Jim Cunningham – 2016 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills
The below Parliamentary question was asked by Jim Cunningham on 2016-04-14.
To ask the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, how much EU (a) 7th Framework Programme and (b) Horizon 2020 funding has been provided to (i) universities, (ii) other research institutions and (iii) small businesses in the West Midlands in each of the last five years.
Joseph Johnson
The figures for organisations in the West Midlands are set out below. These reflect the full value of grant agreements signed in each calendar year, not the money received in that year.
Higher and Secondary Education Organisations (HES) agreed funding (€):
2011 |
2012 |
2013 |
2014 |
2015 |
|
FP7 |
34,512,638 |
65,197,543 |
62,376,751 |
23,703,605 |
|
Horizon 2020 |
10,025,431 |
64,947,891 |
Non-profit Research organisations (REC) agreed funding (€):
2011 |
2012 |
2013 |
2014 |
2015 |
|
FP7 |
459,795 |
1,873,085 |
946,077 |
2,102,799 |
|
Horizon 2020 |
819,340 |
2,297,233 |
All Small and Medium sized Enterprises (SME) agreed funding (€):
2011 |
2012 |
2013 |
2014 |
2015 |
|
FP7 |
7,861,934 |
11,503,709 |
11,193,539 |
2,773,696 |
|
Horizon 2020 |
3,471,182 |
14,249,221 |
Please note that the SME figures may include some HES or REC organisations.
The variation in the figures across the years in part reflects the fact that calls are competitively bid for and vary in the amount of funding available; and in part the fact that the FP7 budget was back-loaded, with increasing amounts of money available to award as grants in the final two years of the programme (2012-2013). In contrast, relatively few grants were awarded in the first year of Horizon 2020 (2014), which thereafter is due to run with annual budgets larger than those available to FP7.
Overall, the UK was the second biggest recipient of EU research funding under FP7, and remains so under Horizon 2020.