Open letter to the Prime Minister of Australia: Australia's national public research infrastructure preparing for shutdown

Subject: Open letter to the Prime Minister of Australia: Australia's national public research infrastructure preparing for shutdown
From: Dr Tony Peacock
Date: 10 Jul 2015

Dear Prime Minister,

We, the undersigned members of the National Research Alliance are writing to alert you to the damage being caused to significant public infrastructure by the continued uncertainty over operational funding for the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS).

Since 2004, NCRIS and its predecessor program has sensibly and successfully guided Australia's national research infrastructure investment; committing over $2 billion of taxpayer money to 27 major research facilities. Together, these facilities:

allow Australia's scientists to undertake world-class research;
enable significant science industry linkage, including the capacity for innovative Australian companies to access high-tech infrastructure; and
facilitate international research collaboration, which provide substantial economic and intellectual value to Australia.
Over 35,000 Australian and international researchers use NCRIS facilities, and the 27 national facilities employ over 1,700 highly skilled scientists, and support and management staff. The facilities underpin much of Australia's $30 billion annual spend on science, research and development at an operational cost of just $150 million per annum (0.5% of total, and 1.6% of the Australian Government science funding).

As with any major public infrastructure, the NCRIS facilities depend on secure funding to enable forward planning and efficient operation. However, with continued uncertainty over the 2015-16 operational funding included in the last budget, many of the NCRIS facilities are preparing to close.

The damage to Australia's domestic and collaborative international research effort that will result from such closures is immense. Continuity and productivity of critical research programs will be set back by several years, with some innovative Australian companies will be forced to take their operations offshore, many profitable international research collaborations will cease, and 1,700 highly skilled NCRIS staff could become unemployed.

Importantly, with just four months until the end of the financial year, the uncertainty is already having an impact. Many NCRIS staff have been put on provisional notice of termination, and the consequent exodus of highly specialised skills has begun and will only accelerate as the end of the year draws closer.

Furthermore, many of the facilities cannot be viably maintained if taken offline for significant periods. This means that if operational funding for 2015-16 is not confirmed in the next two months, the Government will be effectively decommissioning high-cost public infrastructure that in many cases has years if not decades of productive working life remaining.

The National Research Alliance urges the Government to fulfil its responsibility to fund the NCRIS program in 2015-16, and to use the NCRIS review that is already underway as an opportunity to find a long-term funding solution for research infrastructure in Australia.

If this does not happen, the locking of lab doors, the mothballing of world class facilities and the retrenching of specialist scientists and research staff will inevitably begin soon.

Yours sincerely,

Dr Ross Smith, President, Science and Technology Australia
Ms Belinda Robinson, Chief Executive, Universities Australia
Professor Doug Hilton, President, Association of Australian Medical Research Institutes (AAMRI)
Dr John Beaton, Executive Director, Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia
Professor Andrew Holmes, President, Australian Academy of Science
Ms Robyn Porter, President, Professional Scientists Australia
Dr Phoebe Phillips, President, Australian Society for Medical Research
Dr Margaret Hartley, Chief Executive, Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering
Dr Caroline Perkins, Executive Director, Regional Universities Network
Elizabeth Foley, CEO and managing Director, Research Australia
Mr Conor King, Executive Director, Innovative Research Universities
Professor John Fitzgerald FAHA, President, Australian Academy of the Humanities
Ms Vicki Thomson, Chief Executive, The Group of Eight
Dr Tony Peacock, Chief Executive, Cooperative Research Centres Association
Ms Renee Hindmarsh, Executive Director, Australian Technology Network

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