Public funding is needed to support the next generation of scientists: 老司机直播's Mark Lautens
Young scientists in Canada are facing serious obstacles when it comes to funding, writes Mark Lautens, in 老司机直播's department of chemistry, in a .
When Lautens was starting out, research funding supported him through his PhD and postdoctoral work in the United States, and funding from Canada's Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) is what ultimately brought him back to Canada.
The funding boost from NSERC allowed Lautens to develop a thriving research program in Toronto, he says.
Now researchers are struggling to get large enough grants while supplies and equipment have increased in cost, writes Lautens, who teaches in the Faculty of Arts & Science.
鈥淭his is an enormous waste of talent and potential,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t is also likely to do multigenerational damage to innovation in all parts of the Canadian economy.鈥
Lautens' op-ed comes as 老司机直播 advocates for the federal government to adopt , the report by a panel led by 老司机直播 President Emeritus David Naylor. The report calls for a $1.3-billion increase in federal research funding over four years, as well as sweeping changes to how it is administered.
Lautens writes that Canada is falling behind countries like Switzerland and Germany, and more recently China and Singapore, which have some of the best-funded researchers whose contributions are growing their country's GDPs. Here in Canada, on the other hand, funding is failing to keep up with inflation and applied research is given preferential treatment, he says.
Lautens cites discoveries like stem cells and artificial intelligence as innovations that have been studied for decades but are only now seeing practical applications. They鈥檙e proof, he says, of the need to fund basic science and research for the long term.
鈥淭he most important outcome of scientific research isn't patents or products,鈥 writes Lautens. 鈥淚t's people who can think and solve our toughest problems.鈥