DSIT reported on Friday 5 June that ten more researchers had joined UK institutions through the UKRI Global Talent Fund, a £54m pot administered by UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), taking the running total to 18. The named recruits left posts at Oregon State, Stanford, Columbia, UC San Diego, Yale and Tel Aviv. Professor Bryony DuPont moved from Oregon State to Strathclyde for AI in energy systems; Professor Laura Huckins left Yale for Bath to work on psychiatric genetics. 1
The timing tracks cuts to United States federal science budgets under the current administration, which have left researchers looking for stable funding abroad. These are placements, not promises: named people in named labs, expected to seed spinout activity over the coming years. Not every recruit founds a company, and the fund buys research capacity rather than guaranteed ventures.
The Advanced Research and Invention Agency (ARIA), the UK's high-risk research funder modelled on DARPA, reported a sharper conversion from its Encode fellowship, which pays researchers to spin out companies. Two proto-companies emerged from 18 fellows in four months, after which the government added £5m to double the cohort.
Britain signed a researcher-mobility deal with France in May, committing annual funding to early-career exchange . The Global Talent Fund and ARIA are the domestic side of the same effort, moving people as well as money into UK science.
