UCL's India Mission: How UK's Top University Deepens Research Ties

UCL Vice-Provost Geraint Rees is visiting Indian institutions to strengthen research ties. He emphasizes that these partnerships go beyond academic papers to build real capabilities. The collaboration focuses on cutting-edge areas like quantum computing and AI-driven medicine. Many Indian students are returning home to launch ventures solving healthcare and climate challenges.

Key Points: UCL Vice-Provost Geraint Rees Strengthens India Research Partnerships

  • Focus on building capabilities beyond academic research papers
  • Partnerships target quantum computing and AI-driven medicine development
  • Record number of Indian students returning to launch ventures
  • Combining India's scale with UCL's research depth for innovation
2 min read

UCL Vice-Provost Geraint Rees highlights deepening UK-India collaboration in advanced research

UCL Vice-Provost Geraint Rees visits IIT Delhi and AIIMS to expand UK-India collaboration in quantum computing, AI medicine, and climate technologies.

"India has the scale and UCL has the depth, and together we can build the technologies and capabilities that we couldn't create alone - Geraint Rees"

New Delhi, November 22

Geraint Rees, Vice Provost for Research, Innovation and Global Engagement at University College London (UCL), on Friday said he would be visiting the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) and All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in the national capital to further strengthen ongoing collaborations.

Speaking to ANI, Rees noted that India is among the major partners of UCL, asserting that these partnerships extend beyond academic publications and focus on building capabilities in advanced areas such as quantum computing, AI-driven medicine and assistive technologies.

"I have been visiting IIT Delhi and AIIMS along with IISc Bengaluru. They are our major partners in India. What really excites me is that these partnerships are not just about research papers, they are about building capabilities, from quantum computing to AI-driven medicine and assistive technologies," Geraint Rees said.

Furthermore, the Vice-Provost highlighted the potential of co-creation between UCL and India, beyond conventional collaboration. He mentioned that while UCL is witnessing a record number of Indian students in London, what is more significant is that many of these students return to India to launch ventures addressing real-world challenges, particularly in healthcare and climate technologies.

"UCL's future with India is this potential to co-create, not just collaborate. In London, we are seeing a record number of Indian students coming to UCL, which is great, but more importantly, they are coming back to Delhi and going on to launch ventures to solve real problems like healthcare and climate technologies," he added.

Rees emphasised the complementary strengths of the two nations, stating that India's scale combined with UCL's depth can generate technologies and capabilities that neither could achieve alone.

"India has the scale and UCL has the depth, and together we can build the technologies and capabilities that we couldn't create alone," Rees added.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great to see our students going abroad for quality education and returning to solve India's problems. This brain circulation is much better than brain drain. Hope more such collaborations happen across other IITs and medical colleges too.
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David E
As someone working in healthcare tech, I appreciate the focus on co-creation rather than just collaboration. India's massive population provides the perfect testing ground for medical innovations. Exciting times ahead for both countries!
A
Ananya R
While this sounds promising, I hope the benefits reach beyond elite institutions. We need to ensure that research outcomes actually translate into affordable healthcare solutions for common people across India, not just urban centers.
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Vikram M
Perfect partnership! India's scale + UK's research depth = winning combination. The focus on climate technologies is particularly important given our environmental challenges. More such international collaborations please! 🙏
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Sarah B
Assistive technologies is such an important area that often gets overlooked. With India's aging population and disability challenges, this collaboration could make a real difference in people's lives. Well done to both institutions!

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