India's R&D Revolution: How UIG Partnership Can Boost Innovation

A top government official has emphasized the need for stronger collaboration between universities, industries, and government to speed up research and development in India. The recommendation came during NITI Aayog's regional meeting focused on creating an easier environment for scientific research. Experts highlighted the importance of breaking down institutional silos and improving how research outcomes are communicated to society. The meeting also discussed leveraging retired scientists' expertise and implementing the ROPE framework to remove research obstacles.

Key Points: Union Earth Sciences Secretary Urges Stronger University-Industry-Government Ties

  • Strengthen University-Industry-Government ecosystem for collaborative research
  • Foster greater data sharing across institutions instead of working in silos
  • Improve science communication to make research outcomes more relatable
  • Leverage expertise of retired scientific talent pool to bolster R&D
2 min read

University-Industry-Govt must join hands to speed up R&D: Top official

Dr M. Ravichandran calls for enhanced UIG ecosystem, better data sharing, and improved science communication to accelerate India's research and development progress.

"Addressing both dimensions in tandem is essential to realising India's vision of becoming a global leader in research and innovation. - Dr V.K. Saraswat, NITI Aayog"

Thiruvananthapuram, Nov 2

Union Earth Sciences Secretary, Dr M. Ravichandran, has recommended strengthening the University-Industry-Government (UIG) ecosystem, fostering greater data sharing across institutions instead of working in silos, and improving science communication to make research outcomes more relatable to society.

Addressing the 8th Regional Consultative Meeting on "Ease of Doing Research and Development", Dr Ravichandran also suggested leveraging the expertise of the retired scientific talent pool to bolster research.

The meeting was organised by NITI Aayog at the National Centre for Earth Science Studies (NCESS) here on October 30-31. The consultation brought together a distinguished gathering of Institutional leaders, Vice Chancellors, and Scientific ministries/departments for in-depth discussions on strengthening India's research and development ecosystem.

The session commenced with a welcome address by Prof N.V. Chalapathi Rao, Director, NCESS, who underscored the significance of an enabling environment for scientific inquiry and highlighted the role of regional research institutions in driving innovation-led development. Prof Vivek Kumar Singh, of the NITI Aayog, set the context for the meeting and introduced the ROPE Framework - Removing Obstacles, Promoting Enablers, as the guiding approach of NITI Aayog's initiative on Ease of Doing R&D. He emphasized that the framework aims to identify institutional and policy-level challenges faced by researchers and simultaneously promote supportive mechanisms such as flexibility, inter-agency collaboration, and capacity enhancement to create a conducive environment for scientific progress.

Dr V.K. Saraswat, Member, NITI Aayog, in his address, highlighted that the Ease of Doing R&D depends on two critical elements, internal and external factors. While internal factors relate to the structure, governance, and functioning of research institutions, external factors encompass regulatory barriers, funding mechanisms, and cross-sector coordination. He stressed that addressing both dimensions in tandem is essential to realising India's vision of becoming a global leader in research and innovation.

The two-day meeting concluded with interactive sessions and consultations with representatives from academic institutes, research laboratories, and government, reaffirming the collective commitment to build an enabling, efficient, and collaborative R&D ecosystem in India.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great initiative! But will this remain just another meeting or lead to actual policy changes? We've heard similar promises before. Hope the ROPE framework delivers real results this time.
A
Arjun K
Leveraging retired scientists is brilliant! So much experience goes wasted in India. My grandfather was a scientist who could have contributed so much more if such programs existed earlier.
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Sarah B
The focus on science communication is much needed. Research should benefit common people, not just remain in academic journals. Better communication can inspire more students to pursue science careers.
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Vikram M
Industry-academia collaboration is the key! In IIT, we saw how projects with companies gave students real-world experience. This should be scaled nationwide. 👍
K
Karthik V
Hope they address the funding issues too. Young researchers struggle with limited grants and excessive bureaucracy. The ROPE framework sounds promising if it actually removes these obstacles.

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