Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

National security now a factor in research funding

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jul, 2021 09:42 AM
  • National security now a factor in research funding

The federal government is setting new guidelines that work national security considerations into funding criteria for university research.

Research projects must now undergo a risk assessment as part of any grant application to the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) that involves private-sector partners, Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne said Monday.

The research council will then assess and work to mitigate any risk alongside national security agencies and departments on a case-by-case basis, he said.

“The agencies will form a view, and for the partnerships that are deemed high risk, they will not be funded," Champagne said in an interview Monday, citing fields from aerospace to artificial intelligence and quantum computing.

The Canadian Security Intelligence Service and the Communications Security Establishment — the country's cyberspy agency — will play a key role in the risk assessment, he said.

Security questions around scientific research have drawn renewed attention after two scientists were escorted from the high-security National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg in July 2019 and then fired in January this year.

One of the employees had earlier been responsible for a shipment of Ebola and Henipah viruses to China's Wuhan Institute of Virology, though the Public Health Agency of Canada has said that event is unrelated to their dismissal.

Champagne did not directly address the incident, which involved government employees rather than university researchers, but warned of “foreign interference or unwanted knowledge transfer that could contribute to the advancement of foreign militaries or other types of activities … which could harm the national security of Canada."

“The framework in play will certainly provide us with tools in order to better assess who our researchers are planning to partner with," Champagne said.

A working group composed of three federal departments, two security agencies and eight other organizations representing researchers and universities formed in 2018 — before the duo was escorted out of the Winnipeg lab — to promote practices that protect Canadian research data and intellectual property, he noted.

The working group helped develop the new criteria, dubbed the National Security Guidelines for Research Partnerships.

Champagne acknowledged that institutions have asked about the possibility of red-tape bottlenecks for researchers whose applications will funnel through intelligence services before receiving a stamp of approval.

The lead-up to the fresh framework, which has roots in workshops on research safeguards dating back to 2016, has helped clear a path for the current guidelines that will steer clear of backlogs, he said.

The Innovation Department plans to expand the new guidelines beyond NSERC's Alliance grant program to all granting councils and the Canada Foundation for Innovation "in the near term."<

MORE National ARTICLES

145 COVID19 cases over 3 days

145 COVID19 cases over 3 days
78.1% of all adults in BC have received at least 1 COVID-19 dose, 76.8% of those 12-over have received at least one dose. BC has administered 4,886,709 doses, with 1,320,194 second doses.

145 COVID19 cases over 3 days

Single-lane traffic on Highway 97 by wildfire

Single-lane traffic on Highway 97 by wildfire
The Log Jam wildfire burning south of Peachland was estimated to be less than half a square kilometre but smoke was likely to be visible in the area. It says Highway 97 was reduced to a single lane of alternating traffic.

Single-lane traffic on Highway 97 by wildfire

B.C. funds searches at former residential schools

B.C. funds searches at former residential schools
The British Columbia government says it's providing $12 million to support First Nations with investigative work at former residential school sites.

B.C. funds searches at former residential schools

Suspicious fire scorches church in northwest B.C.

Suspicious fire scorches church in northwest B.C.
New Hazelton RCMP say the fire was reported early Saturday morning on the Gitwangak First Nation and was quickly extinguished with minimal damage and no injuries.

Suspicious fire scorches church in northwest B.C.

Wildfire officials brace as temperatures climb

Wildfire officials brace as temperatures climb
A community in central British Columbia broke Canada's all-time heat record yesterday with a temperature of 46 C and even northerly cities like Edmonton are expected to near the 40 C mark this week.

Wildfire officials brace as temperatures climb

Vaccine mixing generates strong immune response

Vaccine mixing generates strong immune response
The results are similar to those reported earlier this year from small studies in Germany and Spain and will reinforce the decision to mix and match vaccines in much of Canada.

Vaccine mixing generates strong immune response