The University of Southampton
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New funding to INSPIRE Southampton studentships in environmental sciences research

Our University has been awarded funding for 80 new PhD studentships over the next five years as leader of the INSPIRE Doctoral Training Partnership (DTP), one of 17 announced by the UK’s Natural Environment Research Council (NERC).

INSPIRE engages our University in partnership with the National Oceanography Centre, the Natural History Museum, the British Antarctic Survey and the Marine Biological Association. The partnership underpins our University’s and the UK’s world-leading profile within the global environmental science community.

Oceanography research

The £6.99m awarded by NERC will focus on studentships in the Schools of Ocean and Earth Science, Biological Sciences, Engineering, Geography and Environmental Sciences, Physics and Astronomy, and Humanities. The success of Southampton’s bid meant that our University was awarded an increased number of studentships against a backdrop of stiff competition for a shrinking resource.

Professor Tim Minshull from the School of Ocean and Earth Science, who led the INSPIRE bid, said:

“This was a real team effort and I would like to thank the team of Professor Martin Palmer, Professor Paul Hughes and Dr Blair Thornton from the University, and Dr Adrian Martin from the National Oceanography Centre for their effort and commitment. The bid also built on the hard work of many other colleagues within the University and partner organisations who have run the successful SPITFIRE DTP on which this bid was built, and who guided the bid through internal review processes.”

Professor Chris Howls, Director of the Doctoral College at our University added,

“The NERC award to the INSPIRE team demonstrates the quality of doctoral provision within this Southampton-led consortium. With 16 studentships per year, this is the second highest annual number anywhere in the UK and as such is a major contribution to the next generation of world-class research leaders in environmental sciences.”

If you’d like to learn more about this, you can read the full story here.

 
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