Australian Research Council Act 2001 - Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development - Funding Rules for Funding commencing in 2005 (Cth)
Australian Research Council
Funding Rules for Funding commencing in 2005
Ethics
All research proposals should conform with the principles outlined in the Joint NHMRC/AVCC Statement and Guidelines on Research Practice (1997) (at and, as applicable, the principles outlined in the NHMRC’s National Statement on Ethical Conduct in Research Involving Humans (at: and the principles outlined in the NHMRC’s codes on animal research (at
Acknowledging ARC support
The ARC expects that research funded by the ARC will be appropriately acknowledged.
When, at any time during or after completion of a Project, the Institution or researcher publishes material, books, articles, television or radio programs, newsletters or other literary or artistic works which relate to the Project and/or Research Cadetship, the Institution or researcher shall acknowledge, at a prominent place in the publication, the support of the ARC in a form acceptable to the ARC.
Advice on acceptable forms of acknowledgement and use of the logo is provided on the ARC website at
Acronyms
The following acronyms are used in ARC Funding Rules.
Australian Eastern Standard Time | |
Australian Institute of Marine Science | |
Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation | |
Australian Postgraduate Award | |
Australian Postgraduate Award (Industry) | |
Australian Postdoctoral Fellowship | |
Australian Postdoctoral Fellowship (CSIRO) | |
Australian Postdoctoral Fellowship (Industry) | |
Australian Professorial Fellowship | |
Australian Research Council | |
Australian Research Council International Fellowship | |
Australian Research Fellowship | |
Australian Vice-Chancellors’ Committee | |
Chief Investigator | |
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation | |
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development | |
Defence Science and Technology Organisation | |
Expert Advisory Committee | |
Early Career Researcher | |
Geoscience Australia | |
Grant Application Management System | |
Goods and Services Tax | |
Higher Education Contribution Scheme | |
Key Centre for Teaching and Research | |
Learned Academies Special Projects | |
Linkage Infrastructure Equipment and Facilities Program | |
Linkage Industry Fellowship | |
National Competitive Grants Program | |
National Health and Medical Research Council | |
Partner Investigator | |
Queen Elizabeth II Fellowship | |
Research Cadetship-Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander | |
Research Infrastructure Equipment and Facilities Scheme | |
Strategic Partnerships with Industry – Research and Training | |
Special Research Centres | |
Universal Resource Locator |
Australian Research Council
Funding Rules for Funding commencing in 2005
However,
develop the research expertise of Indigenous Australian researchers to a level competitive with mainstream research funding; support fundamental research and research training by Indigenous Australians individuals and teams;
provide Indigenous Australian researchers with experience in the preparation of research funding applications; and
expand Australia ’s knowledge base and research capability.
A Research Cadetship is available under
Chief Investigators and Research Cadets must be Indigenous researchers of Australian Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent, who identify and are accepted as such by the community in which they live.
Applicants may nominate Mentors and, where applicable, Supervisors of their postgraduate research who will support them in developing as researchers. Mentors and Supervisors may be Indigenous, but it is not a requirement that they be Indigenous.
pure basic research which is experimental and theoretical work undertaken to acquire new knowledge without looking for long-term benefits other than the advancement of knowledge;
strategic basic research which is experimental and theoretical work undertaken to acquire new knowledge directed into specified broad areas that are expected to lead to useful discoveries. It provides the broad base of knowledge necessary to solve recognised practical problems; and
applied research which is original work undertaken primarily to acquire new knowledge with a specific application in view. It is undertaken either to determine possible uses for the findings of basic research or to determine new ways of achieving some specific and predetermined objectives.
The Minister for Education, Science and Training has designated the following areas as national research priorities for the 2005 funding round:
Research Priority 1: An Environmentally Sustainable Australia
Research Priority 2: Promoting and Maintaining Good Health
Research Priority 3: Frontier Technologies for Building and Transforming Australian Industries
Research Priority 4: Safeguarding Australia
These areas of research will be referred to as Designated National Research Priorities. Within each Research Priority is a number of Priority Goals which are listed below:
Research Priority 1: An Environmentally Sustainable Australia
Priority Goals
- PG 1 Water – a critical resource
- PG 2 Transforming existing industries
- PG 3 Overcoming soil loss, salinity and acidity
- PG 4 Reducing and capturing emissions in transport and energy generation
- PG 5 Sustainable use of Australia ’s biodiversity
- PG 6 Developing deep earth resources
Research Priority 2: Promoting and Maintaining Good Health
Priority Goals
- PG 1 A healthy start to life
- PG 2 Ageing well, ageing productively
- PG 3 Preventive healthcare
Research Priority 3: Frontier Technologies for Building and Transforming Australian Industries
Priority Goals
- PG 1 Breakthrough science
- PG 2 Frontier technologies
- PG 3 Advanced materials
- PG 4 Smart information use
Research Priority 4: Safeguarding Australia
Priority Goals
- PG 1 Critical infrastructure
- PG 2 Protecting Australia from invasive diseases and pests
- PG 3 Protecting Australia from terrorism and crime
- PG 4 Transformational defence technologies
Full descriptions of these Designated National Research Priorities and their associated Priority Goals can be found in Appendix 3, and on the ARC web site (
There are four applicant roles available under
Chief Investigator (CI)
ARC Research Cadetship-Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (RC-ATSI)
Mentor (M)
Supervisor (S)
To be eligible to apply for
identify as an Australian Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander; and
be accepted as such by the community in which s/he lives or has lived.
It is not a requirement that Mentors and Supervisors be Indigenous.
To be eligible to apply as a Chief Investigator, the applicant must meet the following criteria:
He/she must be an active researcher who takes intellectual responsibility for the project, its conception, any strategic decisions called for in its pursuit and the communication of results. The applicant must have the capacity to make a serious commitment to the project and cannot assume the role of a supplier of resources for work that will largely be placed in the hands of others. The ARC reserves the right to rule on the question of capacity.
He/she must reside predominantly in Australia for the full term of the grant. If the applicant does not have permanent resident status he/she must obtain temporary resident status from the Department of Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs before taking up the grant.
He/she must meet at least one of the following three criteria:
- be associated with, or employed by an eligible Institution, listed in Appendix 1. The applicant must hold a substantive position at, and/or derive at least 50 per cent of her/his salary from, that Institution; and/or
- be associated with, or employed by, an Australian publicly funded organisation not directly funded to carry out research but with research-related purposes and objectives (such as a museum). The applicant must hold a substantive position at, and/or derive at least 50 per cent of her/his salary from, that organisation; and/or
- be a currently-enrolled candidate for a postgraduate research degree.
Researchers who are enrolled in higher research degrees may apply for research funding, where the project forms part of their current research towards the degree. In this case, applicants will still need to demonstrate research capacity and experience.
Indigenous Australian researchers are not eligible to apply for funding if they:
are undertaking an undergraduate degree or an undergraduate diploma;
currently hold or have held, a nationally competitive grant or fellowship from the ARC (other than an award made under the
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development program) or the NHMRC; orderive more than 50 percent of appropriated salary from a research organisation outside the higher education sector that is funded primarily for research from State/Territory or Commonwealth Government sources, for example:
- Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO);
- Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
- Geoscience Australia (GA); and
- State/Territory Research and Development (R&D) organisations.
RC-ATSIs are one or two years’ full-time employment on an approved project and are tenable at eligible Institutions.
RC-ATSIs are not eligible to apply for a second RC-ATSI. However, they may apply for an APD (
Applicants who apply for a RC-ATSI may apply for both a postdoctoral Cadetship, which provides a salary, and for a research project grant. Applicants who apply for RC-ATSI but not for research funding must demonstrate how their research will be supported.
To be eligible to apply as an RC-ATSI, the applicant must meet the following criteria:
He/she must be an active researcher who takes intellectual responsibility for the project, its conception, any strategic decisions called for in its pursuit and the communication of results. The applicant must have the capacity to make a serious commitment to the project and cannot assume the role of a supplier of resources for work that will largely be placed in the hands of others. The ARC reserves the right to rule on the question of capacity;
He/she must reside predominantly in Australia for the full term of the grant. If the applicant does not have permanent resident status he/she must obtain temporary resident status from the Department of Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs before taking up the grant; and
He/she must be a researcher who has been awarded a PhD, or equivalent research doctorate, since 1 January 2001, or has not yet submitted the PhD but will do so before 31 December 2004. If an RC-ATSI is offered, it will be contingent upon receiving official confirmation that the thesis has been submitted by 31 December 2004. The cadetship cannot be taken up until formal advice has been received that the PhD has been awarded. If these conditions have not been satisfied, the offer will be withdrawn.
Indigenous Australian researchers are not eligible to apply for a grant if they:
are undertaking an undergraduate degree or an undergraduate diploma; and/or
currently hold or have held, a nationally competitive grant or fellowship from the ARC or the NHMRC.
In some circumstances, an applicant who is seeking an RC-ATSI may not satisfy the eligibility criteria due to research career interruption (including working in universities in non-research positions). If this is the case, an applicant may apply for an exemption from the eligibility criteria.
If, after reading these Funding Rules, a researcher is unsure whether he/she is eligible to apply for an RC-ATSI, he/she must consult the Institution’s research office in the first instance.
If the candidate does require an eligibility exemption, a request must be lodged in writing, through the Institution’s research office, with the
If an applicant seeking an eligibility exemption fails to meet the above deadline, her/his subsequent application will be deemed ineligible.
As
If the proposed research is part of the research towards a higher research degree, it is strongly recommended that the applicant’s Supervisor be consulted on the preparation of the application and be associated with the proposal. The roles of Supervisor and Mentor can be filled either by the same individual or by separate persons, and applications may nominate both a mentor and supervisor.
In any one year, the ARC will consider no more than two initial applications to
Submitting initial applications that contravene the above limits will result in the automatic exclusion of all applications involving that researcher as a Chief Investigator or RC-ATSI.
Only one application to the
The following limits apply to grants awarded under the
A researcher may not hold more than two
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development grants on which he/she is CI or RC-ATSI; andA researcher may not hold more than one
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development grant on which he/she is the sole CI or sole Research Cadet.
Applicants may apply for
Every grant must have at least one Chief Investigator or Research Cadetship holder.
The minimum grant size is $10,000 per annum. This level refers to the average annual amount that the ARC deems necessary for the project over the full period of the grant (not the average amount applied for, nor the amount sought in the first year).
The RC-ATSI salary is commensurate with current ARC APD salary rates (see Appendix 2).
Applicants may apply for one or two years’ Cadetship but the ARC reserves the right to offer a one year Cadetship.
clinical medicine and dental research and training and public health research and training that are covered by the NHMRC
activities leading solely to the creation or performance of a work of art, including visual art, musical compositions, drama, dance, designs and literary works, for which Commonwealth Government support is provided through the Australia Council for the Arts
scholarly investigations that, while important in themselves, do not lead to conceptual advances or discoveries, or to novel practical outcomes or applications. Projects such as uncritical biographical compilations and purely descriptive catalogues or editions that do not involve original research are not funded
production of teaching materials, even though some research may be involved in their production
compilation of data, unless an integral part of a project, in which case applicants must provide a statement indicating the research objectives to which the data would contribute
development of research aids and tools (including computer programs), unless they form an integral part of a project, in which case applicants must provide a statement indicating the research objectives to which these activities would contribute.
Salaries of Chief Investigators: the Commonwealth will not provide support, in whole or in part, to meet the salaries of Chief Investigators. Salaries for RC-ATSIs are provided.
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development funding is not provided to fund teaching However, the Committee may consider a request for teaching relief for a period of not more than six months a year, if such a request is fully justified in terms of achieving a successful outcome for the project. If approved, the funding is limited to the maximum base rate of $29,666 (2003$),regardless of the level of appointment of the staff member and is a special condition on the grant. Only funds specifically approved for teaching relief may be used for that purpose.Special Studies Programs: funds are not provided for travel or other expenses for researchers when on a Special Studies Program. Travel to special facilities away from the base where a researcher is conducting her/his study is seen as part of the normal costs of a Special Studies Program.
International students’ fees and Higher Education Contribution Scheme (HECS) liability: funds are not provided to pay the fees of international students or HECS liabilities for Australian students. Computer facilities for molecular analysis: applicants for projects involving molecular biology should be aware that the ARC supports the Australian National Genomic Information Service which provides access to a range of databases and a large suite of analysis programs. As this service is available at modest cost, proposals seeking funding for computer facilities to undertake molecular analysis will have to justify such needs very thoroughly.
Basic facilities: the Institution must certify its agreement to provide the following basic facilities which will not be funded under
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development :
- accommodation (eg. laboratory and office, suitably equipped and furnished in standard ways);
- access to workshop services (eg. machine tools and qualified technicians available to each member of staff, according to need, for research);
- access to a basic library collection;
- adequate computing time (excluding access to high-performance computers);
- standard reference materials or funds for abstracting services;
- basic computing, word processing and microfilm reading facilities;
- use of photocopiers, telephones, mail, fax, email and Internet services; and
- transcription services where the project is linked to higher degree studies.
Publication costs, including page costs, are not funded under
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development .
The ARC will not fund research already funded by the Commonwealth. The ARC reserves the right to determine if a proposed research project duplicates research already being funded.
If a funding request for any project, salary or equipment is being submitted to any other funding body, the
The ARC may liaise with other funding agencies to discuss any overlap between applications in order to avoid duplication of funding.
As the application is the prime source of information available to the selection committee, it must contain all the information necessary for assessment of the project without the need for further written or oral explanation, or for reference to additional documentation, including the World Wide Web, unless requested by the committee. All details in the application, particularly concerning any successful grants, must be current when submitted
It is the responsibility of the administering Institution to obtain signatures of the Chief Investigators and RC-ATSIs named at part A2 of the application form. These signatures are to be retained by the administering Institution which must provide these certifications if requested. A pro forma is available for this purpose on the ARC website ( level="2">
Applications under
Application form, to be completed in Grant Application Management System (GAMS)
Additional text:
- Section A7.2, ‘additional detail’ for any participants
- Section B9, ‘Research record relative to opportunities’;
- Sections C2 and C3, ‘justifications of funding requested from the ARC’ and ‘details of non-ARC contributions’;
- Section D2, ‘reports on ARC grants’
- Part E, ‘Project description’.
- If applicable, add supporting documentation: ‘additional detail’ for any participants associated with a Commonwealth Government-funded Centre.
Curricula vitae and resumes should not be submitted as a part of the application. Additional unsolicited text will be removed from the application.
As applications are scanned electronically, applicants must use a highly legible font type, such as Arial, Courier, Palatino, Times New Roman and Helvetica. Variants such as mathematical typesetting languages may also be used. References may be reproduced in 10-point font size. Colour graphs or colour photographs may be included but they will be reproduced in black and white and the reproduction quality may be degraded.
Pages in excess of stipulated limits may be removed before assessment.
The application form is produced by the ARC’s web-based GAMS at
Applicants should note that a separate document,
An original and one identical paper copy are required. The application must be clipped with NAL clips, not stapled. The application form should be submitted with the additional text, including supporting documentation, interleaved appropriately and the pages numbered consecutively starting at the beginning of the application (
Paper originals of the applications for
Applications should be sent to:
by mail, to
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development Program Coordinator
Disciplines and Programs
Australian Research Council
GPO Box 2702
CANBERRA ACT 2601
by courier, to
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development Program Coordinator
Disciplines and Programs
Australian Research Council
Geoscience Australia Building
cnr Hindmarsh Drive and
Jerrabomberra Avenue
SYMONSTON ACT 2609
Primary criteria in considering applications are:
the quality of the research project being proposed;
the quality of the researcher(s) proposing the research project; and
the quality of the research environment and/or mentor.
Other considerations may be:
the probable impact of a successful outcome for the research project; and/or
the extent to which the successful completion of the research project will train and equip the researcher to compete for mainstream research funding.
If an application is judged to be outside the scope of the
RC-ATSI applicants must provide additional details, in the text of her/his application (at Section B9.6) of
their contribution to the project, and
the research environment of the their host Institution.
Assessment of applications is undertaken by a selection committee comprising two or more members of the ARC Expert Advisory Committee. The selection committee may:
exclude ineligible applications;
assign independent readers/assessors to review the applications;
seek applicants’ comments on assessors’ reports;
rank each application relative to the others on the basis of the application, the assessors’ reports and applicants’ response to these assessments;
assess and recommend budgets; and
prepare funding recommendations that are submitted to the ARC Board.
The ARC has procedures for declaring conflicts of interest and for members to withdraw from considering particular applications
Exclusion of ineligible applications by the ARC may take place at any time during the selection process. Every effort will be made to exclude ineligible applications and inform applicants early in the assessment process. Applications that contravene the Funding Rules in any way may be excluded. Grounds for exclusion include, but are not limited to:
failing to submit the application through the appropriate Research Office/Chief Executive Officer for certification;
not meeting the eligibility criteria for a Chief Investigator or RC-ATSI;
exceeding limits on the number of applications permissible;
incomplete, inaccurate or misleading information (refer to 11.4); and
designating the application as ‘commercial-in-confidence’.
Each application not initially excluded will be assigned to one or more Australian-based readers who will be asked to read and rank assigned applications. Although every effort will be made to obtain one or more assessments for each application, the ARC reserves the right to make decisions based on any number of assessments or solely on the expert assessment of the selection committee.
Applicants may name any person whom they do not wish to assess the application. Detailed written justification must be submitted through the Institution’s research office, in a separate letter, and it must not accompany the application. The letter must be received before the closing date for applications and be sent to
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development Program CoordinatorDisciplines and Programs Branch
Australian Research Council
GPO Box 2702
CANBERRA ACT 2601
The readers’ textual comments will be provided to the administering Institution allowing the opportunity for a one-page rejoinder to the comments. To ensure impartiality, the readers’ names are not provided to the applicant. At the same time, the selection committee may add questions to the assessments sent to the applicants for rejoinder. Applicants have at least 10 working days in which to submit a rejoinder to the ARC.
The Committee’s recommendations are submitted to the ARC Board and, subject to its views, to the Minister for Education, Science and Training for approval.
A recommendation from the ARC Board is sent to the Minister for consideration. The Minister determines which applications will be offered funding.
The successful administering Institution will be notified in a letter of offer, that will indicate the funding to be provided and will include the Funding Agreement.
A project may not begin, nor ARC funding assistance be expended before the Funding Agreement is signed by the administering Institution and by the ARC.
Appeals must be made on the appeals form available from the ARC website (
The Appeals Officer
Australian Research Council
GPO Box 2702
CANBERRA ACT 2601
Successful applicants should familiarise themselves with the Funding Agreement. They must accept the terms of the Funding Agreement and the administering Institution must sign the Funding Agreement before funds can be paid.
Failure to do so will result in termination of funding.
The draft Funding Agreement can be viewed on the ARC website ( level="3">
Requests to vary the Funding Agreement must be forwarded in writing by the Institution’s Research Office, or equivalent, to the ARC. Forms are available for variation requests on the ARC website ( level="3">
The Funding Approval may be varied where:
the organisation’s involvement with the research program ends or substantially changes;
the research program changes so that it is no longer consistent with the description in the Funding Approval;
the person named in the funding approval as the person leading the research program ceases to lead the program;
any of the collaborating partner institutions involved in the research program end or substantially change their involvement with the program.
Administering Institutions are required to submit reports concerning funded projects to the ARC on a regular basis, as detailed in the Funding Agreement.
The ARC is required to comply with the requirements of the
Information contained in applications is regarded as confidential unless otherwise stated and, subject to the need to provide applications to assessors, and statutory requirements for the ARC to provide information to Parliament and other organisations, applications will be received and treated as confidential.
Notwithstanding the above, the ARC may publicise and report offers or awards of funding, including information about the proposed research, the name and institution of any applicant, the identity of the administering Institution and any other institution or organisation involved in the project, the title and summary descriptions of the project and its intended outcomes, and the level and nature of financial assistance from the ARC.
Applicants must agree to comply with the National Principles of Intellectual Property Management for Publicly Funded Research (available at and act in accordance with any intellectual property policies of the applicant’s Institution.
If an application is incomplete, inaccurate or contains misleading information, it may be excluded from any further consideration for funding (see item 8.2.1).
The Commonwealth Government is committed to protecting its revenue, expenditure and property from any attempt, by members of the public, contractors, sub-contractors, agents, intermediaries or its own employees, to gain financial or other benefits by deceit.
Examples of malpractice include, but are not restricted to:
providing fictitious track records; or
falsifying claims in publications records (such as describing a paper as accepted for publication when it has only been submitted).
Institutions are subject to the liability, indemnity and insurance provisions of the Funding Agreement. The draft Funding Agreement can be viewed on the ARC website ( points
For further information, the Institution’s Research Office should be contacted in the first instance.
Enquires about
Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development Program Coordinator
Disciplines and Programs Branch
Australian Research Council
GPO Box 2702
CANBERRA ACT 2601
New South Wales
Charles Sturt University
Macquarie University
Southern Cross University
The University of New England
The University of New South Wales
The University of Newcastle
The University of Sydney
University of Technology, Sydney
University of Western Sydney
University of Wollongong
Victoria
Deakin University
La Trobe University
Melbourne College of Divinity
Monash University
RMIT University
Swinburne University of Technology
The University of Melbourne
University of Ballarat
Victoria University
Queensland
Bond University
Central Queensland University
Griffith University
James Cook University
Queensland University of Technology
The University of Queensland
The University of the Sunshine Coast
University of Southern Queensland
Western Australia
Curtin University of Technology
Edith Cowan University
Murdoch University
The University of Notre Dame Australia
The University of Western Australia
South Australia
The Flinders University of South Australia
The University of Adelaide
University of South Australia
Tasmania
Australian Maritime College
University of Tasmania
Northern Territory
Northern Territory University
Batchelor College
Australian Capital Territory
The Australian National University
University of Canberra
Multi-State
Australian Catholic University
Salaries are indexed annually.
Fellowship | Step | Salary | 26% oncosts | TOTAL |
Australian Postdoctoral Fellowship (APD); Australian Postdoctoral Fellowship Industry (APDI); Linkage Australian Postdoctoral Fellowship CSIRO; Research Cadetship-Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (RC-ATSI) | $52,240 | $13,582 | $65,822 | |
Australian Research Fellowship (ARF) | $65,210 | $16,955 | $82,165 | |
Queen Elizabeth II Fellowship (QEII) | $77,497 | $20,149 | $97,646 | |
Australian Professorial Fellowship (APF) | Step 1 | $89,516 | $23,275 | $112,791 |
Australian Professorial Fellowship (APF) | Step 2 | $105,125 | $27,333 | $132,458 |
Federation Fellowship | $235,201 | $61,152 | $296,353 |
2003 ARC Fellows and Research Cadets Relocation (maximum) Allowances (Australian dollars)
USA $15,000
UK/Europe/Asia (Nth Hem) $12,000
Asia (Sth Hem)/NZ $ 9,000
Australia $ 6,000
Natural resources have traditionally fuelled our national and regional economies. They have the potential to generate further wealth and employment opportunities in the future.
But our natural resources and biodiversity must be used on a sustainable basis so that the benefits continue to be enjoyed by future generations.
Australia faces significant environmental challenges:
Efficient and sustainable water use is a critically important issue for our economic and social development;
Significant land degradation issues, such as salinity, need to be arrested to underpin our agricultural production systems;
Climate change can be expected to have complex, long term consequences for the environment, and for our agricultural and marine production systems; and
The cleanliness and efficiency of our energy production systems should be enhanced.
There is substantial effort underway to develop more efficient water utilisation practices, to protect our rivers and groundwater resources, and to protect and remediate our fragile soils.
Our agricultural and mining industries are being transformed through the adoption of new technologies, and the development of new types of foods.
This will help to revitalise our regional communities and generate substantial export earnings for the nation over the coming decades.
The Government is committed to meeting the greenhouse gas emissions target set for Australia at Kyoto.
Australia is well placed to take an international lead in developing new and improved energy technologies and in capturing and ‘sequestering’ carbon dioxide.
Other opportunities lie in managing and using our unique, rich land- and marine-based biodiversity, and in developing our deep earth resources.
Australia has a strong record of achievement in research in fields such as agriculture, natural resource management, climate change, horticulture, forestry, mining, energy, and marine sciences.
We must build on these strengths to improve our competitive advantages while enhancing our understanding of natural systems and the interplay of human activities.
To understand and manage these complex interactions better will require significant collaboration within the research community and with other stakeholders.
Priority goals for research fall in the six areas of water utilisation, transforming resource-based industries, overcoming land degradation, developing cleaner, more efficient fuels and energy sources, managing biodiversity and deep earth resources.
Priority Goals
•
Water – a critical resource
Ways of using less water in agriculture and other industries, providing increased protection of rivers and groundwater and the re-use of urban and industrial waste waters. Australia is one of the driest continents and is dependent upon access to freshwater supplies for economic and social development. It has a complex geological structure and unique ecosystems, flora and fauna. Enhancing our understanding of the links between water availability and these factors will result in a better understanding of sustainable water management practices.
•
Transforming existing industries
New technologies for resource-based industries to deliver substantial increases in national wealth by reducing environmental impacts on land and sea. Resource-based industries underpin much of Australia’s prosperity and have the potential to do so in the future. For example, Australia remains highly prospective for minerals discoveries and highly attractive for the development of new era foods from agricultural and marine sources. Our competitive advantage will depend on research and new technologies.
•
Overcoming soil loss, salinity and acidity
Identifying causes and solutions to land degradation using a multidisciplinary approach (examples include incorporating hydrology, geology, biology and climatology) to restore land surfaces. The Australian landscape is fragile: soil salinity, acidity, and nutrient levels pose significant, long term challenges for agriculture and the environment. Research is helping to find solutions to these problems. For example, the National Land and Water Resources Audit shows the extent of salinity in the Australian environment and illustrates Australia’s leading edge in national mapping of critical resource data.
•
Reducing and capturing emissions in transport and energy generation
Alternative transport technologies and clean combustion and efficient new power generation systems and capture and sequestration of carbon dioxide. Australia is well positioned to produce world class solutions to reduce and capture greenhouse gas emissions and the Government is committed to meeting the emissions target set for Australia at Kyoto. We are also well placed to develop alternative energy technologies and ecologically sustainable transport and power generation systems.
•
Sustainable use of Australia ’s biodiversity
Managing and protecting Australia ’s terrestrial and marine biodiversity to develop long term use of ecosystem goods and services ranging from fisheries to ecotourism. Australia has a unique and rich flora and fauna. Our complex ecosystems are resilient and have adapted to events such as drought and fire, and underpin the health of our agricultural, fisheries and tourism industries. There is a need for a more comprehensive understanding of these natural systems and the interplay with human activities.
•
Developing deep earth resources
Smart high-technology exploration methodologies, including imaging and mapping the deep earth and ocean floors, and novel efficient ways of commodity extraction and processing (examples include minerals, oil and gas). Many of Australia’s known mineral assets may be nearly exhausted within the next decade. New land-based deposits are believed to be buried deeper in the crust and the deep marine areas surrounding Australia are also largely unexplored. New technologies, such as remote sensing, indicate scientists are on the brink of being able to ‘see’ inside the earth and identify deeply buried deposits.
Average life expectancies have increased markedly in recent decades. Australians also expect to lead longer and healthier lives in the future, and to remain productive and independent over an extended period.
Enhancing the health outcomes of Australians will yield economic and social benefits and add materially to national well-being.
Australians expect that their children and grandchildren should have a healthy start to life.
Developing strategies to promote the healthy development of young Australians, and reducing the impact of the genetic, social and environmental factors which diminish their life potential will be critical.
A revolution is also underway at the other end of the life cycle. Australia, like many other developed nations, is undergoing a major demographic shift involving significant growth in the aged population.
To meet this challenge, it will be important to promote healthy ageing by developing better social and medical strategies to ensure that older Australians enjoy healthy and productive lives.
Informed insights into the causes of disease and of mental and physical degeneration will contribute to the achievement of this goal.
All Australians stand to benefit from preventive healthcare through the adoption of healthier attitudes, habits and lifestyles.
Evidence-based preventive interventions may help reduce the incidence and severity of many diseases, including major health problems such as cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases, mental ill-health, obesity, diabetes, asthma and chronic inflammatory conditions.
Improvements in the health and well being of the young, of older Australians and in preventive healthcare will be underpinned by research.
However, while Australia has an enviable record in health and medical research, the research effort is spread across the many universities, hospitals and health and medical research institutes, resulting in critical mass only in limited areas of research.
There is also a need to draw on multi-disciplinary approaches that include research contributions from the social sciences and humanities.
This priority is designed to promote health and prevent disease through a more focused and collaborative effort.
Priority goals for research fall in the three areas of a healthy start to life, ageing well, ageing productively, and health promotion and disease prevention healthcare.
Priority Goals
•
A healthy start to life
Reducing the impact of genetic, social and environmental factors predisposing infants and children to ill health and reducing their life potential. Human health in the developing foetus and in early childhood is absolutely critical to the future well being of the adult. Research shows that health and well being in early childhood is predictive of later positive outcomes, and that health in middle and late childhood is also crucial. This goal fits well with the Government’s National Agenda for Early Childhood initiative.
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Ageing well, ageing productively
Developing new and better social and medical strategies to reduce mental and physical degeneration based on greater knowledge and understanding of the causes of disease and degeneration of mind and body. Australia’s population is ageing, with a significant projected increase in the number of people aged over 65 and over 85. While Australia is relatively well placed compared with many other OECD nations, major shifts in cultural expectations and attitude are necessary to respond constructively to ageing, at both an individual and population level. This goal fits well with the Government’s National Strategy for an Ageing Australia. A healthy aged population will actively contribute to the life of the nation through participation in the labour market or through voluntary work.
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Preventive healthcare
New evidence-based strategies to promote healthy attitudes, habits and lifestyles and to develop new health-promoting foods and nutraceuticals. Preventive healthcare research will improve the prediction and prevention of disease and injury through the adoption of healthier behaviours, lifestyles and environments. Research will generate an improvement in the design, delivery and uptake of programmes such as exercise-based rehabilitation. There are several major disease targets amenable to immediate study, such as cardiovascular health, neurodegenerative diseases, mental ill-health, obesity, diabetes, asthma and chronic inflammatory conditions. Research in prevention will emphasise interdisciplinary research, drawing on contributions from the social sciences and humanities, as well as from the health and medical sciences.
Wealth often derives from the unforeseen application of new discoveries.
Australia must be at the leading edge if it is to stay abreast of international developments and take advantage of opportunities.
Our national capabilities in emerging sciences and their underpinning disciplines determine our capacity to develop and implement new technologies.
Australia has a strong base of expertise, skills and technological capacities in the fundamental sciences and key technologies.
Our strengths are in a wide range of areas such as biotechnology, material sciences, information and communications technology (ICT), photonics, nanotechnology and sensor technology.
ICT is currently the critical enabling technology and is a major contributor to national productivity and growth.
But breakthrough science underpins technological advancements in many areas and Australia needs to foster an environment that stimulates creativity and innovation.
Applications for frontier technologies are potentially very large. Australia has the capacity to exploit niche markets for new products and services.
Australia also has an enviable track record as an innovator and developer of advanced materials and must grasp the opportunity to stay ahead.
Smart information use involving improved data management, intelligent transport systems and creative applications for digital technologies provides huge opportunities to improve the performance of key Australian industries.
Australia needs to invest in this research area as it is fundamental to our future competitiveness and well being.
This priority will help to strengthen the capacity of Australian researchers to participate in new areas of research, enhance Australia’s international scientific reputation, stimulate local expertise, and help create vibrant new industries.
Enhanced research effort will also be achieved through initiatives that develop a critical mass of researchers in key areas.
Priority goals for research fall in the four areas of breakthrough science, frontier technologies, advanced materials and smart information use.
Priority Goals
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Breakthrough science
Better understanding of the fundamental processes that will advance knowledge and develop technological innovations (examples include bio-informatics, nano-assembly, quantum computing and geo-informatics). Breakthrough science underpins technological innovation across a range of industries critical to maintaining Australia’s position as a developed country. Some examples include bio- and geo-informatics, nano-assembly and quantum computing. Technological advances are often unexpected and a strong foundation in mathematics and the fundamental sciences will provide an environment that fosters creativity and innovation. Early participation in leading edge areas of research will enable Australian researchers to benefit more fully from international developments.
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Frontier technologies
Enhanced capacity in frontier technologies to power world-class industries of the future and build on Australia ’s strengths in research and innovation (examples include nanotechnology, biotechnology, ICT, photonics, genomics/phenomics, and complex systems). The potential applications of frontier technologies across a range of industries in Australia are vast. Australia has significant capacity to exploit niche markets for new products and services emerging from frontier technologies. Australia has world-class research expertise in many such areas. Some examples include nanotechnology, biotechnology, ICT, photonics, genomics and phenomics. Also important are advanced frameworks such as complex systems in which these technologies are applied. Future directions in this priority area need to target the cutting-edge science critical for each emerging technology.
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Advanced materials
Advanced materials for applications in construction, communications, transport, agriculture and medicine (examples include ceramics, organics, biomaterials, smart material and fabrics, composites, polymers and light metals). The development of advanced materials will underpin growth in many areas of industrial and economic activity in Australia. Australia has substantial infrastructure in this area and an enviable track record as an innovator and developer of advanced materials. The era of advanced materials is just beginning in spite of the tremendous progress in recent years. Substantial scientific and technological challenges remain ahead, including the development of more sophisticated and specialised materials. Some examples include ceramics, organics, biomaterials, smart materials and fabrics, composites, polymers, and light metals.
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Smart information use
Improved data management for existing and new business applications and creative applications for digital technologies (examples include e-finance, multimedia, content generation and imaging). ICT applications are providing huge opportunities to deliver new systems, products, business solutions, and to make more efficient use of infrastructure. Examples include e-finance, multimedia, content generation and imaging. Improved data management is central to the future competitiveness of key industries such as agriculture, biotechnology, finance, banking, education, transport, government, health and ‘infotainment’. The ability of organisations to operate virtually and collaborate across huge distances in Australia and internationally hinges on our capabilities in this area. Research is also needed to exploit the huge potential in the digital media industry.
The importance of security and safety to Australia has been underscored by recent events.
Australia has to be capable of anticipating and tackling critical threats to society, strategic areas of the national economy and the environment.
The threats can potentially come from within and outside Australia.
The world is now characterised by the widespread and rapid movements of people, digitally coded data, goods and services, and exotic biological agents.
Critical infrastructure in Australia is increasingly dependent on digital technology for its management and integration.
Information protection and the integrity of security systems are now more important than ever before.
It is also necessary to protect the status of Australia as a nation free of many of the diseases affecting primary production around the world.
Terrorism has emerged as a very real global threat and crime is taking a significant toll on Australian society and economy.
Maintaining the operational advantage of Australia’s defence forces through superior capabilities is also fundamental to our national security.
Leading edge research in Australia is already yielding high dividends and as a national research priority will improve the effectiveness of that contribution.
Stronger research capabilities will ensure that solutions are tailored to Australia’s unique circumstances, reflecting its geographic features and small population.
Greater collaboration within the research community and with other stakeholders will allow us to better understand and manage potential threats to Australia.
Harnessing the knowledge and capabilities across Australia offers us the best chance of developing innovative and rapid solutions to serious threats.
Australia’s international relations and its regional influence will be strengthened through new science and technologies that enhance security and safety.
The heightened interest in personal and electronic security across the world also provides opportunities for Australian solutions.
Priority goals for research fall in the four areas of critical infrastructure, protecting Australia from invasive diseases and pests, protecting Australia from terrorism and crime, and transformational defence technologies.
Priority goals
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Critical infrastructure
Protecting Australia ’s critical infrastructure including our financial, energy, computing and transport systems. Protecting our critical infrastructure is important to national security and to the social and economic well being of Australia. An important aspect of this priority goal is e-security which is an enabler of e-commerce. Maintaining a critical mass of research in e-security will be essential in providing Australia with the tools to protect our way of life.
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Protecting Australia from invasive diseases and pests
Counteract the impact of invasive species through the application of new technologies and by integrating approaches across agencies and jurisdictions. Australia is free of many of the pests and diseases affecting primary production around the world. This status needs to be protected as the introduction of exotic species has the potential to adversely affect our exports and the environment. Australia already has strong skills and expertise in this area of research and further work will offer immediate benefits to the community. A greater level of coordination of our research effort will mean that Australia can more effectively develop innovative and rapid solutions to serious threats.
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Protecting Australia from terrorism and crime
By promoting a healthy and diverse Research and Development system that supports core competencies in modern and rapid identification techniques. Protecting Australia from terrorism is now more important than ever before in light of recent events and our involvement in the ‘war on terror’. Crime takes a significant toll on Australian society and economy. The June 2000 report from the Prime Minister’s Science, Engineering and Innovation Council estimated that crime costs Australia at least $18 billion per annum. Personal identification, information protection and the integrity of security systems are fundamental towards ensuring the national security of Australia. An effective solution will include building on Australia’s existing strengths in rapid detection using new analytical technologies and managing significant data collections.
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Transformational defence technologies
Transform military operations for the defence of Australia by providing superior technologies, better information and improved ways of operation. Australia has a small defence force to protect a large continent and a substantial maritime region of responsibility. Its operational advantage has been maintained through a superior capability which is dependent on leveraging innovative technologies. Although some benefits can be gained from overseas research, Australia has to conduct its own research to address uniquely Australian demands. A systems approach which harnesses the research capabilities of all stakeholders is essential to the successful development and introduction of innovative technologies.
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