Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
About us Latest news News News articles

ERC laureates in the limelight

30 November 2011

The University of Groningen researchers who were awarded an ERC grant this year were made the centre of attention last week. They were festively welcomed to the Academy Building and officially made members of the University of Groningen ERC Club. No fewer than nine researchers were invited because they had won a prestigious Starting Grant from the European Research Council (ERC); two others were invited because they were awarded an ERC Advanced Grant.

group photograph
Back row L-R: Prof. Thijs van der Hulst, Prof. Jan-Jacob Schuringa, Prof. Caspar van der Wal, Prof. Niels Taatgen, Prof. Antoine van Ooijen, Dr Gerard Roelfes. Front row L-R: Dr Sijbren Otto, Prof. Dirk Jan Slotboom, Dr Wesley Browne, Dr Ellen Nollen, Bert Verveld (General Director of the Office of the University of Groningen), Neeltje Miedema (Transfer&Liason Group, University of Groningen) , Dr Wesley Browne. Not in the photo: Prof. Peter Lansdorp/photo: Kees van de Veen

The Starting Grant laureates each receive a budget of about EUR 1.5 million from the ERC for pioneering research that will last about five years. The grant will enable them to conduct independent research with a team that they can form or expand. The winners of an Advanced Grant each receive about EUR 2.5 million.

Creative and driven

The ERC programme is intended to support the most creative and driven researchers in every field of study. There is only one selection criterion – outstanding quality. The laureates are thus mainly linked to the high class research institutes at the University, such as the Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials, the Stratingh Institute for Chemistry, the NOVA top research school to which the Kapteyn Institute for Astronomy is linked, or ERIBA, the joint medical-biological research institute of the University of Groningen/UMCG.

University of Groningen top of the list for Starting Grants

The Netherlands is very successful at gaining ERC research grants. This year 47 Starting Grants were awarded to researchers at Dutch universities. That is nearly ten percent of the total of 480 grants, which together represent a total value of EUR 670 million.
The University of Groningen holds a special position in the acquisition of ERC grants. With regard to Dutch universities, Groningen has achieved an excellent score for the fourth year in a row. With 19 successful researchers since 2007, when the first ERC call was published, Groningen is by far and away the university with the most Starting Grants. Last year, the success percentage at European level was about 13 percent. The University of Groningen has a success percentage of over 25 percent.


For more information: Neeltje Miedema

Within the University of Groningen, ERC consultant Neeltje Miedema of the EU team within the Transfer and Liaison Group together with former and current ERC grant recipients gives advice to prospective laureates on how to translate and present their talent in a way that will lead to the acquisition of ERC project finance. To this end she works with other departments within the University (Academic Affairs and Human Resources), with the UMCG Research Office and with AgentschapNL.

Last modified:24 August 2021 3.27 p.m.
View this page in: Nederlands

More news

  • 18 April 2024

    PET-scan expert Jan Pruim benoemd tot Officier in Orde van Oranje Nassau

    Hoogleraar medische beeldvorming Jan Pruim is bij zijn afscheid van het UMCG benoemd tot Officier in de Orde van Oranje Nassau. De koninklijke versierselen werden hem op woensdag 17 april uitgereikt door burgemeester Koen Schuiling van de gemeente...

  • 16 April 2024

    UG signs Barcelona Declaration on Open Research Information

    In a significant stride toward advancing responsible research assessment and open science, the University of Groningen has officially signed the Barcelona Declaration on Open Research Information.

  • 15 April 2024

    Night vision with artificial atoms

    Every two weeks, UG Makers puts the spotlight on a researcher who has created something tangible, ranging from homemade measuring equipment for academic research to small or larger products that can change our daily lives. That is how UG...