Key Features
Businesses can apply for a share of £15 million for projects that support SMEs to develop innovations in health and life sciences
Programme: Innovate UK
Award: Up to £1.4m
Opens: 12th Sep 2016
Closes: 16th Nov 2016
The aim of this competition is to stimulate innovation in Health and Life Sciences (H&LS). Projects must cover at least one of the following Innovate UK priority areas:
Proposals should indicate how projects will enable a step change in competitiveness and productivity for at least one UK SME involved in the project.
Applications from the following themes are encouraged:
Increasing agricultural productivity – Including advanced and precision engineering and fighting agro-chemical and antimicrobial resistance
Improved food quality and sustainability – Including authenticity and traceability and enhanced nutritional value
Precision medicine – Including companion diagnostics and antimicrobial resistance
Advanced therapies – Including preclinical testing and advanced therapies and preparation and execution of early clinical trials
Biosciences – Including synthetic biology and computational systems biology
For more information on specific competition themes, click here.
Eligibility
To lead a project, you must:
If project costs are less than £100,000, an SME can work on the project alone or with partners.
If project costs are £100,000 or more, the project must include at least 2 grant-claiming partners working together.
Funding and project details
Innovate UK have allocated up to £15 million to fund innovation projects.
Projects may focus on technical feasibility, industrial research or experimental development.
All projects must involve at least one SME and a business must lead the project.
Stream 1
Project costs of up to £100,000 for up to 12 months.
Stream 2
Project costs of over £100,000 or over 12 months.
Projects are expected to last from 6 months to 3 years and to range in size from total costs of £50,000 to £2 million.
Project types
For technical feasibility studies and industrial research, you could get:
For experimental development projects which are nearer to market, you could get: