SCRI Forms 'Super Institute' to Tackle World Problems

Published

12th April 2011

Scottish Crop Research Institute helps to form new research 'super institute', tasked with tackling some of the world's most challenging problems including the impact of climate change and threats to food and water security.

The James Hutton Institute, formally launched on the 5 April at the Royal Society of Edinburgh, brings together the Macaulay Land Use Research Institute in Aberdeen and SCRI, Scotland's renowned centre for crop research and breeding, based at Invergowrie near Dundee.

The new research organisation will employ more than 600 scientists, researchers and support staff, making it one of the biggest institutes of its type in Europe and a potential world-leader in agricultural and environmental science in which Scotland already excels.

Named after the Edinburgh-born founder of modern geology, James Hutton, one of the leading figures of the 18th century Scottish Enlightenment, The Institute has been hailed by the UK's Chief Scientist, Sir John Beddington, saying 'This is an exciting development. It needs to be followed through. The challenges out there for the world community are enormous and we need hard work and innovation and excitement and drive and enthusiasm.'

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