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Canada 150 program results in 'brain gain' for Canadian universities: Duncan

Twenty-four scientists have been selected as Canada 150 Research Chairs. Grants of up to $1 million are provided to each for seven years to conduct research in Canada.

24 scientists have been picked from thousands of applicants to be Canada 150 Research Chairs

Minister of Science Kirsty Duncan poses with some of the Canada 150 Research Chairs in Gatineau, Quebec. Twenty-four scientists have been chosen to receive new research grants. (Patrick Doyle/Canadian Press)

Last June, Science Minister Kirsty Duncan hung out the "we're hiring" sign and dangled grants of up to $1 million to try and lure some of the best and brightest international researchers to come to work in Canada.

Nine months later, 24 scientists have been given the nod 10 of themCanadians coming home from all over the world.

Duncan calls it a "brain gain."

"We're in a global talent competition," Duncan said. "All the research superpowers want to pull the best and brightest to their countries."

$117Min funding up for grabs

The Canada 150 Research Chairs program was introduced last year with $117 million, aiming to hire between 15 and 35 scientists currently working abroad.

Duncan said "thousands" of people applied, their applications were peer reviewed and 24 have been chosen.

She said many of the scientists say the fact Canada chose to celebrate its 150th birthday with a major investment in scientific research was a big reason why they applied.

Minister of Science Kirsty Duncan, right, speaks with two new Canada 150 Research Chairs, Katherine O'Brien, left, and Shireen Hassim, centre. (Patrick Doyle/Canadian Press)

Carolyn Fischer, an economist with a Washington, D.C.-based think tank, had been collaborating with the Smart Prosperity Institute at the University of Ottawa when the Canada 150 research chairs program was announced. She was flooded with messages from people telling her to apply, so she did.

"It's an exciting opportunity," she said.

Fischer's area of expertise is the environment and economy and she said the University of Ottawa has been developing expertise on it, which makes moving to Canada to be part of that appealing. So did the idea of working in Ottawa, where the federal government is in the midst of rolling out a national carbon pricing policy.

"There is a bit more going on in climate policy than in the U.S., at least at the federal level right now, so it seems like a good time to swing north," she said.

The United States is the only country in the world not currently endorsing the international Paris accord agreement to cut greenhouse emissions. It signed on under former president Barack Obama, but President Donald Trump says he will pull out of the agreement in 2020, the earliest date any country can withdraw.

Fischer was born in Ontario to a pair of computer science professors one American, one Canadian then working at the University of Waterloo. She grew up mostly in the United States and has been for the last 20 years a fellow at Resources for the Future in Washington.

Diverse research backgrounds

Duncan has been pushing universities and granting councils to bring up their game in attracting women to chairs jobseven threatening not to renew funding for other research jobs at schools that don't improve their gender ratios. Fourteen of the Canada 150 research chairs are held bywomen, which Duncan saidis a huge accomplishment.

Each chair position comes with a grant of either $350,000 or $1 million, for seven years.

The 24 researchers will work in a variety of fields including theoretical and quantum chemistry, hydrology, vaccinology and bacterial cell biology, new media and environment economics.

They come from institutions across the United States, including Harvard University, UCLA, Duke Universityand Johns Hopkins University, as well as post-secondary institutions in England, Austria and South Africa. They will take up residence at more than a dozen schools across Canada in almost every province.