Transformative impact the focus of Research Ireland €20m investment in 22 high-risk, high-reward projects

Transformative impact the focus of Research Ireland €20m investment in 22 high-risk, high-reward projects

Author: Irish Tech News May 14, 2026 Duration: 8:02
Minister for Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science, James Lawless TD, has announced funding of €20million for 22 high-risk, high-reward research projects through the Research Ireland Frontiers for the Future Programme.
Minister Lawless said: "The 22 projects announced today under Research Ireland's Frontiers for the Future Programme are ambitious in both scope and scale, spanning areas from pioneering cancer therapies to advancing a more sustainable and circular economy, and much more besides. The breadth of research being funded reflects the exceptional depth and diversity of talent across our research and innovation ecosystem. I congratulate all the awardees and wish them every success as they push the boundaries of knowledge and deliver meaningful innovation."
Welcoming the announcement, Dr Diarmuid O'Brien, CEO of Research Ireland, commented: "Curiosity-driven research funding is an essential part of a healthy, purposeful and forward-looking research ecosystem. Through the Frontiers for the Future Programme, Research Ireland supports researchers to take intellectual risks, and to pursue ideas that might not yet have a clear pathway, but could fundamentally reshape our understanding of the world around us. Supports like these are central to sustaining a vibrant and internationally competitive research environment, which is a core element of our recently launched strategy, 'Curiosity. Capability. Competitiveness – Charting Ireland's Research and Innovation Future."
Frontiers for the Future is a legacy programme inherited from Science Foundation Ireland (SFI), and has played an important role in supporting ambitious, curiosity-driven scientific research with the potential to deliver transformative societal and economic impact. As a new agency, Research Ireland is reimagining and redeveloping the legacy programmes inherited from both SFI and the Irish Research Council (IRC) to reflect its broadened remit and the full diversity of disciplines now supported, as set out in our recently published Programme Plan.
Research initiatives funded under the Frontiers for the Future programme enable independent investigators to pursue bold ideas and innovative research over a four- to five-year period. Research areas funded today range from advanced materials and road safety to antimicrobial resistance and cancer treatment, with this funding round supporting 16 medium-scale 'projects' and six larger scale 'awards'.
The funding announced today represents the final Frontiers for the Future outcome for the 'Projects' stream of this programme. Future investigator-led funding of this scale is now being delivered through the Research Ireland Investigators programme, which combines aspects of the former Frontiers for the Future 'projects' funding and IRC Laureate programme. The Investigators Programme will run annually, and is open to independent researchers across all disciplines.
Some highlights of funded Projects are:
GlycoMetalGuard: Glycoconjugate metal complexes as targeted bacterial therapeutics and protective coatings suitable for medical devices (Dr Joseph Byrne, University College Dublin):
Dr Byrne and his team are developing innovative antimicrobial coatings and therapies to prevent hospital-acquired infections stemming from medical devices. The research aims to target harmful bacteria with novel sugar-based metal compounds, supporting efforts to addressing antimicrobial resistance and improving patient safety and quality of life.
SHIELD: Intelligent Reflecting Surface for Enhanced Integrated Sensing and Communication to Protect Vulnerable Road Users (Dr Md Noor-A-Rahim, University College Cork):
Dr Noor-A-Rahim and his team are developing new ways to improve the safety of vulnerable road users such as cyclists and pedestrians in busy urban environments. The research aims to overcome the limitations of existing sensor-based systems and generate new knowledge and practical solutions that support safer, smarte...

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