Defence Science and Technology Laboratory
File:Dstl.svg | |
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 2 July 2001 |
Preceding agency | |
Jurisdiction | United Kingdom |
Headquarters | Porton Down, Wiltshire |
Employees | 3,636 (2009/10 average) |
Agency executive | |
Parent agency | Ministry of Defence |
Website | www |
The Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) is a trading fund of the Ministry of Defence of the United Kingdom. Responsibility for it lies with the Minister for Defence Equipment, Support and Technology, currently Philip Dunne.[1] Its board is chaired by Sir David Pepper.[2]
Its stated purpose is "to maximise the impact of science and technology for the defence and security of the UK."[3]
Contents
History
In July 2001, the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency (DERA) was split into two parts, Dstl and Qinetiq. Dstl was established to carry out science and technology work that is best done within government,[4] while the majority and that suitable for industry was transferred to QinetiQ, a wholly owned government company before being floated on the stock exchange.
Organisation
Dstl is a trading fund owned by the Secretary of State for Defence. Most funding comes from the Ministry of Defence (MOD), while a small portion comes from other government departments and commercial sources. According to 2012/13 figures, 93% of Dstl's income comes from the MOD.[5]
From its creation in 2001 the Chief Executive was Martin J Earwicker until he left in 2006 for the Science Museum.[6] Dr Frances Saunders took over as acting Chief Executive in May 2006[7] and was appointed as Chief Executive in August 2007.[8][9]
On 29 June 2011 Dr Saunders announced to staff that her post had been advertised and that she would not be applying.[10] On 13 December 2011 the MOD announced that Jonathan Lyle, Director of the Programme Office at Dstl, would replace Dr Saunders in March 2012.[11]
Dstl consists of the following operational departments:[5]
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- Air and Weapons Systems
- Biomedical Sciences
- Detection
- Environmental Sciences
- Information Management
- Joint Systems
- Land Battlespace Systems
- Naval Systems
- Physical Sciences
- Policy and Capability Studies
- Security Sciences
- Sensors and Countermeasures
Operations
Dstl carries out a broad range of work from high-level analysis to support Ministry of Defence policy and procurement decisions, to technical research in defence areas such as biomedical science and electronics, alongside operational work such as forensic analysis of explosives[12] and providing paid volunteer scientists to Iraq and Afghanistan to provide rapid scientific advice to British forces. It has done work for around 40 government departments and agencies including the Home Office and Department for Transport.[13] It undertakes research with both industry and academia to achieve its role.[14]
Following a review and consultation process initiated by MOD's Chief Scientific Advisor, it become responsible for the formulation and commission of MOD's non-nuclear research programme from 1 Apr 2010, under the responsibility of the DST Programme Office.[15][16] Within the Programme Office are 16 domains [17] with some established as Science and Technology Centres, including Armour and Protection, Cyber and Influence, Counter Terrorism, and CBR (Chemical, Biological and Radiological).[18] These centres fund research via the Centre for Defence Enterprise,[19] also part[20] of the Programme Office.
Current locations
Sites include:
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- Alverstoke, Hampshire (as a tenant of the Institute of Naval Medicine)
- Fort Halstead, Kent (until 2016)[21]
- Porton Down, Wiltshire (headquarters)
- Portsdown West, Hampshire
- Harwell, Oxfordshire (within the science and innovation campus)
Spin-offs
In April 2005[22] the technology transfer company Ploughshare Innovations Ltd was formed to manage and exploit intellectual property within Dstl.[23] Dstl and Ploughshare Innovations have successfully spun-out several new companies including Acolyte Biomedica Ltd (since acquired by 3m Medical Diagnostics Ltd), Alaska Food Diagnostics Ltd,[24] Enigma Diagnostics Ltd, Lucigen Ltd, ProKyma Technologies Ltd, Sherwood Therapeutics and P2i Ltd.
See also
- The Technical Cooperation Program (TTCP) – an international defence science and technology collaboration between Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States.
- DARPA – US Defence Agency responsible for the development of new technology for the US military.
- Defence Science and Technology Organisation – a branch of the Australian Department of Defence that researches and develops technologies for the Australian defence industry.
- Qinetiq – the part of Defence Evaluation and Research Agency (DERA) privatised in June 2001, with the remainder of DERA renamed Dstl.
Notes and references
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External links
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- ↑ https://www.dstl.gov.uk/downloads/framework.pdf
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 https://www.dstl.gov.uk/downloads/Annual%20Report%20and%20Accounts%202012_13.pdf
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- ↑ https://www.dstl.gov.uk/downloads/15-08-07.pdf
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- ↑ Global email to all staff dated 29/6/11
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- ↑ https://www.dstl.gov.uk/whoweworkwith
- ↑ https://www.dstl.gov.uk/industry
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- ↑ http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/+/http://www.bis.gov.uk/assets/ukspaceagency/docs/space%20science/aurora/knowledge-exchange-april-2011/gibson-dstl-presentation.pdf
- ↑ https://www.dstl.gov.uk/scienceandtechnologycentres
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- ↑ DSTL Press Release dated 17/6/2011 https://www.dstl.gov.uk/downloads/Dstl_Fort_Halstead.pdf
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- Pages with reference errors
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- Official website not in Wikidata
- Defence agencies of the United Kingdom
- Science and technology in the United Kingdom
- Defence science and technology agencies
- Trading funds of the United Kingdom government
- 2001 establishments in the United Kingdom
- Aerospace industry in the United Kingdom
- Biosafety level 4 laboratories