Focus on Chile

Facts and figures, life scientists in Chile, EMBO opportunities

National Agency for Research and Development (ANID) of Chile has been an EMBC/EMBO co-operation partner since 2018.

Facts and figures

The Republic of Chile hosts world class astronomy facilities in the Atacama Desert including the ALMA radio telescope and the European Southern Observatory’s Paranal

Observatory[1]. Chile has also adopted the 2022 Declaration of Puntas Arenas recognizing the country’s southern regions as a natural laboratory for observation, study and adaptation to climate change.[2]

Chile has 61 state and private universities.[3]The University of Chile in Santiago was founded in 1842 and is the country’s oldest. It has 16 faculties and three interdisciplinary institutes and attracted 46,937 students in 2021.[4]

National enrolment in universities exceeded 1.3 million in 2023 with female participation of 53.5% representing a 2.5% increase in female enrolment over the previous year. Doctoral students comprised less than one per cent of total enrolment.[5]

In 2020, estimated gross expenditure on R&D was 675 billion pesos or 0.33% of GDP. Government and the business sector accounted for a third of the total each and the higher education / non-profit sector one quarter.[6] About 16,300 people in Chile were employed in R&D work in 2020.[7]

Most patents in Chile are filed from abroad, with 2,764 patent applications submitted by non-residents and 3,136 total applications filed in 2022 to the Instituto Nacional de Propiedad Industrial (INAPI) .[8]

The Chilean government created the Ministry of Science, Technology, Knowledge and Innovation in 2018 and published a national strategy in 2022[9] with the vision of strengthening the country’s research ecosystem. Government R&D expenditure in Chile is undertaken through two funding agencies: the Chilean economic development agency (CORFO) and the National Agency of Research and Development (ANID).

A scientific and technological cooperation agreement was signed in 2002, allowing Chile to participate in the European Commission research and innovation programmes.[10]

EMBO and Chile’s cooperation agreement commenced in 2018.

Population: 19.8 million[11]
R&D spending: 0.33% of GDP[6]
People employed in R&D: 16,348[7]
Researchers per 1,000 employed: 14.7[16]
Patents (INAPI): 3,136[8]
Researchers in business enterprise: ~136,300[17]
Higher education institutions: 61[4]
Higher education enrolment: 1,301,925[5]
Horizon 2020 & Horizon Europe funding[12]:
  • Number of signed grants: 151
  • 202 participating organizations
  • One ERC principal investigator36 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions-funded researchers

Life scientists in Taiwan are eligible for all of the EMBO Programmes. Find out about all EMBO funding schemes here.

Click to expand

All information as of July 2024.

References

Meet scientists from the EMBO communities