Professor Sir David King, Director

director [at] smithschool.ox.ac.uk

 

Professor Sir David King became the Smith School's first Director in January 2008. Since then, he has drawn together an elite group of full-time, associate and visiting academics from all over the world to be part of the School. With them he if forging links with global businesses and politicians from every continent to achieve the Smith School's aims - to be a catalyst for innovative science, progressive decision-making and sustainable economic progress.

Sir David was the UK Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser and Head of the Government Office of Science from October 2000 to 31 December 2007. In that time, he alerted governments worldwide to the threat of climate change. He was instrumental in creating the £1bn Energy Technologies Institute and was Director of the government’s Foresight Programme, creating an in-depth horizon scanning process to advise ministers on a range of long-term problems, from flooding to obesity.

Sir David chaired the government’s Global Science and Innovation Forum from its inception and advised on the foot-and-mouth epidemic of 2001, post 9/11 risks to the UK, GM foods and energy provision. He was heavily involved in establishing the government’s Science and Innovation Strategy of 2004-2014. After leaving government he co-authored The Hot Topic (Bloomsbury).

Sir David was born in South Africa in 1939 and in 1974, after an early career at the University of Witwatersrand, Imperial College and the University of East Anglia, he became the Brunner Professor of Physical Chemistry at the University of Liverpool. In 1988, he was appointed 1920 Professor of Physical Chemistry at the University of Cambridge, subsequently becoming Master of Downing College (1995-2000) and Head of Cambridge University Chemistry Department (1993-2000). He has published more than 500 papers on chemical physics and science and policy, and has been awarded numerous prizes, fellowships, and honorary degrees. He remains Director of Research at the Department of Chemistry in Cambridge. He was President of the British Science Association from 2008-9.

 

1 October 2009

Top scientists call for Nobel prize reform

A groupof leading scientists and engineers has written an open letter to the Nobel Foundation proposing changes to align the Nobel awards more closely with modern science. They says the prizes should reflect new scientific challenges such as climate change.

 

9 July 2009

World Forum shows G8 how it's done

G8 countries are blocking progress on climate change talks. But the Smith School World Forum proved that other governments, and business, are forging low-carbon futures.

 

12 June 2009

We need energy research more than ever before 

New interest in energy research and development is timely, Sir David King told the Oxford Energy Futures Conference. He said the need to keep the lights on, maintain competitiveness and reduce emissions meant energy research was “the most important topic of today.”