What can we gain from open access to Australian research? Climate action for a start
- Written by Lucy Montgomery, Program Lead, Innovation in Knowledge Communication, Curtin University
The COP26 meeting has sharpened the world’s focus on climate change. To adapt and thrive in a world of reduced emissions, Australian businesses and communities need access to the technologies and innovation made possible by the nation’s researchers. But most Australian research is locked behind publisher paywalls.
Open access to research has become an important strategy to speed innovation. Making COVID-19-related research and data publicly accessible to fast-track the development of vaccines, treatments and policies is one example.
Given the gravity of the global climate emergency, it seems reasonable also to use open access to help speed green innovation.
Read more: All publicly funded research could soon be free for you, the taxpayer, to read[1]
Mick Tsikas/AAPBut, as Prime Minister Scott Morrison recently noted[2], research systems driven by a “publish or perish mindset” do little to spur innovation. Scholarly communication models that lock research behind paywalls slow the flow of new knowledge from researchers into real-world innovation.
Australian universities pay hundreds of millions of dollars in subscription fees each year for access to publications by Australian researchers. Businesses, policy advisers, think-tanks and private individuals who don’t have access to a university library must either pay separately for access or miss out.
This is despite the fact Australia invests an estimated A$12 billion of taxpayer money[3] each year in research and innovation, according to Chief Scientist Cathy Foley. Action is needed to ensure this publicly funded research can be translated into innovation for the wider economy.
Read more: Making Australian research free for everyone to read sounds ideal. But the Chief Scientist's open-access plan isn't risk-free[4]
How does Australia compare to the world?
International research communities are already using open-access strategies to maximise the impacts of climate-related research. Our analysis of publication data* shows between 2011 and 2020 the proportion of research on climate change that is open access rose from 30% to 50%. This is consistent with an accelerating international shift[5] towards “public access to publicly funded research”.