Brazil to become an Associate Member State of CERN
Tuesday 12 April 2022

CERN Director-General Fabiola Gianotti and Brazilian Minister for Science, Technology and Innovation Marcos Pontes (Image: CERN) Geneva,
12 April 2022. On 3 March 2022, CERN Director-General Fabiola Gianotti
and Brazilian Minister for Science, Technology and Innovation Marcos
Pontes signed an agreement admitting Brazil as an Associate Member State
of CERN1. The Associate Membership will enter into force
once Brazil has completed all necessary accession and ratification
processes. Brazil will be the first country in Latin America to join
CERN as an Associate Member State. “We are very pleased to welcome
Brazil as an Associate Member State. Over the past three decades,
Brazilian scientists have contributed substantially to many CERN
projects. This agreement enables Brazil and CERN to further strengthen
our collaboration, opening up a broad range of new and mutually
beneficial opportunities in fundamental research, technological
developments and innovation, and education and training activities,”
said Fabiola Gianotti, CERN Director-General.
“The accession
of Brazil to CERN Associate Membership creates a robust framework for
collaboration in research, technology development and innovation. The
Brazilian scientific community has collaborated with CERN since its
creation. Being an Associate Member State will foster novel
opportunities for our scientists and engineers to participate in
activities developed at CERN. Our industry will benefit as well through
the participation in contract bids for both R&D and the supply of
services and materials. I am certain that this partnership will take the
Brazilian science, technology and innovation sector to a whole new
level of development,” said Marcos Pontes, Brazilian Minister for
Science, Technology and Innovation1. Formal cooperation
between CERN and Brazil started in 1990 with the signature of an
International Cooperation Agreement, allowing Brazilian researchers to
participate in the DELPHI experiment at the Large Electron–Positron
Collider (LEP). Today, Brazilian institutes participate in all the main
experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC): ALICE, ATLAS, CMS and
LHCb. They are also involved in several other experiments and R&D
programmes, such as ALPHA, ProtoDUNE at the Neutrino Platform, ISOLDE,
Medipix and RD51. Brazilian nationals also participate very actively in
CERN training and outreach programmes, including the Summer Student
programme, the Portuguese-Language Teacher programme and the Beamline
for Schools competition. Over the past decade, Brazil’s
experimental particle-physics community has doubled in size. At the four
main LHC experiments alone, more than 180 Brazilian scientists,
engineers and students collaborate in fields ranging from hardware and
data processing to physics analysis. Beyond particle physics, CERN and
Brazil’s National Centre for Research in Energy and Materials (CNPEM)
have also been formally cooperating since December 2020 on accelerator
technology R&D and its applications. As an Associate Member
State, Brazil will attend meetings of the CERN Council and the Finance
Committee. Brazilian nationals will be eligible for limited-duration
staff positions, fellowships and studentships. Brazilian companies will
be able to bid for CERN contracts, increasing opportunities for
industrial collaboration in advanced technologies.
1 Marcos Pontes served as Brazilian Minister for Science, Technology and Innovation until 31 March 2022.
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