OXFORD University’s highest honour for philanthropy has been awarded to INEOS Chairman Sir Jim Ratcliffe in recognition of the company’s £100 million gift to research the growing resistance to antibiotics. INEOS’ funding led to the creation of the Ineos Oxford Institute, which is now a world-leading centre of research, training and education aimed at combating antimicrobial resistance.
“It is a privilege to partner with such a worldclass university, whose history is entwined with that of antibiotics, to tackle such a key global challenge,” he said. “And I am encouraged to see Oxford’s remarkable ethos and academic rigour already making promising progress in the field.”
Antimicrobial resistance is one of the hidden dangers facing humanity. It has been caused by overuse and misuse of antibiotics, which now threatens to claim more than 10 million lives every year by 2050 unless new drugs can be found to replace existing antibiotics that have lost their efficacy.
Sir Jim was presented with the Sheldon Medal by the Vice Chancellor of the University of Oxford, Professor Irene Tracey, at the Sheldonian Theatre.
“Thanks to INEOS’ transformational gift, we can work collaboratively towards global solutions and, together, reduce this significant threat to humanity,” she said.
The university’s Vice-Chancellor said she had no doubt that the institute would devise a way to protect the future of modern medicine in the ‘not-too-distant future’.
The presentation, which also recognised INEOS co-owners John Reece and Andy Currie, was followed by dinner in the Divinity School.
Earlier, former Tory Party leader William Hague, now Lord Hague of Richmond and Chancellor-elect of the University of Oxford, thanked Sir Jim for his ‘remarkable generosity’ and unwavering belief in what Oxford could achieve.
“I am looking forward to seeing what the Ineos Oxford Institute achieves in the coming years and to getting to know Sir Jim as I take up my role,” he said.
The medal is named after Gilbert Sheldon, one of Oxford’s early benefactors, who graduated in 1620. As Archbishop of Canterbury he funded the entire cost of Christopher Wren’s ambitious masterpiece at the Sheldonian Theatre.
The medal, which is reserved for an individual benefactor who has made a strategic difference to the life of the university, was first awarded in 2002.
Previous recipients have included the late Dr James Martin, whose book The Wired Society: A Challenge for Tomorrow contained remarkably accurate descriptions of how computerisation, telecommunications and the rise of the internet would change the world.
His donation founded the Oxford Martin School in 2005.
Sir Leonard Blavatnik won the award in 2012 after he donated £75 million to the University of Oxford to establish the Blavatnik School of Government, whose vision is of a world better led, better served and better governed.
THE SHELDON MEDAL
The medal awarded to Sir Jim was designed and executed by renowned sculptor Emma Lavender, who worked over many months to create the finished piece. A portrait of Sir Jim sits on the obverse of the medal and a representation of the Sheldonian Theatre adorns the reverse. Only two of each design are ever produced: a silver presentation piece given to the recipient and a bronze copy deposited within the Heberden Coin Room of the Ashmolean Museum.
‘It is a privilege to partner with such a world-class university, whose history is entwined with that of antibiotics, to tackle such a key global challenge.’