It's absolutely not affecting the research agenda or staff in any way. The goal in these extraordinary times was to look at, for example, travel budgets and international conferences. Nobody is going to them. Otherwise, some of our research has been slowed down because of respecting physical distancing on site, since we can't have the same number of people moving through.
We looked at our budget and saw there was money there that we didn't think we could spend. We were very comfortable that this money would lapse, because things like travel would obviously not happen. We wanted to get this money into the hands of the sector, and that's what we've done, but we certainly aren't creating any restrictions on our expenditures otherwise. People who want to undertake projects can do it in the context of public health guidance. When travel resumes and people are going to conferences that open up, there will be no restrictions on that later.