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Negotiations on subscription fees and Open Access between Dutch universities and Elsevier fail -

Negotiations between the Dutch universities and publishing company Elsevier on subscription fees and Open Access have ground to a halt. In line with the policy pursued by the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science, the universities want academic publications to be freely accessible. To that end, agreements will have to be made with publishers. The proposal presented by Elsevier last week failed to address this inevitable change. The universities hope that Elsevier will submit an amended proposal.

Agreements are being made with individual academic publishers on subscription fees for academic journals for all Dutch research universities and universities of applied sciences, as well as for the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) and other research institutes. These agreements form part of what are known as the 'Big Deal' negotiations. The universities are only prepared to renew the agreements on subscriptions if the publishers take steps towards Open Access. Several publishers are not very keen to do so, given the drastic changes in their revenue model that this transition will cause. At the same time, negotiations with publishers other than Elsevier have shown that the parties do succeed in moving towards Open Access.

The Dutch universities and the Dutch government are very much in favour of opening access to academic publications. Open Access publications are easier to find, more frequently quoted and capable of reaching a larger audience - benefiting not only science, but society and the economy at large. According to targets set by State Secretary Dekker for Education, Culture and Science, five and ten years from now 60 percent and 100 percent of all Dutch academic publications, respectively, should be Open Access publications. A great deal of academic research depends on public funds, and the universities aim to prevent a situation in which users eventually have to pay twice for consulting Open Access publications.

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