October 2010: Research at CU-Boulder PowerPoint Presentation

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Transcript October 2010: Research at CU-Boulder PowerPoint Presentation

CU-Boulder Research and
Creative Works
Prepared by the Office of the Vice Chancellor
for Research
October 2010
Rapidly Growing Sponsored
Research Awards
2010: $454,386,816
2009: $339,684,761
2008: $280,009,342
2007: $266,088,557
2006: $256,452,911
FISCAL YEAR 2010
Number of Awards: 1,944
Award Amount: $454,386,816
=
Approximately 1/3 of total university revenue
OCG Annual Report Fiscal Year 2009-2010
Awards by Funding Agency
$454,386,816
$120,000,000.00
$100,000,000.00
$80,000,000.00
$60,000,000.00
$40,000,000.00
$20,000,000.00
$0.00
Awards By Department: FY 2010
Campus Units
Number of Awards
Award Amount
1,944
454,386,816
ADMINISTRATION AND COLLEGES
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS (includes ATLAS)
CONTINUING EDUCATION
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SERVICES
INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION
LIBRARY
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS (LEEDS)
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
SCHOOL OF LAW
STUDENT AFFAIRS
WARDENBURG HEALTH CENTER
TOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND COLLEGES
12
3
1
2
2
6
27
8
13
1
75
2,919,717
15,947
62,592
63,385
15,739
4,373,092
7,858,617
1,386,566
5,919,834
11,911
22,627,400
TOTAL COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
626
92,961,225
TOTAL COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCE
539
65,770,967
TOTAL GRADUATE SCHOOL AND RESEARCH INSTITUTES
704
273,027,224
TOTAL FY 2010 (JULY 1, 2009 - JUNE 30, 2010)
Awards By Institute: FY 2010
Campus Units
Number of Awards
GRADUATE SCHOOL AND RESEARCH INSTITUTES
CENTER FOR LIMB ATMOSPHERIC SOUNDING (CLAS)
5
COLORADO INITIATIVE FOR MOLECULAR BIOTECHNOLOGY (CIMB)
2
COOPERATIVE INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH IN ENV. SCIENCES
228
GRADUATE SCHOOL
5
INSTITUTE FOR BEHAVIORAL GENETICS
48
INSTITUTE OF ARCTIC AND ALPINE RESEARCH
75
INSTITUTE OF BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE
29
INSTITUTE OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE
32
JILA
84
LABORATORY FOR ATMOSPHERIC AND SPACE PHYSICS (LASP)
178
MUSEUM
17
RENEWABLE AND SUSTAINABLE ENERGY INSTITUTE (RASEI)
1
TOTAL GRADUATE SCHOOL AND RESEARCH INSTITUTES
704
Award Amount
4,865,283
16,400,000
65,330,350
4,120,441
13,614,178
11,193,388
4,894,672
6,740,010
44,015,503
100,373,344
1,330,055
150,000
273,027,224
Proposals By Department: FY 2010
Campus Units
Number of Proposals
TOTAL FY 2010 (JULY 1, 2009 - JUNE 30, 2010)
Amount
2241
1,532,425,977
80
38,011,862
TOTAL COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
748
402,820,067
TOTAL COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCE
698
426,589,120
TOTAL GRADUATE SCHOOL AND RESEARCH INSTITUTES
715
665,004,928
TOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND COLLEGES
Research Expenditures: FY 2010
OTHER
FEDERAL
STATE OF
TOTAL
EXPENDED
EXPENSE CATEGORY
FEDERAL
AWARDS
FLOW THRU &
COLORADO
AWARDS
INDUSTRY
AWARDS
NON-FEDERAL
AWARDS
SALARIES & WAGES
$ 128,700,562.53 $
99,406,560.49 $3,125,743.65 $ 4,984,095.17 $ 21,184,163.22
FRINGE BENEFITS
$
31,803,674.34 $
24,823,452.93 $ 708,453.63 $
TUITION
$
5,438,263.87 $
SUPPLIES & SERVICES
SUBCONTRACTS &
SUBAWARDS
$
43,657,393.98 $
33,882,841.59 $1,198,557.67 $ 1,163,737.84 $ 7,412,256.88
$
24,451,408.20 $
17,945,859.11 $
TRAVEL
$
9,863,193.20 $
7,477,173.77 $
UTILITIES
$
250,682.56 $
STIPENDS
$
3,730,039.16 $
LIBRARY
$
21,819.20 $
EQUIPMENT
$
9,836,259.21 $
INDIRECT COSTS
$
73,192,374.09 $
TOTAL
330,945,670
3,731,024.80 $
99,345.42 $
521,357.26 $ 1,086,536.39
97,436.41 $ 1,352,612.18 $ 5,055,500.50
98,203.36 $
237,132.59
3,528,858.86 $
851,059.11 $ 5,420,708.67
400,045.97 $ 1,887,770.10
$
97.30 $
13,452.67
8,093.96 $
31,047.03 $
162,039.31
21,819.20
$
7,659,278.95 $ 375,434.31 $
-
195,809.62 $ 1,605,736.33
58,107,236.27 $ 897,590.20 $ 2,226,189.90 $ 11,961,357.72
256,821,239
6,608,859
11,726,051
55,789,522
Where are we headed?
Research-Related Elements of
Flagship 2030 Strategic Plan
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Fostering Research Excellence
Enhancing Graduate Education
Enhancing Education and Scholarship
Colorado’s Research Diamond
Transcending Traditional Academic Boundaries
Five Interdisciplinary Initiatives
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
Aerospace
Biotechnology
Computational Sciences and Engineering
Geosciences
Renewable and Sustainable Energy
Pushing the Aerospace Envelope
•CU-Boulder is the only research institution in the world that
has designed and built NASA space instruments that traveled
to every planet in the solar system
•LASP-The Laboratory for the Atmospheric and Space Physicsat CU-Boulder is the most experienced university-based space
research in the world
•The CU-Boulder Department of Aerospace Engineering
Sciences is ranked as high as 2nd nationally by the National
Research Council (NRC)
Pushing the Aerospace Envelope
Colorado’s Aerospace Industry is soaring and CU-Boulder is large
part of that success
• LASP is one of the oldest ad most prestigious space
programs in the nation.
• Colorado has the nation’s 3rd largest aerospace economy.
• Colorado is home to more than 300 aerospace companies,
contractors, and suppliers..
• Colorado has nearly 177,000 people working in spacerelated jobs.
• No other public university in the world receives more NASA
funding. Between 2005 and 2009, CU-Boulder received
nearly $300 million in NASA grants and contracts to support
space research and education.
Generating Energy Solutions
Colorado has become a national hub for new energy
innovation. CU- Boulder is playing an important role in
advancing sustainable and renewable solutions
• According to the Colorado Cleantech Industry
Associaton, more than 300 clean technology companies
are based in Colorado - all working toward energy
creation that does not deplete natural resources.
• Cleantech jobs are on the rise. The governor’s office
reports that 17,000 renewable energy and energy
research jobs - the 4th largest concentration in the nation
- are powering Colorado’s new energy economy.
Generating Energy Solutions
• CU-Boulder and its partners–the National Renewable
Energy Laboratory (NREL), The Colorado School of
Mines, and Colorado State (CSU)- in 2008 founded the
Colorado Renewable Energy Collaboratory, a major
initiative to advance and develop renewable and
sustainable energy solutions
• CU-Boulder’s Renewable and Sustainable Energy
Institute (RASEI) has partnered with NREL to create an
interdisciplinary joint institute dedicated to solving the
world’s energy challenges through research, education,
and marketable technology.
Building a Biotechnology Economy
• The Metro Denver Economic Development Corp. reports
there are more than 15,090 bioscience workers at 520
companies in the nine-county Denver region.
• CU-Boulder’s Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology
Building will be home to the Colorado Initiative in
Molecular Biotechnology, or CIMB, led by Nobel
laureate and CU Distinguished Professor Tom Cech.
11 Institutes
1. Alliance for Technology, Learning, and Society
(ATLAS)
2. Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR)
3. Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP)
4. Behavioral Genetics (IBG)
5. Behavioral Science (IBS)
6. Center for Humanities and the Arts (CHA)
7. Cognitive Science (ICS)
8. Cooperative Institute for Research in
Environmental Sciences (CIRES)
9. JILA
10. Renewable and Sustainable Energy (RASEI)
11. University of Colorado Museum of Natural History
80+ Centers and 52 Departments
Some highlights:
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Social Entrepreneurship
Colors of Socialization
Cosmic Origins Spectograph
Engineering and Technology Education
Liquid Crystals
Media, Religion, and Culture
Natural Hazards and Disasters
Nanotechnology
New Forms of Matter
Research-Related Capital Projects
Underway
• Institute for Behavioral Science
• Biotechnology
• JILA Expansion
Economic Impact of CU-Boulder on
State of Colorado
• Our talented graduates move into the workforce.
• We provide graduate and professional
education, which are critical to business and
community leadership.
• Faculty research cultivates technology transfer
and business start-ups.
• Basic and applied research are the building
blocks of economic growth and sustainability.
Economic Impact of CU-Boulder on
State of Colorado
• Our presence is a key factor in the decision of
federal labs and corporations to locate in the
region.
• We add over $26 to the Colorado economy for
every state dollar we receive.
• Over 10,000 students from out-of-state and outof-country come here to spend their money
• In 2008-09, we generated $2.9 billion of
economic activity, with a payroll of 13,968 and a
total employment impact of 26,453 jobs.
Economic Impact: CU System
• CU System contributes $6.3 billion to the state’s
economy annually through its demands for
goods and services.
• CU System is Colorado’s fourth-largest
employer, with some 26,000 employees, and is
responsible for another 30,000 jobs related to
the university’s endeavors.
• For every $1 of unrestricted state general fund
support, CU System returns $40 to the Colorado
economy.
based on 2008-2009 data
Economic Impact of CU System
CU-Boulder, Anschutz Medical Campus, UC-Denver, and UCCS
• Students who study on all four CU System
campuses and their out-of-state guests spend
$707 million on meals, rent, entertainment,
clothing and utilities each year.
• Spending by CU System, the students, and their
visitors generates $300 million in local and state
taxes for the Colorado economy.
based on 2008-2009 data
Developing a Knowledge-Based Work
Force
• The CU System confers 60 percent of master’s degrees
and 54 percent of doctoral degrees
• The National Science Foundation ranks the CU System
eighth among public universities for federally financed
research and development in science and engineering.
Fostering Technology Revolutions
• Over the past five years, 51 startup companies
based on CU System technology and research
have emerged. In fiscal year 2008, CU System
tried for 10th nationally with other major
universities for its 11 startups.
• Since 2002, efforts to promote and market
technology created at the CU System have
generated $121.2 million in revenue.
Fostering Technology Revolutions
• A fourth of royalties from technology created at
the CU System have gone to discoverers; a
fourth to their CU labs; a fourth to the CU
Technology Transfer Office; and a fourth to the
discoverer’s campus.
• CU System inventions related to the biosciences
make up nearly two-thirds of the university’s
technology portfolio. The rest comprises
cleantech, 10 percent; physical sciences and
engineering; 13 percent; and software, 14
percent.
Questions?