UH sets new extramural funding record of $515.9M in FY2023
University of HawaiʻiVice President for Research and Innovation
Eric R. Matsunaga, (808) 956-5588
Director, Research and Administrative Operations, Office of the Vice President for Research and Inno
Link to video and sound (details below): https://go.hawaii.edu/wzX
For the second consecutive year, the University of Hawaiʻi has set a record in extramural funding at $515.9 million for fiscal year 2023 (FY2023), $10.9 million more over the previous record of $505 million set in FY2022.
UH Mānoa, the flagship campus of UH’s 10 campus system, led the extramural award amounts this year with $342.7 million. The UH System brought in $117.7 million, UH Community Colleges totaled $33.7 million, UH Hilo received $17.8 million and UH West O‘ahu totaled $4 million.
“We are extremely proud of our back-to-back record hauls in extramural funding, despite having to deal with a myriad of challenges due to the recent pandemic and its lingering after-effects on the world economy and our funders,” said UH Vice President for Research and Innovation Vassilis L. Syrmos. “The accolades must be given to our faculty, staff and graduate students for their hard work and dedication to the UH research enterprise and to the state of Hawai‘i.”
Extramural funding is external investments from governmental agencies such as the federal government, industry and non-profit organizations that support research and training activities conducted by university faculty and staff. Extramural projects support research and innovation that help to increase knowledge and provide solutions to improve quality of life.
“Every dollar invested by one of our extramural sponsors is a vote of confidence that UH faculty, staff and students are creating a better future for Hawaiʻi and the world,” said UH President David Lassner. “This includes everything from climate change, resilience, water quality and energy solutions to addressing health disparities, educational inequities, feeding our population, and training Hawaiʻi's people for the jobs of today and tomorrow.”
Several examples of UH programs that attracted the attention of funders:
- The Office of the Vice President for Community Colleges was awarded $16.3 million from the U.S. Department of Commerce for the “Resilient Hawai‘i: Good Jobs Challenge” initiative that provides employer-driven training in living-wage jobs to individuals whose employment was disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Read more on UH News.
- The Institute for Astronomy received $5.5 million from NASA to continue a wide area survey of Near Earth Objects at its Pan-STARRS observatory on Haleakalā, Maui. Read more on UH News.
- The John A. Burns School of Medicine was awarded $4.5 million, as part of a five-year $23 million grant from the National Institutes for Health (NIH) for Ola HAWAII, a multidisciplinary research center that addresses health disparities in underserved, multiethnic populations in Hawai‘i. Read more on UH News.
- UH’s Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research received $4 million, as part of a five-year $20 million grant by the National Science Foundation (NSF), to integrate climate and data science research under its “Change HI” initiative. Read more on UH News.
- The Hawai‘i Natural Energy Institute received $3.6 million from the Office of Naval Research (ONR) to continue its research and maintenance support of the U.S. Navy’s Wave Energy Test Site in Kāne‘ohe Bay. Read more on UH News.
- ONR awarded UH a $2.4 million grant to partner with the University of Alaska and the University of Rhode Island to develop and advance energy, marine and other blue economy technologies and opportunities through the Office of Innovation and Commercialization. Read more on UH News.
- NIH awarded $2.4 million to the UH Cancer Center to continue its important Multiethnic Cohort Study. Read more on UH News.
- Windward Community College was awarded $2 million of a $3.5 million grant by NSF’s Tribal Colleges and Universities Program to establish its Kia‘i Loko Center for Limu Research. The center focuses on applying traditional Native Hawaiian knowledge alongside Western scientific methods to study limu (algae) and traditional Hawaiian fishponds. Read more on UH News.
- UH Mānoa’s School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) was awarded $3 million by ONR to map flood risks related to sea-level rise in Hawai‘i.
- The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency awarded SOEST and the UH Applied Research Laboratory another $1.5 million increment of a five-year, $25 million project to develop an engineered coral reef system to protect coastlines from flooding, erosion and storm damage. Read more on UH News.
- The UH Center for Indigenous Innovation and Health Equity received $1.5 million from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to restore ancestral and cultural practices to improve health equity among Native Hawaiians and NHPI communities.
- UH Hilo received $1.1 million from the U.S. Department of Education for its E Hoi I Ke Kumu program to address the Hawaiian language immersion teacher shortage in the state.
- UH was awarded a $1 million NSF Engines Development Award to establish its Climate-Resilient Food Innovation Network that will serve as a hub for Hawaiʻi and U.S-affiliated Pacific Islands to develop collaborative, food innovation solutions driven by Indigenous knowledge systems and modern technology. UH could be eligible for another award of up to $160 million. Read more on UH News.
- UH West O‘ahu received a $944,307 grant from the U.S. Department of Education to develop its He Paepae Aloha curriculum to increase Native Hawaiian participation and completion of post-secondary education through the incorporation of Native Hawaiian traditions and culture.
About UH Research
Research conducted by the University of Hawai‘i impacts the quality of life in the islands and around the world. As the state’s major research university, and because of Hawai‘i’s tremendous geographic diversity, UH plays a prominent role in the state’s economic growth and development through its diverse and world-renowned research and innovation programs in astronomy, earth and ocean sciences, medicine and tropical agriculture. Research.hawaii.edu
Link to video and sound (details below):
VIDEO: https://go.hawaii.edu/wzX
BROLL: trt 2:14
- Natural resource management
- Ola HAWAII aquaponics
- DARPA project
- Multiethnic cohort project
- Good Jobs Hawaii
- IfA Pan-STARRS
SOUNDBITES:
David Lassner, UH President (:13)
“We are incredibly proud to have grown our UH extramural funding enterprise into what is now a stable, half-billion-dollars-a-year sector that creates thousands of jobs across the islands.”
Vassilis L. Syrmos, UH Vice President for Research and Innovation (:21)
“The university has been very fortunate to actually have a very strong support for our research enterprise not only from the State of Hawai‘i, who has supported this over the last five decades, but also from our congressional delegation which without their help and faith in what we do we wouldn’t have been in such a place right now.”
Noreen Mokuau, Ola HAWAII co-lead and former Dean of the Thompson School of Social Work and Public Health (:21)
“Our overarching goal for Ola HAWAII is to improve the health of our families, our neighbors and our communities. And we focus on those who are vulnerable and are disproportionate in health disparities in both outcomes and health care access.”