Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

UNBC places first in research income growth in new report of Canadian universities

University sees more funding coming in for research projects
campus-winter01
UNBC's Prince George campus in the winter. (via UNBC)

UNBC saw its research income increase the most of any university of its size in the latest edition of Canada’s Top 50 Research Universities produced by Research Infosource Inc.

The Prince George post-secondary received $12.9 million in research income in the 2019 fiscal year, a 42.5 per cent increase from 2018.

It is the largest increase of any Canadian university in the undergraduate tier. The nearly $4 million increase helped UNBC jump four spots in the overall ranking to 42nd in Canada, the University’s highest ranking in seven years.

“Through exploration, innovation and partnerships, UNBC researchers continue to make discoveries that advance our knowledge making significant positive impacts to our society,” says Interim President Dr. Geoff Payne in a news release today (Dec. 8).

“The substantial increase in research funding this year is further confirmation of the excellence of our faculty, students and staff who work together to cultivate a preeminent research culture.”

UNBC also moved up the undergraduate tier table in two categories related to research intensity.

In the research dollars per faculty metric, UNBC moved up two spots into seventh place earning $66,000 in income per faculty member.

With $21,400 in research income per graduate student, UNBC moved up three spots into ninth place.

Last year, UNBC placed first in corporate research income growth and once again, the school saw a significant increase in that metric.

UNBC’s corporate-sponsored research in 2019 was $585,000, a further 29.4 per cent increase from 2018.

“UNBC is committed to being a leader in the integration of research and teaching,” says UNBC Acting Vice-President, Research Dr. Kathy Lewis in the same release.  

“In addition to being innovation scholars, our faculty also foster a highly stimulating research environment for our students at both the undergraduate and graduate level.”

Some of the research highlights from the past year include:

  • The Centre for Technology Adoption for Aging in the North, a new AGE-WELL National Innovation Hub, opened at UNBC
  • The NSERC/Rio Tinto Industrial Research Chair on Climate Change and Water Security partnership celebrated its first anniversary
    • Environmental Science Professor Dr. Stephen Déry provided an update on the project’s progress
  • Dr. Jianbing Li, an Environmental Engineering Professor at UNBC is leading part of a national project to investigate improved methods to separate oil from water to make it more efficient and less costly to clean up marine oil spills
    • Fisheries and Oceans Canada pledged $1.9 million to fund the next stage of Li’s research through the multi-partner oil spill research initiative
  • UNBC researchers received more than $1.3 million in funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council’s Discovery Grant program and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Insight Grant program