Clemson University has grown to become the most active research institution in South Carolina, according to data from the National Science Foundation (NSF).
Clemson’s total research and development (R&D) expenditures topped all South Carolina universities for the first time at $339 million in 2024, the latest year for which data is available for all universities in the NSF Higher Education Research and Development Survey. Total R&D includes competitive grants from the federal government, institutional spending, state support and investments from the private sector and nonprofit foundations.
“We have aligned our research strengths with state and federal priorities in energy resilience, national security, advanced manufacturing, health, agriculture and critical technologies to push meaningful innovation and scientific discovery that benefits the public and the state’s economy. We appreciate the investment in our work,” said Tanju Karanfil, senior vice president for research, scholarship and creative endeavors.
Clemson researchers are working directly with farmers, utilities, manufacturers, medical providers, K-12 schools, employers, state agencies, community organizations and others to help improve the economy and lives across South Carolina through workforce development and innovation.
Dominion Energy South Carolina and TECO Westinghouse Motor Company, for example, are working with Clemson on a new transformer device that can prevent outages during disruptions caused by fallen tree limbs and other disturbances. Prisma Health recently recognized a Clemson faculty member for research on reducing hospital readmissions. A Clemson research team was recognized nationally for helping more than 1,500 South Carolinians better manage diabetes. Clemson scientists developed new dry pea cultivars to give South Carolina farmers a new revenue stream for acreage typically left fallow or planted with cover crops over the winter. Clemson researchers are helping K-12 school districts in South Carolina adapt to the advent of artificial intelligence. These are a few examples.
“Clemson research is defined by bold ideas, broad collaboration and big impact,” Karanfil said in announcing Clemson’s total R&D figures at the University’s Board of Trustees meetings last week.
In the past five years, Clemson research has supported nearly 1,400 Ph.D. completions and 9,000 master’s degree completions, funneling a pipeline of talent to the state and regional workforce. Thousands of undergraduate students participate in research each year, as well, gaining unique experiential learning opportunities to prepare them for work after graduation.
Additionally, Clemson research has spawned 24 startup companies over the past five years and led to 304 invention disclosures, 83 patents and 80 licenses and options in which businesses are putting Clemson innovation to work.
