
RALEIGH — NCInnovation, the university research accelerator nonprofit, has announced the approval of $10 million in funding for 13 projects spanning 11 schools in the UNC System.
“NCInnovation’s December 2025 slate represents some of the strongest university-to-industry opportunities emerging anywhere in the country,” said Michelle Bolas, the group’s acting president and CEO, in a press release.
Bolas was named to her role in mid-November. She replaced CEO J. Bennet Waters, who stepped down Nov. 30.
According to the press release, the latest round of funding brings NCInnovation’s (NCI) “cumulative commitment” to $29 million.
“Our universities are solving real problems, such as, improving manufacturing reliability, advancing next-generation medical treatments, and strengthening cybersecurity education,” said Bolas. “The overall goal is to support innovations that keep value in North Carolina by contributing to economic development throughout the state.”
“These projects show how applied research, when rigorously reviewed and matched with the right support, can meaningfully strengthen North Carolina’s competitiveness,” said Deanna Ballard, the chair of the Programs Committee and member of the NCI Board of Directors. “I’m grateful to our external reviewers and staff for the diligence they bring to this work.”
The announcement comes as the state budget is still in limbo, with provisions in both the House and the Senate versions containing a clawback of the $500 million endowment given to NCI by the legislature in 2023.
Some projects listed include:
- Advanced manufacturing and materials science (NC State, UNC Charlotte, WCU)
- Therapeutics and medical innovation (UNC Greensboro, UNC Charlotte)
- Cybersecurity and educational technologies (UNC Wilmington)
- Defense and simulation technologies (Fayetteville State)
- AI-enabled tools for health, mobility, and safety (UNC Chapel Hill, Appalachian State, NC Central)
- Agriculture and environmental technologies (Winston-Salem State University, ECU)
A full list of the projects and their descriptions can be found by visiting NCInnovation.org.
