Last year, UNH’s “fleet” – the 300-plus transit and non-transit vehicles on campus – traveled a total of 1.6 million miles, racking up more than $624,000 in fuel costs and emitting 1,500 tons of carbon dioxide, the equivalent of 18 tanker trucks filled with gasoline or the electricity used in one year by more than 200 homes.
Now, a new tool will help UNH departments and offices make wise fiscal and environmental choices when purchasing new vehicles – or not.
The ECOCat Vehicle Selection Calculator, released in May by a team that includes UNH Facilities Campus Planning in collaboration with transportation services, purchasing, and the Sustainability Institute, is a spreadsheet tool that incorporates vehicle price, miles per gallon (MPG), and greenhouse gas emissions to represent the full life cycle and environmental costs of selecting vehicle ownership. An ...

Xiaowei Teng, assistant professor of chemical engineering, has received an Early Career Research Award from the U.S. Department of Energy to pursue research that will improve the ability to store energy in supercapacitors. The award, of $750,000 over five years, is one of just 61 that went to researchers from universities and national laboratories; it was chosen from about 770 proposals. 

Recent graduate Alex Freid ’13 has received the 2013 Samuel Huntington Public Service Award. The award, granted by National Grid, provides a $10,000 stipend for a graduating college senior to pursue one year of public service.