09/18/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/18/2025 08:04
The University of Cincinnati secured a $158 million donation of geosciences software from global energy technology company SLB.
The generous gift provides students and faculty with access to the same digital platforms used by leading energy companies worldwide.
"Subsurface energy sources, both conventional and unconventional, satisfy over 80% of total U.S. energy needs and mastering the subsurface is central to the nation's energy future," said UC Professor of Hydrogeology Reza Soltanian, who helped secure the donation.
"This is an impactful donation that will provide an opportunity for our students to get real-world experience while pursuing their degree at UC," UC College of Arts and Sciences Dean James Mack said.
Professor Reza Soltanian helped UC secure software licenses from tech company SLB that will help students prepare for jobs in the geosciences. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC
UC Geosciences Department Head Craig Dietsch said the software licenses will give UC grads a competitive edge as they launch their careers. Students will be able to develop powerful 3D models for subsurface groundwater flow and hydrogen storage. They also can model the layered crust of the Earth, he said.
"Students who have worked with these software packages will be highly sought after by employers in a number of fields, including environmental engineering," Dietsch said.
Mack agreed, noting how important practical skills are for UC's mission.
"Experiential learning is the hallmark of a University of Cincinnati education. Our faculty are committed to acquiring the resources to make this happen," he said. "Access to this software will give our students a competitive advantage not just while they are studying at UC, but also well after the leave."
Reza Soltanian, UC Department of Geosciences
Most geoscience research in the energy industry is multidisciplinary, Soltanian said.
"The oil and gas industry, and subsurface research more broadly, is highly integrated and multidisciplinary. The donated software platforms connect everything from basic geoscience visualization to geological modeling, engineering design and reservoir management," he said.
"Energy decisions today are data decisions. This gift allows UC to integrate geoscience, engineering and advanced computing in one digital environment, preparing our students to drive the energy transition," Soltanian added.
The software will be directly relevant to UC Digital Futures' new Data Visualization Lab, where researchers will combine modeling and visualization.
Meanwhile, the university is creating a new Subsurface Energy Institute led by Soltanian at UC's Digital Futures to serve as a hub for research into emerging priorities such as geothermal energy, hydrogen storage, lithium extraction and shale gas fields that are particularly relevant to Ohio's economy.
The institute dovetails with UC's plans for a related Energy Innovation Institute, UC Vice President for Research Patrick Limbach said.
"Oil and gas remain globally important, but the real story is the rapid rise of new energy frontiers," Limbach said.
The new institute would help UC address state and national energy needs.
"It's an opportunity for investment, invention and impact," Limbach said "This is exactly the kind of forward-looking applied research that Digital Futures was designed to foster. This is yet another exciting milestone for UC."
Featured image at top: Tech company SLB donated software licenses to UC that will help students prepare for jobs in the geosciences. Photo/Imaginima/iStockPhoto
UC is a powerhouse of discovery and impact as a Carnegie 1 research institution. From pioneering medical research to transformative engineering and social innovation, our faculty and students drive progress that reaches across the world.
Discover research at UC.
September 18, 2025
Tech company SLB donates software licenses to UC that will help prepare students for jobs in geosciences.
July 22, 2024
With an app that combats food waste and incentivises donations to food banks, two University of Cincinnati students were part of a team that won an artificial intelligence and blockchain hackathon competition in San Francisco. Daniel Vennemeyer, a computer science, economics and mathematics student who also is pursuing a master's degree in AI through UC's ACCEND program, and Phan Anh "Rai" Duong, a computer science student, were part of a team that won the grand prize in the EasyA x VeChain Bay Area Hackathon.
October 13, 2022
Continual innovation and more individuals who are trained to combat an array of malicious actors and evolving threats are needed in cybersecurity, experts in the field said during a symposium at the University of Cincinnati.