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Title |
External Id |
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Agency |
Next Deadline |
Details |
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AHA Institutional Research Enhancement Award (AIREA) |
N/A |
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American Heart Association (AHA) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Jul 7, 2023 Has Passed
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Title
AHA Institutional Research Enhancement Award (AIREA)
Agencies
American Heart Association (AHA)
Description
The purpose is to support small-scale research projects related to cardiovascular diseases and brain health at educational institutions that provide baccalaureate or advanced degrees but that have not been major recipients of NIH support. The award supports any part of the full range of basic, clinical and population research and development.
The goals of the program are to:
-support meritorious research,
-expose students to research,
-strengthen the research environment of the institution.
More Information
https://professional.heart.org/en/research-programs/aha-funding-opportunities/aha-institutional-research-enhancement-award-airea
Submission Limits
An applicant may submit only one AIREA application per deadline.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Jul 7, 2023 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Jul 8, 2023 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Jul 21, 2023 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Jul 28, 2023 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Sep 14, 2023
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CZM Habitat Protection and Restoration Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) Competition |
NOAA-NOS-OCM-2023-2008054 |
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Office for Coastal Management/NOAA |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Jul 7, 2023 Has Passed
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Title
CZM Habitat Protection and Restoration Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) Competition
Agencies
Office for Coastal Management/NOAA
Description
The purpose of this notice is to solicit grant proposals from
eligible state and territory Coastal Zone Management Programs (CZM Programs) for coastal
habitat restoration; coastal habitat restoration planning, engineering, and design; and land
conservation projects that support the goals and intent of the Coastal Zone Management Act
(CZMA), the Coastal and Estuarine Land Conservation Program (CELCP), and the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act, Public Law 117-58. For the purposes of this funding opportunity,
coastal habitat conservation is defined as the acquisition of fee simple interest in real property or
conservation easements.
NOAA anticipates that approximately $59.6 million will be competitively awarded to approved
state and territory Coastal Management Programs. For habitat restoration engineering, design
and planning, it is anticipated that projects will range from approximately $200,000-$500,000.
For habitat restoration, it is anticipated that projects will range from approximately $2 million to
$6 million. For land conservation, it is anticipated that projects will range from approximately $1
million to $4 million. Applicants may propose projects with a Federal funding request less than
or more than these amounts, up to $6 million.
The NOAA Office for Coastal Management (OCM) encourages applicants and awardees to
support the principles of equity and inclusion when writing their proposals and performing their
work. Promoting equity and inclusion through community engagement, co-development, and
partnership improves creativity, productivity, and the vitality of the coastal management community that OCM supports.
More Information
https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/view-opportunity.html?oppId=348701
Submission Limits
Each applicant may submit no more than
three letters of intent for consideration under this competition.
Cost Sharing:
Pursuant to the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Public Law 117-58, Division J,
Title II, in order to promote a more equitable competition that supports a wider variety of
projects and project partners, there is no non-Federal matching requirement for this funding.
However, applicants are strongly encouraged to combine NOAA Federal funding with
formal matching contributions or informal leverage from a broad range of sources in the
public and private sectors to implement restoration. Such
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Jul 7, 2023 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Jul 8, 2023 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Jul 17, 2023 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Jul 24, 2023 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Aug 14, 2023
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Cyberinfrastructure Technology Acceleration Pathway (CITAP) |
NSF 23-597 |
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National Science Foundation (NSF) |
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Title
Cyberinfrastructure Technology Acceleration Pathway (CITAP)
Agencies
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Description
The national cyberinfrastructure (CI) ecosystem is essential to computational- and data-intensive research across all science and engineering
(S&E) domains. The CI ecosystem is highly dynamic, driven by rapid advances in a wide range of technologies, increasing volumes of highly
heterogeneous data, and escalating demands for CI resources and services by the research community. Innovations in CI are consequently
key catalysts for new modes of discovery and play a critical role in ensuring U.S. leadership in science, engineering, economic
competitiveness, and national security, consistent with NSF's mission. It is thus imperative that CI innovations become available, in a
coordinated and sustainable manner, as part of the NSF-funded advanced CI ecosystem.
The Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Coordination Ecosystem of Support and Services (ACCESS) program provides an array of national-scale
CI services to the S&E research community, including integrated coordination of users’ requests for computational and data resources;
integration of resource providers’ systems; deployment of technical support; monitoring of system usage; user training; and communication
and outreach to the CI and research communities. The ACCESS program is envisioned to include a process to enable breakthrough CI
innovations of recognized value to researchers to be translated into production-quality sustained services that are deployed and made
available to the user community from applicable NSF-funded resource providers. Such a process would also include methods to prioritize
which innovations to translate to production services and to identify when these services should be taken out of service or replaced.
This CITAP solicitation is focused on the translation of innovative research CI software – such as system software, libraries, application codes,
and software enabling data services. NSF seeks proposals that aim to design, test, and subsequently operate a pathway service within the
ACCESS program that manages and accelerates the translation of promising research CI software to production-quality services across the
NSF advanced CI ecosystem in support of the NSF S&E research community. CITAP proposals are expected to create a new workflow
process (represented notionally in Figure 1 below) within the ACCESS program that: (1) identifies novel CI software from diverse sources in a
strongly community-informed way; (2) establishes an open and merit-based process for selecting and prioritizing/sequencing which of the
identified innovations are of highest and most immediate value to users of the advanced CI ecosystem and can be feasibly translated to
production level and made available for use by researchers using ACCESS resources; and (3) establishes an operational process that
translates innovations into production services, including creation of partnerships where necessary to address each of the technical challenges
and intellectual property (IP) considerations faced when integrating novel CI software within the advanced CI ecosystem.
Examples of translation challenges include (but are not limited to): awareness by potential users who could benefit from the technology;
systems engineering and software deployment; an initial launch period of collaborative maintenance; anticipation of user support that will be
necessary; engagement of people or possibly organizations needed to sustain and upgrade the software/service in response to changes in
technology and/or feedback from users and communities served; and determination of when the relative use or value of the software has
decreased to an extent that decommissioning is warranted. The pathway must also be designed to evolve as the types of systems and
services that are part of the NSF-funded production advanced CI ecosystem evolve and expand.
CITAP proposals should assume the following three phases of development activities during the award period for the CITAP project: process
design; pilot development and testing using CI translation use cases within the ACCESS program; and initial operations at scale.
Advancement by the project to each subsequent phase will be based on successful associated milestone reviews that will assess the
satisfaction of performance criteria defined for each phase that reflect the interests of key constituents, including S&E users, system
administrators, and CI developers. During the initial operations phase, product launches will include a period of collaborative maintenance by
the CITAP awardee and developers. Longer-term maintenance should also be planned to sustain and upgrade the technology.
Given the variety of sources of CI research and potential development partners, CITAP proposals are expected to promote the sustainability of
the production software via collaboration with organizations or relevant NSF projects. Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure (OAC) programs
highlighted below are among those that foster development of CI technologies that are candidates for accelerated translation to production.
Programs in OAC and in NSF’s new Directorate for Technology, Innovations and Partnerships (TIP) support communities that may be suited
to sustain or upgrade the production CI technologies. CITAP proposals are welcome to also include or propose to recruit collaborative
involvement of constituents beyond NSF programs, such as academic institutions, non-government organizations, industry, and other
government agencies.
More Information
https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2023/nsf23597/nsf23597.pdf?WT.mc_ev=click&WT.mc_id=&utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery
Submission Limits
Limit on Number of Proposals per Organization: 1
Organizations are limited to one CITAP proposal per competition. In the event that an organization exceeds this limit, proposals will be
accepted based on earliest date and time of proposal submission, i.e., the first proposal will be accepted, and the remainder will be returned
without review. No exceptions will be made.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Jul 14, 2023 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Jul 15, 2023 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Jul 24, 2023 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Aug 4, 2023 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Sep 6, 2023
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Major Research Instrumentation Program: (MRI) Instrument Acquisition or Development |
NSF 23-519 |
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National Science Foundation (NSF) |
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Title
Major Research Instrumentation Program: (MRI) Instrument Acquisition or Development
Agencies
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Description
The Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) Program (MRI Program Website) serves to increase access to multi-user scientific and
engineering instrumentation for research and research training in our Nation's institutions of higher education and not-for-profit
scientific/engineering research organizations. An MRI award supports the acquisition of a multi-user research instrument that is commercially
available through direct purchase from a vendor, or for the personnel costs and equipment that are required for the development of an
instrument with new capabilities, thereby advancing instrumentation capabilities and enhancing expertise for instrument design and fabrication
at academic institutions. MRI instruments are, in general, too costly and/or not appropriate for support through other NSF programs.
MRI provides support to acquire critical research instrumentation without which advances in fundamental science and engineering research
may not otherwise occur. MRI also provides support to obtain next-generation research instruments by developing instruments with new
capabilities that open new opportunities to advance the frontiers in science and engineering research. Additionally, an MRI award is expected
to enhance research training of students who will become the next generation of instrument users, designers and builders.
An MRI proposal may request from NSF up to $4 million for either acquisition or development of a research instrument. Each performing
organization may submit in revised "Tracks" as defined below, with no more than two (2) submissions in Track 1 and no more than one (1)
submission in Track 2. For the newly defined Track 3, no more than one (1) submission per competition is permitted. As a result, it is now
possible for an institution to submit up to four MRI proposals within the Track limits as described above.
Track 1: Track 1 MRI proposals are those that request funds from NSF greater than $100,0001 and less than $1,400,000.
Track 2: Track 2 MRI proposals are those that request funds from NSF greater than or equal to $1,400,000 up to and including
$4,000,000.
Track 3: Track 3 MRI proposals are those that request funds from NSF greater than or equal to $100,0001 and less than or equal to
$4,000,000 that include the purchase, installation, operation, and maintenance of equipment and instrumentation to conserve or
reduce the consumption of helium. Institutions may submit no more than one Track 3 proposal. Submission of a Track 3
proposal does not impact limits that apply for Track 1 and Track 2 proposals.
Cost sharing requirements for new awards in the MRI Program are waived for a period of 5 years beginning with the FY 2023 MRI
competition. Institutional submission limits for Track 1, Track 2 and Track 3 proposals remain.
The MRI Program especially seeks broad representation of groups, institutions, and geographic regions that are underrepresented in STEM
disciplines. Proposals from women, underrepresented minorities, persons with disabilities and early-career PIs are encouraged, as are
proposals that benefit early-career researchers and proposals with PIs from geographically under-served regions, including EPSCoR
jurisdictions. Additionally, proposals are encouraged from under-resourced institutions, including from emerging research institutions, where
MRI can significantly build capacity for research.
1 Track 1 proposals requesting funds from NSF less than $100,000 will be accepted only from: a) eligible performing organizations requesting
instrumentation supporting research in the disciplines of mathematics or social, behavioral and economic sciences; or b)
More Information
https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2018/nsf18513/nsf18513.pdf
Submission Limits
Two (2) in Track 1, one (1) in Track 2 and one (1) in Track 3 as described below. Potential PIs are advised to contact their sponsored projects
office well in advance of the MRI submission window regarding processes used to select proposals for submission.
The MRI program requires that an MRI-eligible organization may, as a performing organization, submit or be included as a significantly
funded2 subawardee in no more than three MRI proposals in Tracks 1 and 2 as defined below, with no more than two (2) submissions in Track
1 and no more than one (1) submission in Track 2. One (1) additional submission is permitted in the newly defined Track 3. As a result, it is
now possible for an institution to submit up to four MRI proposals within the Track limits described above.
Any MRI proposal may request support for either the acquisition or development of a research instrument or an upgrade of an existing
research instrument. Within their submission limit, NSF strongly encourages an organization to submit proposals for innovative development
projects.
Track 1: Track 1 MRI proposals are those that request funds from NSF greater than or equal to $100,0001 and less than $1,400,000.
Track 2: Track 2 MRI proposals are those that request funds from NSF greater than or equal to $1,400,000 up to and including
$4,000,000.
Track 3 MRI proposals are those that request funds from NSF greater than or equal to $100,0001 and less than or equal to
$4,000,000 for requests that include the purchase,
Cost Sharing:
Inclusion of voluntary committed cost sharing is prohibited
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Jul 28, 2023 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Jul 29, 2023 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Aug 18, 2023 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Sep 1, 2023 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Nov 15, 2023
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CHRB Grants Program - FY 2024-2025 |
CHRB |
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Commonwealth Health Research Board (CHRB) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Jul 28, 2023 Has Passed — [All slots are filled]
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Title
CHRB Grants Program - FY 2024-2025
Agencies
Commonwealth Health Research Board (CHRB)
Description
The Commonwealth Health Research Board (CHRB or Board) was created by Virginia Code §32.1-162.23 to provide financial support— in the form of grants, donations, or other assistance— for research efforts having the potential of maximizing human health benefits for the citizens of the Commonwealth. Research efforts eligible for support by the Board shall include traditional medical and biomedical research relating to the causes and cures of diseases, as well as research related to health services and the delivery of health care. Since its inception, the CHRB has made 291 grant awards totaling almost $25.2 million in grant funding to institutions of higher education and other Virginia nonprofit organizations that conduct health, or health-related research in Virginia. When the required 33% matching funds are added to the CHRB funded amount, the cumulative funding for research supported by the Commonwealth Health
Research Board totals $36.4 million for health research in Virginia. For a description of past CHRB grant awards and abstracts, visit
our website at www.chrb.org.
In accordance with Virginia Code §32.1-162.24, the Board encourages collaborative research efforts among two or more institutions
or organizations, gives priority to those research efforts where Board support can be leveraged to foster contributions from federal
agencies or other entities, and supports both new research efforts and the expansion or continuation of existing research efforts. CHRB grant recipients — for grant awards life-to-date — have leveraged over $38.2 million in additional private and federal grant funds to further their research studies. Additionally, numerous publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals and periodicals as well as presentations of the data at regional and national scientific meetings have resulted from CHRB grant funded research
projects.
More Information
https://www.chrb.org/preaward.shtml
Submission Limits
Applicant institutions are
limited to a submission of 12 Concept Papers in each cycle.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Jul 28, 2023 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Jul 29, 2023 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Aug 11, 2023 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Aug 21, 2023 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Sep 21, 2023
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Medical and Science Program |
N/A |
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Keck Foundation (Keck) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Jul 31, 2023 Has Passed — [All slots are filled]
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Title
Medical and Science Program
Agencies
Keck Foundation (Keck)
Description
The W. M. Keck Research Program seeks to benefit humanity by supporting Medical Research and Science & Engineering projects that are distinctive and novel in their approach, question the prevailing paradigm, or have the potential to break open new territory in their field.
Past grants have been awarded to major universities, independent research institutions, and medical schools to support pioneering biological and physical science research and engineering, including the development of promising new technologies, instrumentation or methodologies. Grants range from $1 million to $5 million and are typically $2 million or less. Please see our grant abstracts for examples of funded projects.
The Research Program employs a two-phase application process with optional pre-application counseling. All communication with the Foundation, including submitting applications, proposals and reports must be via the institution’s designated liaison. Please see the liaison guidelines for more information on this role.
More Information
https://www.wmkeck.org/
Submission Limits
Any eligible institutions may submit one Phase I application per grant cycle to each of the applicable grant areas: Medical Research, and Science & Engineering Research.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Jul 31, 2023 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Aug 1, 2023 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Aug 11, 2023 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Aug 21, 2023 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Nov 1, 2023
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Anyone wishing to submit a proposal for one of these programs should click on the appropriate link in the list above. To expedite the process of planning an internal competition, please submit your notice of intent as soon as you know you have an interest in the funding program. You are only required to include the name of the Principal Investigator, any co-PI's, and the subject or title of the proposed project. The deadline for the internal notice of intent is indicated above.