Open to Sea Grant Programs
$9,000,000 total; $1,200,000 maximum per award over 1–3 years
Federal Funding Opportunity: NOAA-OAR-SG-2019-2005963
The National Sea Grant Office anticipates at least $9,000,000 will be available to support the establishment of collaborative programs to build the capacity of Sea Grant and its partners to advance aquaculture in areas where a foundation of knowledge and activity currently exists but where significant barriers to sustainable domestic marine and Great Lakes aquaculture remain. These collaborative programs will serve as geographic or topic-based hubs for fully integrated, transdisciplinary research, outreach, and education that will provide broad, non-proprietary support and investment for building and/or enhancing an aquaculture industry.
This is one of three federal funding opportunities to advance U.S. aquaculture announced by the National Sea Grant College Program.
Eligible Applicants: Sea Grant College Programs, Sea Grant Institutional Programs, Sea Grant Coherent Area Programs, and the National Sea Grant Law Center.
● Other interested entities must work with a relevant Sea Grant Program to establish appropriate collaborations. This includes: any individual; any public or private corporation, partnership, or other association or entity; or any State, political subdivision of a State, Tribal government or agency or officer thereof.
The Exploring New Opportunities and Collaborative Program FFOs require Sea Grant Program leadership and submission. Neither of these calls is intended to support a single, discrete research project. As outlined in the FFOs, they are intended to be broader projects that may involve research but also require industry involvement, outreach and extension components and increase the capacity of the California Sea Grant Program to support ongoing and future research, extension and communication programming related to aquaculture.
If you are interested in collaborating with California Sea Grant on an aquaculture proposal, please complete the partnership form by close of business on March 28, 2019. If you are interested in multiple opportunities, please fill out additional forms by the date indicated below:
Thursday, March 14, 2019 |
Exploring New Aquaculture Opportunities FFO | NOAA-OAR-SG-2019-2005960 |
Thursday, March 21, 2019 |
Social, Behavioral, and Economic Research Needs in Aquaculture FFO Please note that this competition is open to all and does not require collaboration with or submission by CA Sea Grant. |
NOAA-OAR-SG-2019-2005953 |
Thursday, March 28, 2019 |
Advanced Aquaculture Collaborative Programs | NOAA-OAR-SG-2019-2005963 |
The California Sea Grant Aquaculture FFO Team will discuss the collective ideas, prioritize, and follow up within a reasonable time before the LOI due date. Please keep in mind that given the short turn-around time for the LOIs and our own program’s priorities for aquaculture programming and capacity, we will not be able to develop meaningful collaboration with all interested partners at this time.
Webinar
There was an optional informational webinar about these federal funding opportunities on Monday, March 4.
Proposal Deadlines:
Letters of intent due April 15, 2019 to oar.hq.sg.aquaculture@noaa.gov and copy sgproposal@ucsd.edu by 2:00pm Pacific Time/5:00pm Eastern Time.
Full proposals due May 15, 2019 via grants.gov by 2:00pm Pacific Time/5:00pm Eastern Time.
Social, Behavioral and Economic Research | Exploring New Opportunities | Advanced Aquaculture Collaborative | |
---|---|---|---|
Project proposal narrative page limit | 15 | 15 | 25 |
Eligible applicants and submissions | All interested entities (as defined in FFO) | Sea Grant programs (as defined in FFO) | Sea Grant programs (as defined in FFO) |
Letters of Intent (required) due to NSGO via email | April 2, 2019, 5:00 pm ET | March 26, 2019, 5:00 pm ET | April 15, 2019, 5:00 pm ET |
Application materials due to Grants.gov | May 1, 2019, 5:00 pm ET | April 24, 2019, 5:00 pm ET | May 15, 2019, 5:00 |
Project time limit | up to 2 years | 1-2 years | up to 3 years |
Project cost ceiling (Federal funds) | $250,000 | $100,000 | $1,200,000 |