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Funding Opportunities

An updated list of funding opportunities for projects pertaining to landscape conservation, climate change, and more.

Ohio River Basin Fish Habitat Partnership

ORBFHP is currently accepting proposals for the Ohio River Basin Fish Habitat Partnership to fund aquatic habitat projects within the Ohio River Basin. The Request for Proposals (RFP) is an online application and can be found at the Midwest Fish Habitat Partnerships website, linked above. Click on “Apply for Project Funding” on the home page and then again on the “Apply for Project Funding” link on the upper left side of the page. Proposal instructions, a pdf of the proposal questions, and additional information are found in the attached documents as well as at the bottom of the “Apply for Funding” page.

NAWCA Small Grants Program
The Small Grants Program is a competitive, matching grants program that supports public-private partnerships carrying out projects in the United States that further the goals of the North American Wetlands Conservation Act. These projects must involve long-term protection, restoration, and/or enhancement of wetlands and associated uplands habitats for the benefit of all wetlands-associated migratory birds.

Eastern Brook Trout Joint Venture

National Fish Habitat Action Plan Funding

The Eastern Brook Trout Joint Venture is requesting project proposals to restore and conserve habitat necessary to support healthy and productive populations of brook trout. National Fish Habitat Action Plan funding administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) will be allocated to top ranked proposals.  The maximum award amount for an individual project is $50,000.  All proposed projects must be developed in coordination with the nearest Service Sponsoring Office.  A list of these offices by state can be found with the application materials on the EBTJV website under the Funding tab. 

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

U.S. Neotropical Migratory Bird Conservation Act Grant
The United States Neotropical Migratory Bird Conservation Act established an annual, competitive grants program to support projects that promote the conservation of neotropical migratory birds and their habitats in the United States, Canada, Latin America and the Caribbean.

Multistate Conservation Grant Program
The Multistate Conservation Grant Program provides funding for wildlife and sport fish restoration projects identified as priority projects by the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (AFWA). These high priority projects address problems affecting states on a regional or national basis. Project types that are generally selected for funding are: biological research/training, species population status, outreach, data collection regarding hunter/angler participation, hunter/aquatic education, economic value of fishing/hunting, and regional or multistate habitat needs assessments. States, groups of states, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and non-governmental organizations may apply for MSCGP grants by contacting AFWA or apply online at grants.gov.

Endangered Species Program
A variety of tools are available under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) to help States and landowners plan and implement projects to conserve species. One of the tools, the Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund (section 6 of the ESA) provides grants to States and Territories to participate in a wide array of voluntary conservation projects for candidate, proposed, and listed species. The program provides funding to States and Territories for species and habitat conservation actions on non-Federal lands. States and Territories must contribute a minimum non-Federal match of 25 percent of the total program costs, or 10 percent when two or more States or Territories implement a joint project. A State or Territory must currently have, or enter into, a cooperative agreement with the Secretary of the Interior to receive these grants.

USFWS State Wildlife Grant Program
The State Wildlife Grants Program provides federal grant funds for developing and implementing programs that benefit wildlife and their habitats, including species not hunted or fished. Priority is placed on projects that benefit species of greatest conservation need. Grant funds must be used to address conservation needs such as research, surveys, species and habitat management, and monitoring, identified within a State’s Comprehensive Wildlife Conservation Plan/Strategy. These funds may also be used to update, revise, or modify a State’s Strategy.

NOAA

Climate Program Office

NOAA's Climate Program Office (CPO) supports competitive research through four major Programs: Climate Observations and Monitoring (COM); Earth System Science (ESS); Modeling, Analysis, Predictions, and Projections (MAPP); and Climate and Societal Interactions (CSI). Through this Announcement, CPO's Programs are seeking applications for 10 individual competitions in FY 2015. Prior to submitting applications, investigators should be familiar with CPO and its specific Program priorities for FY15. This information, along with the names and contact information of relevant Competition Managers, is provided in Program information sheets below. We estimate that $15.5 million will be available through this Announcement in FY 2015 for approximately 100 new awards pending budget appropriations. It is anticipated that most awards will be at a funding level between $50,000 and $200,000 per year, with some exceptions for larger awards. Investigators should visit the CPO website http://cpo.noaa.gov/GrantsandProjects.aspx for more detailed information and instructions prior to submitting applications.

Natural Resources Conservation Service

Agriculture Conservation Easement Program
Provides financial and technical assistance to help conserve agricultural lands and wetlands and their related benefits. Under the Agricultural Land Easements component, NRCS helps Indian tribes, state and local governments and non-governmental organizations protect working agricultural lands and limit non-agricultural uses of the land. Under the Wetlands Reserve Easements component, NRCS helps to restore, protect and enhance enrolled wetlands. Land eligible for agricultural easements includes cropland, rangeland, grassland, pastureland and nonindustrial private forest land. NRCS will prioritize applications that protect agricultural uses and related conservation values of the land and those that maximize the protection of contiguous acres devoted to agricultural use. ACEP is a new program that consolidates three former programs – the Wetlands Reserve Program, Grassland Reserve Program and Farm and Ranch Land Protection Program.

Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program
Recipients of the Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program can use the grant funding to create new or expand existing public access programs. These programs provide financial incentives or technical assistance, such as rental payments or wildlife habitat planning services, to owners and managers who allow public access.

Funding priority will be given to applications that propose to:

  • Maximize private lands acreage available to the public;
  • Ensure that land enrolled in the program has appropriate wildlife habitat;
  • Strengthen wildlife habitat improvement efforts;
  • Supplement funding and services from other federal or state agencies, tribes or private resources; and
  • Provide information to the public about the location of public access land.


Conservation Partners Program
Through this Request for Proposals (RFP), Conservation Partners will fund organizations to partner with NRCS field offices to deliver technical assistance for high priority conservation objectives. Conservation Partners is a collaborative effort between the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service, the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, and other regional/initiative-specific partners. The purpose of the partnership is to provide grants on a competitive basis to:

  • Increase technical assistance capacity to implement three programs: NRCS’s Landscape Conservation Initiatives, NFWF’s Keystone Initiatives, and the NRCS-U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service partnership – Working Lands for Wildlife.
  • Maximize benefits to the three programs listed above within certain identified Program Priority Areas (PPAs).

The Spring 2014 Conservation Partners Program will award a total of $1.9 Million. Typical grant awards will range from $50,000 to $200,000.  Each Program Priority Area is expected to receive between $100,000 and $250,000 in funding.

Environmental Quality Incentives Program
The Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) is a voluntary program that provides financial and technical assistance to agricultural producers through contracts up to a maximum term of ten years in length. These contracts provide financial assistance to help plan and implement conservation practices that address natural resource concerns and for opportunities to improve soil, water, plant, animal, air and related resources on agricultural land and non-industrial private forestland. In addition, a purpose of EQIP is to help producers meet Federal, State, Tribal and local environmental regulations. Deadlines vary by state, click on link to go to your state's page.

Working Lands for Wildlife
Working Lands for Wildlife is a new partnership between NRCS and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to use agency technical expertise combined with $33 million in financial assistance from the Wildlife Habitat Incentive Program to combat the decline of seven specific wildlife species whose decline can be reversed and will benefit other species with similar habitat needs. Through Working Lands for Wildlife landowners can voluntarily participate in an incentive-based efforts to:

  • Restore populations of declining wildlife species.
  • Provide farmers, ranchers, and forest managers with regulatory certainty that conservation investments they make today help sustain their operations over the long term.
  • Strengthen and sustain rural economies by restoring and protecting the productive capacity of working lands.


Conservation Innovation Grants
Conservation Innovation Grants (CIG) is a voluntary program intended to stimulate the development and adoption of innovative conservation approaches and technologies while leveraging Federal investment in environmental enhancement and protection, in conjunction with agricultural production. Under CIG, Environmental Quality Incentives Program funds are used to award competitive grants to non-Federal governmental or nongovernmental organizations, Tribes, or individuals. CIG enables NRCS to work with other public and private entities to accelerate technology transfer and adoption of promising technologies and approaches to address some of the Nation's most pressing natural resource concerns. CIG will benefit agricultural producers by providing more options for environmental enhancement and compliance with Federal, State, and local regulations.

Conservation Stewardship Program
The Natural Resources Conservation Service’s Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP) will provide about $175 million in funding for up to 12.6 million additional acres enrollment this year. The voluntary program allows producers to go the extra mile in conserving natural resources while also maintaining or increasing the productivity of their operations. CSP is available on Tribal and private agricultural lands and non-industrial private forest land in all 50 States and the Caribbean and Pacific Islands Areas. The program provides equitable access to all producers, regardless of operation size, crops produced, or geographic location.

National Fish and Wildlife Foundation

Early Successional Forest
Early Successional Forest Initiative focuses on establishing viable populations of the American Woodcock, Golden-winged Warbler, and some two dozen additional imperiled species that nest in young, regenerating forests in eastern North America. Cost-effective, ecologically sound habitat creation and enhancement in key bird conservation regions is the primary goal of this program. Conservation planning for these species in both North America and in the Neotropics (the birds’ wintering grounds) is also a priority. These actions are being supported through a competitive grants program administered by NFWF and implemented by federal and state governments, non-governmental organizations, and academic institutions.

Longleaf Stewardship Fund
The Longleaf Stewardship Fund expands on longleaf restoration efforts across the nine states within longleaf pine’s historic range. It is a landmark public-private partnership that includes the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Forest Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Natural Resources Conservation Service and Southern Company. Funding priorities for this program include:

  • Restoring the longleaf pine ecosystem through collaborative and result-oriented actions that help advance the goals of the Range-Wide Conservation Plan for Longleaf Pine
  • Maintaining, enhancing and expanding productive understory habitat of the Longleaf Pine ecosystem
  • Aiding federal agencies in achieving their mission-oriented objectives
  • Supporting the recovery of iconic species through habitat enhancements
  • Strengthening the capacity of local organizations to establish, advance and/or lead local longleaf pine ecosystem restoration efforts
  • Expanding the number of landowners engaged in longleaf pine restoration and maintenance on private lands.

 


Forestland Stewards
The program will establish protected wildlife corridors between existing hubs of forestland and assist landowners in improving management practices to enhance the economic and ecological functions of working forests. Forestland Stewardswill launch conservation projects in three regions: the low country of North and South Carolina, the Cumberland Plateau of Tennessee and Alabama, and the piney woods on the Louisiana-Texas border. International Paper has 28 facilities located in these regions, affording IP employees an opportunity to participate in hands-on conservation work in their local areas.

Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforecement

Abandoned Mine Land Grants

More than $298 million is available in Fiscal Year (FY) 2014 to states and tribes to reclaim abandoned coal mines.  Funded in part by a fee collected on all coal produced in the United States, the 2014 Abandoned Mine Land (AML) grants enable 28 eligible states and tribes to help eliminate dangerous conditions and pollution caused by past coal mining. AML-funded projects include closing dangerous mine shafts, reclaiming unstable slopes, improving water quality by treating acid mine drainage, and restoring water supplies damaged by mining. The AML funds that OSMRE provides also support vitally needed well-paying jobs for communities in coal country.

Additional Funding

Open Space Institute: Resilience Landscapes Initiative
Using this new science, with a $6 million lead grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, OSI has launched the Resilient Landscapes Initiative to engage land trusts and public agencies across the eastern United States to respond to climate change. The Initiative seeks to increase conservation of lands that can facilitate wildlife adaptation to climate change, facilitate access to and use of The Nature Conservancy resiliency science, and enhance land trust capacity focused on critical climate priorities. OSI will achieve its goals through selected capital grants and a targeted outreach and education program. Through the Initiative, OSI is distributing $5.5 million in capital grants within four targeted areas. OSI selected these four Resilient Landscapes that are all strongly positioned to facilitate wildlife adaptation to climate change. Two of the four are within the AMJV region and include the Potomac Headwaters in West Virginia and Virginia and the Highlands and Kittatinny Ridge in New Jersey and Pennyslvania.

Land and Water Conservation Fund
Provides money to federal, state and local governments to purchase land, water and wetlands for the the benefit of all Americans. From majestic forests and snowcapped mountains, to wild rivers and stunning beaches, these acquisitions become part of your national forests. Lands and waters purchased through the LWCF are used to:

  • Provide recreational opportunities
  • Provide clean water
  • Preserve wildlife habitat
  • Enhance scenic vistas
  • Protect archaeological and historical sites
  • Maintain the pristine nature of wilderness areas

Land is bought from landowners at fair-market value (unless the owner chooses to offer the land as a donation or at a bargain price). The Fund receives money mostly from fees paid by companies drilling offshore for oil and gas. Other funding sources include the sale of surplus federal real estate and taxes on motorboat fuel.

Southern Cumberland Land Protection Fund
Second round of funding through the Southern Cumberland Land Protection Fund, which will award grants and loans to conservation projects protecting habitat that facilitates wildlife adaptation to changes in climate and other environmental factors. funding will be focused on permanently protecting large forest blocks in the Southern Cumberland Plateau in portions of Alabama, Tennessee and Georgia that have been identified as a high priority in recognized wildlife habitat and landscape conservation plans, including but not limited to state wildlife action plans and OSI’s recent research project, Protecting Southern Appalachian Wildlife in an Era of Climate Change. OSI will make loans and grants to qualified organizations for land acquisition through a competitive process that is guided by an advisory board comprised of experts within the region who are knowledgeable about natural resources, conservation planning, philanthropy, land transactions and policy.