Important Information and Updates
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NOFO at a Glance
General Information
CPO’s grant programs manage a competitive process through a NOFO announcement to make awards supporting high-quality research conducted across the United States and internationally on the most urgent climate science questions. While each program area has its own focus, together they advance understanding of Earth’s climate system through interdisciplinary, integrated scientific research, and leverage the resulting knowledge, data, and systems to enhance society’s ability to plan and respond to climate variability and climate change. Toward this end, CPO also supports partnerships that build end-to-end pipelines of information (e.g., integrated information systems) flowing from scientists to decision-makers.
For FY25, the MAPP program invites proposals that develop multi-decadal projections of climate impacts related to various industry concerns. A number of industries including finance and reinsurance, retail, and architecture and engineering, have been engaged with NOAA in recent years and are seeking integrated projections of climate risks to mitigate climate impacts on their operations. Projects submitted in response to this solicitation should focus on the application of climate data and model projections to characterizing the risks to these industries. Proposals should include the application of relevant datasets such as CMIP6, downscaled projection datasets, observations, and large ensemble simulations. Collaborations with industrial stakeholders or individuals who serve as boundary-spanners between the climate science and industrial stakeholder communities are essential to the effective co-development of reliable, useful and responsive projections for application in industrial planning. Proposals should result in tangible products, information, or techniques that can be delivered to stakeholders for application. Proposals may consider developing methods or outputs that can be transitioned to NCEI.
Links to Full NOFO and Grants.gov Listing
Important Dates/Deadlines
Letters of Intent:
Letters of intent (LOIs) should be submitted via Google Form by 11:59 pm Eastern Time on October 18, 2024.
Full Applications:
Full applications must be received by 11:59 pm Eastern Time, on January 10, 2025.
Applications received after this time will not be considered for funding.
Applications must be submitted via http://www.grants.gov. For applications submitted through grants.gov, the basis for determining timeliness is the receipt notice issued by http://www.grants.gov, which includes the date and time received.
Emailed or faxed copies of applications will not be accepted.
Applicants without Internet access:
For applicants without internet access, please contact the CPO Grants Manager Diane Brown by mail at NOAA Climate Program Office (R/CP1), SSMC3, Room 12734, 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910 to obtain an application package.
Please allow two weeks after receipt for a response. Hard copy submissions will be date and time stamped when they are received in the Climate Program Office.
Where to Submit
Application packages:
Visit the Grants.gov listing and click on Apply.
Federal Funding Opportunity Number:
Applicants without Internet access:
Send applications to:
Diane Brown
CPO Grants Manager
NOAA Climate Program Office (R/CP1), SSMC3, Room 12734
1315 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, MD 20910
Please allow two weeks after receipt for a response. Hard copy submissions will be date and time stamped when they are received in the Climate Program Office.
For Federal Investigators
Federal lead investigators who wish to apply to this Announcement of Opportunity must prepare a proposal according to the FFO guidelines and submit the proposal to the program manager directly, instead of to Grants.gov. Federal co-investigators must submit a proposal identical to the proposal lead’s but with personalized budget information.
Letters of Intent for Federal investigators should be received by the Competition Manager by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on October 18, 2024.
Full applications must be received by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on January 10, 2025.
Questions/Who to Contact
For competition specific information please contact the Competition Manager, dan.barrie@noaa.gov.
For general questions about the NOFO application process, please contact the CPO Grants Specialist Kathleen Palermo or the CPO Grants Manager, Diane Brown, by mail (see address below) or at diane.brown@noaa.gov.
Diane Brown
CPO Grants Manager
NOAA Climate Program Office (R/CP1), SSMC3, Room 12734
1315 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, MD 20910
Please allow up to two weeks after receipt for a response.
Additional Links
Webinars/Events
For FY25, the MAPP program is soliciting proposals to 2 competitions. Informational video provides details for applications, including timelines and deadlines.
A joint discussion with Q&A was held for all FY25 competitions hosted by the Climate Program Office's Earth System Science and Modeling (ESSM) Division programs. The video recording can be found by visiting the event page.
List Of Competitions
MAPP is accepting individual applications for 1 competition.
Climate Change Projections to 2050: Applied Information for Industrial
Program Manager(s)
- Dan Barrie
- dan.barrie@noaa.gov
Grants Specialist
- Kathleen Palermo
For FY25, the MAPP program invites proposals that develop multi-decadal projections of climate impacts related to various industry concerns. A number of industries including finance and reinsurance, retail, and architecture and engineering, have been engaged with NOAA in recent years and are seeking integrated projections of climate risks to mitigate climate impacts on their operations. Projects submitted in response to this solicitation should focus on the application of climate data and model projections to characterizing the risks to these industries. Proposals should include the application of relevant datasets such as CMIP6, downscaled projection datasets, observations, and large ensemble simulations. Collaborations with industrial stakeholders or individuals who serve as boundary-spanners between the climate science and industrial stakeholder communities are essential to the effective co-development of reliable, useful and responsive projections for application in industrial planning. Proposals should result in tangible products, information, or techniques that can be delivered to stakeholders for application. Proposals may consider developing methods or outputs that can be transitioned to NCEI.
For FY25, the MAPP program is soliciting proposals to 2 competitions. Informational video provides details for applications, including timelines and deadlines.