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AI for Good Grant for Ethical and Socially Responsible AI Innovation is sponsored by Moonshot Platform (through fundsforNGOs). An award for young innovators, engineers, and coders aged 15 to 30 who are building AI solutions that create social good in areas such as education, healthcare, commerce, environmental protection, and community development.
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Or search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Young innovators, engineers, coders, social innovators, and early-stage changemakers aged 15-30. Can apply individually or as part of a team. Ineligible applicants: governmental organizations. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows $5,000 equity-free grant (AI for Good thematic award). Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Applications for AI for Good Grant for Ethical and Socially Responsible AI Innovation are due July 12, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
AI for Good Grant for Ethical and Socially Responsible AI Innovation is funded by Moonshot Platform (through fundsforNGOs). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
NVIDIA Graduate Fellowship Program is a grant from NVIDIA providing up to $60,000 per award to PhD students conducting research that advances accelerated computing and its applications. Now in its 25th year, the program invites nominations from doctoral students pushing the boundaries of artificial intelligence, robotics, autonomous vehicles, and related fields. Recipients receive not only research funding but also access to NVIDIA technology, products, and engineering expertise, along with a mandatory in-person summer internship. Students are nominated by their faculty advisors and selected based on academic achievement and research area alignment.
CalSEED Concept Award is a grant from the California Energy Commission that provides $150,000 in funding to early-stage clean energy innovators in California. The program targets individuals, businesses, and nonprofits developing hardware, software, or integrated solutions at Technology Readiness Levels 2-4. Eligible technology areas rotate each cycle and have included battery recycling and reuse, long-duration energy storage, medium- and heavy-duty vehicle electrification, industrial electrification, and advanced EV charging. Applicants must be located in California, have under $1 million in private funding, and propose innovations that benefit California ratepayers. Concept Award winners also receive professional development resources and access to accelerator programs, and may compete for a subsequent $450,000 Prototype Award.
NIST SBIR Phase I - Advanced Manufacturing and Robotics is sponsored by National Institute of Standards and Technology. NIST SBIR Phase I - Advanced Manufacturing and Robotics is a grant from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) that funds small businesses with innovative research and technology ideas in advanced manufacturing and robotics.
The May 29 OMB rewrite of 2 CFR Part 200 quietly rebuilds the pass-through entity compliance architecture. Proposed §200.332 strengthens subrecipient risk assessment, monitoring documentation, and remediation triggers. A new requirement mandates that every subaward be reported to SAM.gov with the reported records confirmed in performance reports — converting subaward administration from a back-office accounting function into a public-record certification regime. For the universities, state agencies, and national nonprofits that pass through more than half of their federal awards as subawards, the operational implication is a new compliance operating model that needs to be standing up by the October 1 effective date.
Read articleBuried in the May 29 OMB rewrite of 2 CFR Part 200 is the elimination of fixed-amount awards as a default grant instrument. Cost-reimbursement reverts to the standard. Here is what the change costs community-based nonprofits, pass-through subaward portfolios, SBIR Phase II direct-to-award structures, and the grant offices that have built workflows around milestone payments — and the comment-and-renegotiation strategy that has six weeks to land before July 13.
Read articleS. 3971 reauthorized SBIR/STTR through September 2031, but the interesting parts are buried in the fine print: higher award ceilings, proposal-submission caps, a new $30M late-stage mechanism, and NSF's $250M restart with a July 27 deadline. Here's what actually changed and how to position for it.
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