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Find similar grantsEngineering of Biomedical Systems is sponsored by NSF Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental, and Transport Systems. Supports fundamental and transformative research that integrates engineering and life sciences to solve biomedical problems.
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Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental and Transport Systems (ENG/CBET) | NSF - U.S. National Science Foundation Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental and Transport Systems (ENG/CBET) View image credit & caption Updates to reflect the new organizational structure of ENG are in progress. Some information on this page may no longer be current.
Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental and Transport Systems (ENG/CBET) The U.S. National Science Foundation Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental and Transport Systems (CBET) invests in fundamental research and education that involve the transformation and transport of matter and energy by chemical, thermal or mechanical means.
CBET supports research, education and innovation in: Chemical and biochemical systems. Environmental engineering and sustainability. Bioengineering and engineering health care.
Fundamental transport, thermal and fluid phenomena.
NSF ENG leadership changes ENG Newsletter: Improving disaster resilience Next Required Due Date: Proposals Accepted Anytime Engineering Biological and Biomedical Systems Next Required Due Date: Proposals Accepted Anytime Next Required Due Date: Proposals Accepted Anytime Engineering Environmental Resiliency Next Required Due Date: Proposals Accepted Anytime View all CBET opportunities Researchers discover microplastics at all ocean depths New tools to identify and monitor cardiovascular disease Unique skeletal tissue may enable new regenerative medical treatments
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Non-U. S. citizens may be eligible; refer to program guidelines for specific eligibility criteria. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Engineering of Biomedical Systems is funded by NSF Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental, and Transport Systems. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
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On June 11, 2026, U.S. District Judge Richard Gergel ruled that the EPA's February 2025 termination of the $2.8 billion Environmental and Climate Justice Block Grant Program — created by Section 60201 of the Inflation Reduction Act — was arbitrary, capricious, and unlawful. The ruling voids the termination but does not order the EPA to resume the program, leaving the September 30, 2026 statutory deadline as the binding constraint. For the 116 grantees and the coalition of nonprofits, cities, and tribal partners that were already in award negotiations, the next 105 days will determine whether the program survives in any operational form or migrates entirely to the Court of Federal Claims as a damages action.
Read articleThe NSF FY 2026-2030 Strategic Plan reorganizes the agency around three goals, names AI, quantum, and biotech as the critical technologies, codifies Gold Standard Science, and explicitly targets applicant burden. The implications for proposal strategy are bigger than they look.
Read articleCongress appropriated \$8.75 billion for NSF in FY2026, rejecting the administration's proposed 55% cut to \$3.9 billion. But between April and May 2025, DOGE terminated 1,752 grants worth \$1.4 billion, hitting STEM Education (\$888M, 839 grants) and Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences hardest. Director Panchanathan resigned April 24, 2025; no permanent replacement has been named. Effective December 15, 2025, NSF cut minimum external reviews from three to two, made one internal review allowable, made panel discussions optional, and shrank panel summaries to three to five sentences. Here is what the new NSF actually looks like as a funder, who is being selected against, and how to position a 2026 proposal against the new merit review.
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