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Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) Energy Efficiency Improvement Guaranteed Loans & Grants is sponsored by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). The REAP program provides guaranteed loan financing and grant funding to agricultural producers and rural small businesses for renewable energy systems or to make energy efficiency improvements, including high-efficiency HVAC systems.
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Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Agricultural producers and rural small businesses are eligible. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) Energy Efficiency Improvement Guaranteed Loans & Grants is funded by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Yes — this listing is flagged as national in scope, so applicants across the U.S. may apply, subject to the sponsor's other eligibility criteria.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
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Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) / Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Programs (Phase I) is sponsored by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA). The USDA SBIR/STTR programs focus on transforming scientific discovery into products and services with commercial potential and/or societal benefit in agriculturally-related areas. This can include app development for agricultural technology, rural development, and smart farming. Phase I aims to demonstrate technical feasibility.
Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program (VPA-HIP) is sponsored by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). This program helps state and tribal governments encourage private landowners to allow public access to their land for hunting, fishing, and other wildlife-dependent recreation. It benefits both landowners and the public by increasing recreational opportunities.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) / Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Programs (Phase I) is sponsored by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA). The USDA SBIR/STTR programs focus on transforming scientific discovery into products and services with commercial potential and/or societal benefit in agriculturally-related areas. This can include app development for agricultural technology, rural development, and smart farming. Phase I aims to demonstrate technical feasibility.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program is sponsored by NOAA. This program provides seed funding to small businesses for research and development of innovative technologies across NOAA's mission areas, including climate change adaptation and mitigation, coastal resilience, and extreme weather events. Phase I awards fund a six-month period for conducting feasibility and proof of concept research.
SBIR/STTR Phase I Programs is sponsored by National Science Foundation (NSF). The NSF SBIR/STTR programs provide non-dilutive funding for cutting-edge technology innovations that address societal challenges. The Space (SP) topic seeks transformative technologies for sustainable space exploration, habitation, or industrialization, which could include in-space research or manufacturing systems, microgravity applications, and photonic devices and materials.
FNS will award up to $5M with individual requests of $20K to $2M. Past FY24 and FY25 PTIG winners are ineligible as lead applicants, opening the field substantially. The state SNAP letter of commitment is the operational bottleneck — not the proposal itself.
Read articleASCF is a direct-payment program, not a competitive grant — but the eligibility traps (no controlled-environment, no cover-crop acres, prior 2025 acreage report by April 24) and the $250K cap mean tens of thousands of producers will leave money on the table.
Read articleThe FAS NOFO opens $226M for five-year, $28–35M cooperative agreements with a July 6 deadline. The seven-country priority list — Bangladesh, Bolivia, Ecuador, Morocco, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand — replaces the prior Africa-heavy footprint with an Indo-Pacific and Western-Hemisphere geography that maps directly to U.S. commercial agriculture export strategy.
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