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Find similar grantsUK AISI Systemic Safety Grants is sponsored by UK AI Security Institute (AISI). This program strengthens societal resilience to AI risks by funding research on how AI systems interact with social, economic, and institutional systems to create emergent harms. Researchers from academia, industry, and civil society can apply.
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Search similar grants →Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Academic researchers, industry researchers, civil society organizations. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
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The Systemic AI Safety Grants programme is a joint initiative of the UK AI Security Institute (AISI), the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), and Innovate UK, designed to safeguard societal systems during the rapid advancement and adoption of AI technologies. Unlike AISI's Alignment Project which focuses on preventing dangerous behavior in individual AI models, the Systemic Safety programme addresses broader societal risks from widespread AI deployment across critical sectors. The programme supports research across multiple priority areas: evaluations of dangerous capabilities and safeguards, studies on user interactions with AI models, risk governance through protocols and safety cases, sector-specific AI integration risks in education, healthcare, and finance, AI agent interactions and critical infrastructure vulnerability, AI-generated misinformation, and labour market impacts. The first phase selected 20 projects and those are currently underway. With a total fund of £8.5 million, the programme's initial £4 million allocation will expand as the scheme progresses. Successful applicants receive ongoing support, computing resources where needed, and access to a community of AI and sector-specific domain experts. The programme particularly values projects bringing together academic, industry, and civil society expertise.
The AISI Challenge Fund is a grant programme from the UK AI Security Institute focused on supporting research that directly addresses risks from advanced AI systems. Distinct from AISI's Systemic Safety programme (which targets broader societal deployment risks) and the Alignment Project (which focuses on preventing dangerous model behavior), the Challenge Fund supports a wider range of AI safety and security research proposals. The fund has been designed with a multi-stage review process and provides applicants with detailed application packs, clarification question documents, and cost guidance to support high-quality proposals. The programme is open to researchers at eligible UK and international academic institutions and non-profit organizations. The Challenge Fund launched on March 5, 2025, and the first round of applications has completed its review cycle. Future rounds are expected as AISI continues to expand its external research funding portfolio. The UK AI Security Institute was established following the 2023 AI Safety Summit at Bletchley Park and has rapidly grown into one of the world's leading government-funded AI safety research organizations, with a mandate to evaluate frontier AI models, conduct safety research, and fund external research that advances AI safety.
The UK AI Security Institute (AISI) Challenge Fund awards funding to researchers addressing pressing questions in AI safety and security. The fund covers research areas including AI safeguards, control mechanisms, alignment techniques, and societal resilience to AI risks. The AISI, formerly the UK AI Safety Institute, is the UK government's dedicated body for evaluating and ensuring the safety of advanced AI systems. The Challenge Fund is designed to build a broader research ecosystem around AI safety by engaging academic institutions and non-profit organizations in the UK and internationally. While the most recent application round has closed, the program is part of AISI's ongoing research portfolio and is expected to continue with future funding rounds. The program complements the larger AISI Alignment Project (up to £1M per project) and the Systemic Safety Grants, forming a comprehensive suite of AI safety research funding from the UK government.
Digital Cities' Innovation Accelerator Small Grant Program is sponsored by U.S. State Department's Bureau of Cyberspace and Digital Policy (CDP). These small grants activate the private sector to deliver novel and innovative solutions to civic challenges. Projects must address a sub-national public service or infrastructure need AND incorporate trusted U.S. digital based solutions, empowering municipalities to improve public service delivery.
This NOFO provides an opportunity to all FY 2018 NIST SBIR Phase I awardees to submit a Phase II application following completion of Phase I. This NOFO provides instructions for FY 2019 NIST SBIR Phase II application preparation and submission requirements. In Phase II, work from Phase I that exhibits potential for commercial application is further developed. Phase II is the R&D or prototype development phase. To apply for a Phase II award, each Phase I awardee will be required to submit a comprehensive application outlining the proposed research and a detailed plan to commercialize the final product. Each NIST Phase II award is for up to $400,000 and up to a 24-month period of performance. One year after completing the Phase II R&D activity, the awardee shall be required to report on its commercialization activities. Up to an additional $6,500 may be requested for Technical and Business Assistance (TABA); see Section 5.11 for more information about TABA. Funding Opportunity Number: 2019-NIST-SBIR-02. Assistance Listing: 11.620. Funding Instrument: CA. Category: ST. Award Amount: Up to $400K per award.
Research on Circular Economy, Smart Manufacturing, and Energy-Efficient Microelectronics is sponsored by U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Advanced Materials & Manufacturing Technologies Office (AMMTO). This funding opportunity supports innovative technology R&D across the manufacturing sector with a focus on circular economy, smart manufacturing, and energy-efficient microelectronics. While the stated deadline for full applications has passed, AMMTO frequently issues similar solicitations, and this highlights a relevant area of interest for the DOE.