Awarded Grants
Below is a listing of our awarded grants that tackle big food and agriculture challenges.

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436 Grants found

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Uniting Urban Agriculture Operations to Increase Food Security 

Year Awarded  2023

FFAR award amount   $300,000

Total award amount   $600,667

Location   New York City, NY

Program   Seeding Solutions

Matching Funders   Mother Cabrini Health Foundation, NYU Stern Center for Sustainable Business

Grantee Institution   NYU Stern Center for Sustainable Business

The New York City urban agriculture community is fragmented, with little understanding of who is growing food and how it is being distributed. Consistent data collection and access is the first step to understanding urban agriculture systems and promoting equitable food access. Led by Marianna Koval, NYU Stern Center for Sustainable Business researchers are developing a data collection tool to establish a baseline understanding of local food production in New York City.

Validation of Efficacy of a Protective DIVA-Compatible Prototype African Swine Fever Virus Vaccine 

Year Awarded  2023

FFAR award amount   $1,000,000

Total award amount   $2,645,427

Location   Manhattan, KS

Program   Seeding Solutions

Matching Funders   Elanco Animal Health, Kansas State University, Kansas State University Innovation Partners and MEDIAN Diagnostics, Inc.

Grantee Institution   Kansas State University

African Swine Fever Virus (ASFV) is a highly contagious, fatal disease in pigs that spreads rapidly. There is no commercially available treatment or vaccine for the virus, and the threat to U.S. swine production is significant. To protect U.S. herds, Kansas State University College of Veterinary Medicine researchers are developing and validating a vaccine to protect pigs from ASFV.

The Revitalization of Indigenous Crops in the Southwest 

Year Awarded  2023

Total award amount   $450,000

Location   Tempe, AZ

Grantee Institution   University of Arizona

Climate change is compromising highly nutritious, localized food grown by Indigenous societies, which has led to detrimental health disparities for American Indians, including higher rates of diabetes, heart disease and obesity. Dr. Michael Kotutwa Johnson aims to ensure crop biodiversity and increase access to nutritious food through partnerships with tribal communities. Kotutwa Johnson is examining water conservation practices that increase Indigenous food production, analyzing Indigenous foods’ nutritional value to integrate these foods into USDA and other food programs and developing safeguards to protect Indigenous groups data rights.

Big Data to Improve and Sustain Wheat End-Use Quality in the Face of Increasingly Variable Climate Scenarios 

Year Awarded  2023

Total award amount   $322,129

Location   Corvallis, OR

Grantee Institution   Oregon State University

To maintain a competitive advantage, United States grain producers often focus on producing wheat with milling and baking qualities desirable in Asia and Latin America, the primary importers of U.S. wheat. However, climate extremes can destabilize wheat crops with these end-use qualities. Dr. Margaret Krause is supplementing end-use datasets assembled by the USDA by linking measurements of wheat milling and baking quality to climate and crop management data. Krause aims to determine which climate and crop management factors most affect wheat quality, whether end-use quality can be forecasted and what options might be available to producers to improve wheat quality.

Developing circular urban food systems for a rapidly growing desert city 

Year Awarded  2023

Total award amount   $450,000

Location   Tempe, AZ

Grantee Institution   Arizona State University

Using food waste-derived fertilizer in controlled environment agriculture can address urban food system challenges. Yet, limited information is available about fertilizer characteristics and application methodologies. Dr. Yujin Park is examining the nutrient content of food waste-derived fertilizer, determining procedures to increase its nutrient balance and evaluating the impact of its use with indoor and greenhouse production systems.

Evaluating the use of calcium silicate amendments to manage the bioavailability of organic carbon in agricultural soils 

Year Awarded  2023

Total award amount   $449,607

Location   New Haven, CT

Grantee Institution   Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station Research Foundation Inc.

Organic carbon greatly benefits soil health and functions such as crop productivity, limiting erosion and sequestering carbon dioxide. Dr. Itamar Shabtai is evaluating the interactions of calcium inputs, currently studied for sequestering inorganic carbon, on soil organic carbon. The project is examining how these inputs affect soil organic carbon and soil health and whether they change soils’ microbial community.

Advancing the Design and Fabrication of Biopolymer-based Nanocomposites for Sustainable Food Packaging 

Year Awarded  2023

Total award amount   $450,000

Location   Clemson, SC

Grantee Institution   Clemson University

Current food packaging still relies on non-biodegradable plastics, which persist in the environment for a long time and can harm wildlife. Dr. Zhaoxu Meng's research aims to design and fabricate high-performance packaging materials with sustainable, biodegradable biopolymers derived from renewable sources like food and agriculture waste and byproducts. Meng is using advanced technologies like computational modeling and artificial intelligence to guide the hypothesis-driven, bottom-up—linking molecular structure to materials' overall performance—design and fabrication processes.

Using a novel RNA therapy to tackle dual threat of tomato spotted wilt virus, a pandemic agricultural pathogen and its supervector, thrips 

Year Awarded  2023

FFAR award amount   $449,158

Total award amount   $449,158

Location   College Station, TX

Matching Funders   Texas A&M AgriLife Research

Grantee Institution   Texas A&M AgriLife Research

Currently, producers manage the tomato spotted wilt virus through genetically resistant varieties of tomato and pepper as well as insecticides to control thrips, an insect that spreads the virus. However, novel strains of tomato spotted wilt virus have overcome the genetic resistance, and thrips have developed insecticide resistance. Dr. Kiran Gadhave is developing a type of RNA that can deliver targeted therapeutics, both preventative and curative, specifically tailored against the virus and thrips to the tomato and pepper, helping to develop a novel, sustainable, economical, eco-friendly tool for pest management.

Harnessing mycorrhizal-microbial synergies for agricultural resilience and health 

Year Awarded  2023

Total award amount   $449,897

Location   Amherst, MA

Grantee Institution   University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Beneficial partnerships that form between mycorrhizal fungi and most agricultural crop families can support crop productivity and soil health. Recent research shows that these benefits partly depend upon interactions between the fungi and other soil microorganisms. Through interdisciplinary collaborations and analytical approaches that span molecular measurements and cellular imaging to field trials, Dr. Rachel Hestrin is investigating how mycorrhizal-microbial relationships facilitate soil nutrient cycling, organic matter formation and other processes that promote soil health.

Food security in the Anthropocene in Islander Communities 

Year Awarded  2023

Total award amount   $449,942

Location   Honolulu, HI

Grantee Institution   University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa

Dr. Subhashni Raj is analyzing how the COVID pandemic disruptions affected food supply chains in communities in Hawaii and Fiji and the role the presence of traditional and ancestral food systems may have played in shoring up food security. By understanding the role of Indigenous and ancestral food pathways in maintaining food security during a crisis, Raj is developing plans to restore traditional and Indigenous food pathways into the food systems.