Funding-NSF - Dear Colleague
Letter: SEES: Interactions of Food Systems with Water and Energy Systems; September
01, 2015
February 2, 2015
Dear Colleagues:
NSF established the Science, Engineering, and
Education for Sustainability (SEES) investment area in 2010 to lay the research
foundation for decision capabilities and technologies aimed at mitigating and
adapting to environmental changes that threaten sustainability. SEES
investments advance a systems-based approach to understanding, predicting, and
reacting to stress upon and changes in the linked natural, social, and built
environments. In this context, the importance of understanding the
interconnected and interdependent systems involving food, energy, and water
(FEW) has emerged. Through this Dear Colleague Letter (DCL), the NSF aims to
accelerate fundamental understanding and stimulate basic research on systems
that extend beyond the interests of the SEES Water Sustainability and Climate
(WSC) program to include couplings to energy and food systems where the NSF
already has established presence.
Water and energy are critical for agriculture and
food production. In addition, many factors - including changing land-use
practices; increased urbanization; population growth and distribution; changing
demand and consumer preferences; water contamination; and climate variability -
create stresses on water, energy, and agriculture resources and systems in
multiple and sometimes unexpected ways. These multifaceted interactions
among food, energy, and water systems function according to fundamental
scientific principles that govern the coupling of various physical, chemical,
biological and social processes. There is a critical need to enhance
understanding of the couplings within these complex systems and how they
determine the systems-level response of the FEW system.
a need for basic research to enable foundational
technologies critical to the safety, security, productivity, and resilience of
the FEW system and to pursue sustained cyberinfrastructure (data, software, and
computational resources) that will support these activities and advances. The
NSF supports basic research in nearly all key scientific and engineering
disciplines which can further the understanding of these physical, chemical,
biological, and social interactions, as well as the integration of
heterogeneous data and uncertainties. In addition, the NSF supports the
building of knowledge and educational advances to foster a broad and diverse
next generation workforce.
The NSF defines the FEW system very broadly,
incorporating physical processes (such as new technologies for more efficient
resource utilization), natural processes (such as biogeochemical and hydrologic
cycles), biological processes (such as agroecosystem
structure and productivity), social/behavioral processes (such as decision
making and governance), and cyber elements. Understanding these complex,
dynamic coupled systems will require new or enhanced partnerships across many
disciplinary research communities.
The NSF requests innovative proposals in the form of
(1) supplements, to build upon existing NSF-funded research activities; or (2)
conferences of typically 30-80 attendees that stimulate debate, discussion,
visioning and collaboration across research communities, and enable a higher
appreciation, visualization and understanding of food systems and their
couplings to energy and water systems. Such conferences are typically
identified as "workshops" and will hereafter be referred to as simply
"workshops". All NSF Directorates/Office listed below are
interested in receiving inquiries. These proposals should address the
coupled nature of the food, energy, and water system and the interdisciplinary
dimensions of physical, natural, biological, cyber, and social/behavioral
processes of relevance.
Workshop
proposals should facilitate and enable interdisciplinary
partnerships among natural science, physical science, social science, computing
and engineering researchers and develop innovative, interdisciplinary research
approaches to understanding the FEW system. Workshop projects should culminate
in deliverable white papers that define scientific, engineering and data
challenges in understanding the FEW system. In
addition to academic researchers, workshop participants may include scientists,
engineers, educators, and practitioners from industry, local, state, and
federal agencies (e.g. EPA, DOE, USDA, USGS, NOAA).
For any potential NSF follow-on effort in the FEW system,
NSF anticipates some Federal agency partner participation.
Workshop proposals may be submitted to any
appropriate program, with prior approval of the program's manager, and may be
additionally discussed by other relevant programs. Prior to submitting a
proposal the PI must contact one of the individuals listed below to ensure that
the proposal fits the goals of this DCL. PIs will then be directed to
appropriate Program Directors for submission through the normal submission
process outlined in the NSF Grants Proposal Guide. Workshop proposal
budgets must be less than a total of $100,000. The title of workshop proposals
submitted under this DCL should begin with "FEW."
Supplements to existing NSF active grants may be proposed with prior permission
of the appropriate managing Program Officer. These requests must enhance
existing projects by incorporating or exploring the concepts described in this
DCL. For example, a project focusing on energy and water might propose to add a
component related to food production. In addition, proposed supplements may
provide an opportunity to broaden the project's interdisciplinary dimensions to
incorporate physical, natural, biological, cyber, and social/behavioral
processes of relevance. All supplement requests must include costs
associated with use of facilities or other infrastructure. Supplements whose
focus is to foster and strengthen interaction among scientists, engineers, and
educators, to advance research or education in the FEW
system, across disciplinary, organization, geographic, and international
boundaries, will also be considered.
Workshop proposals and supplement requests must be
submitted by March 30, 2015, for consideration. Workshop proposals should focus
their activities and deliverables in the September to December 2015
timeframe. For supplements that foster new collaborations and partnerships
to address interdisciplinary topics, it is strongly encouraged to have initial
activities during 2015. Proposals or requests where PIs have not contacted the
relevant program officers, as described in this DCL, will be returned without
consideration.
MPS will also consider EAGERs following specific
discussion with the MPS point of contact below. Investigators are encouraged to
review the six "bottleneck" areas of research identified in the July
of 2014 report of the Mathematical and Physical Sciences Advisory Committee -
Subcommittee on Food Systems "Food, Energy and Water: Transformative
Research Opportunities in the Mathematical and Physical Sciences." This
report can be found at:http://www.nsf.gov/mps/advisory/mpsac_other_reports/nsf_food_security_report_review_final_rev2.pdf
Points of contact for participating Directorates:
ENG: JoAnn Lighty, FEW
Working Group co-Chair
Division Director
Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental, & Transport Systems
GEO: Thomas Torgersen, FEW
Working Group co-Chair
Program Officer, Division of Earth Sciences
BIO: Alan Tessier
Deputy Division Director (Acting), Division of Environmental Biology
SBE: Leah Nichols
Program Officer, Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences
OIIA: Audrey Levine
Program Officer, Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research
MPS: Colby Foss
Program Officer, Division of Chemistry
CISE: David Corman
Program Officer, Division of Computer and Network Systems
EHR: Amy Chan Hilton
Program Officer, Division of Undergraduate Education