Funding-NSF - Dear
Colleague Letter: Special Guidelines for Submitting Collaborative Proposals
under the US NSF/GEO - UK NERC Lead Agency Opportunity; October 3, 2014
SCOPE
The Directorate for Geosciences (GEO) of the
National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Natural Environment Research Council
(NERC) of the Research Councils UK (RCUK) are pleased to announce an
NSF/GEO-NERC lead agency opportunity. The goal of this opportunity is to reduce
some of the current barriers to working internationally. Through a lead agency
model, GEO and NERC will address these issues by allowing US and UK researchers
to submit a single collaborative proposal that will undergo a single review
process.
The US NSF and the RCUK have signed a Memorandum of Understanding
(MOU) on Research Cooperation. The MOU provides an overarching framework to
encourage collaboration between US and UK research communities and sets out the
principles by which jointly supported activities might be developed. The MOU
provides for a lead agency arrangement whereby proposals may be submitted to
either NSF or NERC.
Proposals will be accepted for collaborative
research in areas at the intersection of NSF/GEO and NERC interest as set out
below:
NSF/GEO Solicitations
Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences, Earth Sciences,
Ocean Sciences, and Polar Programs:http://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_list.jsp?org=GEO
NERC Responsive
Mode1
Standard Research Grants (including New Investigator Grants)
Large Research Grants
Proposals
are expected to adhere to the remit, funding limits, and grant durations for
the NSF/GEO and NERC programs of the respective agency from which the funding
is sought and must represent an integrated collaborative effort. This document provides guidelines for the preparation, submission, review, and award
of NSF/GEO-NERC collaborative proposals. During an initial two-year phase
(2015-2016), both agencies will evaluate the interest in and success of the
activities.
Proposers
are advised that all documents submitted to NSF or
RCUK may be shared with the other agency in order to implement the two-way
agency activities.
PROPOSAL
PREPARATION AND SUBMISSION
- Researchers
will identify a prospective lead agency (either NSF or NERC) based on where the largest proportion of research lies. Prior to submission
of a letter of intent, the principal investigator (PI) should contact the
proposed lead funding agency at NSFGEO-NERC@nsf.gov or international@nerc.ac.uk to
discuss the research focus of the project. The two agencies will consult
and confirm which one will act as lead
funding agency, and this will be communicated to the PI.
- If
NSF/GEO is the lead agency, a letter of intent (LOI) must then
be submitted to NSFGEO-NERC@nsf.gov and
the appropriate NSF program officer at least four months in advance of the
program deadline. The title of the LOI should be prefaced with
"NSFGEO-NERC:" to indicate that the document is to be considered
under these lead agency activities. The
letter of intent should include the following information:
- If
NERC is the lead agency and the proposal meets the Standard Grant scheme
criteria, a letter of intent (LOI) must then be submitted to NERC at least four months in advance of the standard grant
closing date, via email tointernational@nerc.ac.uk.
The
following information must be included:
If
the proposal meets the Large Grant scheme criteria an outline
proposal must be submitted via the Je-S system in accordance with usual
Large Grant outline closing date and requirements.
An additional page in the case for support must be used to describe the US team
and provide bottom line estimates of funding that the US team will be
requesting from NSF (a detailed budget is not needed at this time).
- For
UK partners, involvement in a joint international proposal will count
towards the limit on the number of proposal submissions an individual can
make to a funding call, whether submitted to NSF or NERC.
- The
lead agency will share the LOI or outline proposal
with the non-lead agency to check for eligibility (whether the proposed
research is within the participating agencies' portfolio, and if the
proposers and institutions meet agency eligibility requirements). If the
lead agency is NERC, the outline proposals will undergo a peer
evaluation for intellectual merit and broader impacts. Based on these
evaluations, proposers may be invited to submit a full research proposal
to NERC. LOIs will not undergo peer review.
- The
lead agency will provide a written response to proposers on
whether or not the proposed submission is invited to proceed under the
lead agency process.
- Proposers
who are invited to submit a full proposal will do so in
accordance with the proposal preparation requirements of both agencies: if NSF is lead, complying with the GEO solicitation and
submitting through NSF's FastLane
system (https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov)
or Grants.gov (http://grants.gov)
and if NERC is lead, complying with the Research
Grants Handbook via
the Research Council's Je-S system (https://je-s.rcuk.ac.uk/).
Biographical
sketches of all senior personnel (including US and UK partners) should
be prepared in accordance with the standard biographical sketch format
identified in GEO solicitation and uploaded in one PDF file.
- The
full proposal should indicate the proposal is to be considered under the
lead agency activities by prefacing the title
with "NSFGEO-NERC:"
- If
NSF is the lead agency, the proposal should only indicate the US expenses
on the NSF budget form. If NERC is the lead agency, the proposal should
only indicate the UK expenses on NERC's budget form. A copy of the proposed requested budget of the non-lead agency
should be included as part of the full proposal as a supplementary
document. The Budget Justification section of the full proposal should
address the full UK and US project budgets and they must be clearly differentiated in the justification. Proposals that
request duplicative funding may be returned without review.
As
the non-lead agency, NERC will make awards up to a limit of £300,000,
calculated at 100% Full Economic Cost (FEC) (NERC will fund
80% of the FEC). In addition NERC anticipates managing an annual volume of 3%
of its Discovery Science budget that can be awarded as non-lead agency. As the
non-lead agency, NSF/GEO may limit the US component of any project. Information
on the estimated program budget and the estimated
number of awards can be found in the award information section in the current
GEO solicitations.
- The
following documents must be provided as Supplementary
Documents for the full proposal:
- For
projects involving human subjects/participants or vertebrate animals,
proposers should consult both NSF and NERC policies.
- The
full proposal will be submitted by established program deadlines or target
dates determined by the lead agency during the initial phase of this
activity (2015 and 2016) and annually afterwards. Refer to the GEO
solicitations and NERC Responsive Mode/Discovery
Science schemes for specific timing of deadlines.
PEER
REVIEW
NSF/GEO-NERC
collaborative proposals will be reviewed alongside all other standard proposals
received in the same funding round or call and will not undergo a separate or special review process.
Proposals
will be reviewed in accordance with the lead agency's review criteria. While
these are not identical, NSF and RCUK ask reviewers to evaluate research on
both its scientific or intellectual merit as well as its
broader or societal impacts.
FUNDING
DECISIONS
The
funding decisions will be discussed with the partner agency. The lead agency
will use its usual internal procedures to determine whether a proposal will be
awarded or declined. Funding decisions may be subject to availability of
funds.
All
proposers will be advised by the lead funding agency whether their proposals
have been recommended for funding or will be declined. Proposers will receive
copies of the reviewers' unattributed comments and, where applicable, a panel summary.
Once
a proposer is notified that his or her proposal has been recommended for
funding, the non-lead research partner(s) must contact the non-lead agency, in
the case of NSF at NSFGEO-NERC@nsf.gov, and
in the case of NERC atinternational@nerc.ac.uk and
subsequently submit a copy of the proposal to the non-lead
agency so that both agencies have complete documentation.
Each
agency will notify the proposer that these awards were made possible by the
NSF/GEO-NERC lead agency activities.
Because
the participating organizations have different funding cycles,
it is possible that some projects will have delayed start dates in order to
wait until funds become available.
Should
a proposal be declined for funding, proposers should refer to each agency's
individual resubmission policies. Involvement in a proposal
submitted to the lead agency will count as a submission to the non-lead agency
for purposes of resubmission monitoring.
POSTAWARD
CONSIDERATIONS
Awardees
will be expected to comply with the award conditions and reporting
requirements of the agencies from which they receive funding.
Awardees
will be required to acknowledge both NSF and NERC in any reports or
publications arising from the grant.
Extension
and supplement requests will be considered by participating agencies using
standard procedures. Requests for changes to awards pertaining to the scope of
research or significant changes or delays to the research will be communicated
to counterpart funding agencies.
All
NSF and NERC requirements for data storage are still applicable
to investigators funded by these respective agencies. NERC funded scientists
must make their data openly available within two years of collection.http://www.nerc.ac.uk/research/sites/data/policy/.
In
accordance with NSF and NERC standard procedures, awards are announced
publically.
1 NERC Responsive Mode schemes
are now known as Discovery Science.
Link
to Full Announcement: http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2014/nsf14118/nsf14118.jsp?WT.mc_id=USNSF_25&WT.mc_ev=click