Environmental Venture Projects
Environmental Venture Projects
Promising research needs support to advance. To catalyze transformative environmental and sustainability research around the world, the Stanford Woods Institute has awarded millions of dollars in Environmental Venture Projects (EVP) seed grants to interdisciplinary faculty research teams from all seven of Stanford’s schools and 34 of its departments. These innovative research projects focus on finding solutions to challenges ranging from the protection of endangered species in California to the delivery of clean drinking water in Africa. EVPs have led to development of natural resources valuation software and biodegradable building materials.
Applications for 2017 Environmental Venture Project (EVP) grants are now CLOSED.
The Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment (Stanford Woods) EVP program provides seed grants, from $5,000 up to $200,000 over two years, for interdisciplinary research projects that seek to identify solutions to pressing problems of the environment and sustainability. Projects are evaluated for their intellectual merit, potential to solve environmental problems, the interdisciplinary strength of the team and the project's potential to secure additional funding in the future.
**NEW** MINI GRANTS FROM $5,000 TO $50,000 ARE AVAILABLE
The EVP Program will consider applications in two categories:
- EVP Mini Grants with support from $5,000 up to $50,000 for discrete research needs and efforts to define and scope research projects at preliminary stages of development, in line with the EVP program priorities and guidelines below. *Note: Requests may be for less than $50,000, and PIs are encouraged to be judicious in their requests for EVP Mini Grant funds. These EVP Mini Grants are treated as department research grants, rather than sponsored research. PIs who receive an EVP Mini Grant to develop a project remain eligible to apply in a future round for an EVP Grant for that project.
- EVP Grants with support from $10,000 up to $200,000 over two years for research projects per the EVP priorities and guidelines below. *Note: Requests may be for less than 200,000 and need not be for two years. PIs are encouraged to be judicious in their requests for EVP Grant funds. EVP Grants are treated as sponsored research.
Faculty members may only be Lead PI on one EVP application at a time, either for one EVP Mini Grant or one EVP Grant, and not both. Faculty members are also restricted from being the Lead PI on more than one active grant from the EVP Program. However, faculty may be the Lead PI on consecutive grants from the EVP program.
PROGRAM PRIORITIES
The EVP program seeks projects that:
- Are high-risk, transformative projects that have the potential to produce solutions to major global environmental challenges;
- Represent new interdisciplinary collaborations among faculty who have not previously worked together, with a preference for scholarly communities that have not been active in the Stanford Woods Institute to date; and
- Address cross-cutting issues that are relevant to the environment in general and/or address challenges within one or more of the Stanford Woods’ seven focal areas.
PROGRAM GUIDELINES
Proposed projects should:
- Represent one or more of the above program priorities;
- Contribute towards a solution to a major global environmental challenge;
- Demonstrate a clear strategy and pathway for connecting your research to an actual solution;
- Involve PIs at Stanford from at least two separate disciplines (For assistance identifying possible co-investigators, please visit the Stanford Woods Institute’s faculty and researchers directory);
- Document how the collaborative effort will be stronger than the sum of disciplinary parts; and
- Have the potential for obtaining future support.
Full program guidelines and specific application instructions for the 2017 cycle are now available in the RELATED DOCUMENTS section of this page.
FEATURED PROJECT
Natural Flood Mitigation »
Deforestation and unplanned development increase the risk of flood damage to lives and property, particularly in dense urban and coastal areas. Decision-makers around the world want to incorporate into planning information about the conditions in which natural ecosystems and land management can help mitigate flood risks.
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