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The Food and Agricultural Science Enhancement (FASE) Grants are designed to help institutions develop competitive projects and to attract new scientists and educators into careers in high-priority areas of national need in the agricultural, food, and environmental sciences. 

FASE Grants consist of New Investigator Grants, Pre- and Postdoctoral Fellowship Grants, and Strengthening Grants. Strengthening Grants are further divided into:

  • Sabbatical Grants
  • Equipment Grants
  • Seed Grants
  • Strengthening Standard Grants
  • Strengthening CAP (Coordinated Agricultural Project) Grants
  • Strengthening Conference Grants.

Fifteen percent of AFRI funding is set aside for Strengthening Grants and Pre- and Postdoctoral Fellowship Grants.

Strengthening Grant Eligibility

Strengthening Grants are available during each funding cycle to ensure that researchers at institutions and states that are underrepresented in terms of Federal research, education, and/or extension funding receive a portion of AFRI funds. Strengthening Grants are limited to: 

  1. small and mid-sized or minority-serving degree-granting institutions that previously had limited institutional success for receiving Federal funds
  2. State Agricultural Experiment Stations or degree-granting institutions eligible for USDA Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) funding.

A flow chart showing strengthening grant eligibility is included in each AFRI Request for Applications.


  
          Have questions?

Have questions?

Get definitions and other clarifying information about FASE and Strengthening grants, as well as the EPSCoR program, on our Project and Grant Types FAQ page.

Learn more

FY 2025 EPSCoR ELIGIBILITY

Every year, NIFA determines the states that are eligible for USDA EPSCoR funding. This list includes states having a funding level no higher than the 38th percentile of all states based on a three-year rolling average of AFRI funding levels, excluding FASE Strengthening funds granted to EPSCoR states and small-mid-sized and minority-serving, degree-granting institutions.

While significant FY 2024 funds are unobligated, the eligibility determinations are based on the data obtained from grants made through the AFRI program from 2021 through 2023. For FY 2025 RFA applications, the following States meet the requirements for this category:

AlaskaKentuckyNew MexicoVermont
ConnecticutMaineNevadaWest Virginia
DelawareMontanaRhode IslandWyoming
HawaiiNorth DakotaSouth Carolina 
IdahoNew JerseyUtah 


Other entities eligible for USDA EPSCoR funds in FY 2025 include the following United States commonwealths, territories, possessions and their successors, and the District of Columbia:

American SamoaGuamNorthern MarianasVirgin Islands (U.S.)
District of ColumbiaMicronesiaPuerto Rico 

Other EPSCoR Information

Since NIFA determines EPSCoR state eligibility every year, a number of states will join or leave (“graduate from”) the 19-state list every year. The chart shows the history of each EPSCoR state’s eligibility status since 2009.

Several other federal agencies also provide funding to EPSCoR states. The EPSCoR program originated in the National Science Foundation (NSF), which provides funding to the eligible states’ EPSCoR committees (NSF EPSCoR). 

By contrast, NIFA provides EPSCoR funding directly to individual investigators in those states. In addition, NIFA’s EPSCoR funding mechanism is embedded in the FASE program as noted above (a graphic illustration of FASE and EPSCoR funding diagrams this relationship). For these reasons, NIFA is said to have an EPSCoR-like program. NIFA is a member of the EPSCoR Interagency Coordinating Committee (EICC) headed by NSF. The EICC was established in FY 1992 to improve coordination among and between the federal agencies in implementing EPSCoR and EPSCoR-like programs consistent with the policies of those agencies.

Request for Applications Links

AFRI - Sustainable Agricultural Systems (SAS)
AFRI - Foundational and Applied Science Program (FASP)
AFRI - Education and Workforce Development (EWD)

Farm bill priority areas
Plant health, production, and products
Agriculture systems and technology
Animal health and production and animal products
Bioenergy, natural resources, and environment
Food Safety, Nutrition, and Health
Agriculture economics and rural communities
Page last updated: May 21, 2025

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