Media
Contact: Bill Hoffman, 202-445-5576
KANSAS CITY, MO, April 22,
2020 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and
Agriculture (NIFA) announced that it is investing in research on the impact of
COVID-19 on American agriculture. Last week, NIFA opened its request for
applications on research or extension activities that focus on developing and
deploying rapid, reliable, and readily adoptable COVID-19 agricultural
strategies across the food and agriculture enterprise. Through the Agriculture and
Food Research Initiative (AFRI) program, NIFA will invest up to $9
million for research in the following areas: : health and security of
livestock; food and food processing; well-being of farm workforce, food service
providers, and rural Americans; and economic security. Applications are due
June 4, 2020.
“Keeping the agricultural
workforce healthy and our nation’s food supply safe is a top priority for
USDA,” said Scott Angle, NIFA Director. “The entire country depends on the jobs
that these agricultural workers do, from farm to fork, to ensure a robust
agricultural food supply. The systems that our agricultural workforce manages
and the products they produce literally sustain both our bodies and our
nation’s economy.”
NIFA is using an expedited
solicitation, evaluation, and grant-making process to quickly deploy funding on
COVID-19 agricultural research. In turn, the agency will only fund projects
designed to swiftly fill knowledge and information gaps; strengthen and support
critical cross-cutting issues to protect the food and agriculture supply chain,
livestock health and security, the safety of our foods; as well as research
projects that focus on the well-being of farm, food service providers, and
rural Americans. “Every step must be rapid,” said Angle, “so we can use agricultural
sciences to mitigate this crisis.”
In response to the current
Pandemic, NIFA also set a deadline of May 21, 2020, for COVID-19 research
proposals from all other areas in the wide-ranging AFRI request for
applications (RFA). NIFA also re-opened its Small Business
Innovation Research RFA to search for COVID-19 solutions from small
businesses.
NIFA invests in and advances
agricultural research, education, and extension, and promotes transformative
discoveries that solve societal challenges. NIFA's integrated research,
education, and extension programs support scientists and extension personnel
whose work results in user-inspired, groundbreaking discoveries. These
discoveries combat childhood obesity, improve and sustain rural economic
growth, address water availability issues, increase food production, find new
sources of energy, mitigate climate variability, and ensure food safety. To
learn more about NIFA’s impact on agricultural science, visit https://nifa.usda.gov/impacts,
sign up for email updates
or follow us on Twitter @USDA_NIFA,
#NIFAimpacts.
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