Grants Database

The Foundation awards approximately 200 grants per year (excluding the Sloan Research Fellowships), totaling roughly $80 million dollars in annual commitments in support of research and education in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and economics. This database contains grants for currently operating programs going back to 2008. For grants from prior years and for now-completed programs, see the annual reports section of this website.

Grants Database

Grantee
Amount
City
Year
  • grantee: Association of Environmental and Resource Economists
    amount: $50,000
    city: Altamonte Springs, United States
    year: 2023

    To continue and expand the AERE Scholars Program that aims to diversify energy and environmental resource economics and create a more inclusive culture across the field by engaging other professional societies

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Jill Caviglia-Harris

    To continue and expand the AERE Scholars Program that aims to diversify energy and environmental resource economics and create a more inclusive culture across the field by engaging other professional societies

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  • grantee: Gordon Research Conferences
    amount: $50,000
    city: West Kingston, United States
    year: 2023

    To support student and early-career scholar participation in the 2023 and 2025 Gordon Research Conferences on Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage (GRC-CCUS)

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Greeshma Gadikota

    To support student and early-career scholar participation in the 2023 and 2025 Gordon Research Conferences on Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage (GRC-CCUS)

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  • grantee: University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
    amount: $50,000
    city: Champaign, United States
    year: 2023

    To support a multi-sectoral workshop on equitable transitions to sustainable transportation, resulting from the Energy Insights 2022 Ideas to Action Call for Proposals

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Eleftheria Kontou

    To support a multi-sectoral workshop on equitable transitions to sustainable transportation, resulting from the Energy Insights 2022 Ideas to Action Call for Proposals

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  • grantee: North Carolina A&T State University
    amount: $50,000
    city: Greensboro, United States
    year: 2023

    To examine the equity dimensions of the Value of Lost Load metric in multiple regions, resulting from the Energy Insights 2022 Ideas to Action Call for Proposals

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Hieu Nguyen

    To examine the equity dimensions of the Value of Lost Load metric in multiple regions, resulting from the Energy Insights 2022 Ideas to Action Call for Proposals

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  • grantee: Good Energy Collective
    amount: $50,000
    city: Sacramento, United States
    year: 2023

    To initiate a fellowship program to engage undergraduate students from Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) in energy transitions research, resulting from the Energy Insights 2022 Ideas to Action Call for Proposals

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Jessica Lovering

    To initiate a fellowship program to engage undergraduate students from Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) in energy transitions research, resulting from the Energy Insights 2022 Ideas to Action Call for Proposals

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  • grantee: Northwestern University
    amount: $50,000
    city: Evanston, IL
    year: 2023

    To conduct a community-engaged life cycle assessment of critical mineral mining in partnership with Indigenous communities, resulting from the Energy Insights 2022 Ideas to Action Call for Proposals

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Jennifer Dunn

    To conduct a community-engaged life cycle assessment of critical mineral mining in partnership with Indigenous communities, resulting from the Energy Insights 2022 Ideas to Action Call for Proposals

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  • grantee: Carnegie Mellon University
    amount: $409,175
    city: Pittsburgh, United States
    year: 2023

    To grow and sustain the Open Energy Outlook Initiative open source modeling collaboration

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Paulina Jaramillo

    This grant provides ongoing support to the Open Energy Outlook (OEO) Initiative, a multi-disciplinary, open-source, publicly available energy system model collaboration led by scholars at Carnegie Mellon University and North Carolina State University. The OEO Initiative involves input from over 40 consulting external subject matter experts from fields such as policy, electricity, buildings, and transportation, and it provides an open-source platform that makes energy system analysis more accessible to a range of stakeholders and applicable to different geographies and sectors. Grant funds will provide the organizational resources necessary to help grow and sustain the OEO Initiative over the coming years, involving three primary tasks. First, the team will update the open-source modeling platform that the OEO Initiative is based on, called the Tools for Energy Model Optimization and Analysis (Temoa) model, to better represent recent energy policy developments and legislation. Second, the team will develop a strategic plan that charts the longer-term path for their research, fundraising, and operational model, which includes establishing a consortium of funding partners from industry, nonprofits, and other foundations. Finally, the team will participate in research partnerships that will apply and extend the OEO Initiative framework to specific states, sectors, and other regions and countries. These research partnership efforts are expected to train 4-6 graduate students at a variety of institutions deploying the Temoa model. Funds will primarily go towards supporting the Executive Director role in managing the OEO Initiative.

    To grow and sustain the Open Energy Outlook Initiative open source modeling collaboration

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  • grantee: Boston University
    amount: $497,428
    city: Boston, United States
    year: 2023

    To assess underexplored equity implications of renewable energy generation through eight case studies across the wind and solar supply chains

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Benjamin Sovacool

    The are many dimensions related to the local implications of renewable energy generation that have yet to be explored in much depth, especially impact that tend to be less visible stages along the supply chain lifecycle. As policies are developed that look to grow renewable energy infrastructure while also aiming for an equitable distribution of benefits, these questions as to how communities will be impacted across the renewable supply chain become increasingly pressing. This grant funds a highly interdisciplinary team at Boston University, the University of Delaware, and Virginia Tech to analyze eight case studies relating to the equity and justice dimensions of renewable energy production in the U.S. Funded case studies will focus on several different stages of the renewable energy supply chain, including resource extraction, construction and manufacturing, electricity generation in rural areas, and end-stage issues like recycling, disposal, and decommissioning.  Studies will be divided evenly between wind and solar generation and will focus on a wide range of geographies including critical mineral mining in Utah and Texas, solar panel manufacturing in Ohio, offshore wind installation along the Northeast Coast, a solar e-waste recycling in Kansas, and wind turbine blade disposal in Iowa. Study methods will include semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders, focus groups, expert elicitations, and observations to explore community experiences, opportunities, and vulnerabilities. The research team will draw on several conceptual frameworks to analyze the equity dimensions of the renewable energy supply chain. These include a feminist lens that addresses gender power dynamics, an anti-racist lens that focuses on racial discrimination, an Indigenous lens that explores historical patterns of land appropriation, and a post-colonial lens that relates to broader geopolitical factors. The team will link these frameworks with the empirical case studies to develop a fuller, multi-dimensional conceptualization of energy justice that promises to help illuminate the impacts of renewable energy development throughout the United States and provide important insights across all stages of the renewable energy supply chain.

    To assess underexplored equity implications of renewable energy generation through eight case studies across the wind and solar supply chains

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  • grantee: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    amount: $600,000
    city: Cambridge, United States
    year: 2023

    To study the economic and equity impacts of alternative electricity rate structures via a randomized controlled trial with rural electricity cooperatives in the Midwest

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Jing Li

    One of the challenges to making electricity markets operate more efficiently is that most consumers pay flat electricity prices. While this rate structure provides consumers with cost certainty and insulates them from higher prices during extreme events, it does not provide price signals when electricity demand is high and therefore expensive. Some states and utilities are attempting to encourage load shifting or reduced use of electricity during key moments of grid stress through demand response programs, including time-of-use (TOU) programs that define peak and off-peak periods with different prices well in advance, and critical peak pricing (CPP) programs that announce and implement higher electricity prices on shorter notice. Uptake of these demand response programs remains limited in the United States, and there is a lack of research as to how consumers respond to these programs, especially in non-coastal and rural areas. This grant, resulting from an open Request for Proposals on Energy System Electrification, supports a team of economists and engineers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Massachusetts, Amherst aiming to empirically study consumer participation in demand response programs in rural areas through a randomized controlled trial (RCT). Grant funds will allow the team to complete three phases of work through partnerships with local electric cooperatives who have agreed to deploy demand response pricing experiments among their consumer bases. First, the team will implement a demand response RCT, covering at least one winter and one summer season, with a total sample of 43,000 electricity consumers. Participants will be offered different enrollment incentives and information relating to TOU and CPP programs. Next, the team will integrate findings from this RCT into an energy system capacity expansion model that will help understand the impact on broader energy system operations. Finally, the team will analyze the distributional and equity dimensions of the RCT, and they will assess what those findings might imply for other demand response programs across the country. Results from this research will also help electric cooperatives and similar utilities design and implement demand response programs.

    To study the economic and equity impacts of alternative electricity rate structures via a randomized controlled trial with rural electricity cooperatives in the Midwest

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  • grantee: University of California, Berkeley
    amount: $1,500,000
    city: Berkeley, United States
    year: 2023

    To further grow and diversify the field of energy and environmental economics through training programs that engage students and early-career scholars from multiple universities

    • Program Research
    • Sub-program Energy and Environment
    • Investigator Meredith Fowlie

    The goal of this project is to grow and diversify the field of energy and environmental (EEE) economics by supporting an integrated set of training and early-career scholar engagement efforts taking place at the Energy Institute at Haas, based at the University of California, Berkeley. Four programmatic activities will be funded through this grant. The first is Grad Camp, a week-long, summer training course that brings 60 graduate students per year from across North American universities to the University of California, Berkeley for a rigorous introduction to cutting-edge research in EEE. The second is Energy Camp, a multi-day, early-summer gathering of 60 graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, junior faculty, and more established faculty to share and work on early-stage research projects. Three promising graduate students from the previous year’s Grad Camp will be invited to attend and present at the next year’s Energy Camp. The third is the EEE Undergraduate Mentoring Program, undertaken in partnership with Berkeley’s Opportunity Lab, which will prepare 18 Black, Indigenous, and Latina/o/x undergraduates per year at Berkeley for EEE graduate study by pairing these students with graduate student and faculty mentors. The fourth is research funding for two EEE graduate students per year that are working on seed projects designed to produce publicly available datasets or outputs that can be used by other scholars in the field. This proposal will help ensure that these programs will continue to enrich the EEE field and train the next generation scholars from a diverse range of backgrounds and institutions.

    To further grow and diversify the field of energy and environmental economics through training programs that engage students and early-career scholars from multiple universities

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