Title: BREAD Workshop for Prospective PIs
1BREAD Workshop for Prospective PIsBasic
Research to Enable Agricultural Development
- The workshop will begin at 900 am EDT
- Welcome to our local participants
- Welcome to those participating via Webcast
2Workshop Agenda
- Welcome and Introductions
- What is BREAD?
- What are the key goals of BREAD? What kinds of
research will BREAD support? Who may apply? - Information on Proposal Submission
- Policy and Management Issues
- QA Session
3Welcome Introductions
- Deborah Delmer, BREAD Program Director and
Workshop Moderator - Members of the BREAD Working Group
- Jane Silverthorne, National Science Foundation
- Katherine Kahn, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
4Some Advice
- This powerpoint presentation and QA transcripts
will be posted on the BREAD website - We anticipate posting the Program Solicitation
and addtional FAQs in late May or early June - There may be some changes to the details outlined
today, so please pay careful attention to the
Program Solicitation
5What is BREAD?
- BREAD is a new NSF Program supported through a
partnership with the Bill Melinda Gates
Foundation (BMGF) - Addresses the BMGF focus on improving the lives
of smallholder farmers in the developing world - Takes advantage of the NSF peer review process
- Allows support for research of international
partners at their home institutions - 48 million total over 5 years
6Key Criteria for BREAD Projects
- Scientific excellence with focus on research at
the proof-of-concept stage rather than
application or redevelopment - Clear evidence of innovative approaches
- Clear relevance to the constraints faced by
small-holder farmers in the developing world - Partnerships must be meaningful and synergistic
7International Collaborators
- No specific countries or regions will be targeted
by BREAD - BREAD encourages proposals that address problems
of broad importance to large areas and/or
populations where solutions could have broad
impact - Proposals that address problems unique to one
small location or population may be less desirable
8What BREAD will not support
- Purely basic research of the sort funded by other
NSF programs and without developing country focus - Purely applied research that aims to deliver
already proven approaches or technologies - Research in the fields of social science or
economics
9What BREAD will support
- Some emphasis will be placed on crop improvement
but - BREAD aims to cast a fairly wide net and will
also consider strong proposals involving work on
relevant microbes, insects, or animals including
fish soil and water issues - BREAD will also consider innovative proposals
beyond biology that involve other scientific and
engineering disciplines
10Some Examples of Potential Scope
- Projects that seek to exploit new discoveries in
the biological sciences - To create durable resistance to major diseases
and pests that affect plants, animals or insects
of agricultural importance - To enhance water-, nitrogen- or phosphate-use
efficiency in crops - To enhance the ability of plant and animal
products to delay ripening and/or withstand
storage under less-than-ideal conditions
prevalent in many parts of the developing world. - To exploit knowledge on genetic diversity to
enhance the ability of small-scale farmers to
adapt to emerging threats of global climate
change, emerging diseases, and the rising costs
of energy
11Some Examples of Potential Scope
- Projects that seek to exploit new discoveries
beyond the biological sciences - Application of new advances in fields such as
nanotechnology to the development of novel and
more efficient ways to deliver fertilizers and
this address poor soil fertility without
negatively affecting the environment - Creation of low-cost, high throughput tools for
use in breeding or disease diagnostics,
especially suited to developing world agriculture - Development of new technologies or devices for
local or remote monitoring of crops - Development of low-cost, efficient devices for
energy production and storage appropriate to
small-scale agriculture in remote settings
12Who may apply?
- All proposals must be submitted by an eligible US
institution, and the PI must be from the
submitting institution - A PI or co-PI may only be involved in one
submitted project no limit on number of
proposals from submitting institutions - No proposals may be directly submitted by foreign
institutions - Co-PIs and collaborators (US and international)
may be funded via sub-awards
13International Collaborations
- Sub-awards may be requested for any eligible
educational or research institution in any
country of the world except those embargoed by
the US government
14International Collaborations
- Collaborators are not required, but are
encouraged it when it shows clear benefit to the
project - Collaborators in developing countries are not
required, but you are strongly encouraged to
explore whether such a partnership might enhance
the relevance and feasibility of your research - BREAD encourages training that will enhance
capacity of developing country partners
15Relationship with the Plant Genome Research
Program
- BREAD grew out of discussions between BMGF and
PGRP, and BREAD is a program at NSF managed from
within the PGRP - You do not need to have a PGRP award nor must you
have a genomics approach to apply to BREAD - Developing Country Collaborations in Plant Genome
Research (DCC-PGR) will continue BREAD is not a
replacement for this activity
16Project Size and Duration
- Support will likely be for up to 3 years
- As many as 10-20 grants could be supported in the
first year with tentative budgets in the range
of - Up to 150,000 per year per lab
- With 3 or fewer sub-awards per project
17Submission Guidelines
- All Letters of Intent and Proposals will be
submitted through FastLane - Anticipated due dates
- Letters of Intent early August 2009
- Proposal deadline early September 2009
- Program Solicitation will contain details on
proposal preparation visit www.nsf.gov and sign
up for NSF Updates by E-mail
18Policy and Management Issues
- The budget will be in US dollars
- The awardee institution will manage all
sub-awards and - It will be responsible for ensuring accurate and
timely submission of all technical and financial
reports - It will be expected to ensure ethical conduct of
all research according to relevant country
regulations - A workshop will be held in late June with more
information and guidance for sponsored research
officials at submitting institutions
19Relevant NSF Websites
Plant Genome Research Program (PGRP) http//www.ns
f.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id5338 BREAD
Program http//www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pi
ms_id503403
20Questions Answers
- Submit questions via e-mail
- Keep questions short, clear and to the point
- webcast_at_nsf.gov