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National Industrial Competitiveness through Energy, Environment, and Economics

Published on AidPage by IDILOGIC on Jun 24, 2005

Administered by:

US Federal Government Agency (see all agencies)
Department of Energy
CFDA #: 81.105

Who is eligible to apply...

Proposals from all States and proposals from industry that have coordinated a State agency endorsement were considered. State agencies include State energy, State environmental, State business development, or any State agency as defined by 10 CFR 600.202. In addition to the 50 States, the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any territory or possession of the U.S., and all federally recognized Indian tribes are eligible. Coordinated State agency endorsement refers to the act of a State(s) 1) Recommending the proposed technology demonstration, 2) waiving its role as the primary applicant, and 3) assigning that role to industry via signature on the State Endorsement Form.

Eligible Applicant Categories:
Eligible Functional Categories:
Credentials/Documentation

None.

Note:This is a brief description of the credentials or documentation required prior to, or along with, an application for assistance.

About this section:

This section indicates who can apply to the Federal government for assistance and the criteria the potential applicant must satisfy. For example, individuals may be eligible for research grants, and the criteria to be satisfied may be that they have a professional or scientific degree, 3 years of research experience, and be a citizen of the United States. Universities, medical schools, hospitals, or State and local governments may also be eligible. Where State governments are eligible, the type of State agency will be indicated (State welfare agency or State agency on aging) and the criteria that they must satisfy.

Certain federal programs (e.g., the Pell Grant program which provides grants to students) involve intermediate levels of application processing, i.e., applications are transmitted through colleges or universities that are neither the direct applicant nor the ultimate beneficiary. For these programs, the criteria that the intermediaries must satisfy are also indicated, along with intermediaries who are not eligible.