Supplemental and Alternative Crops

Department of Agriculture · Opportunity USDA-NIFA-OP-011756

NewComplexity 4/5

At a glance AI extracted

Supplemental and Alternative Crops (National Institute of Food and Agriculture) $230,000 – $460,000

Who can apply

  • Others (see text field entitled "Additional Information on Eligibility" for clar…

Eligible uses

  • Agriculture

Typical documents

  • Application form (SF-424)
  • Project narrative
  • Detailed budget
Award size$230,000 – $460,000
Number of awards8
Deadline2026-06-25
Posted2026-05-08
Eligible applicantsOthers (see text field entitled "Additional Information on Eligibility" for clarification)
ActivityAgriculture
Funding instrumentGrant
CFDA programGrants for Agricultural Research, Special Research Grants
Org type filterHigher EdAI-tagged
Sector filterHealth / Agriculture / ArtsAI-tagged
Use filterOperationsAI-tagged
Sourcegrants.gov
Last updated2026-05-14T14:08:51.538023+00:00

From the official announcement

The SAC program, Assistance Listing Number 10.200, supports projects that lead to expanded adaptation and increased acreage in the United States of alternative crops grown for food/feedstuff, oil, and feedstocks for industrial value-added products. Such crops are important to U.S. agriculture in that these can provide new and profitable cropping options in response to low commodity prices and changes in consumer demand for new agricultural-based products. Oilseed, grain, and feedstock crops have major uses in healthy human foods and animal feeds, as natural pest control when used as cover crops, and as a feedstock in industrial chemical manufacture and biofuel production. Grains/pseudocereals and legumes/pulses can play an important role in the cropping rotation for food/feedstuff and/or feedstock for industrial value-added purposes, as cover crops, and as habitat for pollinators. Applicants for SAC must meet all the requirements discussed in this NOFO. Failure to meet the eligibility criteria by the application deadline may result in exclusion from consideration or preclude NIFA from making an award. For those new to Federal financial assistance, NIFA’s About Grants provides highly recommended information about grants and other resources to help understand the Federal awards process. Colleges and universities (as defined in section 1404 of NARETPA, 7 U.S.C. 3103), other Federal agencies, and private sector entities are eligible to submit applications. Award recipients may subcontract to organizations not eligible to apply provided such organizations are necessary for the conduct of the project.

Agency contact

Heidi Z Vanegas Grantor

grantapplicationquestions@usda.gov

Open on grants.gov →

This page summarizes public information from grants.gov via AI extraction. Final eligibility and application terms are set by the issuing agency. AI summaries may contain errors. Verify on the official announcement before applying.