Prevention, Control, and Mitigation of Harmful Algal Blooms Program
NOAA will fund cooperative-agreement projects that develop, test, and transition technologies or strategies to prevent, control, or mitigate harmful algal blooms, with emphasis on comprehensive testing of control technologies in marine or transferable settings.
⚑ Cooperative Agreement · up to $500,000/year for focal area 1 or up to $1,000,000/year for focal area 2 · anticipated total support about $2.5M for first year of 3-5 projects · informational webinar March 26, 2026 2-3 p.m. ET
Unit fits — one characterization, each unit's own rules
| Physical Sciences & Engineering (demo) | 80 strong | technical depth: central; funds applied research |
| IPPRA | 45 partial | portfolio topics: environment, water_resources, public_health (primary); social/behavioral work is none; funds applied research; capped at 45 (limited social-science role) |
| Tom Love Innovation Hub | 45 partial | funds applied research; prototyping/demonstration stage; deep-tech content |
Description
The purpose of this document is to advise the public that NOAA/NOS/National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science (NCCOS) Competitive Research Program (NCCOS/CRP) [formerly Center for Sponsored Coastal Ocean Research (CSCOR)/Coastal Ocean Program (COP)] is soliciting proposals for the Prevention, Control and Mitigation of Harmful Algal Bloom (PCMHAB) program. The PCMHAB program seeks to develop and transition technologies and strategies for preventing, controlling, or mitigating harmful algal blooms and their impacts. For this announcement, PCMHAB will prioritize proposals focused on the comprehensive testing of harmful algal bloom control technologies that fit one of the two following focal areas: (1) promising control technologies that are in need of further testing to prove feasibility; and (2) proven control technologies that are still in need of large-scale field testing or that are already approved related control technologies (e.g., freshwater harmful algal blooms, oil spills, etc.) that could be transferable to harmful algal blooms in the marine environment. Funding is contingent upon availability of Federal appropriations. It is anticipated that approximately $2,500,000 may be available to support the first year of three to five projects. Proposals may request up to $500,000 per year for up to 3 years (focal area 1) or up to $1,000,000 per year for up to 5 years. NCCOS/CRP may reject any PCMHAB proposals submitted with an annual budget for any year that is greater than $500,000 for focal area 1 projects or $1,000,000 for focal area 2 projects. --- An informational webinar on this solicitation will be offered on March 26, 2026 from 2 to 3 p.m. Eastern Time. Information regarding this Announcement, including the webinar and additional background information, is available on the NCCOS PCMHAB webpage (https://coastalscience.noaa.gov/science-areas/habs/pcmhab/).
Eligibility
Eligible applicants for Federal financial assistance in this competition are U.S. institutions of higher education, non-profits, state and local governments, tribal government entities, U.S. Territories, U.S. Affiliated Pacific Islands institutions, and for-profit organizations. Federal applicants (including NOAA) are eligible provided legal authority exists for the Federal applicant to receive funds from another agency.---Please note that:1. PIs must be employees of an eligible entity listed above; and applications must be submitted through that entity. Non-Federal researchers should comply with their institutional requirements for application submission.---2. Non-Federal researchers affiliated with NOAA-University CIs will be funded through cooperative agreements.---3. Foreign researchers must apply as subawards or contracts through an eligible U.S. entity.---4. Federal applicants are eligible to submit applications for intra- or inter-agency funds transfers through this competition. Non-NOAA Federal applicants will be required to submit certifications or documentation showing that they have specific legal authority to accept funds for this type of research.---5. An eligible U.S. entity may propose Federal agency researchers as funded or unfunded collaborators. If Federal agency researchers are proposed as funded collaborators, the applicant should present the collaborator's funding request in the application in the same way documentation is provided for a subrecipient for purposes of project evaluation, even though intra- or inter-agency funding transfers will generally be used if the project is selected.---6. NOAA NCCOS researchers may apply through an eligible U.S. entity as funded or unfunded collaborators, but cannot be the lead PI on the application. Federal employees, including NOAA, with the exception of NCCOS employees, may serve as lead PI on the application. NOAA Federal salaries will not be paid.
Apply
View on Grants.gov → CONTACT: Frederick L Isaac Grantor <felix.martinez@noaa.gov>
Proposal brief SEE AN EXAMPLE →
A one-page internal memo: fit assessment, submission requirements, document scaffold, and next steps dated back from the deadline — tailored to your project idea if you add one.
Proposal shell · NOAA / Department of Commerce conventions SEE A NOAA EXAMPLE →
Funder-faithful document skeletons — NOAA / Department of Commerce's document set with section headings, page limits, reviewer guidance, and writing prompts; add a project idea to get [DRAFT] starter bullets. Download as .md for Word or Overleaf.
Legacy IPPRA LLM assessment (v2.0, for comparison)
58/100 · gpt-5.4-mini · 2026-07-06
This is a NOAA coastal science research competition focused on developing and field-testing harmful algal bloom control technologies, which is clearly relevant to water quality, coastal resilience, and environmental management. IPPRA’s strongest fit would be on the human/policy side only if the proposal includes decision-making, risk communication, stakeholder adoption, or evaluation of mitigation strategies; otherwise the opportunity is primarily technical and better suited to ocean/biophysical researchers. Public universities are eligible, so IPPRA could participate as a partner, but it would likely not be the lead intellectual anchor.
Legacy scoring history
| 2026-07-06 | 58 | gpt-5.4-mini | This is a NOAA coastal science research competition focused on developing and field-testing harmful algal bloom control technologies, which is clearly relevant to water quality, coastal resilience, and environmental management. IPPRA’s strongest fit would be on the human/policy side only if the proposal includes decision-making, risk communication, stakeholder adoption, or evaluation of mitigation strategies; otherwise the opportunity is primarily technical and better suited to ocean/biophysical researchers. Public universities are eligible, so IPPRA could participate as a partner, but it would likely not be the lead intellectual anchor. |
| 2026-07-06 | 78 | gpt-5.4-mini | This is a strong fit because harmful algal blooms are a water-quality and coastal resilience problem with clear environmental policy implications, and NOAA is explicitly seeking testing and transition of control/mitigation strategies. IPPRA could contribute if the proposal includes stakeholder response, risk communication, community impacts, or policy evaluation around HAB prevention and mitigation, though the core science is still more technical than IPPRA’s usual lead role. Public universities are explicitly eligible, so OU/IPPRA could apply directly as a lead or partner. |