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Cornell University is a finalist in NSF competition focused on climate research

Cornell University will state funding awarded in the Commercial and Industrial (C&I) Carbon Challenge for projects to increase energy efficiency and reduce its greenhouse-gas footprint. (Photo credit: zoeyadvertising.com)

ITHACA, N.Y. — The National Science Foundation (NSF) has selected Cornell University as a $1 million awardee and finalist for investment through its regional innovation engines program.

Cornell’s effort seeks to “grow the region into America’s next hub for climate research and innovation,” the office of U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) announced Thursday.

Cornell University will receive a $1 million award to develop its proposal to grow a “climate smart bioeconomy” in the upstate New York region. The university can now compete in the next phase for up to a $160 million in federal investment to bring Ithaca’s work to tackle climate change “to the next level.”

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“This NSF Regional Innovation Engines development award presents a tremendously exciting new opportunity for Cornell to help map a more prosperous and sustainable future for New York, and for our planet,” Cornell University President Martha Pollack said. “Cornell University is grateful for Senator Schumer’s leadership to fuel national investment in new approaches like this NSF Engines program and the NSF Directorate for Technology, Innovation, and Partnerships (TIP) — programs that leverage our regional and national capacity for advanced research as a springboard for sustainable economic growth. I look forward to the collaborative innovation of our teams at Cornell and SUNY ESF [in Syracuse], and the way they will bring theory to practice as we work to address our most urgent global challenges.”

 

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