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2330317

Project Grant

Overview

Grant Description
Global Centers Track 1: Understanding Climate Change Impacts on Transboundary Waters - The Global Center for Climate Change Impacts on Transboundary Waters leads research focused on understanding and mitigating water crises in transboundary jurisdictions.

Water resources around North America are under threat as climate change intensifies floods and droughts, worsens water quality, exacerbates shoreline erosion, and damages infrastructure and homes. Communities must learn to adapt to increased extremes, but the tools and knowledge for adaptation are often non-existent or fragmented across jurisdictional boundaries.

This problem is complicated in transboundary water systems which intersect multiple sovereign nations, including those of indigenous peoples. Managing water resources in multijurisdictional settings requires a diverse perspective on governance structures, stakeholder groups, and management strategies as well as dissemination of scientific resources, including data and models.

The center studies water resources spanning U.S.-Canada geopolitical boundaries, leveraging U.S. and Canadian expertise. The center aims to increase the resilience of vulnerable coastal communities by integrating research across three organizing clusters focused on:

1) Reliable projections of the expected frequency and intensity of climate change impacts;
2) Understanding of climate change impacts on ecological and social systems and outcomes; and
3) Building capacity for governance and management systems that increase disaster resilience in communities across multiple scales.

The center is a partnership among University of Michigan, Cornell University, College of the Menominee Nation and Red Lake Nation together with McMaster University, Toronto Metropolitan University, and the Six Nations of the Grand River. It also trains graduate and undergraduate students and supports postdoctoral associates. The knowledge developed through the center has international relevance and will be disseminated to benefit communities around the world.

The international team focuses on understanding and mitigating an intensifying water crisis by addressing regional needs for water resources management guidance and preparing communities and ecosystems within transboundary water systems for hazards accompanying climate change. The center will apply a unique social science framework that emphasizes engagement with communities across transnational watershed boundaries to develop new insights into risk tolerance and management practices, climate change monitoring strategies, and community resilience.

The interdisciplinary center will integrate knowledge from multiple fields to create a comprehensive understanding of the challenges facing communities accessing transnational waters. The center's use of statistical modeling, state-of-the-art process models, and novel, data-driven observational studies allow for testing of hypotheses about future climate change trajectories, providing critical insights to our stakeholders.

This approach is designed to be flexible and responsive to community needs, ensuring that research outcomes are relevant and useful to the communities it serves and enabling the development of a national model for transboundary watershed management in subsequent years. The scientific and community-engagement models developed by the center will initially be focused on the Great Lakes region and will be replicable and scalable, amplifying the center's impact across transboundary water systems and communities globally.

This award is funded by the Global Centers Program, an innovative partnership with funding agencies in Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom, to jointly support use-inspired research addressing global challenges in climate change and clean energy. Partnerships with the Commonwealth Science and Innovation Research Organisation (CSIRO), Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC), and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) leverage resources to tackle challenges at a larger scale than would be possible for one funding agency alone.

This center is jointly supported by NSF and SSHRC. The NSF award is co-funded by the Office of International Science and the Tribal Colleges and Universities Program in the Directorate for STEM Education. This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria. Subawards are planned for this award.
Funding Goals
THE GOAL OF THIS FUNDING OPPORTUNITY, "GLOBAL CENTERS", IS IDENTIFIED IN THE LINK: HTTPS://WWW.NSF.GOV/PUBLICATIONS/PUB_SUMM.JSP?ODS_KEY=NSF23557
Place of Performance
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1340 United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 516% from $808,657 to $4,978,887.
Regents Of The University Of Michigan was awarded Climate Change Impacts on Transboundary Waters Project Grant 2330317 worth $4,978,887 from the Office of International Science and Engineering in January 2024 with work to be completed primarily in Ann Arbor Michigan United States. The grant has a duration of 5 years and was awarded through assistance program 47.079 Office of International Science and Engineering. The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Global Centers.

Status
(Ongoing)

Last Modified 2/20/24

Period of Performance
1/1/24
Start Date
12/31/28
End Date
33.0% Complete

Funding Split
$5.0M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$5.0M
Total Obligated
100.0% Federal Funding
0.0% Non-Federal Funding

Activity Timeline

Interactive chart of timeline of amendments to 2330317

Subgrant Awards

Disclosed subgrants for 2330317

Transaction History

Modifications to 2330317

Additional Detail

Award ID FAIN
2330317
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI EXEMPT
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
490109 OFC INTERNTL SCIENCE ENG
Funding Office
490109 OFC INTERNTL SCIENCE ENG
Awardee UEI
GNJ7BBP73WE9
Awardee CAGE
03399
Performance District
MI-06
Senators
Debbie Stabenow
Gary Peters

Budget Funding

Federal Account Budget Subfunction Object Class Total Percentage
Research and Related Activities, National Science Foundation (049-0100) General science and basic research Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) $4,170,230 84%
STEM Education, National Science Foundation (049-0106) General science and basic research Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) $808,657 16%
Modified: 2/20/24