Opportunity

Simpler Grants.gov #PD-24-7298

NSF MultiPLEx Program: International Multilateral Research Partnerships Solicitation

Buyer

National Science Foundation

Posted

September 14, 2024

Identifier

PD-24-7298

NAICS

541715

The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) is inviting proposals for the MultiPLEx program to foster international multilateral research partnerships addressing urgent global or societal challenges. - Government Buyer: - U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), Office of International Science and Engineering (OISE) - Program Focus: - Supports visionary, ambitious international research collaborations - Projects must involve at least two countries in addition to the U.S. - Emphasis on critical and emerging technology research and urgent global challenges - U.S. research teams are funded; international partners must secure their own national funding - Proposals must be outside the scope of existing OISE or directorate programs - Funding Details: - Awards typically up to three years - Funding range: $200,000 to $2,500,000 - Products/Services Requested: - No specific OEMs, vendors, products, or part numbers are listed - Service: Support for U.S. research teams in international multilateral partnerships - Unique Requirements: - Must demonstrate how international partnership enables advances beyond a narrower team - Collaboration with at least two non-U.S. countries is mandatory - Focus on impactful, globally relevant research outcomes

Description

The Office of International Science and Engineering’s MultiPLEx program supports visionary and ambitious international multilateral research partnerships to address grand challenges by leveraging research excellence in the U.S. and globally. The program seeks proposals that address urgent global research or societal challenges requiring multilateral collaboration with at least two countries other than the U.S. and that demonstrate how international collaboration will enable research advances beyond narrower teams. MultiPLEx funds support the U.S. research team, with partners expected to seek funding from their own national agencies. Awards typically last up to three years and proposals must fall outside the scope of existing OISE or directorate programs.

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