Composting and Food Waste Reduction Program

CFWR
CFDA 10.339 Active Cooperative Agreement

Funded Projects

Examples of what this program has supported.

FY2025 USDA’s Office of Urban Agriculture and Innovative Production Composting and Food Waste Reduction Program (CFWR) has distributed more than $31 million across 145 projects in 42 States and 1 U.S. territory since its launch in fiscal year 2020 supporting local governments across the country conserve food and develop alternative waste streams that benefit American producers. In its first year, CFWR projects diverted 1,150 tons of food waste from landfills, generated over 16,000 tons of compost, and provided thousands of Americans with specialized education, job training, employment, and material support to farmers and gardeners.

Program Objective

The goals and objectives of this program are:
• Food Waste Reduction Objectives
o Reduce municipal food and waste
o Divert residential and commercial food waste from landfills
• Composting and Conservation Objectives
o Generate compost
o Increase agricultural producers' access to compost
o Reduce reliance on, and limit the use of, chemical fertilizer
o Improve soil quality
o Encourage waste management and permaculture business
development.
o Increase rainwater utilization (capture, infiltration, or absorption)

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants

  • Municipality/Township Government
  • Public Housing Authority
  • Tribally Designated Housing Authority
  • County Government
  • School District
  • Federally Recognized Tribal Government
  • Tribal Government (other)

How to Apply

Award Procedure

Applications are subjected to a system of peer and merit review in accordance with section 103 of the Agricultural Research, Extension and Education Reform Act of 1998 (7 U.S.C. 7613) by a panel of qualified scientists and other appropriate persons who are specialists in the field covered by the proposal. Within the limit of funds available for such purpose, the NIFA Authorized Departmental Officer (ADO) shall make grants to those responsible, eligible applicants whose applications are judged most meritorious under the procedures set forth in the NOFO. Reviewers will be selected based upon training and experience in relevant scientific, extension, or education fields, taking into account the following factors: (a) The level of relevant formal scientific, technical education, or extension experience of the individual, as well as the extent to which an individual is engaged in relevant research, education, or extension activities; (b) the need to include as reviewers experts from various areas of specialization within relevant CFWR extension fields; (c) the need to include as reviewers other experts (e.g., producers, range or forest managers/operators, and consumers) who can assess relevance of the applications to targeted audiences and to program needs; (d) the need to include as reviewers experts from a variety of organizational types (e.g., schools, local government, industry, state and Federal agencies, private profit and non-profit organizations) and geographic locations; (e) the need to maintain a balanced composition of reviewers with regard to gender representation and an age distribution; and (f) the need to include reviewers who can judge the effective usefulness to producers and the general public of each application. Evaluation Criteria will be delineated in the NOFO.

Refer to the NOFO.

Program details & compliance

Description

Composting and Food Waste Reduction (CFWR) cooperative agreements assist local and municipal governments with projects that develop and test strategies for planning and implementing municipal compost plans and food waste reduction plans. Implementation activities will increase access to compost for agricultural producers, improve soil quality and encourages innovative, scalable waste management plans that reduce and divert food waste from landfills.

Mission Categories

Primary: Marketing Opportunities

Use of Funds

Allowed Uses

Grant funds must be used for allowable costs necessary to conduct approved CFWR objectives according to the NOFO.

Required Documentation

Applicants (unless excepted under 2 CFR § 25.110(b) or (c), or has an exception approved by the Federal awarding agency under 2 CFR § 25.110(d)) must (1): Have an active SAM registration prior to applying; (2) Provide a valid Unique Entity Identifier number in its application; and (3) Continue to maintain an active SAM registration with current information at all times during which it has an application under consideration or an active federal award. Applicants must furnish the information required in the Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO). Successful applicants recommended for funding must furnish the information and assurances requested during the award documentation process.

Matching Requirements

25% match is required.

Reporting & Compliance

Records Retention
3 years

Applicable 2 CFR 200 Subparts

  • Subpart B — General Provisions
  • Subpart C — Pre-Federal Award Requirements
  • Subpart D — Post-Federal Award Requirements
  • Subpart E — Cost Principles
  • Subpart F — Audit Requirements

Contacts

USDA, NIFA, Institute of Food Safety and Nutrition (IFSN) — National Program Leader,
(202) 424-9722
National Institute of Food and Agriculture U.S. Department of Agriculture P.O. Box 419205, Mail Stop 10000, Kansas City, MO 64141-6205, Courier/Package Delivery Address: 2312 East Bannister Road, Mail Stop 10000, Kansas City, MO 64141-3061, Kansas City, MO 64141
Data from SAM.gov Federal Assistance Listings. Source published: 2026-06-08. Spec v2.0. Last synced: 2026-06-08 03:01:25.