ROLLING CFDA 15.232 ↗ Competitive Cooperative Agreement Competitive ~100h typical effort

USDA/USDOI Joint Fire Science Program (JFSP)

🏛 Bureau of Land Management

✓ Free, no account · Source: Grants.gov · Last verified Jul 15, 2026

📅 Fiscal Year
FY 2020
📍 Scope
National

Can you apply?

This grant is for research teams and universities studying fire science and management across the United States. Eligible applicants typically include academic institutions, government agencies, nonprofits, and private research organizations conducting collaborative research on prescribed fire impacts, wildfire prevention, and fuel treatment outcomes.

Research must address one of the specified fire science topics: comparing prescribed and wildfire impacts, analyzing ignition patterns and prevention strategies, or developing fuel treatment performance metrics. Projects should be conducted in partnership with land management agencies or fire science collaborators.

Geographic scope is national, focusing on wildfire-prone regions with diverse vegetation types. Applications must demonstrate potential for advancing fire science knowledge relevant to federal land management agencies.

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Program description

GRANT OPPORTUNITY FORECAST

USDA/USDOI Joint Fire Science Program (JFSP)

Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA): July – September 2020

Potential Topics

March 2020

Background

The interagency Joint Fire Science Program (JFSP) intends to request proposals through one or more formal Funding Opportunity Announcements (FOA) beginning approximately July 2020 and remaining open 60 days. The intent of this announcement is to provide an early alert to investigators interested in the topics listed below so that they can begin considering responsive ideas with potential partners and collaborators.

Investigators should recognize that final decisions regarding topic selection will not be made until Spring of 2020 and that final topic selection may differ from that posted here. One or more topics could be dropped or added, and the specific focus of individual topics may be altered. Investigators should recognize this uncertainty and not invest substantial time or resources working on proposals until the FOAs and their associated topics are formally posted.

Investigators should not contact the JFSP Office or Governing Board members seeking further information on these topics. No further information will be released until the FOAs are formally posted.

 Primary FOA

A. Relative impacts of prescribed and wildland fire

Although the documented benefits of prescribed fire are numerous including habitat improvement and hazardous fuel reduction, there are drawbacks as well, such as reductions in air quality, which may impact human health. Prescribed fire is often implemented with the assumption that it will mitigate the effects of uncontrolled wildfire, because prescribed fire has been shown to reduce the intensity of subsequent wildfire under certain conditions. This is desirable because the impacts of wildfire are usually of a higher magnitude, larger in size and intensity, and pose a risk to public safety. To fully evaluate the trade-offs between prescribed fire programs and current wildfire impacts, an assessment framework is vital. Currently, there is little information on the spatial scale, frequency and spatial pattern at which prescribed fire begins to have an impact on subsequent wildfire extent, intensity and severity. As a result, JFSP is interested in proposals that improve our understanding of the relationship between prescribed fire programs and subsequent wildfire characteristics and this information is needed across a variety of vegetation types and regions.

B. Types and distribution of ignitions and their relation to fire size and impacts

One approach to reducing the negative impacts of wildfire to social and ecological values is to reduce the occurrence of human-caused wildfire ignitions with targeted wildfire prevention strategies. Planning and implementing effective fire prevention strategies requires detailed knowledge of the temporal and spatial distribution of different wildfire ignition sources (e.g., arson, accidental, lightning) and factors that influence whether different ignition sources lead to development of large wildfires. As a result, JFSP is interested in proposals that evaluate driving factors for the spatial and temporal distribution of ignitions and the effectiveness of different fire prevention actions as they relate to different human-caused ignitions.

C. Science in support of fuel treatment performance metrics

While it is relatively easy to document changes in fuels conditions following treatments at finer spatial scales, there is currently no objective framework to link fuel conditions to desired outcomes (e.g., reducing fire intensity and severity, improving fire suppression efficacy, reducing resource loss) at the landscape level. Such information is critical for developing cost-effective strategies to address the threats of wildfire. One possible strategy is to consider the evaluation of fuels treatment programs using a risk framework, where the probability and intensity of wildfire is considered in conjunction with valued resources. The development of a risk framework should assist agencies in measuring the extent and duration of risk reduction that could be achieved from a given fuel treatment. As a result, JFSP is interested in proposals that improve our understanding of the impacts of fuels treatments on fire suppression efficiency and protection of valued resources including the development of fuel treatment performance metrics at landscape scales. 

GRIN FOA – Graduate Research Innovation (GRIN) Award

In partnership with the Association for Fire Ecology, the Joint Fire Science Program (JFSP) will likely continue the Graduate Research Innovation (GRIN) program for current master and doctoral students in the field of wildland fire and related physical, biological, and social sciences. The purpose of these awards is to enhance student exposure to the management and policy relevance of their research. As a result, these awards will enable graduate students to conduct research that will supplement and enhance the quality, scope, or applicability of their thesis or dissertation to develop information and products useful to managers and decision-makers.

Proposals must describe new, unfunded work that extends ongoing or planned research that is the subject of a thesis or dissertation that has been approved by the graduate student’s advisory committee. Proposals must be directly related to the mission and goals of JFSP to be considered, and they must address management- or policy-related questions related to one or more of the following general topic areas: fuels management and fire behavior, emissions and air quality, fire effects and post-fire recovery, relative impacts of prescribed fire versus wildfire, or human dimensions of fire.

Note: The specific topics eligible for GRIN proposals identified in the FOA may differ from those listed above.

Who can apply

Eligible applicants

How to apply

Application links

Required documents

  • Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) with topic details
  • Project narrative and research proposal
  • Budget and budget justification
  • Curriculum vitae of key personnel
  • Letters of support from partner agencies or collaborators
  • SF-424 Federal application form (or agency equivalent)

Program contact

  • 👤 Karina I Del Toro Grants Management Officer
  • 📧 kdeltoro@blm.gov
  • 📞 208-373-3881

Funding track record

Recent awards under CFDA 15.232 from the last 3 years — real organizations that won funding through this same program.

103
awards (3 yrs)
$29M
total funded
44
unique recipients
$280K
average award

Top 10 Largest Recent Awards

  1. $659,000
  2. $643,948
  3. $606,000
  4. $606,000
  5. $604,000
  6. $524,000
  7. $524,000
  8. $524,000
  9. $523,997
  10. $523,941

Top States by Funding

  • CA 11 awards $3.7M
  • CO 11 awards $3.0M
  • AZ 7 awards $2.2M
  • OR 5 awards $2.1M
  • FL 4 awards $2.0M

Source: USAspending.gov — federal spending transparency. Data covers last 3 years.

Funding history

Annual funding for this program — Federal obligations (CFDA 15.232). How funding has trended year over year.

2019 $834,175
2020 $4,287,160
2021 est. $3,200,000
2022 $1,211,897
2023 $13,294,678
2024 $8,534,531
2025 est. $330,269
2026 est. $500,000

FAQ

Who can apply for JFSP funding?

Academic institutions, government agencies, research nonprofits, and private research organizations with fire science expertise. Collaborative projects involving land management agencies are strongly encouraged.

When is the application deadline?

The FOA typically opens in July and remains open for approximately 60 days. Consult the formal Funding Opportunity Announcement for exact dates and specific deadlines.

What types of research are funded?

Projects studying prescribed fire impacts, wildfire ignition patterns and prevention, fuel treatment effectiveness, and fire ecology across varied vegetation types and regions.

How competitive is this grant?

Very competitive. JFSP funds high-quality, peer-reviewed research proposals addressing critical fire science gaps relevant to federal land management priorities.

What is the typical funding range?

Award amounts vary by project scope and topic. Consult the formal FOA for specific funding ranges and project duration expectations.

💡 Tips for applicants

  • Address a specific research gap listed in the FOA. Generic fire research proposals are less competitive than those tightly focused on posted topics.
  • Partner with BLM, Forest Service, or other land management agencies early. Agency collaboration strengthens competitiveness and ensures relevance.
  • Include clear methods for measuring outcomes across vegetation types and regions. Broad applicability is highly valued.
  • Propose timelines realistic for field research and data collection. Multi-year funding allows for rigorous long-term studies.
  • Demonstrate how findings will directly inform federal fire management policies or practices. Practical applications matter.

⚠️ Common mistakes

Proposals that ignore the specific research topics outlined in the FOA lack focus and competitiveness. Applications without documented partnerships with land management agencies miss a key strength indicator. Projects failing to address how results scale spatially or across regions fall short of JFSP's emphasis on broad applicability.

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Source: Grants.gov · FY 2020 · Last updated May 27, 2026

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