EPA grant application closes on June 20

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EPA grant application closes on June 20

The Environmental Protection Agency is offering a grant open from March 8 to June 20.

The grant could provide up to $1,200,000.

This grant opportunity is announced under the authority of the Pollution Prevention Act of 1990 and isfunded by IIJA. EPA is announcing a two-year competitive funding opportunity for awards to eligibleentities, including: the fifty states, the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth ofPuerto Rico, any territory or possession of the U.S., any agency or instrumentality of a state or tribe,including colleges and universities, and federally recognized tribes and intertribal consortia. Applicants arestrongly encouraged, but not required, to develop partnerships where they can strengthen their ability toprovide P2 technical assistance to businesses in disadvantaged communities, which are communities thatare marginalized, underserved, and overburdened by pollution.The goal of this grant opportunity is to address environmental justice by providing P2 technical assistance tobusinesses (e.g., information, training, expert advice) to improve human health and the environment indisadvantaged communities by increasing the supply, demand and use of safer and more sustainableproducts, such as those that are certified by EPA's Safer Choice Program, or those that conform to EPA'sRecommendations for Specifications, Standards and Ecolabels for Federal Purchasing (EPARecommendations). Greater availability and use of safer and sustainable products can decrease harmful chemical exposures and impacts on human health and the environment in disadvantaged communities. Therefore, EPA views these grants as a component of the Biden Administration Justice40 Initiative, which is designed to assure that 40 percent of the overall benefits of certain Federal investments flow to disadvantaged communities.To allow a greater number of disadvantaged communities to benefit from the results and lessons learned from projects funded by these grants, EPA is requiring recipients to develop P2 case studies on approaches to make safer and sustainable products more available in disadvantaged communities where the approaches are new, not widely known or adopted, or where the recipient believes detailed information on the project could support more widespread project replication. Recipients must develop at least one case study during the grant period. Case studies submitted by recipients will be used to build and share a body of knowledge about P2 approaches to make safer and sustainable products more available in disadvantaged communities that could be implemented by other enterprises. In addition to case studies, EPA also encourages other means to document and widely share projects and lessons learned through the technical assistance provided through these grants (e.g., outreach, training, and videos). Guidance for developing these case studies can be found in Appendix B.