Environment Grants in Alaska
9 matching federal environment opportunities for Alaska. Updated daily.
Environment grant alerts for Alaska
Get notified when new environment funding posts — free.
U.S Wildland Fire Service BLM-National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) Joint Fire Science Program (JFSP) Regional Fire Science Exchange Announcement
DOI-BLM · FA-NOFO0027-003
F26AS00104 State ANS Management Plan 2026
DOI-FWS · F26AS00104
Technical Assistance and Training for Rural, Small and Tribal Municipalities and Wastewater Treatment Systems
EPA · EPA-OW-OWM-26-01
2026 Alaska Marine Education and Training Mini-Grant Program
DOC-DOCNOAAERA · NOAA-NMFS-AK-2026-33268
Prevention, Control, and Mitigation of Harmful Algal Blooms Program
DOC-DOCNOAAERA · NOAA-NOS-NCCOS-2026-33016
Harmful Algal Bloom Innovation Challenge: Toxin Detection in Seafood
DOC-DOCNOAAERA · NOAA-NOS-NCCOS-2026-32955
Intervention Research to Improve Native American Health (R34 Clinical Trial Optional)
HHS-NIH11 · PAR-25-378
CONTAMINATED ALASKA NATIVE CLAIMS SETTLEMENT ACT LANDS ASSISTANCE PROGRAM
EPA · EPA-OLEM-R10-NC-24-01
NPS Cooperative Ecosystems Studies Units (CESU) Master Cooperative Agreements
DOI-NPS · P23AS00132
Environment Grants in Alaska: How to Apply
Federal environment grants available to Alaska organizations are funded by agencies like EPA, NOAA, and DOI. Most require 501(c)(3) status, though some are open to state/local governments, tribal organizations, and educational institutions.
Typical process: Review the Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO), confirm eligibility, submit a Letter of Intent if required (2-4 weeks before deadline), then submit the full application through Grants.gov before the close date. Applications typically include a project narrative, budget, and organizational capacity statement.
Why timing matters: Most NOFOs have a 30-60 day window. Starting the day it posts (vs. finding it 3 weeks late) can be the difference between a strong submission and a rushed one. That's what GrantQuick solves.
FAQ: Environment Grants in Alaska
Who is eligible for environment grants in Alaska?
Most federal environment grants require 501(c)(3) nonprofit status. State and local government agencies, tribal organizations, and educational institutions in Alaska are also often eligible. Check each NOFO's eligibility section — some are restricted to specific org types.
How much funding is available?
Federal environment grants range from $10,000 (planning grants) to $10M+ (multi-year program grants). Small-to-mid nonprofits in Alaska typically target $50K-$500K awards. Many agencies also offer capacity-building grants specifically for smaller organizations.
How often do new environment grants post for Alaska?
New opportunities post year-round, but volume peaks in the federal fiscal year Q1-Q2 (October-March) when agencies release new-year funding. Set up a free alert to get notified the same day a matching grant posts.