For Immediate Release: May 9,
2012
Contact: Dean Higuchi, 808-541-2711, higuchi.dean@epa.gov
Contact: Dean Higuchi, 808-541-2711, higuchi.dean@epa.gov
MEDIA ADVISORY
EPA seeks project proposals to reduce marine
debris
$280,000 available to reduce the source of land-based marine debris
$280,000 available to reduce the source of land-based marine debris
SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency is seeking project proposals to reduce land-based trash at the
source, thus preventing trash from entering coastal runoff and becoming marine
debris.
The amount of funding available is
approximately $280,000 and projects must occur in a coastal or estuarine
watershed in U.S. EPA Region 9, which includes coastal areas of California,
Hawaii, and the Pacific Territories of Guam, American Samoa and the Commonwealth
of the Northern Mariana Islands. States, local governments, public and private
nonprofit institutions/organizations, federally recognized Indian tribal
governments, U.S. territories or possessions, and interstate agencies are
eligible and encouraged to apply.
The aim of the grant is to reduce marine
debris from coastal watersheds with true source reduction practices, not with
the more commonly used capture and removal practices such as inserting catch
basin screens and enhancing street sweeping. Methods that businesses can use to
facilitate true source reduction include creating mechanisms for
product/packaging take-back, minimizing procurement of difficult-to-recycle
goods, and ‘incentivizing’ reuse.
Proposals should demonstrate and promote the
economic benefits of source reduction to business and government, inspire
innovative local policies promoting litter prevention, and foster creative
collaborative partnerships between local government, non-profits, and business.
Proposals that principally support recycling, clean-up, treatment, trash
capture/removal, plastic bag and/or polystyrene bans, or disposal activities
will not be considered for funding.
Marine debris degrades estuarine, near
shore, and open ocean habitats. It endangers marine and coastal wildlife, causes
navigation hazards, results in economic losses to industry and governments, and
threatens human health and safety. With up to 80 percent of marine debris coming
from land-based sources, reducing what is generated upstream will result in less
trash having to be captured and removed downstream.
Submission Date: Proposals are due on
Friday, June 8, 2012, 5 pm (PDT). EPA anticipates awarding one to three grants
under this solicitation with project periods of up to three years. Applicants
must demonstrate how they will provide the minimum non-federal match of 25
percent of the total cost of the proposal.
For more information and the full request
for proposals, please visit: http://www.epa.gov/region9/marine-debris/
This grant will support the Region 9
Strategic Plan goal of reducing the accumulation of trash that contributes to
marine debris, please visit: http://www.epa.gov/region9/strategicplan/islands.html
and http://www.epa.gov/region9/strategicplan/comm.html
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