Iowa EPSCoR Builds State’s Research Capacity in Renewable Energy and Energy Use

Iowa’s three Regents universities are making faculty hires, launching studies, partnering with community colleges and building industry partnerships – all in a $22 million effort to boost the state’s research capacity in renewable energy and energy utilization.

Written byIowa State University
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AMES, Iowa – Iowa’s three Regents universities are making faculty hires, launching studies, partnering with community colleges and building industry partnerships – all in a $22 million effort to boost the state’s research capacity in renewable energy and energy utilization.

The benefits to Iowa could be many: research grants, new technologies, startup companies, educational opportunities and workforce improvements – all contributing to the state’s economic development.

The effort is driven by a five-year, $20 million grant from the National Science Foundation. The grant, announced in September 2011, is from the foundation’s Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, known as EPSCoR (pronounced Ep-score). The Iowa Power Fund, a state program supporting energy innovation and independence, has also awarded Iowa’s EPSCoR program $2 million to pay for research equipment.

“The alignment of the goals of the grant and the goals of state economic development are very good,” said Jordan Cohen, the chairman of the Iowa EPSCoR State Governance Committee and retired vice president for research and economic development at the University of Iowa.

The grant and the state, for example, are both interested in building capabilities in biosciences and advanced manufacturing, Cohen said.

Iowa EPSCoR is supporting studies of biomass production for renewable energy and chemicals. Photo credit: Iowa State University BioCentury Research Farm
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