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Award Data
The Award database is continually updated throughout the year. As a result, data for FY24 is not expected to be complete until March, 2025.
Download all SBIR.gov award data either with award abstracts (290MB)
or without award abstracts (65MB).
A data dictionary and additional information is located on the Data Resource Page. Files are refreshed monthly.
The SBIR.gov award data files now contain the required fields to calculate award timeliness for individual awards or for an agency or branch. Additional information on calculating award timeliness is available on the Data Resource Page.
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Silver Ion Formulations for the Control of Bacterial Plant Pathogens and to Reduce Bactericide Resistance and Health Risks
SBC: AGION TECHNOLOGIES, INC. Topic: 82While bacteria cause fewer plant diseases than fungi and viruses, they do cause serious economic damages to both US and worldwide agriculture. Citrus canker caused by Xanthomonas axonopodis has resulted in the destruction of over 20 million trees in Florida, while fire blight caused by Erwinia amylovora costs exceed $100 million per year in the United States alone, and recent epidemics have cost o ...
SBIR Phase I 2011 Department of Agriculture -
Robust Airborne Wind Turbine Shroud for Production of Low Cost Renewable Energy
SBC: Altaeros Energies, Inc. Topic: 86Hundreds of existing wind power projects have transformed communities by creating jobs, improving economic development, and reducing environmental pollution. However, 85 percent of rural communities cannot utilize wind power today due to community concerns or poor wind resources at ground level that make projects uneconomical. Altaeros Energies is developing an airborne wind turbine that adapts pr ...
SBIR Phase I 2011 Department of Agriculture -
Evaluation of Various Low Cost Natural Plant Materials as Raw Materials for Patented Processing Techniques
SBC: FIBERSTAR BIO-INGREDIENT TECHNOLOGIES Topic: 85Obesity is a growing epidemic that continues to threaten the health of both adults and children around the world. Additionally, challenging economic times and increasing food costs puts pressure on consumers to purchase lower priced meals. While there are many ingredients available that can lower fat and calorie contents of foods, their usage is somewhat limited because either their quality is not ...
SBIR Phase I 2011 Department of Agriculture -
Structural Testing of Round Branched Timbers
SBC: Whole Trees, LLC Topic: 81USDA secretary, Tom Vilsack recently urged the Forest Service to "develop new markets" for forest by-products, which encourage healthy timber management. Small-diameter round timber is an abundant by-product of healthy timber management and could serve emerging green commercial markets if technical barriers, specifically round timber "connections", can be solved. Whole Trees Architecture and Const ...
SBIR Phase I 2011 Department of Agriculture -
The feasibility of developing a low cost, remote sensing technology to provide information critical to finfish hatchery operations
SBC: AXAT Topic: 87Since wild fish stocks began their drastic decline in the early 1990s, the aquaculture sector is the fastest growing food sector in the world. Production from U.S. marine aquaculture accounts for only 1.5 percent of the domestic seafood supply, leaving an enormous growth potential for the production of safe, high-quality seafood that is farmed under federal and state environmental standards. Howev ...
SBIR Phase I 2011 Department of Agriculture -
The project "KickinKitchen.TV"- An interactive digital learning technology program.
SBC: KIDSCOOK PRODUCTIONS LLC Topic: 85The "KickinKitchen.TV" project combines: technology, education and research strategies to address the USDA challenge area of improving nutritional health and reducing childhood obesity. This study involves the following partners: racially diverse, urban public schools, KidsCOOK Productions, an independent production company committed to addressing childhood obesity risk through its digital educati ...
SBIR Phase I 2011 Department of Agriculture -
Efficient isomer-selective biosynthesis of pinene from cellulosic feedstocks
SBC: PHYSICAL SCIENCES INC. Topic: N10BT046There is a need to find more efficient methods for producing high-density, liquid, tactical fuels for use in missile propulsion or as components to improve key performance characteristics of currently available jet and diesel fuels. Generation of such fuels from renewable sources such as waste cellulose, grasses, waste agricultural material and forestry products will provide important national sec ...
STTR Phase I 2011 Department of DefenseNavy -
Bioengineering Saccharomyces cerevisiae for the Selective Production of beta-Pinene
SBC: IMPACT Technology Development Topic: N10BT046This technology development program addresses the market and strategic need for renewable high density fuels for missile propulsion or as additives to increase performance of jet propulsion fuels. beta-Pinene, a natural plant derived organic compound, is the proposed high density fuel precursor. In the Phase 1 project, we will demonstrate the feasibility of this approach by: 1) engineering a strai ...
STTR Phase I 2011 Department of DefenseNavy -
Renewable Fuel Production System (RFPS)
SBC: Orbital Technologies Corporation Topic: N10BT047Orbital Technologies Corporation (ORBITEC) and the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW-Madison) propose to develop the Renewable Fuel Production System (RFPS), a system which will produce liquid alkene-based transportation fuels from lignocellulosic biomass. Specifically, we propose to investigate the production of levulinic acid (LA) and/or gamma-valerolactone (GVL) from lignocellulose; both of t ...
STTR Phase I 2011 Department of DefenseNavy -
Innovative Methods for the Conversion of Biomass to Short Chain Alkenes for the Production of Renewable Jet Fuels
SBC: C5-6 TECHNOLOGIES Topic: N10BT047C5-6 Technologies and University of Wisconsin Stevens Point scientists will develop a bacterial strain that economically ferments sugars into isoprene, a platform chemical that will play a central role in the future bio-economy. UWSP scientists have genetically engineered E. coli to produce isoprene, a precursor of B-pinene and other fuels, via a novel pathway that has significant potential produc ...
STTR Phase I 2011 Department of DefenseNavy