Skip to main content

Climate Hackathon in Northern Japan

Agency: U.S. Mission to Japan

Assistance Listings: 19.040 -- Public Diplomacy Programs

Last Updated: February 17, 2022

The U.S. Consulate General in Sapporo is committed to combatting the climate crisis and supporting sustainable energy adoption in Northern Japan.

Realizing success in the battle against the climate crisis will require innovative approaches over the long term, it is essential for Japan’s youth and next-generation scientists, tech sector workers, entrepreneurs, and opinion leaders to develop a better understanding of the issues and start to workshop potential solutions. Northern Japan will play a significant role in whether Japan is able to achieve its ambitious climate change and decarbonization goals, and the prefectural government has made Zero Carbon Hokkaido a signature initiative – and youth involvement could help sustain momentum over time.

The Consulate invites proposals from academic institutions, engineers, scientists, NGOs, and individuals or groups at tech companies to execute a tech camp or hackathon on climate change preferably in 2022. The program can be online, in-person, or hybrid depending on the public health environment. The program is expected to be interactive under any type of formats above, and it will target university students in Northern Japan. Ideally, it will bring approximately 30 to 50 students, along with several mentors, to work together during the program.

Applicants are encouraged to submit proposals following the attached program and using the program template provided to demonstrate the organizational capacity and budget estimates to support online and/or in-person program empowering youth in northern Japan to develop innovative ideas and skills for combatting climate change.

The applicants are responsible for identifying and arranging the venue (regardless of in-person or virtual) as well as recruitment of participants and mentors/lecturers of the program as well. Encouraging female students or considering gender balance for the participants in the program will be an asset.

Participants and Audiences:

Expected participants will be university (and/or high school) students at schools in northern Japan (defined as Hokkaido, Aomori, Akita, Iwate, and/or Miyagi Prefectures).

Eligibility

Eligible applicants

Government

  • County governments
  • City or township governments

Nonprofit

  • Nonprofits non-higher education without 501(c)(3)
  • Nonprofits non-higher education with 501(c)(3)

Miscellaneous

  • Individuals

Education

  • Independent school districts
  • Public and state institutions of higher education
  • Private institutions of higher education

Additional information

--

Grantor contact information

Description

--

Email

Public Affairs Section, US Embassy Tokyo

tokyopasgrants@state.gov

Documents

File nameDescriptionLast updated
Sapporo-PAS-FY22-01-02_Climate_Hackathon_in_Northern_Japan.pdf
Information on Climate Hackathon in Northern Japan
Feb 17, 2022 07:57 AM UTC

Link to additional information

--

Forecasted

Estimated Post Date:

--

Estimated Application Due Date:

April 15, 2022

Estimated Due Date Description:

Not available

Estimated Award Date:

--

Estimated Project Start Date:

--

Fiscal Year:

2022

Application process

This site is a work in progress. Go to www.grants.gov to apply, track application status, and subscribe to updates.

Award

$--

Program Funding

1

Expected awards

$--

Award Minimum

$--

Award Maximum

Funding opportunity number:

SAPPORO-PAS-FY22-01-02

Cost sharing or matching requirement:

No

Funding instrument type:

Cooperative agreement

Opportunity Category:

Discretionary

Opportunity Category Explanation:

--

Category of Funding Activity:

Energy

Community development

Education

Environment

Regional development

Science technology and other research and development

Category Explanation:

--

History

Version:

1

Forecast posted date:

February 18, 2022

Archive date:

--

HHS.gov

An official website of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Looking for U.S. government information and services? Visit USA.gov