How to Seek Grants for Alternative Energy R & D
If you are someone who wishes to begin researching and
developing alternative energy technologies and you would want
to be set up as a not-for-profit organization or entity, you
will want to look into getting government grants, on both the
state and the federal levels. Government grants for alternative
energy research and development have been highly touted by
politicians on local, state, and federal levels in recent
years, all the way up to the President himself. This is due to
the fact that we now recognize as a society that we need to
seek out and develop alternative energy sources to those of the
fossil fuels that we presently depend upon, as these fuels are
not only slowly but surely running out (at least cheap access
to digging them up is running out), but also damaging to the
environment and air quality.
There is a fairly vast array of government grant programs
available for you to check into. The great and most important
thing to keep in mind about a government grant is that it's
essentially free money. It is not a loan, you don't pay any
interest, and you don't ever have to give the money back.
However, qualifying for these grants, as you might imagine with
something involving the government and free money, has quite a
lot of restrictions attached to it. Not only is qualification
based on purpose and need in the eyes and opinions of
government bureaucrats, but just because you qualify does not
mean that you necessarily get the grant. As Marshall McLuen put
it, “the medium is the message”. The fact of the matter is that
it is typically easier to apply for and qualify to receive a
business loan—but then, that would not be free money, that
would be something you owed to someone, and with interest on
top.
There are professional grant writers who know how to write
proposals in such a way that they get around the heavy load of
restrictions set up by the government, and you might need to
resort to one of these. Even governments employ professional
grant writers to seek money from other branches of the
government, such as a country government needing funding from
the state or the federal government. These people also keep
abreast of what government grants are still or newly available
and what ones have been removed from the table. It's an
intricate web, so one must not get tangled up in when seeking
needed financial backing for alternative energy research and
development. In fact, it is so complex that in the last decade
or so the ranks of profession writers, as both individuals and
as entire companies, have swelled. It is a profitable
business—and this can make it fraught with illegal actions and
controversial claims.
Nevertheless, each year there are many thousands of grants
awarded throughout the United States for the purpose of helping
the public. And again, with the government endorsement of grant
money to be given to alternative energy researchers, you could
very well get what you seek.
|