07/14/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/14/2026 10:14
The U.S. National Science Foundation announced it awarded the newest NSF Regional Innovation Engines (NSF Engines) awards to 12 U.S. teams across 20 states. These NSF Engines will build and scale innovation clusters that aim to accelerate the development of critical technologies, prepare talent for emerging jobs and grow regional economies. Building on decades of NSF investments in foundational research, the NSF Engines partner with the private sector to advance technology deployment and secure America's position at the forefront of science and technology.
View a map of these NSF Engines.
"These new NSF Engines will be transformational for America's innovation infrastructure - helping secure our national competitiveness in technologies and future industries that will be critical to our economic and national security for decades to come," said Brian Stone, performing the duties of the NSF director. "These engines will unlock innovation and enable technologies that will improve the quality of life and result in good-paying jobs for all Americans."
The newest NSF Engines awards span critical technologies and applications ranging from enhancing energy grid security to maximizing the yield of critical mineral mining extraction to advancing quantum computing. Each team, led by a coalition of regional organizations, including universities, nonprofits and private industry, will initially receive an award of $15 million over two years. Teams that demonstrate progress on well-defined milestones will have the potential to eventually receive up to $160 million each from NSF over the next decade as they seek to build an internationally competitive technology and innovation cluster in their region.
No single region can solve America's technology challenges alone. NSF Engines are designed as a connected national network, linking complementary regional strengths. Together, they build domestic supply chains, fill capability gaps and accelerate technology advancement across key sectors and regions.
The NSF Engines program is beginning to demonstrate significant returns and impacts as a result of the nation's investment via the inaugural NSF Engines funded two years ago. To date, an initial investment of $135 million in taxpayers' dollars across nine inaugural NSF Engines has garnered more than $2 billion in matching commitments from private industry, philanthropy and state and local governments. These investments are also advancing technologies that maintain American competitiveness in critical areas, including advanced chipmaking, next-generation artificial intelligence, agriculture and food production, disaster preparedness and energy storage. This cohort of NSF Engines coincides with another round of funding released this summer for the inaugural NSF Engines that have demonstrated sustained progress over the first two years of performance.
The 12 newest NSF Engines are:
To learn more about these NSF Engines, visit the NSF Engines Cohort 2 webpage.