Applying for Funding
The National Weeds and Productivity Program
Applying for Funding and Guidelines
When making your application please refer to:
Applications must address the four research objectives (taken from the five-year plan) as shown below, and must also take into consideration the 'broad research priorities' from the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, which are also in the five-year plan.
Research Objectives:
Objective 1: Improve knowledge for effective risk management of weeds.
Outcome: Improved likelihood of effective integrated weed management strategies being adopted, particularly at a landscape scale to manage the risks associated with invasive plants in agriculture, forestry and natural resource management including aquatic weeds. This includes preventative, mitigative and adaptive strategies including the impact of climate change.
Priority: Investing in R&D that fills key knowledge gaps which contribute to more effective risk management of weeds. RIRDC will collaborate with key agencies including Plant Health Australia, the Biosecurity Services Group of the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, CSIRO, other rural research and development corporations, and state and territory government agencies in identifying knowledge gaps and commissioning the necessary research.
Resource Allocation: The Plan envisages allocating up to 25% of the Program budget to this objective.
Objective 2: Reduce current and future impacts of weeds on Australia's productive systems and environments.
Outcome: Improved tools, methods and technology that can solve the most serious invasive plant problems impacting on primary industry productivity and the environment including aquatic weeds. This will include new methods that reduce reliance on high cost and potentially harmful herbicides and promote integrated approaches to weed management. This objective will be aligned to the needs of Australian agriculture to address energy and chemical inputs in production and also the impact of climate change on the spread and invasive intensity of existing and potential weeds.
Priority: Investing in R&D to investigate the most serious invasive plant problems and to provide the knowledge and methods to solve those problems.
Resource Allocation: The Plan envisages allocating up to 40% of the Program budget to this objective.
Objective 3: Support improved adoption of weed management approaches.
Outcome: Outputs of R&D facilitates improved adoption by stakeholders of the National Weeds and Productivity Research Program.
Priority: Investing in R&D that improves understanding of economic, social and environmental impacts of invasive plants; that identifies the motivators and barriers to the uptake of cost-effective integrated weed management strategies and options; and ensures better coordination and information exchange between researchers, land managers and regulatory agencies about integrated approaches for management of invasive weeds.
Resource Allocation: The Plan envisages allocating up to 30% of the Program budget to this objective.
Objective 4: Plan for future funding and institutional arrangements for national investment and management of weeds R&D.
Outcome: A well-researched plan for future investment and institutional arrangements for national weeds research and development that can be presented to governments and other potential investors prior to the ending of the current funding for the National Weeds and Productivity Research Program.
Priority: Investing in research and development that identifies options, the pros and cons of those options and how the preferred option or options can be implemented.
Resource allocation: The Plan envisages allocating up to 5% of the Program budget to this objective.
Minister's Broad Research Priorities:
investigate and solve the most serious invasive plant problems focusing efforts to improve productivity and the environment;
investigate new methods which reduce reliance on herbicides and promote integrated approaches which also help to reduce energy and chemical inputs in agriculture;
refine landscape-scale integrated weed management strategies to manage the risks associated with invasive plants in agriculture, forests, pastures and native vegetation, including addressing climate change mitigation and adaptation issues;
identify motivators and barriers to the uptake of cost-effective integrated weed management strategies and options to encourage the uptake of integrated practices;
improve understanding of economic, social and environmental impacts of invasive plants; and
ensure better coordination and information exchange between researchers, land managers and regulatory agencies about integrated approaches for priority management of invasive weeds.
Projects should aim to develop proposals that address research needs, involve integrated approaches to weed issues and cover economic, social and environmental impacts.
Projects could be delivered at a regional or landscape level, industry level or deal with a major weed issue at a local level. RIRDC is also seeking projects which involve collaboration between stakeholder groups.
Applicants are required to submit their proposals through a two stage process:
Stage 1:
Please fill in the National Weeds and Productivity Program Stage 1 Application form [
National Weeds and Productivity Stage 1 Application.doc
] and email the completed document to weeds@rirdc.gov.au by 5:00pm Australian Eastern Daylight Savings Time, 10th of December 2010. Once RIRDC has received this document a Clarity User ID and Password will be provided.
Stage 2
When a Clarity User ID and logon have been provided to the applicant, proposals will need to be submitted via Clarity as Full Research Proposals
Submitting a Full Proposal.pdf
by 5:00pm Australian Eastern Daylight Savings Time, 13th of December 2010.
Key Dates
Action | Date |
Open-call for research proposals | 13 November 2010 |
Closing date for Stage 1 proposals | 10 December 2010 |
Closing date for Stage 2 proposals | 13 December 2010 |
Advice on successful/ unsuccessful proposals | 31 January 2011 |
Contracts entered into (First payment on contract execution) | As specified in contract |
Annual progress reports | As specified in contract |
Final report | As specified in contract |
Checklist for proposals
Before applying for RIRDC R&D funding please:
- Ensure your proposal is aligned with current research priorities
- Check key dates for proposal submission
- Ensure proposals contain a clear pathway for adoption - see
RIRDC Adoption Principles
- Public sector research must apply through the administration office
Checklist for projects
- Signed research agreement-stored in Clarity
- Due dates for project reports-notification through Clarity
- Project progress reports-submitted through Clarity
- Final report template and RIRDC Style Guide
- Final approval and acceptance of report by RIRDC - notification through Clarity
Travel, Conference Sponsorship, Scholarship applications
If you wish to apply for Travel, Conference Sponsorship or Scholarship funding please contact weeds@rirdc.gov.au or 02 6271 4100 for further information.
More information can be found in
Doing Business With RIRDC
.