Southern University gets share of $33M for USDA projects at 19 HBCUs
31st July 2023 · 0 Comments
By Ariana Figueroa
Contributing Writer
(lailluminator.com) — The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced $33 million in funding on July 24 to 19 Historically Black Colleges and Universities designated as land-grant institutions to support research and education projects.
The funding through USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture will support 82 projects in sustainable farming practices such as reducing use of plastics, enhancing nutritional value in vegetables and addressing shortages in sunflower seed oil.
“The work these universities will take on as a result of this funding have ripple effects far beyond the walls of their laboratories and classrooms,” Agriculture Deputy Secretary Xochitl Torres Small said in a statement.
Torres Small said the investments will help “deliver real-life, applicable solutions to make our food system stronger, while at the same time inspiring a next generation of students and scientists who will help us meet tomorrow’s agricultural challenges.”
1890 Land-Grant Institutions are a byproduct of a Civil War-era law that gave land to dozens of universities, including the HBCUs, but the land had been forcibly taken from Indigenous tribes. In total, nearly 11 million acres were taken from more than 250 tribes, according to a project published in High Country News.
“USDA looks forward to the impact these visionary projects will have in improving the supply of affordable, safe, nutritious and accessible food and agricultural products, while fostering economic development and rural prosperity in America,” NIFA Director Manjit K. Misra said in a statement.
Six projects funded for Southern University
Six projects at Southern University will receive funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture as part of a $33 million grant program for the country’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities.
The projects funded total almost $1.74 million. Details and grant amounts are as follows:
• An integrated assessment of the sweet potato as a functional food, $299,999.
• Creating a “quilting hub” in the Apparel Merchandising and Textiles program, $149,997.
• A genetic approach to assessing ultra-violent B radiation tolerance in certain Southern broadleaf trees, $300,000.
• A mobile livestock harvesting unit to help minority farmers bring their livestock to the marketplace, $589,095.
• An experiential summer camp for middle and early high school students, $250,000.
• Training for undergraduate students and early childhood educators, $147,875.
Many of the projects are geared toward sustainable practices in farming. U.S. agriculture contributes to about 11.2 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, and the Biden administration has focused on “climate smart” farming practices.
For example, one project at North Carolina A&T State University was awarded about $250,000 to conduct farm trials of biodegradable mulches, which would be an alternative to plastic mulch.
Another land-grant university in Wilberforce, Ohio, the Central State University, was awarded about $500,000 to explore the use of a perennial flower — meaning it comes back year after year — as a way to improve honey production in order to enhance sustainability practices in agriculture.
And in Nashville, a project at Tennessee State University was awarded $100,000 to evaluate climate resiliency in legume species, which are crops such as snow peas, chickpeas and lentils, that are crucial to fixing nitrogen into the soil to improve soil health.
A full list of projects can be found at, https://cris.nifa.usda.gov/cgi-bin/starfinder/0?path=fastlink1.txt&id=anon&pass=&search=(GC=EP;EWE;%22EQ%22)%20AND%20(IY=2023)&format=WEBTITLESG.
This article originally published in the July 31, 2023 print edition of The Louisiana Weekly newspaper.