May 2026 | View Online | Subscribe

Research Insight Newsletter by the Office of Research
Photograph of Simon Atkinson wearing black suit

Simon J. Atkinson

Vice Chancellor for Research

Progress on Increasing Our Research Excellence


At the end of April, we hosted a town hall to share an update on the progress of the Increasing Our Research Excellence Committee.


This committee is one of six working groups within UC Davis’s Sustaining Teaching and Research Task Force (START), launched by Provost Croughan in 2023 to strengthen the university’s education, research and service mission through strategic, actionable initiatives.


The committee’s primary goal is to advance UC Davis’s current and future research excellence by identifying key challenges and recommending transformative solutions. Its work is organized across four focus areas: facilities, computing, administration and emerging opportunities.


To date, the committee has put forth a total of 13 recommendations for review spanning a range of targeted enhancements, including improvements to grant reporting tools, expanded support for training grants, modernization of network infrastructure and more. 


Some initiatives have already been approved for implementation. The first is a strategic investment to enhance shared research core facilities, committing $1.25 million in FY26 and $1 million annually thereafter. The second initiative consolidates multiple recommendations related to high-performance computing, infrastructure and oversight, and includes $2.43 million in ongoing annual support for staffing and equipment maintenance, along with $800,000 in one-time funding for hardware and system upgrades. As part of this effort, a Strategic Administration of Research Computing Oversight Committee is being established to evaluate recharge rates and optimize resource allocation.


More information about these initiatives and next steps is available on the START webpage.


At the same time, we are navigating a dynamic and consequential landscape for research. The information below captures important updates and provides guidance for our research community.


Agency Updates

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Federal Research Grant Slowdown: Implications and Actions for UC Davis Faculty


U.S. universities are facing a significant slowdown in federal research funding, particularly from the NIH and NSF, beginning in FY2025 and continuing into FY2026. Competitive grant awards have dropped sharply. Learn about the impact, causes and actions you can take.

National Science Foundation logo with globe and ring of people holding hands around

NSF and NIH Release New Data Management and Sharing Plans


The new plans, released in early 2026, differ between agencies but are simplified relative to earlier paragraph-formatted plans.

Nation Institutes Health logo

NIH Common Form Bioskethces Mandatory for All May 25 Deadlines


NIH Common Form biosketches will be due for all proposals beginning May 8 – this means it is mandatory for all May 25 deadlines. Furthermore, this week NIH added a new certification to the form, so if you created and certified your Common Forms prior to the addition of this text on April 22, you will need to regenerate your Common Form PDF for submissions on or after May 25, 2026.

Announcements

Two scientists working together on a lab bench

Investing In the Future of California Science

UC is co-sponsoring Senate Bill 895, a critical effort to sustain world-changing research that fuels the fourth-largest economy in the world and supports the quality of life for all Californians.

Research Administration Community Forum May 26

Join Us for the Relaunch of the Research Administration Community Forum

Whether you're in a central office or a departmental role, the work of research administration connects us. The Office of Research is excited to relaunch this forum, bringing together partners from across the UC Davis research enterprise for structured, learning-focused sessions covering policy updates, system guidance, sponsor news and best practices.

Proposal Development Tips

Many agencies are acting on compressed proposal timelines due to the government shutdown earlier this fiscal year. We anticipate some new funding opportunities to be released soon, with quick turnaround times, overlapping deadlines and awards made before the end of the fiscal year.


Here are some tips from our Proposal Development Services team to help investigators navigate this shift:


Prepare your pitch: Write one or more one-pagers for research projects in your field, particularly if they align with published agency priorities.


Apply more: Stay abreast of funding opportunity announcements and explore opportunities for supplements to existing grants

  • Subscribe to weekly emails to hear about new funding opportunities
  • Talk to your program officer (of your current grant or recently expired ones) about supplemental funding that may exist
  • Don’t wait for NOFOs! Apply to everything that is available, including unsolicited submissions (e.g., at NSF) and open programs with standard deadlines (e.g., at NIH), even if you have applications currently in review (you can always turn one down if the same idea is funded twice)


Expect changes: We’ve noticed many funding opportunities are publishing amendments and FAQs that modify the initial request for proposals

  • Bookmark NOFOs, don’t download them, so that you are always reading the most current version
  • Regularly check on-line for FAQs, updates and amendments for any funding opportunity you are working on
  • Reach out to Proposal Development Services for assistance interpreting your NOFO or reconciling it with other agency guidance

Funding Opportunities

Subscribe to our funding newsletters for weekly updates on new opportunities or contact our Strategic Initiatives & Research Funding team to customize a plan aligned with your goals.


Select Opportunities:


Limited Submissions:


Foundations and Corporations:



Events


May 26

Research Administration Community Forum

May 27

Small Plastics, Big Questions: Studying Our Coast With the Help of Our Community

May 29

Team Research Forum: New Approach Methodologies (NAMS)

June 3

How is Early-Life Nutrition Associated with Child Development

June 9

2026 Convergence Research Celebration

Oct 20

2026 Energy Transition Summit at UC Davis

From Labs to Lives

From Labs to Lives Logo

Strategic Communications is inviting our community to nominate beneficiaries of UC Davis research to share their story on how it has impacted their life. These stories will be used to increase the impact of the From Labs to Lives campaign.

New Opportunities

visual representation of working concept of a smart electricity grid. Icons for homes, cars, AI, solar and ag.

IAW FlexHub Launched to Accelerate Load Flexibility Innovation Throughout California

The IAW FlexHub will serve as a centralized platform for demonstration projects, technical collaboration, market development, and stakeholder engagement, developed by Momentum in partnership with UC Davis, EPRI, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) and other cutting-edge research partners.


The Hub has issued a call for demonstration project concepts, seeking innovative approaches that advance load flexibility in industrial, agriculture and water applications. Open to any individual, public or private entity, with the exception of publicly owned utilities, the Hub is particularly seeking to fund project concepts with secured site hosts or sites interested in hosting a relevant demonstration. 


Concepts may be submitted through an online form at the newly launched website. The application seeks high-level project details including technology readiness level, anticipated budget with match share and relevant past research showing the project is informed by existing work, while contributing new solutions toward the Hub’s goal of scalable, replicable impact. Concepts will be accepted from March 16 through June 19, 2026.



built to launch bootcamp provided by the UC Davis Biotechnology Program

Built to Launch Bootcamp

The UC Davis Biotechnology Program is offering the Built to Launch Bootcamp, a hands-on, in-person workshop on biotech commercialization taking place on the UC Davis campus August 5-7, 2026. Taught by Matt Stange, author of Built to Launch, the short course provides a comprehensive overview of the key pillars of bringing biotech innovations to market, including data analytics, market research, access and marketing. Participants will work through real-world case studies to make strategic launch decisions, explore how reimbursement and access dynamics influence success and develop marketing and engagement strategies to drive adoption and patient impact.

Support Services

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