George Fox University awarded $100,000 USDA grant to assist farmers
NEWBERG, Ore. – George Fox University engineering students will have the opportunity to provide technical assistance to small farmers and rural businesses thanks to a $100,000 grant from the United States Department of Agriculture.
The university’s engineering department was awarded a Renewable Energy Development Assistance grant this spring for the purpose of funding faculty and undergraduate research that will be used to help farmers and vineyard owners with tasks such as energy audits, energy efficiency, and renewable energy options for their facilities. The funds will be provided over a two-year period, beginning this fall.
“George Fox is located right in the heart of a verdant countryside, surrounded by agricultural endeavors of all kinds – berries, grapes, nuts, dairy and hops – which provides us with a significant opportunity to get to know and serve our neighbors, an advantage we have over some of the other engineering programs located in more urban parts of the state,” said Bob Harder, dean of George Fox’s College of Engineering. “One big benefit will be the fact our students will become more broadly recognized in the state as a viable contributor to the growing needs we are facing in agriculture.”
According to Harder, the grant positions George Fox for future opportunities for USDA funding in other agri-tech areas at the Energy-Food-Water-Climate Nexus – including precision agriculture; Internet-of-things (IOT) sensors and drones for the field; digitizing farm and data science/management opportunities; and synthetic biology at the intersection of agriculture and the life sciences.
“Through this grant our students will get the unique opportunity to interact with owners of small farms and vineyards, understand their energy needs and use their technical engineering capabilities to assist them in diagnosing energy waste as well as propose efficiency measures and renewable energy options,” Harder said. Chad Stillinger, an associate professor of electrical engineering, who has extensive experience with renewable energy applications, is a co-principal investigator on the grant.
The genesis of the grant began two years ago, when the university’s president, Robin Baker, presented “A Charter for Change,” which included a design aspiration designed to “enhance the perceived value of George Fox among key stakeholders in the Pacific Northwest by developing initiatives and addressing the social, economic and spiritual needs in the region we serve.”
One of the goals associated with the aspiration was to “develop solutions to real-life challenges in the Northwest through effective cross-disciplinary collaboration between students, professors and the marketplace.” Since then, the College of Engineering has intentionally worked to engage regional stakeholders in developing solutions to real-life problems they are facing.
“In looking at our surroundings, it became obvious that one of our regional stakeholders was the agricultural industry,” Harder said. “I shared our interest in becoming more engaged with the local agricultural community, and ultimately we applied for this grant through the encouragement of the USDA rural development economic coordinator in our state, Jill Rees. We applied because we saw a clear alignment between the needs of the USDA in this area and our engineering program’s strengths.”
This grant award is the first step toward becoming recognized in the state of Oregon as an academic institution that can help address the future needs of the Energy-Water-Food-Climate Nexus and coming agri-tech revolution. This year, George Fox was the only university in the state to receive the award. It will be collaborating efforts on the grant with Spark Northwest, a Seattle-based renewable energy nonprofit organization.
Source: https://www.georgefox.edu