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"culture & policy",
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"science policy",
"Science",
"Exclusive: NSF Slashes Research Programs to Support New Tech Initiative, Insiders Say",
"The NSF is On Track for Its Worst Year in Decades",
"FY2027 Appropriations Update: NASA, NOAA and NSF",
"AGU Science Policy Action Center",
"math and physical science directorate",
"biology directorate",
"announcement",
"Daniel Feshbach (@danielprime.bsky.social)",
"2026-06-22T16:36:01.728Z",
"Grant Witness",
"eliminated the entire board",
"eliminated postdoctoral funding",
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"textContent": "#### _Research & Developments is a blog for brief updates that provide context for the flurry of news regarding law and policy changes that impact science and scientists today._\n\nThe National Science Foundation (NSF) has slashed budgets for hundreds of its basic science programs for the remainder of this fiscal year, according to an 18 June memo obtained by Science_._\n\n##\n**Related**\n\n**•** Exclusive: NSF Slashes Research Programs to Support New Tech Initiative, Insiders Say**\n**• The NSF is On Track for Its Worst Year in Decades**\n**• FY2027 Appropriations Update: NASA, NOAA and NSF**\n**• Get Involved: AGU Science Policy Action Center****\n****\n\nThe memo informs program managers within a unit of NSF’s math and physical science directorate that their budget for this fiscal year, ending 30 September, has been cut by 30% from the FY2025 level, which was $260 million. The memo also asks NSF program managers to “pull back any award recommendations in the queue,” and refrain from informing potential and current principal investigators (PIs) and other grantees about the changes: “Please do not communicate anything to PIs,” the memo states.\n\nComparable cuts were made within many other NSF units, including the biology directorate, which received a budget cut of $200 million.\n\nSources who preferred not to be named told _Science_ they suspect that the budget cuts are part of an effort to make funds available for a new NSF initiative called X-Labs. The new initiative is a $1.5 billion program that would award “independent teams of researchers, engineers and entrepreneurs” funding to “tackle challenges that were difficult to pursue in conventional academic and industry labs,” a May announcement about it states.\n\n> “The agency appears to be defying a congressional directive in the final FY 2026 appropriations bill that “No [NSF] directorate shall receive more than a 5 percent reduction relative to the fiscal year 2024 enacted level.” That language was meant to address… a concern that now appears prescient.”\n>\n> — Daniel Feshbach (@danielprime.bsky.social) 2026-06-22T16:36:01.728Z\n\nNSF will fund X-Labs through a mechanism called Other Transaction Authority, which allows the agency to issue funding outside of standard grants or cooperative agreements. The overall FY2026 budget did not contain funding for X-Labs; NSF officials expanded the program and accelerated its launch.\n\nThe cuts to basic science programs come during a time of turbulent changes at NSF. This fiscal year, the agency has awarded roughly half the number of awards it had by this time in FY2025 (and just an eighth of the total number of new grants awarded in FY2025), despite the overall NSF budget being just 3% less, according to Grant Witness.\n\nIn April, the Trump administration eliminated the entire board that directs and approves funding decisions for NSF, and in May, it eliminated postdoctoral funding for Earth scientists. Trump’s FY2027 budget request, announced in May, would reduce NSF’s science and research budget by more than half.\n\n—Grace van Deelen (@gvd.bsky.social), Staff Writer\n\n## **_These updates are made possible through information from the scientific community. Do you have a story about how changes in law or policy are affecting scientists or research? Send us a tip at eos@agu.org._**\n\n###### Text © 2026. AGU. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0\nExcept where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.",
"title": "NSF Cuts Hundreds of Science Program Budgets by Up To 30%"
}