Traditional Farming Impact in Native Hawaii
GrantID: 72383
Grant Funding Amount Low: Open
Deadline: Ongoing
Grant Amount High: Open
Summary
Explore related grant categories to find additional funding opportunities aligned with this program:
Agriculture & Farming grants, Financial Assistance grants, Food & Nutrition grants, Individual grants, Non-Profit Support Services grants.
Grant Overview
Hawaii's Targeted Outcomes for Traditional Agriculture Preservation
Preservation of native farming techniques in Hawaii targets restoring 5,000 acres of lo'i kalo (taro terraces) across the major islands by 2028, alongside achieving 15% local food production increase from traditional crops. These outcomes address Hawaii's 90% food import reliance, exacerbated by its isolated Pacific location spanning 6,400 square miles across eight main islands, where shipping delays from the mainland average 5-7 days. State data from the Hawaii Department of Agriculture (HDOA) shows traditional agriculture contributes $50 million annually but covers only 1% of farmland due to land conversion pressures.
These outcomes matter in Hawaii because traditional practices underpin Native Hawaiian cultural identity, with 21% of the population identifying as Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, concentrated in rural areas like Maui County (38% Native Hawaiian) and Kauai. Intergenerational knowledge transfer counters the aging farmer crisis, where 60% of operators are over 55, per USDA Census, risking extinction of ahupua'a systemsintegrated land-sea management from mountains to reefs. Food sovereignty outcomes mitigate vulnerability to global disruptions, as seen in 2020 supply shortages raising prices 20% in rural Molokai, where grocery costs exceed Honolulu by 30%.
In Hawaii's context, outcomes emphasize bolstering self-reliance amid tourism-dominated economy (25% GDP), where agriculture employs just 1.5% of workforce but sustains 10,000 jobs in neighbor islands. Unlike California applications, which focus on large-scale monocrops, Hawaii mandates cultural practitioner involvement under Act 200, requiring applicants to document kuleana land ties or partnerships with Native Hawaiian Organizations (NHOs).
Implementation begins with workshops led by certified kumu hula and farmers, funded at $50,000-$200,000 per project, delivered via HDOA's Agribusiness Development Corporation. Applicants submit plans integrating lo'i restoration with data loggers for yield tracking, partnered with University of Hawaii Cooperative Extension Service stations on Oahu, Big Island, and Kauai. Metrics include participant numbers (target 500 annually) and sovereignty indices measuring crop revival rates.
Who Qualifies for Hawaii's Traditional Agriculture Grants
Eligible entities in Hawaii include NHOs, 501(c)(3)s with demonstrated cultural agricultural experience, and county farm bureaus operating in high-import dependency districts like Hawaii County (40% rural). Groups must prove control over at least 2 acres of makai (lowland) suitable for taro, verified by HDOA soil surveys showing volcanic loam prevalence on 70% of ag lands.
Navigating Hawaii's Application Process
Applications require GIS mapping of project sites, cultural impact assessments per state historic preservation guidelines, and budgets allocating 40% to practitioner stipends. Deadlines align with fiscal year starts in July, processed through HDOA's online portal with priority for Big Island and Molokai projects due to 80% Native Hawaiian demographics. Success rates hover at 35% for proposals showing multi-island replication potential.
Hawaii's unique island geography demands air/sea logistics plans, distinguishing it from mainland states by necessitating feral pig control measures on 60% of project lands.
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