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HORNIG Program NOFO - High-performance Optimized Recycled Nuclear Isotopes for Gen IV Reactors, $500k-$7M, Closes May 28

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Summary

ARPA-E has published NOFO DE-FOA-0003623 for the HORNIG (High-performance Optimized Recycled Nuclear Isotopes for Gen IV reactors) program, seeking proposals for research on transforming transuranic elements (TRU) into commercially deployable reactor fuel. Funding ranges from $500,000 to $7 million per award. The program aims to establish a domestic TRU fuel supply chain, achieve a levelized cost of fuel of 1 cent per kilowatt-hour, and obtain TRU fuel qualification and regulatory acceptance within seven years. Applications close May 28, 2026.

“The High-performance Optimized Recycled Nuclear Isotopes for Gen IV reactors (HORNIG) program will support research and development projects that deliver commercially deployable TRU fuel technologies, thereby strengthening U.S. energy security, reducing nuclear waste, and enabling long-term energy deployment for public benefit.”

ARPA-E , verbatim from source
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What changed

This NOFO announces a funding opportunity for the HORNIG program, which supports research and development to enable commercial-scale deployment of transuranic (TRU) fuel technologies for Generation IV nuclear reactors. The program focuses on overcoming technical and economic barriers to using plutonium, neptunium, and americium as reactor fuel.

Eligible applicants should note the specific program metrics: projects must demonstrate a path toward a levelized cost of fuel equal to 1 cent per kilowatt-hour and regulatory acceptance within seven years. The NOFO is open to unrestricted applicants and is subject to 2 C.F.R. Part 200 and 2 C.F.R. Part 910. This represents a significant opportunity for nuclear technology researchers, fuel fabricators, and advanced reactor developers to secure ARPA-E funding for TRU fuel development.

Archived snapshot

Apr 24, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

High-performance Optimized Recycled Nuclear Isotopes for Gen IV reactors (HORNIG)

Agency: Advanced Research Projects Agency Energy

Assistance Listings: 81.135 -- Advanced Research Projects Agency - Energy

Last Updated: April 23, 2026 View version history on Grants.gov

Description

NOFO Number: DE-FOA-0003623 – High-performance Optimized Recycled Nuclear Isotopes for Gen IV reactors (HORNIG)

Agency Overview:

The Advanced Research Projects Agency—Energy (ARPA-E), an organization within the Department of Energy (DOE), is chartered by Congress in the America COMPETES Act of 2007 (Public Law 110–69), as amended by the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010
(Public Law 111–358), as further amended by the Energy Act of 2020 (Public Law 116–260).

ARPA-E issues this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) under its authorizing statute codified at 42 U.S.C. § 16538. The NOFO... and any cooperative agreements or grants made under this NOFO are subject to 2 C.F.R. Part 200 as supplemented by 2 C.F.R. Part 910.

ARPA-E funds research on, and the development of, transformative science and technology solutions to address the energy and environmental missions of the Department. The agency focuses on technologies that can be meaningfully advanced with a modest investment over a defined period of time in order to catalyze the translation from scientific discovery into early-stage technology. For the latest news and information about ARPA-E, its programs and the research projects currently supported, see: http://arpa-e.energy.gov/.

ARPA-E funds transformational research. Existing energy technologies generally progress on established “learning curves” where refinements to a technology and the economies of scale that accrue as manufacturing and distribution develop drive improvements to the cost/performance metric in a gradual fashion. This continual improvement of a technology is important to its increased commercial deployment and is appropriately the focus of the private sector or the applied technology offices within DOE. In contrast, ARPA-E supports transformative research that has the potential to create fundamentally new learning curves. ARPA-E technology projects typically start with cost/performance estimates well above the level of an incumbent technology. Given the high risk inherent in these projects, many will fail to progress, but some may succeed in generating a new learning curve with a projected cost/performance metric that is significantly better than that of the incumbent technology. ARPA-E will provide support at the highest funding level only for submissions with significant technology risk, aggressive timetables, and careful management of associated risk.

ARPA-E funds technology with the potential to be disruptive in the marketplace. The mere creation of a new learning curve does not ensure market penetration. Rather, the ultimate value of a technology is determined by the marketplace, and impactful technologies ultimately become disruptive—that is, they are widely adopted and displace existing technologies from the marketplace or create entirely new markets. ARPA-E understands that definitive proof of market disruption takes time, particularly for energy technologies. Therefore, ARPA-E funds the development of technologies that, if technically successful, have clear disruptive potential, e.g., by demonstrating capability for manufacturing at competitive cost and deployment at scale. 

ARPA-E funds applied research and development (R&D). The Office of Management and Budget defines “applied research” as an “original investigation undertaken in order to acquire new knowledge…directed primarily toward a specific practical aim or objective” and defines “experimental development” as “creative and systematic work, drawing on knowledge gained from research and practical experience, which is directed at producing new products or processes or improving existing products or processes.” Applicants interested in receiving financial assistance for basic research (defined by the Office of Management and Budget as “experimental or theoretical work undertaken primarily to acquire new knowledge of the underlying foundations of phenomena and observable facts”) should contact the DOE’s Office of Science. Office of Science national scientific user facilities (http://science.energy.gov/user-facilities/) are open to all researchers, including ARPA-E applicants and awardees. These facilities provide advanced tools of modern science including accelerators, colliders, supercomputers, light sources and neutron sources, as well as facilities for studying the nanoworld, the environment, and the atmosphere. Projects focused on early-stage R&D for the improvement of technology along defined roadmaps may be more appropriate for support through the DOE applied energy offices including: the Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation (CMEI), the Office of Hydrocarbon and Geothermal Energy, the Office of Nuclear Energy, and the Office of Electricity.

ARPA-E encourages submissions stemming from ideas that still require proof-of-concept R&D efforts as well as those for which some proof-of-concept demonstration already exists. Submissions can propose a project with the end deliverable being an extremely creative, but partial solution.

Program Overview:

Transuranic (TRU) elements—such as plutonium (Pu), neptunium (Np), and americium (Am)—are a significant source of fissile materials that are available across existing nuclear inventories and strategic reserves and have the potential to drive advanced reactor deployment. , The technical feasibility of recycling TRU elements into new fuels has been proven at the experimental scale. Advances in fabrication, safeguards, equipment design, and modeling will create the opportunity to transition from experimental success to commercial-scale deployment, enabling higher-throughput and lower-cost fuel production with real-time materials accountancy. The High-performance Optimized Recycled Nuclear Isotopes for Gen IV reactors (HORNIG) program will support research and development projects that deliver commercially deployable TRU fuel technologies, thereby strengthening U.S. energy security, reducing nuclear waste, and enabling long-term energy deployment for public benefit.

The HORNIG program seeks to overcome key technical and economic barriers that have historically prevented using TRU fuels in commercial reactors and to create a clear path to domestic nuclear fuel security by supporting the design, fabrication, and qualification of TRU fuels. The program will fund coordinated, multidisciplinary efforts to deliver transformative advances in fuel performance, manufacturability, cost, and regulatory readiness. Technologies developed under this program must have the potential to enable the following program metrics:
• A domestic TRU fuel supply chain
• A levelized cost of fuel (LCOF) = 1¢/kWh
• TRU fuel qualification and regulatory acceptance within seven years

By enabling production of advanced reactor fuels from domestically sourced fissile materials, the program will reduce dependence on imported uranium and enrichment services, expand U.S. fuel supply options, and support establishment of a closed fuel cycle. These objectives support ARPA-E’s statutory goals of improving energy security and resilience, improving the management of radiological waste, and maintaining U.S. technological leadership in energy technologies. If successful, HORNIG will strengthen U.S. energy security and infrastructure resilience and deliver lasting public benefit through reliable nuclear power.

To view the NOFO in its entirety, please visit https://arpa-e-foa.energy.gov Show full description

Eligibility

Eligible applicants

Miscellaneous

  • Unrestricted

Additional information

See Section II.A. of the NOFO.

Grantor contact information

Description

ARPA-E CO
arpa-e-co@hq.doe.gov

Email

Click to email contact

arpa-e-co@hq.doe.gov

Documents

Download all
| File name | Description | Last updated |
| --- | --- | --- |
| HORNIGCPNOFO.pdf | NOFODE-FOA-0003623HORNIG | Apr 23, 2026 06:03 PM UTC |

Link to additional information

ARPA-E eXCHANGE

Closing: May 28, 2026

Application process

This site is a work in progress. Go to www.grants.gov to apply, track application status, and subscribe to updates. View on Grants.gov

Award

$50,000,000

Program Funding

10

Expected awards

$500,000

Award Minimum

$7,000,000

Award Maximum

Funding opportunity number:

DE-FOA-0003623

Cost sharing or matching requirement:

Yes Funding instrument type:

Cooperative agreement

Other

Opportunity Category:

Discretionary

Opportunity Category Explanation:

-- Category of Funding Activity:

Opportunity zone benefits

Science technology and other research and development

Category Explanation:

--

History

Version:

1

Posted date:

April 23, 2026

Archive date:

November 12, 2026

CFR references

2 C.F.R. Part 200 2 C.F.R. Part 910

Named provisions

Program Overview Eligibility Additional Information

Mentioned entities

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
ARPA-E
Published
April 23rd, 2026
Comment period closes
May 28th, 2026 (34 days)
Instrument
Consultation
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
DE-FOA-0003623

Who this affects

Applies to
Educational institutions Nonprofits Research institutions
Industry sector
2211.1 Nuclear Energy
Activity scope
Research funding Nuclear fuel development Government grants
Threshold
Awards range from $500,000 to $7 million
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Energy
Operational domain
Procurement
Topics
Nuclear Energy Public Health

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