DOE Launches $1.9 Billion SPARK Funding Opportunity To Modernize the Grid
On March 12, 2026, DOE issued a NOFO for approximately $1.9 billion through the SPARK initiative (Speed to Power through Accelerated Reconductoring and Other Key Advanced Transmission Technology Upgrades).[1] The SPARK initiative was informed by responses to DOE’s September 18, 2025, request for information, which sought to identify novel strategies to implement four Trump administration executive orders aimed at increasing domestic energy supply and grid reliability and removing obstacles to rapid U.S. load growth.[2] This is especially critical in areas where rapid energy demand growth—driven by the explosion of energy-intensive data centers, AI facilities, and emerging advanced manufacturing—is outstripping grid and generation capacity.[3]
The NOFO concentrates on transmission capacity expansion through reconductoring; advanced transmission technologies that can increase the usable capacity of existing assets in real time; and large-scale, cross-regional transmission upgrades and coordinated planning. The first step in applying for an award is submission of a six-page maximum concept paper due April 2, 2026. Following DOE review, selected concept paper applicants will be invited to submit full proposals. Awards are anticipated in August 2026.
| Milestone | Date (5:00 p.m. ET) |
|---|---|
| NOFO issue date | March 12, 2026 |
| Informational webinar | Posted March 19, 2026 |
| Concept paper deadline | April 2, 2026 |
| Application deadline | May 20, 2026 |
| Anticipated selection notification | August 2026 |
| Anticipated award date | October 2026 – January 2027 |
Potential applicants should be aware that several required registrations may take several weeks to process—early initiation is imperative.[4]
In launching SPARK, DOE signals its intent to prioritize projects that can deliver measurable near-term gains in grid transfer capability, reliability, and resource adequacy. The program gives particular weight to rapid reconductoring and upgrades that can achieve at least a 50% increase in transfer capacity and unlock access to stranded generation or high-growth demand centers, such as new industrial corridors and data hubs. DOE emphasizes operational and physical improvements that use existing rights-of-way to reduce electricity congestion and lower customer costs. Novel elements in this round include a sharper focus on projects that deliver “dispatchable” reliability and documented resource adequacy—responding directly to recent reports identifying national supply risks.
Eligible applicants include a broad range of domestic entities, such as for-profit and nonprofit organizations, institutions of higher education, state and local governments, and Indian tribes.
Eligible applicants include a broad range of domestic entities, such as for-profit and nonprofit organizations, institutions of higher education, state and local governments, and Indian tribes.[5]
Eligible applicants are limited to states, combinations of states, Indian tribes, units of local government, and public utility commissions.
Foreign entities are generally ineligible but may seek a DOE waiver.[6] Foreign entities of concern (as defined by DOE),[7] debarred parties, certain nonprofits engaged in lobbying, and National Laboratories/Federal Funded Research and Development Centers are explicitly excluded from participation as prime recipients.
Most applicants must contribute at least a 50% nonfederal cost share.[8] Applicants may potentially combine SPARK funding with private capital, project financing structures, or certain federal loan programs, subject to applicable restrictions. Applicants should also evaluate how SPARK funding interacts with state incentives or utility rate-based investment mechanisms when structuring their financing.[9]
Applications are evaluated against four weighted criteria: technical approach and impact (40%), financial and market viability (20%), management and organization (20%), and workplan (20%). Within these criteria, DOE prioritizes projects with strong technical merit that deliver substantial new transfer capability, reduce system costs, and present clear, replicable value at a regional scale.
The SPARK NOFO represents a targeted federal effort to accelerate near-term transmission capacity expansion using deployable, existing infrastructure solutions. Successful applicants will need to pair technical ambition with disciplined execution, demonstrating not only what their projects can achieve, but how quickly and credibly they can be delivered.
With a compressed application timeline and significant threshold requirements, prospective applicants should move quickly to confirm eligibility, initiate required registrations, and align key partners while advancing permitting, cost share structuring, and risk management strategies. Interested parties should swiftly review eligibility, immediately initiate SAM.gov and other registrations, and engage partners to shape compelling proposals. Questions regarding this NOFO must be submitted to DE-FOA-0003580@netl.doe.gov no later than three business days before the application due date and time.[19]
Endnotes
[1] Funding for the SPARK initiative comes from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA). NOFO Part 1 describes the DOE program goals and evaluation criteria, eligibility, and other components for each funding opportunity, including concept papers and applications. NOFO Part 2 includes the fixed DOE requirements that generally do not change from NOFO to NOFO, including standard information for the application phase, expectations for award negotiations, and post-award requirements.
[2] Exec. Order 14154: Unleashing American Energy (Jan. 20, 2025); Exec. Order 14179: Removing Barriers to American Leadership in Artificial Intelligence (Jan. 23, 2025); Exec. Order 14262: Strengthening the Reliability and Security of the United States Electric Grid (April 8, 2025); and Exec. Order 14302: Reinvigorating America’s Nuclear Industrial Base (May 23, 2025).
[3] More information on the RFI is provided in our September 24, 2025, blog post.
[4] These include SAM.gov, Grants.gov, and eXCHANGE. NOFO Part V.A and B and NOFO Part 2, Section V provide information about these requirements and how to register.
[5] Projects dependent on certain federal tax credits or deductions for Smart Grid equipment, or routine operational and maintenance expenses, are not eligible.
[6] See NOFO Part 1, sections II.A.2 for Domestic Entity for qualifications of domestic entity eligibility and II.A.3 Foreign Entity Participation. If the prime applicant and/or subrecipient do not meet the qualifications for a domestic entity, then the applicant must submit an explicit waiver request in the application. Detailed information regarding waivers are found in NOFO Part 2, section 4.B.8 & 9.
[7] 89 Fed. Reg. 37079 (May 6, 2024).
[8] Small utilities (selling no more than 4,000,000 MWh/year) may qualify for a reduced 25% cost share.
[9] Note that certain Smart Grid investments under Topic Area 2 may be ineligible if they rely on specific federal tax credits or deductions. Applicants should carefully consider how proposed projects interact with federal tax incentives when structuring project financing and cost share.
[10] See NOFO Part 1, Section VIII, Award Administration Information Requirements.
[11] Detailed information regarding tribal engagement is set forth in NOFO Part 1, Section IV.D.3.
[12] U.S. Department of Energy NEPA Implementing Procedures (June 30, 2025).
[13] The template for the environmental questionnaire is found on eXCHANGE.
[14] Program-specific statutory requirements are set forth in NOFO Part 1, Section IV.F. NOFO Part 1 and NOFO Part 1, Section VIII.A set forth post-award requirements and administration. To better understand post-award requirements and administration, applicants should review the Standard Award Terms and Conditions, the sample Federal Assistance Reporting Checklist, and standard Intellectual Property (IP) Provisions.
[15] NOFO Part 1, Section IV.F.1. Note that this requirement does not apply to prime recipients that are for-profit entities. All iron, steel, manufactured products, and construction materials used in the project must be produced in the United States.
[16] See NOFO Part 2, Section IV.D.6.
[17] See NOFO Part 1, Section VIII.A.3. Supplementary guidance on the cybersecurity plan requirement is available here.
[18] IIJA Section 40126.
[19] All questions and answers related to this NOFO will be posted on the eXCHANGE site.
The information provided is not intended to be a comprehensive review of all developments in the law and practice, or to cover all aspects of those referred to.
Readers should take legal advice before applying it to specific issues or transactions.
Editorial Disclaimer
Originally published before the Ashurst Perkins Coie combination. See disclaimer.