New Zealand - China Strategic Research Alliance 2026 Call for Proposals
We are inviting proposals for joint research partnerships between New Zealand and Chinese research organisations.
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About this opportunity
The New Zealand – China Strategic Research Alliance (SRA) is an annual joint funding programme funded by the Catalyst Strategic Fund. It is a bilateral initiative between the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) and the Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology (MoST).
This opportunity is open to New Zealand research organisations for projects that align with the objective of developing enduring science and innovation collaborative partnerships with world-class Chinese research organisations on topics important to both countries. Activities must significantly broaden and deepen collaborative research partnerships between China and New Zealand.
Applications are invited for activities that demonstrate benefits for New Zealand by collaborating with world-class partners in China to achieve excellence beyond what has already been achieved within New Zealand investment priorities.
Investment priorities
Proposed projects must align with 1 of the 2 priority areas - Environmental Technologies or Health and Biomedical Science. The specific subtopics within each priority area are listed below.
Environmental Technologies - Clean and Renewable Energy Technologies:
- Clean and renewable technologies for climate change adaptation
- Clean and renewable technologies for climate change mitigation.
Environmental Technologies - Aquaculture:
- Aquaculture climate adaptation
- Effects of habitat and environmental change on bivalve spawning and juvenile survival.
Health and Biomedical Science:
- Development of novel methods for data collection, characterisation and analysis
- Development of novel or personalised approaches to disease prevention, diagnosis and management
- Understanding the basis and pathophysiological mechanisms contributing to disease
- Reducing the impact of common risk factors for disease
- Traditional medicines for the treatment of disease.
The funding available
MBIE has made up to $2.0 million (excluding GST) in total over 3 years available for investment in joint research partnerships between New Zealand and China that cannot be supported through existing funding.
MBIE and MoST have agreed to support 6 projects through this funding round, in the priority areas of Environmental Technologies (4 projects) and Health and Biomedical Science (2 projects). Up to $330,000 (excluding GST) over 3 years is available for the New Zealand research partners of each successful project.
Chinese partners must apply for their own funding through MoST.
Who can apply
For a proposal to be assessed it must meet the eligibility criteria set out below. Proposals that do not meet all of these criteria will be declined for funding on eligibility grounds.
- The proposal must be made by a New Zealand-based research organisation or a New Zealand-based legal entity representing a New Zealand-based research organisation.
- The proposal must be for research in 1 of the specified research areas for this call (Environmental Technologies or Health and Biomedical Science)
- The Science Leader must be employed by a New Zealand-based research organisation, or a New Zealand- based legal entity representing a New Zealand-based research organisation.
- The proposal must involve collaboration from a Chinese research organisation (your Chinese partners must apply for their own funding through MoST).
- The proposal must not be made by a department of the public service as listed in Schedule 2 of the Public Service Act 2020.
- Proposals must not benefit a Russian state institution (including but not limited to support for Russian military or security activity) or an organisation outside government that may be perceived as contributing to the war effort.
- Proposals must be uploaded by the closing date for proposals 12 noon, 1 July 2026 in the MBIE Portal and meet the administrative requirements of MBIE.
Proposals which also involve world class partners from other countries will be accepted, where these demonstrate the potential for increased excellence and impact beyond what is achievable through a New Zealand and Chinese partnership alone. Proposals which involve private sector partners are also eligible.
This fund has received a high number of applications in recent years, with typical success rates of 5 to 7 per cent. Before deciding to submit an application, we encourage applicants to carefully consider the alignment to the objectives and likelihood of a proposal achieving the intended outcomes.
How the funding can be used
What is fundable
- Research activity expenses for:
- consumables and other research expenses
- personnel
- contributions to pro-rated salaries
- Research exchange expenses for:
- flights/transport
- accommodation
- travel visas and travel insurance
- meals
Up to 25% of the budget can be used towards travel costs. Project teams are encouraged to consider research exchange visits as part of their project proposal. All expenditure by individuals should adhere to the rules of the organisation they are affiliated with.
What is not fundable
Expenses not directly related with the project and include:
- any capital expenditure (unless otherwise agreed with MBIE)
- dealing with accidents or disasters during the term of the contract
- alcohol
- expenses unrelated to the delivery of the contract.
Application information
Applicants are required to complete their proposals in Pītau - our Investment Management System - a secure online portal. To help you prepare your proposal we’ve provided a proposal template in the key documents section below.
- Applicants submit a full proposal through Pītau. If you do not have a Pītau login, you can request one through your Research Office or through MBIE request access (request access at least 2 weeks before you want to submit your proposal).
Pītau Request for Access form [DOCX, 114 KB] - New Zealand research teams must consult their Chinese partners as some sections of your proposal require their information. Your Chinese partners must apply for their own funding through MoST.
- Before developing your proposal, you are encouraged to consider the eligibility criteria, the assessment criteria, and the terms and conditions relating to this opportunity.
- The proposal template provides guidance on how to prepare your proposal and the information you are required to provide. We recommend you use the proposal template provided to draft the required information in a word processer and then when ready to submit, copy and paste the necessary segments into the appropriate Pītau fields and upload your supporting documentation where directed.
- The information in your proposal is used for assessment and will form the basis of the contract for successful projects.
Key documents
When developing your proposal, we encourage you to consult the following key reference documents:
-
New Zealand - China Strategic Research Alliance 2026 Investment Round Proposal Template [DOCX 233KB]
-
Vision Mātauranga: unlocking the innovation potential of Māori knowledge, resources and people [PDF 418KB]
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New Zealand - China Strategic Research Alliance 2026 Investment Round Contract Template [DOCX 157KB]
Catalyst Fund Investment Plan 2024-2028
For applicants developing Health and Biomedical proposals, we encourage you to consult the following resources:
Government Policy Statement on Health (2024–2027)(external link)— Ministry of Health
New Zealand Health Research Strategy (2017-2027) [PDF 470KB](external link) — Ministry of Health
National Ethical Standards(external link) — National Ethics Advisory Committee
Guidelines for Researchers on Health Research involving Māori(external link) — Health Research Council
Māori Health Advancement Guidelines(external link) — Health Research Council
Pacific Health Research Guidelines 2014(external link) — Health Research Council
ARRIVE guidelines for animal research [PDF 188KB](external link) — ARRIVE
Key dates
| Activity | Date |
|---|---|
| MBIE Portal Pītau opens for proposals | 4 May 2026 |
| Closing date for proposals | 12 noon, 1 July 2026 |
| Assessor names published on MBIE website | October 2026 |
| Assignment of proposals to Assessors | December 2026 |
| Assessment period | December 2026 to January 2027 |
| Assessor Panel Meeting | January 2027 |
| MBIE and MoST agree final funding decisions | January/February 2027 |
| Investment funding decisions announced | February/March 2027 |
| Contracting | March/April 2027 |
| Contracts expected to begin | 1 June 2027 |
Dates are subject to change.
Note: MoST has a 2-step evaluation process which may mean delays to the final decisions and contract start dates.
If dates change, we’ll let you know by email. To be added to the email list, email:
internationalscience@mbie.govt.nz
You can also subscribe to our Alert e-newsletter:
Assessment information
- MBIE and MoST review applications to ensure they meet their respective eligibility criteria.
- MoST complete stage-one assessment of eligible proposals and confirm which applications will be shortlisted for their second-stage assessment.
- New Zealand applications that do not have a shortlisted Chinese partner application will not be assessed.
- MBIE appointed Independent Assessors review the corresponding New Zealand proposals shortlisted by MoST through their Stage 1 assessment. Shortlisted proposals are assessed against the assessment criteria and, where relevant the Vision Mātauranga Policy. Assessor scores and comments are entered into Pītau.
- MBIE appointed Independent Assessors attend an Assessment Panel meeting where the preliminary scores and comments are reviewed, scored, and ranked. The Panel reach a consensus about the preferred proposals, feedback comments, and recommendations which will inform the Panel Chair's report.
- MoST conducts the second-stage assessment for Chinese applicants.
- MBIE and MoST each compile a list of proposals recommended for funding. MBIE’s shortlist is informed by the recommendations in the Panel Chair’s report.
- MBIE and MoST compare the lists of recommended proposals and agree which projects should be funded. Where proposals have been ranked differently, MBIE and MoST will negotiate to agree which teams receive funding.
- The General Manager, Science System Investment and Performance will make the final funding decisions based on Panel Chair’s report and the outcomes of discussions with MoST.
- MBIE will notify applicants of the final funding decision and provide general feedback to all applicants on request.
Notifying you of the outcome
When a decision about your proposal has been made, MBIE will advise the contact person listed in your proposal by email. MBIE may also contact this person to discuss the decision.
Following receiving the stage-one shortlist from MoST, MBIE will notify the New Zealand applicants whose proposals are not being assessed.
Following notification of final funding decisions, MBIE will publish its decisions and may announce these with a press release.
Conflicts of Interest
If you are submitting a proposal, you must notify us if you identify an actual, potential, or perceived direct or indirect conflict of interest, after the application closing date and before the final funding decision date. Applicants should reassess potential conflicts when assessor names are published (expected in October).
Conflicts of interest may occur on 2 different levels:
A direct conflict of interest, where an Assessor is:
- directly involved with a proposal (as a participant, manager, mentor, or partner) or has a close personal relationship with the applicant, for example, family members
- a collaborator or in some other way involved with an applicant’s proposal.
An indirect conflict of interest, where an Assessor:
- is employed by an organisation involved in a proposal but is not part of the applicant’s proposal
- has a personal and/or professional relationship with one of the applicants, e.g., an acquaintance
- is assessing a proposal under discussion that may compete with their business interests.
Assessors
A list of Assessors will be published here by October 2026.
The assessment criteria
Assessors will assess proposals on each of the criteria (below) and them score them from 1 (Low quality) to 7 (High quality).
Excellence: 40% weighting
Will the activity lead to the creation of new knowledge through high quality research.
The Assessors will consider to what extent the proposal:
- will lead to the creation of new knowledge which is of the highest calibre, and that will have national and international scientific impact and recognition
- utilises applicable scientific and technological principles, including a well-designed research plan and a credible approach to managing risk, that will enable delivery of the proposed research aims
- is ambitious in terms of scientific risk, novelty and/or innovative approaches, and leverages state-of the-art knowledge and facilities
- is led by world-class science leaders or potential future leaders, with the skills, knowledge and resources to deliver the proposed activities and to manage risk
- where applicable, explains the science and innovation opportunities and contributions of Māori knowledge, people and resources for the benefit of all New Zealand
Connections: 30% weighting
Will the proposed activity establish an enduring collaboration with world class international collaborators
The Assessors will consider to what extent the:
- New Zealand research team and its proposed international partners have excellent track records of collaborating with other institutions and delivering research results
- proposed partners offer highly complementary, world-class expertise, knowledge, capabilities and resources, building a high-performing and connected research team
- research team and its partner have outstanding capabilities and capacity to build and manage a substantive international partnership and fully realise the stated international opportunities
- research team and its partners have outstanding and comprehensive capabilities including scientific and other resourcing, and supporting infrastructure, to deliver the proposed activities
- where applicable, proposed project will give effect to Vision Mātauranga policy, creating connections with and for Māori in a genuine and meaningful way.
Impact: 30% weighting
Will the project deliver benefit aligned to the wider economic, social and environmental goals of New Zealand
The Assessors will consider to what extent the:
- proposal has a strong line of sight to expected benefits that are of national and global significance, where the analysis supporting the estimates of benefits and uncertainty is excellent
- New Zealand and international partners have excellent records of engagement with end-users, with the potential to bring together New Zealand research capabilities
- proposal identifies opportunities and needs that are important/relevant to New Zealand and connected to multiple end-users or end-user research sectors
- project has potential to support a pipeline of research/knowledge transfer within the wider science systems to build long-term capability and enable the development of new ideas/applications
- project has identified and evaluated the potential impacts for Māori (where relevant)
Other assessment criteria
When assessing proposals against the assessment criteria, MBIE will also take the following factors into account, including the extent to which the overall mix of investments:
- are likely to achieve the objectives of this opportunity
- are likely to support:
Vision Mātauranga policy - doesn’t overlap with similar projects already being funded
- will minimise the risk that applicants do not have the capacity to complete the research project because of existing commitments to other research projects.
Funding decisions
The General Manager, Science System Investment and Performance at MBIE will make funding decisions based on Panel Chair’s report and the outcomes of discussions with MoST.
The decision and recommendations may also:
- set pre-contract conditions which must be met before the investment is contracted
- set special conditions in addition to the general terms and conditions set out in the Funding Contract
- vary the contract title (in consultation with the applicant)
- vary the proposed term of a proposal
- vary the funding allocated from what is proposed and require critical performance indicators to be renegotiated to MBIE’s satisfaction to reflect the changed funding.
Contracting, reporting, and monitoring
Contracting
Successful applicants will enter into a funding contract (see the key documents section above for the template) with MBIE subject to any special conditions being met.
Payments
The contract holder must manage the approved funding to ensure delivery of the contracted project. Subject to specific contract conditions, funding will be provided in 6 instalments of equal value as follows:
- First payment: made on the next available payment date after the contract has been signed by both parties.
- Subsequent payment: made every 6 months.
Reporting and monitoring
Successful applicants will need to provide annual reports and a final report in Pītau.
Annual Report
The Annual Report will include progress against the objectives and KPIs identified in the work programme and details of any emerging risks and what is being done to address them.
Final Report
Required at the end of the project and will include commentary on the overall project outcomes, including key achievements, the steps taken and, where applicable, the changes made to your approach.
Contact
Email: Application queries: internationalscience@mbie.govt.nz
Email: Pītau queries: imssupport@mbie.govt.nz
Phone: 0800 693 778 (Monday to Friday, 8:30am to 4:30pm)