Following a highly competitive review process, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Marine Debris Program is pleased to announce 13 projects awarded for funding under our NOAA Marine Debris Removal and Interception Technologies grant awards for fiscal year 2025. These projects represent an investment of over $26.4 million for marine debris removal focused on two priority areas. The first funding opportunity focused on the removal of large marine debris, such as abandoned and derelict vessels and derelict fishing gear.
Supporting Clean, Healthy Coasts and Economies
Prepare • Respond • Restore • Recover
OR&R Services
Disaster and Pollution
Oil and Chemical Spill Response
OR&R provides scientific support to over 150 oil and chemical spills in U.S. waters annually. Spills impact lives, property, and public natural resources, as well as disrupt marine transportation with widespread economic impacts.
Oil and Chemical Natural Resource Restoration
OR&R and partners assess the impacts of oil spill and industrial pollution incidents and reach legal settlements with those responsible to fund restoration. Over the past 30+ years, NOAA and co-trustees have helped recover $10.8 billion for restoration of injured resources across the country.
Marine Debris Prevention and Removal
OR&R investigates and prevents the adverse impacts of marine debris. Since 2006, we have supported over 260 marine debris removal projects and removed more than 38,000 metric tons of marine debris from our coasts and ocean.
Emergency and Disaster Preparedness
Through planning, training, exercises, disaster coordination, and continuous improvement, OR&R ensures the National Ocean Service and its partners have the tools and information necessary to plan for and respond to disasters so commerce, communities, and natural resources can recover as quickly as possible.
Featured News
Twenty years ago, Hurricane Katrina inflicted staggering levels of damage and loss of life in Louisiana and Mississippi, with significant effects extending into the Florida Panhandle, Georgia, and Alabama. Only 26 days after Katrina made landfall, Hurricane Rita landed on the Texas-Louisiana border. NOAA provided comprehensive scientific support and response efforts for Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
In June, OR&R provided response support for 23 new incidents in 14 states, plus one outside the U.S. exclusive economic zone in the North Pacific.
Communities around Washington, D.C. are working to address the issue of abandoned and derelict vessels in the Anacostia River. A new project aims to remove 28 vessels over four years, and has successfully removed 13 vessels in the first six months of operation.