Representative Galvin moved Amendment 26 to insert a contingent $750,000 state match to support a University of Alaska‑led competitive application to the National Science Foundation’s Engines program focused on critical minerals and extraction technologies. The amendment explicitly conditions state spending on receipt of the NSF Phase‑1 award: if the federal award is not made, the state funds would not be spent.
Sponsors described the effort as investment in research, workforce development, and commercialization that could increase yield at Alaska mines and support downstream industries. Staff said the requested $750,000 is a partial match (the university had sought larger amounts) and that NSF Engines Phase‑1 would be $15 million over two years with a potential decade‑long program if selected for full development. The committee adopted the contingent match 9–2.
The language placed the appropriation in the budget as contingent and limited general‑fund exposure: the appropriation only becomes available if the NSF award is secured. Proponents said the modest state match could unlock substantial federal investment and new commercialization opportunities for Alaska.