NH Clean Vessel Act or Boat Pumpout Grants

New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services

Funding Amount

Varies

Deadline

Rolling / Open

Grant Type

foundation

Overview

NH Clean Vessel Act or Boat Pumpout Grants

Status: ACTIVE
Funder: New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services
Last Updated: December 28, 2025

Summary

The NH Clean Vessel Act or Boat Pumpout Grants, administered by the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services, support the establishment and maintenance of boat pumpout facilities. Organizations can apply for funding to install or renovate these facilities, ensuring they are publicly accessible and affordable. Grants cover future projects only and are available for various eligible expenses related to pumpout operations, promoting environmental health and water quality in New Hampshire.

Overview

About NHDES Helping to sustain a high quality of life for all citizens by protecting and restoring the environment and public health in New Hampshire. The mission of the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services is to help sustain a high quality of life for all citizens by protecting and restoring the environment and public health in New Hampshire. The protection and wise management of the state’s environment are the main goals of the agency. Formed in January 1987 by state statute RSA 21-O, NHDES was legislatively created through the consolidation and reorganization of four previously separate agencies: the Air Resources Agency, the Office of Waste Management, the Water Supply and Pollution Control Commission, and the Water Resources Board. Each of these groups is now represented within the department’s three divisions: Air Resources, Waste Management and Water. NHDES leadership is composed of the agency commissioner, assistant commissioner, chief financial officer and directors of the three divisions. The Air Resources Division is responsible for achieving and maintaining air quality in New Hampshire that is protective of public health and our natural environment. The division is committed to promoting cost-effective, sensible strategies and control measures to address the many complex and inter-related air quality issues facing the state, such as ground-level ozone, small particle pollution, regional haze (visibility), mercury contamination, climate change, acid deposition and air toxics. The Waste Management Division promotes responsible waste management and ensures solid wastes and regulated hazardous materials are properly handled and disposed. The division's remediation programs conduct prompt clean-up of hazardous spills and work to restore contaminated sites to productive use while protecting the environment and public health. The Water Division is tasked with protecting the numerous lakes, ponds and rivers in the state, as well as valuable groundwater. Under guidance from the New Hampshire Water Council and the New Hampshire Wetlands Council, the division conducts a variety of programs designed to ensure the protection of these waters in a variety of areas, such as public water systems, private water wells, source water protection, wetlands, wastewater engineering, septic systems, river and lake monitoring and healthy swimming. In addition, NHDES is home to the New Hampshire Geological Survey and the NH Pollution Prevention (P2) Program, focuses on Strategic Planning and Quality Assurance from the Commissioner's Office on down, and provides services such as the Small Business Ombudsmen and Pre-Application Meetings. NH Boat Pumpout Grants The Clean Vessel Act supports the installation, operation, and maintenance of boat pumpout facilities. Grants are for future projects only and cannot be applied retroactively, so organizations must wait until the grant is officially approved (by the NHDES commissioner or Governor and Executive Council) before any work begins. Generally, this takes 1-3 months if NHDES has the funding available. It may take a year or more if NHDES does not have funding currently available.

Eligibility

You can learn more about this opportunity by visiting the funder's website. Any organization can apply for a grant to install, operate, maintain, or renovate a pumpout facility or dump station for portable boat toilets. Most activities related to the pumpout are eligible for reimbursement. These include supplies such as new hoses, time spent operating or maintaining the facility, holding tank pumpout fees, etc.The key requirements for this grant program are as follows: The facility must be publically available at reasonable times. Cost of a pumpout or use of dump station must be $5 or less. New facilities must be maintained for their entire useful life. Projects are funded by reimbursement. The grantee submits an invoice with applicable receipts and will receive 75% of the total cost as a reimbursement. NHDES is required to provide 25% match on the federal funding that is received.

Focus Areas & Funding Uses

Fields of Work

waterenvironment

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