X Prize Foundation may offer $3 to $10 million award for Gulf Oil Spill solutions

Published 29 June 2010

X Prize Foundation, known for offering prizes to innovative and future-oriented innovations, is considering offering a prize of between $3 and $10 million for a viable solution to stopping the oil spill in the Gulf; the foundation in the process of developing a multi-million dollar competition to help alleviate the effects of the oil spill in the Gulf; the X Prize Foundation is best known for what was originally called the Ansari X Prize — a $10 million competition open to anyone who could build a reusable, privately built craft capable of reaching outer space

The Playa Vista, California-based X Prize Foundation announced Monday, 28 June, that it will begin soliciting ideas for plugging the Deepwater Horizon oil well which is leaking into the Gulf of Mexico.

Speaking Monday at the TEDxOilSpill conference in Washington, D.C., X Prize Foundation Vice President of Prize Development Francis Béland said the group was looking at the possibility of launching a competition aimed at putting an end to the disaster.

Government Technology reports that various news reports claimed that the X Prize Foundation would offer prizes from $3 million to $10 million for a viable solution to stopping the spill.

According to the foundation’s Twitter feed, however, the competition has not been formally declared. “Want to clarify that while at TEDxOilSpill we have not launched a new $10 Million X PRIZE or Challenge for oilspill [sic] clean up,” adding later, “However, we are in the process of developing a multi-million dollar competition to help alleviate the effects of the oilspill in the Gulf.”

The foundation also wrote that the competition will recognize the development of rapidly deployable methods that clean up crude oil on coastlines and in oceans.

Government Technology notes that the X Prize Foundation is best known for what was originally called the Ansari X Prize — a $10 million competition open to anyone who could build a reusable, privately built craft capable of reaching outer space. The prize was eventually won by a suborbital craft called SpaceShipOne, built by aerospace engineer Burt Rutan and his company Scaled Composites.