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Sovereign Future State · Annual Award · Est. 2026

The
SFS Prize

For Civilisational Science

"Awarded to the scientist whose work most advances the long-horizon survival and flourishing of human civilisation."

EUR 10,000 · Annual
About the Prize

Science in service of
ten thousand years.

The SFS Prize is awarded annually to a scientist, researcher, or team whose published work most materially advances the conditions for long-horizon human civilisation — from orbital infrastructure and energy capture to governance, propulsion, and habitat engineering.


The prize recognises that civilisational science operates on timescales that conventional funding rarely rewards. We fill that gap: one prize, one winner, one permanent acknowledgement in the Sovereign Future State Charter records.

€10k Annual Prize Value
1 Winner Per Year
Charter Record — Permanent
2027 First Award Year
Judging Criteria

Four dimensions.
One prize.

01
Civilisational Relevance

The work must address a problem whose solution materially changes the long-horizon trajectory of human civilisation — not merely current conditions. Priority domains: energy, propulsion, habitat, governance, computation, biological continuity, and materials science at civilisational scale.

02
Scientific Rigour

The work must be peer-reviewed and published in a credentialed journal or equivalent venue. Theoretical work is eligible alongside experimental work. The jury assesses methodological soundness, reproducibility, and the degree to which the work advances rather than summarises prior knowledge.

03
Long-Horizon Impact

We explicitly reward work whose impact is measured in centuries rather than quarters. Work that is visionary, under-funded by current institutions, or operating at timescales beyond standard grant cycles receives additional weight. The prize exists precisely because the market under-funds this work.

04
Programme Alignment

The work should connect — directly or conceptually — to one or more of the 46 SFS Engineering Blueprints. This does not mean endorsement of SFS specifically; it means the work addresses problems the programme has identified as civilisationally critical. Orbital, energy, propulsion, governance, and habitat research all qualify.

The Process

How the prize
is awarded.

I
January — March
Nominations Open

Self-nominations and third-party nominations accepted. Nominator completes a structured form: candidate name, institution, specific work nominated, and a 500-word statement of civilisational relevance. Supporting materials (papers, patents, preprints) attached.

II
April — May
Long List Selection

The SFS Science Department (CSO) produces a long list of up to 20 candidates. Initial screening against four criteria. Each candidate assessed against the relevant SFS blueprint domain. Long list shared with the independent jury panel.

III
June — August
Jury Deliberation

The independent jury of five scientists deliberates across three structured rounds. Each juror scores each candidate independently. Scores aggregated. Top five candidates shortlisted. Final round: jury votes. Winner requires majority. Tie-break: CSO casting vote.

IV
September
Winner Announced

Winner announced publicly on 26 September — the autumnal equinox, chosen as the astronomical midpoint between the Foundation Day (26 March) and the year-end. Winner notified privately one week in advance. Public announcement with scientific citation and programme context.

V
26 March — Programme Day
Award Ceremony

The prize is formally presented at the annual SFS Programme Day on 26 March of the following year. EUR 10,000 transferred. Winner's name and work entered permanently into the Human Continuity Charter records. Winner invited to deliver a 20-minute address on their research.

The Jury

Independent.
Expert. Permanent.

The jury consists of five independent scientists appointed by the SFS Foundation Board for three-year renewable terms. Jury members are drawn from the domains most relevant to the SFS programme's technical scope. No jury member may nominate a candidate during their term.

Jury Domain
Astrophysics & Stellar Engineering

Covers: Dyson swarm and sphere engineering · Stellar physics · Solar energy capture · Interstellar medium navigation · Star formation and longevity.

Jury Domain
Propulsion & Space Systems

Covers: D-He3 fusion propulsion · Nuclear thermal and pulse drives · Antimatter propulsion concepts · In-space manufacturing · Orbital mechanics at civilisational scale.

Jury Domain
Habitat & Life Support

Covers: Closed-loop ecologies · O'Neill cylinder biome design · Long-duration human spaceflight biology · Population genetics at multi-generational timescales · Terraforming concepts.

Jury Domain
Computation & Governance

Covers: AI safety and alignment at civilisational scale · Signal-delay governance systems · Distributed democratic systems for multi-planetary populations · Matrioshka brain architecture concepts.

Jury Domain
Energy & Materials Science

Covers: Nuclear fusion (D-He3, p-B11) · Advanced materials for megastructure construction · Carbon nanotube engineering at scale · Energy storage for interstellar timescales · Heat-death physics.

Prize History

The inaugural prize
awaits its first laureate.

2027

The first SFS Prize will be awarded in 2027 — to the scientist whose published work most advances the conditions for long-horizon human civilisation. Nominations open January 2027.

First award · First laureate · First permanent Charter entry

"The scientists who will take humanity to the stars are working right now — in underfunded labs, on ignored problems, on timescales that no grant committee will approve. The SFS Prize exists to find them."

— Sovereign Future State · Prize Charter · 2026

Nominate a
scientist.

Nominations for the 2027 inaugural prize open January 2027. Register your interest now to be notified when submissions open.

Register Interest Download Prize Guidelines

Self-nominations accepted · Any nationality · Any institution · Published work required · No application fee