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The Week of August 8, 2022

What’s Ahead

Biden during a video call

President Biden met with leaders from companies and labor organizations on Aug. 4 to discuss the Inflation Reduction Act, a spending and tax reform bill Senate Democrats passed over the weekend. (Image credit – The White House)

Democrats’ Climate Spending Bill on Glide Path to Enactment

Last week, Senate Democrats secured the unanimous support they needed within their caucus to advance an ambitious multiyear spending and tax reform bill , leveraging Congress’ budget reconciliation process to circumvent a Republican filibuster. After voting on a long list of amendments, rejecting almost all of them, the chamber passed the legislation on Sunday on a vote of 51 to 50 as Vice President Harris stepped in to break a party-line tie. The House plans to convene on Friday to approve the bill, sending it to President Biden for his signature. The finalized version differs modestly from the version released the previous week, with changes focused on how it generates revenue through its tax provisions. It retains measures related to energy production and climate change mitigation that will cost $369 billion over multiple years and it adds a further $4 billion for drought mitigation.

The climate-related spending will largely fund economic measures aimed at decarbonization and environmental resilience, but $2 billion will provide a one-time boost to facilities projects at Department of Energy national labs. While the bill assigns those funds to specific offices and programs, DOE will have some discretion around what projects it spends them on. Potential uses include accelerating the Fermilab-led LBNF/DUNE neutrino experiment, jump-starting work on the Second Target Station at Oak Ridge National Lab’s Spallation Neutron Source, and ensuring a smooth ramp up in construction for Brookhaven National Lab’s Electron-Ion Collider. DOE may also use part of the funding to bring the U.S. up to date on its contributions to the international ITER fusion energy facility.

Biden Signing CHIPS and Science Act at White House Event

President Biden is holding a press event on Tuesday in the White House Rose Garden to sign the CHIPS and Science Act , which is arguably the most significant science policy legislation to be enacted in the 21st century so far. The “CHIPS” portion (officially called the CHIPS Act of 2022) provides tax credits and $52 billion through fiscal year 2026 to support the U.S. semiconductor industry, of which $24 billion will be available in the current fiscal year. The bulk of the total multiyear appropriation will support subsidies for the construction and refurbishment of semiconductor fabrication facilities, with about $13 billion allocated to R&D initiatives. The bill also includes a $1.5 billion appropriation to establish a Public Wireless Supply Chain Innovation Fund, virtually all of which will be provided in fiscal year 2023. Among its many provisions, the “Science” portion (officially called the Research and Development, Competition, and Innovation Act) creates a regional technology hub program within the Department of Commerce and sets out ambitious funding targets for the National Science Foundation, Department of Energy Office of Science, and National Institute of Standards and Technology. However, unlike with the CHIPS funding, Congress will need to provide the funding to meet these targets through future appropriations.

In Case You Missed It

U.S. allocation of radio spectrum chart

A 2016 chart of the U.S. allocation of radio spectrum. (Image credit – NTIA)

Senators Plot Legislative Strategy for Radio Spectrum Allocation

With the Federal Communications Commission’s authority to auction radio spectrum bands expiring on Sept. 30, the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee convened a hearing last week to consider policies for more effectively governing spectrum allocation. In recent years, FCC allocation decisions have sparked serial controversies amid concerns that advanced telecommunications equipment will interfere with users such as weather satellites and the Global Positioning System. Committee members agreed it is urgent that the Senate follow the House in passing a short-term extension of FCC’s authority to avoid disrupting an ongoing auction of frequencies near 2.5 gigahertz. Arguing more than an extension will be needed, Communications, Media, and Broadband Subcommittee Chair Ben Ray Luján (D-NM) pointed to bureaucratic and engineering challenges associated with reconciling competing spectrum uses and the fact that the public value of some uses cannot be assigned a price. He also approvingly noted that on Aug. 2 FCC updated its memorandum of understanding with the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, which represents federal spectrum users. It is the first update to their MOU since 2003. Committee Ranking Member Roger Wicker (R-MS) and Subcommittee Ranking Member John Thune (R-SD) both suggested Congress should identify specific spectrum bands for future auction, as it did the last time it renewed FCC’s auction authority. Such legislation would likely involve reassigning bands currently used by federal agencies, and Wicker and Thune acknowledged considerable time would probably be needed to work with stakeholders to decide which bands ought to be included.

Former NRG CEO Picked for DOE Infrastructure Under Secretary

President Biden nominated energy industry executive David Crane last week to serve as the Department of Energy’s under secretary for infrastructure. Under statute, DOE has three under secretary positions, but until now the Biden administration had only moved to fill two of them. The responsibilities of the third were ill-defined before DOE reconfigured it earlier this year to oversee DOE’s clean energy demonstration and deployment efforts, which are receiving around $25 billion through last year’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. Crane was CEO of utility company NRG Energy from 2003 to 2015, stewarding its emergence from bankruptcy and increasing its portfolio in renewable energy. In a 2014 open letter to the company’s shareholders, he called on the energy industry to take accountability for its inaction on climate change and laid out a business plan focused on clean energy and distributed energy generation. However, his initiatives failed to gain favor from the company’s board and he was fired in 2015. Crane is currently CEO of Climate Real Impact Solutions, a clean energy investment firm, and serves on the boards of a number of clean energy ventures and sustainability-focused nonprofit organizations. The under secretary role is currently filled on an interim basis by DOE career official Kathleen Hogan. Separately last week, DOE announced it has selected Betony Jones to lead its Office of Energy Jobs, which engages with industry, labor unions, and other stakeholders to promote energy workforce development. Jones was previously a senior adviser in DOE’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.

David Applegate Confirmed as USGS Director

The Senate confirmed geologist David Applegate to serve as director of the U.S. Geological Survey by voice vote on Aug. 4. A career USGS official, Applegate joined the agency in 2004 as senior science adviser for earthquake and geological hazards and then led its Natural Hazards mission area for a decade. He was named the agency’s interim director at the start of the Biden administration and was nominated as Biden’s appointee this past March. At his nomination hearing in April, Applegate fielded questions from senators on energy security and critical minerals and highlighted the agency’s Earth Mapping Resources Initiative (Earth MRI), a project to survey critical mineral concentrations across the U.S. that is receiving $320 million through last year’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

Ohio State Diversity Chief to Lead NSF Education Directorate

The National Science Foundation announced last week that James L. Moore III, Ohio State University’s vice provost for diversity and inclusion, will be the new head of its Education and Human Resources Directorate, effective Aug. 22. Moore holds a doctorate in counselor education from Virginia Tech and has focused his research in areas such as STEM education, gifted education, higher education, and multicultural and urban education. Since taking up his role at Ohio State in 2018, he has also served concurrently as the first executive director of the university’s Todd Anthony Bell National Resource Center on the African American Male. He previously worked at NSF from 2015 to 2017 as program director for NSF’s Broadening Participation in Engineering program, and he helped launch the agency’s INCLUDES initiative, which has become the focal point for its efforts to increase diversity and inclusivity in STEM fields. NSF’s Education and Human Resources Directorate funds education research and STEM education initiatives and has an annual budget of more than $1 billion.

Regulators Opt Against Penalizing NIST for Reactor Incident

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission issued a confirmatory order on Aug. 2 enforcing a mediated settlement it has reached over the National Institutes of Standards and Technology’s culpability for a radiation incident that took place at NIST’s research reactor in February 2021. The order acknowledges NIST’s completed and planned corrective actions and states that NRC will not impose a financial civil penalty. In a press release on the order, NIST states it is currently working to identify an independent nuclear consultant it will contract with to assess the safety culture at the reactor facility. NIST still needs approval from the commission to restart the reactor, which has been offline since the incident. The loss of access to the reactor has severely impinged on U.S. capacity for neutron-scattering research, and this summer that situation has been further exacerbated by an extended shutdown at the only other federal reactor-based user facility for neutron scattering, Oak Ridge National Lab’s High Flux Isotope Reactor.

Events This Week

All times are Eastern Daylight Time, unless otherwise noted. Listings do not imply endorsement.

Monday, August 8

AMS: Collective Madison Meeting
(continues through Friday)

Atlantic Council: “Clean Energy Jobs for Underserved Communities”
10:00 - 10:30 am

National Academies: “Assessing and Improving Strategies for Preventing Countering and Responding to WMD Terrorism: Chemical Threats,” meeting nine
1:00 - 4:00 pm

Tuesday, August 9

NSF: Public scoping meetings on the environmental effects of an Extremely Large Telescope on Maunakea
(continues through Friday)

NASA: Earth Science Applications Week 2022
(continues through Thursday)

National Academies: Condensed Matter and Materials Research Committee meeting
(continues Wednesday)

NASA: NASA Advisory Council meeting
(continues Wednesday)

Naval Surface Warfare Center: 2022 Microelectronics Integrity Meeting
(continues Wednesday)

Carnegie Endowment: “New Nuclear Troubles in Southern Asia?”
10:00 - 11:30 am

National Academies: “Review of Fate, Exposure, and Effects of Sunscreens in Aquatic Environments and Implications for Sunscreen Usage and Human Health,” report release briefing
1:00 - 2:00 pm

Bipartisan Policy Center: “U.S. Competitiveness Policy: It’s Not Over, What’s Next?”
2:00 - 2:45 pm

Wednesday, August 10

Wilson Center: “Energy Security Outlook and Japan-U.S. Cooperation”
9:00 - 10:15 am

Academies: “Strengthening the Talent for National Defense Infusing Advanced Manufacturing in Engineering Education,” meeting 12
2:00 - 5:00 pm

Thursday, August 11

Belfer Center: “Atomic Backfires: How Great Power Nuclear Policies Fail”
10:00 am - 12:00 pm

National Academies: “Assessing and Improving Strategies for Preventing Countering and Responding to WMD Terrorism: Chemical Threats,” meeting 10
12:00 - 1:00 pm

NTI: “Investigating High-Consequence Biological Events of Unknown Origin”
1:15 - 2:45 pm

Resources for the Future: “Energy Security and Decarbonization”
3:00 - 4:00 pm

National Academies: “The Role of Capacity for Collaboration in the Land Grant System”
3:00 - 4:30 pm

AIP: “The Structure and Development of 21st Century Science”
6:00 pm

Friday, August 12

No events.

Monday, August 15

National Academies: “Assessing and Improving Strategies for Preventing Countering and Responding to WMD Terrorism: Nuclear Threats,” meeting two
1:00 - 4:00 pm

Nuclear Threat Initiative: “Regional Perspectives on Strengthening the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty”
1:15 - 2:30 pm

Opportunities

DOE Hiring Advisor for Research Security and Collaboration

The Department of Energy is hiring a senior science adviser for international programs, who will advise the Office of Science on matters related to international scientific cooperation, global competitiveness, research security, and scientific integrity. Applicants should have at least one year of specialized experience in areas such as research management, strategic planning, and technical and policy analysis. Applications are due Aug. 18.

Board on International Scientific Organizations Hiring Director

The National Academies is hiring a director for its Board on International Scientific Organizations, which facilitates U.S. participation in world scientific organizations and international initiatives, including by overseeing a network of 17 discipline-specific national committees. Applicants should have extensive project management and supervisory experience, knowledge of international science, and demonstrated success in obtaining funding from federal agencies or private foundations. A doctorate and 10 years of related professional experience are required.

Union of Concerned Scientists Hiring VP

The Union of Concerned Scientists is hiring a vice president for science and innovation, who will guide research efforts at the intersection of science and advocacy and oversee the UCS Science Fellow Program. Applicants should have at least 15 years of management experience in a nonprofit or government setting as well as experience in a relevant scientific field. A doctorate in the physical or social sciences is preferred.

For additional opportunities, please visit www.aip.org/fyi/opportunities . Know of an opportunity for scientists to engage in science policy? Email us at fyi@aip.org .

Know of an upcoming science policy event either inside or outside the Beltway? Email us at fyi@aip.org .

Around the Web

News and views currently in circulation. Links do not imply endorsement.

White House

OSTP: Statement on Senate passage of the Inflation Reduction Act

White House: Remarks by President Biden on Governor Whitmer’s directive to implement the CHIPS and Science Act

White House: White House takes action on climate by accelerating energy efficiency projects across federal government

White House: President Biden announces team to lead monkeypox response

OSTP: A call for public access to monkeypox-related research and data

OSTP: OSTP unveils new plan to advance research on emerging contaminants

Congress

Nature: Billions more for US science: How the CHIPS and Science Act will boost research

Time: How a closed-door national security briefing convinced senators to pass the CHIPS bill

Daily Signal: CHIPS is a missed opportunity for real security (perspective by Dustin Carmack)

Vox: The Inflation Reduction Act, explained

New York Times: Five decades in the making: Why it took Congress so long to act on climate

Rep. Jim Banks (R-IN): Banks introduces bill to prevent federally funded research from being shared or conducted jointly with Chinese entities that participate in China’s military civil-fusion strategy

American Astronomical Society: FY23 Senate appropriations and outlook for astronomy funding

Science, Society, and the Economy

Roll Call: NSF director: Funding boost can steer research money to more states

The Hill: Refocusing on high-tech R&D will help make America competitive again (perspective by Sethuraman Panchanathan)

Real Clear Policy: Help US companies compete against China on technology standards (perspective by Robert Atkinson and Martijn Rasser)

Roosevelt Institute: The unprecedented green industrial policy wins in the Inflation Reduction Act

DOE: DOE seeks public input on expanding manufacturing capacity and clean-energy economic opportunities to revitalize former coal communities

NCAR: Major project to bring together Indigenous knowledge-holders with university-trained scientists

E&E News: GOP cries ‘censorship’ over climate misinformation push

Nieman Lab: ‘Space is for everyone’: Meet the scientists trying to put otherworldly images into words

Education and Workforce

The Hill: The future of US high-tech is not CHIPS and Science, it’s international students (perspective by Esther Brimmer)

Issues in Science and Technology: Is there really a STEM workforce shortage? (perspective by Ron Hira)

AAS: Committee on the Status of Minorities in Astronomy launches micro-grants program

NSF: Four new INCLUDES Alliances announced

New York Times: Freeman Hrabowski transformed a onetime commuter school into the country’s strongest pipeline of Black graduates in STEM

Chemical and Engineering News: NOBCChE approaches its 50th anniversary and reflects on its origins

Physics Today: Contrary to modern stereotypes, the laws of the natural world used to be considered a fundamental part of young women’s education (perspective by Joanna Behrman)

Fermilab: Six views of working in particle physics without a PhD

Physics Today: College instructors adapt their teaching to prevent cheating

Research Management

UCSD: New initiative seeks to understand how philanthropic giving can help the US maintain its edge as a country of innovation

PNAS: How can we reform the STEM tenure system for the 21st Century? (perspective by T. Prabhakar Clement)

NBER: Do funding agencies select and enable risky research: Evidence from ERC using novelty as a proxy of risk taking (paper by Reinhilde Veugelers, et al.)

New Science: Rejected grants are good for you (perspective by Niko McCarty)

NIH: Implementation updates for the new NIH data management and sharing policy

AAU/APLU: Guide to accelerate public access to research data (report)

Scholarly Kitchen: Why transformative agreements should offer unlimited open access publishing (perspective by Julian Wilson)

Physics Today: The future (budget) of the academic library (perspective by Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe)

Retraction Watch: Fourteen retractions for researchers who falsely claimed US physicist as co-author

Nature: Retractions are increasing, but not enough (perspective by Ivan Oransky)

Nature: What makes an undercover science sleuth tick? Fake-paper detective speaks out (interview with David Bimler)

Labs and Facilities

UCAR: UCAR to become new home for Consortium for Ocean Leadership’s programs

World Nuclear News: ITER fusion project gets power supply equipment delivery from Russia

DOE: Record of decision for the final Versatile Test Reactor environmental impact statement

Idaho National Lab: Energy secretary tours INL with focus on clean energy, national security capabilities

Fermilab: Roger Snyder becomes permanent DOE site office manager at Fermilab

NASA IG: Ames Research Center’s lease management practices (report)

Computing and Communications

Ars Technica: Post-quantum encryption contender is taken out by single-core PC and one hour

Science: Ordinary computers can beat Google’s quantum computer after all

The Wire China: Chips and the open-source secret

Case Western Reserve: Twelve Midwest institutions launch semiconductor-focused network

SupChina: Mayhem in China’s semiconductor industry as ‘chips madmen’ are arrested

Defense News: Remember 5G? Pentagon backs 6G hub tied to Army Research Lab

GAO: DOD is developing alternatives to GPS navigation systems but is not measuring overall progress (report)

OSTP: Readout of the eighth National Artificial Intelligence Research Resource Task Force meeting

Space

NASA: NASA establishes board to review initial Earth System Observatory plans

SpaceNews: Italian satellite may fly NASA’s MAIA instrument

NASA: NASA team troubleshoots asteroid-bound Lucy across millions of miles

NASA: A history of near-Earth objects research (book)

Nature: To the Moon! South Korea’s first lunar mission is on its way

SpaceNews: NASA heliophysics smallsats to share launch with astrophysics mission

SpaceNews: NASA and Roscosmos officials restate intent to operate ISS after 2024

Planetary Society: The cost of SLS and Orion

FCC: FCC opens proceeding on servicing, assembly, and manufacturing in space

Royal Astronomical Society: Photometric characterization and trajectory accuracy of Starlink satellites: Implications for ground-based astronomical surveys (paper by Grace Halferty, et al.)

SpaceNews: Report: US should push for global rules on space traffic management

Physics World: Falling rockets pose increasing danger to human life, study reveals

New York Times: A large object landed on his sheep farm. It came from space

Weather, Climate, and Environment

ScienceInsider: Surprise climate bill will meet ambitious goal of 40% cut in US emissions, energy models predict

Nature: How the biggest US energy bill ever could revive Biden’s climate agenda

Inside Climate News: Deep in the Democrats’ climate bill, analysts see more wins for clean energy than gifts for fossil fuel business

New York Times: How state-level Republicans are ‘weaponizing’ public office against climate action

AIP: Climate change science in the 1970s

DOE: DOE announces $32 million to reduce methane emissions from oil and gas sector

E&E News: Republicans urge faster Interior permits to cut methane

AP: EPA announces flights to look for methane in Permian Basin

Federation of American Scientists: Burning questions: Wildfire policy with Erica Goldman (interview)

NOAA: NOAA and Saildrone launch seven hurricane-tracking surface drones

Energy

Physics Today: Clean hydrogen edges toward competitiveness

NREL: New $20 million Cadmium Telluride Accelerator Consortium aims to reduce costs, speed deployment of low-carbon thin-film solar technologies

DOE: Highlights of DOE’s Carbon Negative Shot Summit

Energy and Policy Institute: Livermore Lab carbon capture campaign funded by utility company front group

Nature: How much industrial carbon have we buried? Much less than thought

Scientific American: Carbon-reduction plans rely on tech that doesn’t exist (perspective by Naomi Oreskes)

World Nuclear News: US regulator to issue final certification for NuScale SMR

AP: UN nuclear chief: Ukraine nuclear plant is `out of control’

Politico : Zelenskyy calls for sanctions on Russian nuclear industry amid ‘disaster’ warning

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: Here’s how US and EU imports of Russian uranium and enrichment services could stop (perspective by Dory Castillo-Peters and Frank von Hippel)

Defense

White House: President Biden statement ahead of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty conference

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: NPT Review Conference: Will it rise to the proliferation challenges?

Nikkei Asia: Satellite photos show China’s new nuclear test site in Xinjiang

NNSA: Large-scale ‘dirty bomb’ exercise in Austin succeeded by exposing potential gaps and failures

National Academies: Effectiveness and efficiency of defense environmental cleanup activities of DOE’s Office of Environmental Management (report)

Breaking Defense: Israel to spend $150 million on laser defenses, after US hesitation

Fedscoop: Barbara McQuiston’s portfolio as DOD deputy CTO for science and technology (audio interview)

Biomedical

STAT: Cities are lobbying to host the ARPA-H headquarters. Experts don’t understand why

Politico: Clinton-era FDA commissioner to lead external review of key agency offices

Science: Transparency practices at the FDA: A barrier to global health (perspective by Murray Lumpkin, et al.)

NPR: Former White House COVID adviser Andy Slavitt on how the pandemic might play out next (audio)

STAT: Inching closer to an essential global pandemic treaty (perspective by Lawrence Gostin, et al.)

Scholarly Kitchen: Tribalism, fraud, and the loss of perspective in Alzheimer’s disease research (perspective by Phill Jones)

International Affairs

State Department: New sanctions imposed on Russian universities and research institutions

Reuters: Russian lab head supporting hypersonic missile program held for treason, TASS reports

Politico: China suspends climate talks with US

China Daily: Tencent to invest 10 billion yuan to support scientific research

Nature: Four scientists explain how a grant debacle stemming from Brexit has affected their research and career plans

Science: A key time for UK–Europe science (perspective by Peter Mathieson)

The Guardian: ‘Science superpower’ plan risks making UK bureaucracy superpower, says peer

Research Professional: Blair Institute report: UK science needs new type of ‘focused research organization’

Research Professional: EU government R&D budgets up 6% in 2021

Research Professional: Jean-Eric Paquet looks back on his time as the European Commission’s top research and innovation official (interview)

Physics Today: IUPAP celebrates a century and strives to meet new challenges

NSF: Facilitating US–India bilateral research collaborations

Iraqi News: Iraq, US discuss scientific cooperation between universities

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