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FYI: Science Policy News
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THE WEEK OF APRIL 6, 2026
What’s Ahead
President Trump walking on the White House grounds in March 2026

President Trump on the White House grounds in March 2026.

White House

Trump again proposes deep cuts to science agencies

The Trump administration has proposed significant cuts to many science agencies in its budget request for fiscal year 2027, including:

  • An 84% cut to the National Institute of Standards and Technology;
  • A 54% cut to the National Science Foundation;
  • A 47% cut to NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, as well as a 23% cut to NASA’s overall budget;
  • A 13% cut to the Department of Energy’s Office of Science, despite a 2% increase to DOE’s overall budget;
  • A 10% cut to the National Institutes of Health;
  • No funding for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s research arm; and
  • Cuts to basic research at the Department of Defense and the U.S. Geological Survey.

In contrast, the administration proposed a 12% increase to the National Nuclear Security Administration’s budget (over total fiscal year 2026 funding, which includes funds from the reconciliation bill enacted in July) to maintain and expand nuclear capabilities. The “skinny” budget documents released last week include many topline funding amounts as well as specific proposals that the administration seeks to call attention to, but they do not include comprehensive program-level numbers, which will be released at a later date.

In several cases, the cuts are similar to those the administration proposed last year, which Congress largely rejected in its final budget for fiscal year 2026. Last year’s request similarly proposed deep cuts across NSF directorates, dozens of NASA Science mission cancellations, and eliminating funding for NOAA’s Office of Atmospheric Research.

The request reiterates AI and quantum as administration priorities, proposing using $1.2 billion from the Biden-era Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act for DOE’s recently created Office of AI and Quantum, which the request states will coordinate all DOE AI and quantum information science activities, including those related to the Genesis Mission. The request also specifies that the funds would go to supercomputers at Argonne and Oak Ridge National Labs. However, the request does not include funding for the American Science Cloud, which DOE calls the “cornerstone of the Genesis Mission’s platform infrastructure.”

The proposed 80% cut to NIST is significantly larger than the 28% cut proposed last year. The request says it aims to eliminate awards for “the development of curricula that advance a radical climate agenda.” The request proposes reorganizing NIST lab programs and standards coordination programs into several more specific funding lines mainly centered around measurement and standards, as well as advanced manufacturing R&D, resilience and fire research, and neutron research.

Across the federal government, the request proposes eliminating funds and programs dedicated to minority-serving institutions and prohibiting funds for “expensive subscriptions to academic journals and prohibitively high publishing costs,” unless required by statute or with prior agency approval.

NSF, NIH lagging in awarding grants

The National Science Foundation has awarded just 613 grants this fiscal year, at about 20% the level at this time in the year in each of fiscal years 2021 through 2024, according to the group Grant Witness. The amount of funding awarded is at similarly low levels, about one-third that of previous years. The trend is visible across each of NSF’s directorates. New and competitive award renewals, which undergo full peer review, are particularly low compared to previous years. The National Institutes of Health has seen a similar trend regarding its number of awards, having given out about 10,000 awards this year compared to around 18,000 at this time in previous years; total award funding is also down by a similar amount. NSF and NIH are even lagging behind fiscal year 2025, during which thousands of grants were canceled and fewer grants were awarded than in previous years.

Jefferson Lab to be run by old managers through new consortium

The Department of Energy has awarded the management contract for Jefferson Lab to a group that includes the parent company of the previous contractor and several other organizations that have long been involved in the lab’s operation. The decision comes just over a year after DOE abruptly terminated the lab manager search that began under the Biden administration because “key elements” of the solicitation did not align with Trump’s executive orders, though the agency did not specify the relevant elements or orders. DOE restarted its search soon after.

The awardee, SURATech, includes the Southeastern Universities Research Association, which built and has operated the lab since its start via its subsidiary Jefferson Science Associates, according to SURA’s website. SURATech also includes Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and four major subcontractors. SURATech will assume operation of Jefferson Lab in June 2026 for at least five years, with potential to extend up to a total of 20 years, DOE’s press release states. Jefferson Lab presently focuses on nuclear physics but plans to become a multi-purpose lab in the coming years by constructing the High Performance Data Facility, a major new user facility offering infrastructure for data-intensive science.

DOE’s Office of Inspector General recently released an audit of Jefferson Science Associates’ costs from fiscal years 2019 and 2020, identifying two “deficiencies” related to cost and subcontract management and approximately $8.9 million in “unresolved costs.” OIG did not disclose the two recommendations it made to Jefferson Science Associates.

Also on our radar

  • The NRC published a proposed rule last week that would allow reactor license applicants to reference a prior DOE or DOD authorization when demonstrating compliance with NRC regulations.
  • DOE is seeking applications for research centers focused on regional, AI-supported studies of severe weather-related hazards that affect critical infrastructure.
  • The Interior Department is offering further deferred resignations and early retirements to staff, E&E News reports.
  • China surpassed the U.S. in gross domestic spending on R&D in 2024, according to the intergovernmental Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
  • ARPA–E will host a conference Tuesday through Thursday featuring several policymakers, including Energy Secretary Chris Wright, DOE Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil, ARPA–E Director Conner Prochaska, and OSTP Associate Director Ethan Klein.
  • NIH ended its continuous submission policy, which allowed grant reviewers to submit applications after the submission deadline had passed. Late applications from grant reviewers will now be considered for approval on a case-by-case basis.
In Case You Missed It

From Physics Today: A scientist can wear nail polish, use makeup, and dress fashionably—and be taken seriously.

Upcoming Events

All events are Eastern Time unless otherwise noted. Listings do not imply endorsement. Events beyond this week are listed on our website.

Monday, April 6

Harvard: Forging just futures: Solutions-based science to address the climate gap
12:00 - 1:15 pm

Harvard: How to influence policy with Professor Matthew Bunn
1:30 - 3:00 pm

Tuesday, April 7

DOE: ARPA–E Energy Innovation Summit (continues through Thursday)

Beyond Earth Institute: Beyond Earth Working Group report series: Minding the LEO gap and the future for commercial space stations
1:00 - 2:00 pm

RFF: Global energy outlook 2026: How the world lost the goal of 1.5°C
1:30 - 2:45 pm

Aspen Institute: Techno humanism? A debate with Antón Barba-Kay and Jason Crawford
7:15 - 8:15 pm

Wednesday, April 8

NRC: Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards meeting (continues through Friday)

NDIA: NDIA Science & Engineering Technology (S&ET) Division April meeting
9:00 - 10:00 am

AMS: The WRF to MPAS transition: Community needs from research to operations
12:00 pm

CSIS: Golden insights: Creating value from commercial Earth observation data
2:00 - 2:45 pm

NIH: Developing the NIH-wide Strategic Plan for fiscal years 2027-2031 community feedback meeting
2:30 - 3:30 pm

Thursday, April 9

National Academies: Ocean Acoustics Education and Expertise report workshop (continues Friday)

Friday, April 10

Atlantic Council: Game changers: Cures for 21st century biological threats
10:00 am

Sunday, April 12

Space Foundation: Space Symposium (continues through Thursday)

Monday, April 13

NSF: SECURE Center Northeast monthly forum
10:00 am

Harvard: Managing the challenges of North Korean nuclear/missile threats
1:30 - 3:00 pm

Opportunities

Deadlines indicated in parentheses. Newly added opportunities are marked with a diamond.

Job Openings

National Academies: Editorial assistant (ongoing)
APLU: Assistant vice president for governmental affairs (ongoing)
APS: Chief marketing and communications officer (ongoing)
AIP: Director of science policy news (ongoing)
AIP: Senior editor, Physics Today (ongoing)
Science Philanthropy Alliance: Civic science fellow (ongoing)
Foundation for American Innovation: Research fellow, weather and atmospheric interventions (ongoing)
NIST: Academic program manager (April 7)
NIST: Supervisory international program manager (April 11)
DOE: Fermi site office manager (April 15)
AAS: John N. Bahcall Public Policy Fellowship (April 15)
DOE: Foreign affairs specialist, NNSA (April 17)
USGS: National Geospatial Technical Operations Center section chiefs, hydrography and cartographic applied research (April 17)
Senate: Committee legislative director, Democratic ranking member, Commerce Committee (April 17)
Senate: Research assistant, Democratic ranking member, Commerce Committee (April 17)
DOE: Attorney-adviser, Office of Energy Dominance Financing (April 30)
AAS: Editor in Chief (May 11)
DOE: Associate director for finance and budget officer, ARPA–E (May 18)
ANS: Congressional science and engineering fellowship (June 5)

Solicitations

NSF: RFC on NCSES data collection (April 7)
House Appropriations Committee: Call to submit written testimony on HHS budget (April 16)
Census Bureau: RFC on Survey of State Government Research and Development (May 1)
ANS: Nominations for 40 Under 40, Nuclear News (May 1)
NRC: RFC on proposed rule on NRC reviews of reactor designs previously authorized by DOE or DOD (May 4)
NSF: RFC on renewal of the Survey of Graduate Students and Postdoctorates in Science and Engineering (May 8)
NSF: RFC on Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers (May 8)
House Appropriations Committee: Call to submit written testimony on FY27 science budget (May 8)
NOAA: Solicitation of nominations for membership on the Ocean Research Advisory Panel (May 14)
NIST: RFC on CHIPS Workforce Solution participant data collection (May 18)
NASA: RFC on NASA Front Door (May 19)
NIH: RFC on NIH-wide strategic plan for fiscal years 2027-2031 (May 26)
NRC: RFC on regulation of byproduct material associated with fusion machines (May 27)
NSF: RFC on Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation (EFRI) program (June 30)

Know of an opportunity for scientists to engage in science policy? Email us at fyi@aip.org.


Do you have a story to tell about how science policy is impacting you?

AIP’s research team is gathering first-hand accounts from scientists, engineers, students, and staff whose careers have been affected by policy and funding changes over the past year. Volunteers can submit their stories via this online form. Participants’ stories will be added to the Niels Bohr Library & Archives digital repository as searchable, citable records — with options for anonymity and a five-year embargo period. Read more about the initiative here.


Around the Web

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

White House

Nature: Massive budget cuts for US science proposed again by Trump administration
SpaceNews: Space Force budget would more than double in Trump’s $1.5 trillion defense plan
SpaceNews: Isaacman defends NASA budget proposal despite steep cuts
AAU: AAU urges Congress to reject Trump administration’s proposal to cut scientific research
Politico: ‘Paradigm shift:’ How Trump’s budget request will keep everyone guessing (perspective by Joseph Schatz)

Congress

Senate Appropriations Committee: Committee Chair Susan Collins (R-ME) on President Trump’s FY27 budget request
Senate Appropriations Committee: Committee Ranking Member Patty Murray (D-WA) on President Trump’s FY27 budget request
House CCP Committee: Committee Chair John Moolenaar (R-MI) cosponsors bipartisan bill to tighten controls on high tech chipmaking equipment

Science, Society, and the Economy

Foreign Affairs: America is losing the innovation race (perspective by L. Rafael Reif)
Chemical & Engineering News: Facts are in crisis. What are we going to do? (editorial)
The Conversation: ‘Project Hail Mary’ demonstrates how intellectual humility can be a guiding force for scientists and astronauts (perspective by Deana Weibel)
The Guardian: It’s official: scientists aren’t funny. But it doesn’t have to be this way (perspective by Helen Pilcher)
Nature: Engaging the head and the heart: Why scientists turn to poetry
GAO: On the horizon: Three science and technology trends that could affect society (report)

Education and Workforce

Government Executive: The Trump administration paid Interior Department employees not to work for more than a year. It just called them back
Federal News Network: Trump administration expands push to hire early-career federal employees
Chronicle of Higher Education: The hostile takeover of higher education (perspective by Reinhold Martin and Robert Newton)
Bloomberg: MIT seeks to unleash faculty and student startups amid AI boom
Nature: Struggling to focus on research when the world is ‘on fire’? Some ways to cope

Research Management

Inside Higher Ed: ‘Potentially existential’: Higher ed denounces proposed federal funding strings
Nature: A responsible authorship culture is needed — it is a collective responsibility (perspective by Véronique Kiermer et al.)
Science: Offering scientists cash to spot errors in published papers doesn’t work
Retraction Watch: Should universities investigate questionable papers students and faculty wrote elsewhere? (perspective by Simon Kolstoe)
Nature: Hallucinated citations are polluting the scientific literature. What can be done?
New York Times: Can science predict when a study won’t hold up

Labs and Facilities

Ames Laboratory: Tim Kidd named director of Ames National Laboratory’s Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering
Inside Higher Ed: Michigan research center faces local opposition
Quanta Magazine: A through-the-lens look at the world’s particle physics labs

Computing and Communications

The POWER Podcast: The Genesis Mission: How AI supercomputing is about to reshape American science and energy (audio interview with Darío Gil)
Brookings: The empty national AI policy framework: Who is in charge of those in charge? (perspective by Tom Wheeler and Bill Baer)
MIT Technology Review: AI benchmarks are broken. Here’s what we need instead (perspective by Angela Aristidou)
NPR: Big tech’s next move is to put data centers in space. Can it work?
Nature: Quantum simulations verified by experiments for the first time
Science: Energy Department aims to build full-fledged quantum computer within 3 years

Space

SpaceNews: NASA stops work on SLS Mobile Launcher 2
The Conversation: Artemis II’s long countdown – a space historian explains why it has taken over 50 years to return to the Moon (perspective by Emily Margolis)
New York Times: For Trump, the Artemis II Moon mission offers a shot to cement his legacy
Nature: Humanity is heading back to the Moon — why aren’t more scientists thrilled?
The Guardian: This Artemis Moon mission is a truly unifying international project, one of the few we have left (perspective by Christopher Riley)
The Guardian: ‘This feels fragile’: How a satellite-smashing chain reaction could spiral out of control
SpaceNews: SpaceX and Amazon spar over satellite deployments

Weather, Climate, and Environment

E&E News: NOAA halts crucial dataset that helps measure Arctic sea ice
Carbon Brief: Q&A: Why the standoff between nations over the next IPCC reports matters (perspective by Cecilia Keating)
The Atlantic: Who gets to block the sun?
E&E News: EPA approves ocean carbon removal test, without mentioning climate
Nature: ’Schrödinger’s carbon’: The misclassification of carbon capture and storage as standard mitigation (perspective by Rosalie Arendt)
Wired: AI has flooded all the weather apps

Energy

E&E News: DOE faces new lawsuit over canceled energy grants
E&E News: Report documents $12B in DOE project cancellations
E&E News: IG cites DOE oversight ‘failures’ on NuScale nuclear project
Undark Magazine: The nuclear safety protections in federal crosshairs
FedScoop: Energy Department speeds up nuclear regulatory process with AI
American Nuclear Society: GAO: Clarification of HLW definition could save DOE billions
E&E News: Pressure grows for nuclear power to get steel in the ground
Axios: Fusion companies partner for “more shots on goal”
HPCwire: DOE partners on quantum algorithm competition to strengthen grid resilience
Power: Geothermal’s rise a hot topic worldwide

Defense

American Nuclear Society: American Nuclear Society joins IAEA in calling for protection of nuclear plants in armed conflicts
NIH: Dr. Elisabeth Armstrong named NIH chief of staff
Stat: How the next CDC director can win back America’s trust (perspective by Charles Lockwood et al.)
Scientific American: Eat more plant-based protein instead of meat, top heart health body says, contradicting RFK, Jr.
The Economist: Scientists are working on “everything vaccines”
New York Times: HHS takes a first step toward restoring vaccine advisory committee
Wired: What happens when a nuclear site is hit?
NucleCast: Iran’s nuclear path and what the latest strikes mean for global security (audio interview with Andrea Stricker)
Nature: AI used in warfare needs a strong ethical framework (perspective by Yana Suchikova and Serhii Nazarovets)
The Information: Pentagon appeals judge’s order pausing Anthropic blacklisting
Bloomberg: Impulse Space, Anduril building space technology for Golden Dome

Biomedical

Stat: NIH director’s invocation of Vannevar Bush’s legacy to promote Trump science policies sparks pushback
NIH: Dr. Elisabeth Armstrong named NIH chief of staff
Stat: How the next CDC director can win back America’s trust (perspective by Charles Lockwood et al.)
Scientific American: Eat more plant-based protein instead of meat, top heart health body says, contradicting RFK, Jr.
The Economist: Scientists are working on “everything vaccines”
New York Times: HHS takes a first step toward restoring vaccine advisory committee

International Affairs

Science: As US blockade bites, Cuba’s health care and science suffer
CERN: Chile becomes an associate member state of CERN
The Guardian: We need a credible plan for science funding in the UK (perspective by Ruben Saakyan and Sheila Rowan)
The Guardian: UK’s leading AI research institute told to make ‘significant’ changes
Research Professional: EU preference has no place in Horizon Europe, research guild head says
Financial Times: China and Europe launch rare joint space mission
Science|Business: South Africa and China deepen science and technology cooperation

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