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FYI: Science Policy News from AIP |
THIS WEEK |
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What’s Ahead |
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A meeting between U.S. and Chinese diplomats in Beijing this summer. (Chuck Kennedy / State Department) |
US–China S&T Cooperation Agreement Set to Expire on Sunday
A bilateral science and technology cooperation agreement that the U.S. and China have maintained since 1979 is set to expire on Aug. 27. While officials from China have expressed interest in an extension, the Biden administration has not commented publicly on the matter and has reportedly been debating it internally. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has generally welcomed continued scholarly exchanges between the countries, including during a visit to China in June and in a major speech last year on U.S. policy toward China, but the administration has also made technological competition with China into a key plank of its international policymaking. Some Republican lawmakers are actively arguing the agreement is no longer in the national interest, stating that China has leveraged cooperative civilian research for military purposes.
The U.S. and China originally entered the agreement as part of the countries’ opening of full diplomatic relations following decades of Cold War tension, and China eventually became the leading country of origin for students and researchers arriving in the U.S. from abroad. The two countries have extended and amended the agreement many times, most recently with a five-year extension signed during the Trump administration that added provisions concerning intellectual property rights. If the agreement expires, it would not preclude scientific exchange between the U.S. and China, but some observers have argued it would deepen the current chill hanging over scientific relations between the countries and that U.S. scientists now have much more to learn from colleagues in China than in prior eras.
DARPA to Showcase Next Phase of Electronics Resurgence Initiative
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s annual Electronics Resurgence Initiative Summit is starting Tuesday in Seattle. DARPA launched ERI in 2017 as a $1.5 billion, five-year effort to increase collaboration between the defense industrial base, the commercial electronics industry, and universities in the development of new microelectronics technologies that meet DOD requirements. With its first phase complete, DARPA expanded the program’s scope by launching “ERI 2.0,” which includes an emphasis on developing domestic capabilities for making 3D heterogeneously integrated microsystems. House Armed Services Committee Ranking Member Adam Smith (D-WA) and Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee Chair Maria Cantwell (D-WA) will offer opening remarks at the summit. Other speakers include officials from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the National Science Foundation, and the Department of Energy’s Office of Science, who will participate in a panel on the CHIPS and Science Act. DOD is receiving $2 billion through the act outside DARPA to establish a series of regional technology hubs known as the Microelectronics Commons.
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In Case You Missed it |
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President Biden’s science adviser Arati Prabhakar speaks at a meeting of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology in April focused on artificial intelligence. Prabhakar and White House budget director Shalanda Young issued a memo last week that establishes cross-agency R&D priorities for fiscal year 2025. |
White House Releases R&D Priorities for Fiscal Year 2025
The White House released its annual R&D priorities memo last week, which will inform federal science agencies’ budget requests for fiscal year 2025. Compared to last year’s memo, the Biden administration is placing a stronger emphasis on developing “trustworthy” artificial intelligence. The new memo also includes new references to R&D connected to regional innovation, research security risk assessment, and benchmarking U.S. competitiveness in science and technology. It also encourages agencies to experiment with different mechanisms for funding research, urging them to try “new approaches such as streamlining processes to minimize administrative burdens, engaging new R&D performers, exploring new R&D methods, and forging new partnerships.” Largely unchanged from last year are priorities related to strengthening the STEM workforce, promoting equity and inclusivity in STEM, fighting climate change, and bolstering national security. Pandemic readiness, a major emphasis in last year’s memo, is now folded into broader priorities focused on improving health outcomes and national security.
NSF Physical Sciences Head Sean Jones Headed to Argonne
Argonne National Laboratory announced last week that it has selected Sean Jones as its next deputy director for science and technology. Jones has been the head of the National Science Foundation’s Mathematical and Physical Sciences Directorate since 2020 and before that had been working at the agency for more than a decade. He holds a doctorate in materials science and, prior to NSF, was a researcher at Bell Labs and a professor of optical engineering at Norfolk State University. His new appointment begins Oct. 9. Jones will leave NSF on Oct. 6 and his role will be filled on an acting basis by Denise Caldwell, who currently directs NSF’s Physics Division.
NSF to Establish AI Institutes for Astronomy and Materials Research
The National Science Foundation opened a $100 million funding opportunity this month to support up to five new artificial intelligence research institutes, each receiving an average of $4 million per year over four or five years. The first awards, expected to be announced next year, will support up to two institutes applying AI to astronomy and will be partially funded by the Simons Foundation. NSF plans to announce additional awards in fiscal year 2025, one for an institute applying AI to materials science and at least two others for institutes focused on developing AI systems that are generalized enough to “learn and think as adeptly as humans do.” NSF currently funds 25 AI institutes across the country.
New Research Capacity-Building Programs Announce Latest Grants
The Department of Energy’s Office of Science announced 65 institutions last week that it plans to provide with a total of $70 million through its Reaching a New Energy Sciences Workforce (RENEW) initiative. RENEW funds projects lasting three to five years that expand training opportunities for members of historically underrepresented groups. Of the selected institutions, 40 are minority-serving institutions and 39 are emerging research institutions with less than $50 million in annual federal funding. The grants build on $32 million awarded through RENEW last year, as well as the $37 million awarded earlier this month through the office’s Funding for Accelerated, Inclusive Research (FAIR) initiative, which focuses on building research capacity at institutions historically underrepresented in its portfolio. Separately last week, the National Science Foundation announced the recipients of $38 million in grants from the ExpandQISE program, which supports collaborations between existing quantum research centers and emerging research institutions that are not heavily engaged in the subject. Including these grants, NSF has supported 33 projects totaling $62 million through the program since it launched last year.
PPBE Commission Floats Revamp of DOD R&D Accounts
A special commission that Congress tasked with recommending reforms to the Department of Defense’s Planning, Programming, Budgeting, and Execution (PPBE) management framework released a nearly 200-page interim report last week. The report identifies a number of actions that DOD can implement immediately and Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks indicated in a statement that it would do so. The report also outlines a series of “potential recommendations” on which the commission intends to gather additional feedback. Several of these revolve around making budgeting more flexible, such as in response to changes in the technology development landscape. For example, the commission is considering steps such as overhauling DOD’s budget structure to better align budgets with strategy and consolidating budget categories within DOD’s research, development, test, and evaluation (RDT&E) accounts. It also suggests potentially reconfiguring the “colors of money” that currently establish strong distinctions between the budget accounts funding RDT&E, procurement, and operations and maintenance. The commission expects to deliver its final report in March 2024.
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Know of an upcoming science policy event either inside or outside the Beltway? Email us at fyi@aip.org.
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Opportunities |
AIP Hiring Chief Research Officer
The American Institute of Physics is hiring a chief research officer to implement and lead a new unit called AIP Research, which will focus on empowering positive change in the physical sciences enterprise through greater understanding of the discipline’s culture and history as well as relevant public policy. Candidates should have an advanced degree or equivalent experience in the physical sciences or engineering, history, social sciences, or public policy as well as 10 years of experience relevant to the role.
Horizon Institute Seeking Emerging Technology Policy Fellows
The Horizon Institute for Public Service is seeking candidates for its Horizon Fellowship, which includes a 10-week policy training program followed by a six month or one-year placement in a think tank or a congressional or executive branch office. Applications are due Sept. 15.
American Mathematical Society Hiring Executive Director
The American Mathematical Society is hiring an executive director, who will oversee a staff of 200 across four offices. Candidates must have a doctoral degree and substantial professional experience in mathematics or a closely related field. Applications are due Sept. 15.
Know of an opportunity for scientists to engage in science policy? Email us at fyi@aip.org.
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