FYI: Science Policy News from AIP
THIS WEEK
What’s Ahead
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Fireworks on the National Mall. Chalice Keith / National Park Service

Science Budget Proposals Coming into Focus

House Republicans revealed many of their topline budget proposals for non-defense science agencies last week and plan to release the detailed figures after Congress returns from its Fourth of July recess. Their draft appropriations legislation for fiscal year 2025 proposes slight increases for some agencies, including a 1.8% increase for the Department of Energy Office of Science, a 2.2% increase for the National Science Foundation, and a 1.1% increase for the National Institute of Standards and Technology (after subtracting the large amount of earmarks included in NIST’s budget). Meanwhile, NASA’s Science Mission Directorate would remain flat and the U.S. Geological Survey would see a 5.6% cut.
All of these amounts are well below those requested by the Biden administration. They also would follow the significant cuts Congress made to these agencies for fiscal year 2024 with the exception of the DOE Office of Science, which received a 1.7% increase. The amounts reflect the tight budget caps Congress has set for these two budget cycles.
Defense science agencies are also in line for belt-tightening. Total funding for the Department of Defense’s early-stage research programs would be cut by 11% under the legislation the House sent to the Senate last week. The Biden administration proposed a steeper cut of 20%.
House Democrats have generally opposed the appropriations legislation advanced so far this year, in part because the bills contain various controversial policy provisions such as broad restrictions on diversity initiatives across agencies. Similar proposals advanced by Republicans last year were removed or scaled back in the final versions of the legislation.
The Senate has not yet released any of its budget proposals. Details on the Senate and House proposals will be collected in FYI’s Federal Science Budget Tracker as they become available.

ITER to Explain Major Delays to Construction Schedule

The multinational ITER fusion facility under construction in France is preparing to update the project’s baseline schedule to account for major delays caused by the pandemic and technical challenges encountered with certain machine components. ITER Director-General Pietro Barabaschi will hold a press conference on Wednesday to explain a new baseline schedule the facility proposed to its governing council, which will meet in November to consider the plans further.
The current baseline, established in 2016, projected that ITER would first turn on in 2025, a milestone known as “first plasma,” and in 2035 would advance to full operations that use deuterium-tritium fuel to generate more power than the facility consumes. ITER announced earlier this month that the proposed new baseline would aim to have the facility begin deuterium-only operations in 2035. The announcement did not indicate a target date for deuterium-tritium operations or for the “first plasma.” Under the 2016 baseline plan, the first plasma phase was to be followed by a two-year pause to install additional components before the deuterium-only operations began.

Also On Our Radar

  • The Supreme Court’s overturning of the “Chevron Deference” doctrine is leading to calls for boosting scientific expertise in the judicial and legislative branches of government to compensate for the decreased role of agency interpretations of laws going forward.
In Case You Missed It

DOE, EPA Announce $850 Million for Methane Emissions Monitoring and Mitigation

JUN 28, 2024

The action is the latest in the administration’s push to improve the accuracy of data on methane emissions.

Republicans Push NIH Reform

JUN 27, 2024

House Republicans are arguing NIH should be overhauled to streamline its operations and rebuild public trust in science.
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, July 1

Tuesday, July 2

SpaceNews: Race to the Moon
11:00 am
National Science Policy Network: Careers in science diplomacy: UN session
12:00 - 1:00 pm

Wednesday, July 3

Thursday, July 4

Independence Day.

Friday, July 5

No events.

Saturday, July 6

AAPT: American Association of Physics Teachers Summer meeting
(continues through Wednesday)

Monday, July 8

IEEE: International Conference on Nanotechnology
(continues through Thursday)
National Academies: Space Weather Roundtable
(continues Tuesday)
Know of an upcoming science policy event either inside or outside the Beltway? Email us at fyi@aip.org.
Opportunities
Deadlines indicated in parentheses. Newly added opportunities are marked with a diamond.

Job Openings

Solicitations

Know of an opportunity for scientists to engage in science policy? Email us at fyi@aip.org.
Around the Web
News and views currently in circulation. Links do not imply endorsement.

White House

Congress

Science, Society, and the Economy

Education and Workforce

Reuters: US needs Chinese students in humanities, Indian students for sciences, US diplomat says
Research Professional: Chinese funders require students in Sweden to return home
The Guardian: Top scientists turning down UK jobs over ‘tax on talent’, says Wellcome boss
Science|Business: French researchers warn against restricting immigration
Science: For international researchers like me, the visa maze can jeopardize a career in science (perspective by Muhammad Arslan Ahmad)
FedScoop: NSF announces new AI investments aimed at diversifying research community
AAAS: Levers for change 2023: Enacting a national agenda for undergraduate STEM education (report)
Nature: How researchers navigate a PhD later in life
AAS: Announcing the Working Group for International Students and Researchers in Astronomy
Science: Nature journals’ UK staff stage second day of strikes over pay

Research Management

Labs and Facilities

Computing and Communications

Space

Weather, Climate, and Environment

Energy

Construction Physics: Will we ever get fusion power?
Construction Physics: Fusion power reading list
American Nuclear Society: With $3.4 billion to spend, the DOE opens RFP for low-enriched uranium
ITIF: China outpacing US in nuclear power development, report finds
IAEA: IAEA and OPEC fund to strengthen cooperation in nuclear science, technology, and applications for sustainable development
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: Nuclear energy could power the AI boom — but only if proliferation risks are minimized (perspective by Miles Pomper and Yanliang Pan)
Power: The world wants nuclear power again — America can lead (perspective by Brendan Bechtel)
Research Professional: European Commission sets out R&I priorities for solar energy
Physics World: Battery boss: physicist Martin Freer will run UK’s Faraday Institution

Defense

Biomedical

International Affairs

Science: Mexico’s new president just gave science a big promotion
Science|Business: Kicking Israeli researchers off Horizon projects could ‘amount to discrimination’, says EU Commissioner
Politico: China’s military is tapping into EU-funded research
Science|Business: EU needs a strong R&I ecosystem more than ever, Commission report finds
Science|Business: Europe reviews science diplomacy policy after Ukraine invasion shock
Nature: Five reasons the UK election matters for science
Financial Times: UK parties must step up innovation pledge to drive growth, science leaders warn
Research Professional: Analysis: UK regional R&D spending
Science: Scarred by COVID-19 experience, Spain launches new office for scientific advice
Physics World: Bringing the second quantum revolution to the rest of the world
Export Compliance Daily: Canada announces new quantum, chip export controls

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