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FYI: Science Policy News from AIP |
THIS WEEK |
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What’s Ahead |
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A sign at NIST’s campus in Maryland. (Jason Stoughton / NIST) |
NIST Leaders to Discuss Safety Deficiencies at Agency
The National Institute of Standards and Technology’s principal advisory committee will meet on Tuesday to discuss concerns about the agency’s approach to workplace safety. The NIST Safety Commission, which published its final report on Aug. 29, concluded the agency has a “weak safety culture” and that employees often feel pressured to downplay the potential risks involved in their work to avoid triggering additional approval processes. The commission also found the situation has been exacerbated by the “chronic underfunding” of NIST facilities, which has “fueled the impression among researchers that safety is not a priority, as they often feel compelled to undertake unauthorized workarounds to enable their work to be completed.”
NIST established the commission in December 2022 in the wake of a radiation incident at the agency’s research reactor and the fatal fall of an engineering technician in the agency’s fire research lab. In a message to agency employees about the commission’s report, NIST Director Laurie Locascio said that some of its findings were “difficult to hear” and “disturbing,” adding “but this is the type of feedback we needed to hear and exactly why I established the commission.” Locascio said NIST has begun implementing the commission’s recommendations and started “benchmarking against other research laboratories, committing funding, and bringing in outside experts to guide us.” She also identified inadequate funding to maintain facilities as one of the agency’s biggest challenges and committed to pressing Congress for additional funding.
Following the safety discussion at this week’s meeting, the advisory committee will hear from the director of NIST’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusivity Office and the director of the CHIPS R&D Office. The committee will also discuss NIST’s role in advancing critical and emerging technologies prioritized by the White House.
Commerce Picks 31 Regional Tech Hubs to Compete for Funds
On Monday, the White House announced 31 regional hubs of technology development across the U.S. that will be eligible to compete for implementation grants of up to $75 million each from the Commerce Department. Eleven are focused on biotechnology, seven on clean energy and critical minerals, four on semiconductor manufacturing, four on advanced materials manufacturing, three on autonomous systems, and two on quantum technology. The hubs were chosen from 370 applications and span 32 states and Puerto Rico. The Commerce Department has also issued strategy development grants to 18 other hubs that are seeking eligibility to compete for implementation grants.
Rapid Technology Assessment Framework Set for Release
On Tuesday, the National Network for Critical Technology Assessment (NNCTA) will release a report on how the U.S. can rapidly identify gaps in its technological capabilities and prioritize relevant innovation initiatives. The report also offers “examples of how modern data and methods can reframe problems and overturn assumptions and address specific issues in AI, semiconductors, biopharmaceuticals, and energy and critical materials.” The NNCTA produced the report to inform the National Science Foundation’s new Directorate for Technology, Innovation, and Partnerships. Among the event speakers are Erwin Gianchandani, head of the TIP directorate; Erica Fuchs, director of the NNCTA; Sue Helper, senior advisor for industrial strategy at the White House Office of Management and Budget; Greg Hebner, assistant director for intelligence programs at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy; and former OSTP director Kelvin Droegemeier.
Emergency Security Budget Request Includes R&D Funds
President Joe Biden is asking Congress to provide around $100 billion in emergency funding for national security initiatives, mostly related to the wars in Ukraine and Israel. Of the total, $1.2 billion is for research, development, test, and evaluation work on Israel’s nascent laser-based missile defense system, known as Iron Beam. The request also includes $563 million in RDT&E funds in support of Ukraine and $144 million for nuclear nonproliferation initiatives in Ukraine. The Senate Appropriations Committee will review the request at a hearing on Oct. 31. The White House has indicated Biden plans to submit a supplemental budget request focused on domestic priorities such as natural disaster recovery, firefighter pay, and childcare. Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Patty Murray (D-WA) has said she will push for Congress to support both supplemental requests.
NIH Director Nominee Advancing
The Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee is meeting on Wednesday to advance the nomination of Monica Bertagnolli to lead the National Institutes of Health. The committee held a hearing on her nomination just last week, at which committee members uniformly lauded her qualifications. However, Committee Ranking Member Bill Cassidy (R-LA) aired objections to how Committee Chair Bernie Sanders (I-VT) handled the nomination process, noting that Sanders only advanced Bertagnolli’s nomination after receiving commitments from the Biden administration on drug pricing. Sanders pressed Bertagnolli in the hearing to commit to adding a “reasonable pricing” clause to NIH contracts that would limit the cost of drugs developed using federal funds, while Cassidy argued such a clause could stifle innovation. Bertagnolli said she would work with the committee to ensure the public can access effective treatments, but declined to commit to any specific actions.
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In Case You Missed It |
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From left: Jefferson Lab Director Stuart Henderson, Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA), Virginia Governor Glenn Younkin (R), and Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) participate in an event celebrating the lab’s selection to lead development of the proposed High Performance Data Facility. (Aileen Devlin / Jefferson Lab) |
Jefferson Lab to Lead DOE High Performance Data Facility
The Department of Energy Office of Science announced last week it has picked Jefferson Lab in Virginia to lead development of the proposed High Performance Data Facility, billed as “a new scientific user facility specializing in advanced infrastructure for data-intensive science.” The facility will use a hub-and-spoke model to provide advanced computing resources to researchers across the country, with Jefferson Lab and Berkeley Lab hosting centralized computing resources connected to distributed infrastructure at other sites. The need for such a facility was identified by DOE’s Advanced Scientific Computing Advisory Committee in 2013, and DOE formally approved the mission need in 2020. DOE estimates the project will cost between $300 million and $500 million, though it instructed labs to target the low end of that range. DOE has provided about $4 million for preliminary project development so far, and it is seeking $8 million for fiscal year 2024.
US Tightens Semiconductor Export Controls
Last week, the Commerce Department announced new export restrictions on semiconductors and associated manufacturing equipment bound for China. The department also imposed stringent export licensing requirements on a group of chip manufacturers in China. The Semiconductor Industry Association, which represents semiconductor manufacturers, released a statement that lamented how “overly broad, unilateral controls” could harm the U.S. semiconductor industry and called on the Biden administration to coordinate such controls with allies. The rule raises restrictions on lower-performance chips that companies such as Nvidia, the largest global manufacturer of AI-suitable chips, were previously allowed to ship to China. In justifying the restrictions, the Biden administration cited the Chinese government’s pursuit of AI technologies with military and surveillance applications.
NASA Revisiting Mars Sample Return Plans Again
Mars Sample Return Program Director Jeff Gramling told an advisory group last week that NASA is considering major changes to the multivehicle mission. A recent independent review recommended that NASA examine alternative MSR architectures to increase the mission’s “resilience” against changes in plan, particularly given that schedule delays are likely coming. While this would be MSR’s third architecture change in two years, Gramling observed that substantial progress has been made on its various “building blocks” and that NASA believes much of that work can feed into a revised architecture. He reported that Steve Thibault of the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory has joined MSR as chief engineer and is leading a team charged with identifying two or three candidate architectures that NASA aims to winnow down to one by March so that it can be integrated into the agency’s full response to the review. Gramling said that NASA aspires to establish a firm baseline design, schedule, and funding profile about a year from now, if funding allows. He also broadly characterized the architecture revision as an effort to “pause and step back” during a “skinnying down” of the mission amid what is poised to be a tight funding environment this fiscal year.
Industry Seeks Extension of Moratorium on FAA Space Regulations
A Senate Commerce Committee hearing on commercial spaceflight last week centered on the question of whether to extend the “learning period” that limits the Federal Aviation Administration’s regulatory authority over space companies. The learning period was set to expire on Sept. 30 but Congress extended it by three months. Committee Chair Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ) expressed openness to extending the learning period “while ensuring sufficient collaboration between the FAA, industry, and other stakeholders.” Ranking member Eric Schmitt (R-MO) endorsed an extension, stating it would “provide both industry and the FAA enough time and data to establish an appropriate off-ramp to a more permanent framework for the commercial space industry.” Industry representatives testifying at the hearing all supported an extension. SpaceX Vice President William Gerstenmaier, formerly a long-time NASA official, argued letting the learning period lapse “would be premature by several years.”
Pathways to Deep Decarbonization Detailed in Academies Report
A National Academies report released last week takes a comprehensive look at ways for the U.S. to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by midcentury, building on a 2021 report that identified “no-regrets” policies and research directions to pursue in the short term. The new report evaluates the impact of major legislation enacted in the interim, namely the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, CHIPS and Science Act, and Inflation Reduction Act. It also offers recommendations for achieving deep decarbonization that span ten themes, such as tightening emissions targets for industry, ensuring procedural equity and environmental justice, building workforce capacity, and meeting research, development, and demonstration needs. The research recommendations focus on broadening the federal RD&D portfolio, noting for instance that topics such as land use and sustainable food production are generally beyond the purview of the Department of Energy. The report also recommends expanding research in areas such as long-duration energy storage, battery manufacturing and recycling, bioenergy with carbon capture and storage, and energy and materials efficiency.
Antarctic Scientists Push for New Icebreaking Research Ship
A National Academies report published last week calls for aging Antarctic research infrastructure to be quickly updated or replaced. The report urges the National Science Foundation to prioritize funding construction of a new icebreaking research vessel or risk the U.S. falling behind other nations in research that is essential to national security. “The U.S. is already behind schedule in updating our scientific infrastructure in the region, especially for aging research vessels,” said report co-chair Alan Mix, a professor of earth sciences at Oregon State University, in a press release. The report also recommends that NSF try to find a cost-effective way to support two light helicopters on the vessel, or secure other means of offering a comparable capability. So far NSF has proceeded with a vessel design without a helipad, drawing criticism from some scientists.
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Upcoming Events |
All times are Eastern Daylight Time, unless otherwise noted. Listings do not imply endorsement. Events beyond this week are listed on our website.
Monday, October 23
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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 |
OSTP Seeking Summer Interns
The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy is accepting applications for its summer 2024 class of interns. Candidates must be currently enrolled in a U.S. college or university. Applications are due Nov. 19.
STPI Hiring Energy and Space Policy Analysts
The Science and Technology Policy Institute has two open research analyst positions, one focusing on space policy and another on environment, climate, and energy policy. Both positions require a doctorate and are accepting applications until Oct. 31.
New Landslide Hazards Advisory Panel Seeking Nominees
The U.S. Geological Survey is seeking nominations for members of the new Advisory Committee on Landslides, mandated by the Landslide Preparedness Act of 2021. Members will be drawn from state and local geological organizations, research institutions, standards organizations, and emergency management agencies. Nominations are due Nov. 20.
Know of an opportunity for scientists to engage in science policy? Email us at fyi@aip.org.
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