Senators Pitching $12 Billion AI Initiative at DOE
The Department of Energy’s ambitions to lead a major artificial intelligence R&D initiative have gained backing from Sens. Joe Manchin (I-WV) and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), who introduced legislation last week that proposes Congress provide DOE with $12 billion over five years for AI work. A portion of these funds would go toward creating at least eight AI R&D centers at DOE national labs, with each center having a minimum budget of $30 million a year. Manchin and Murkowski are influential voices in DOE policy, as they are current and former chairs, respectively, of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. However, the current top Republican on the committee, Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY), is not a cosponsor of the bill, which suggests he has reservations about the proposal.
Clock Starts on Long-Awaited Research Security Policy
The White House released guidance last week on how major research universities will be required to maintain research security programs mandated by National Security Presidential Memorandum-33. The guidance sets minimum standards for how universities handle matters such as cybersecurity, foreign travel reporting, and staff training on research security risks. The guidance also permits agencies to implement additional requirements, for instance in response to risks posed by “improper or illegal transfer of U.S. government-supported R&D to foreign countries of concern,” defined as China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea.
Agencies now must submit their implementation plans to the White House within six months and their final policies will take effect no later than six months after that. Universities will then be required to comply with the policies within 18 months of them going into effect. University groups have generally welcomed the guidance as an improvement over the draft version released in February 2023 but note that there remain many questions over how the details will be implemented, especially given the latitude provided to agencies to add more requirements. The guidance will likely be a topic of discussion at the National Science, Technology, and Security Roundtable’s capstone workshop this Tuesday and Wednesday.
NASA Policy Bill Advances in House
The House Science Committee unanimously approved legislation last week that would broadly update policy for NASA, sending it on to the full House for consideration. The bill largely reaffirms the committee’s support for current NASA initiatives, including in the Science Mission Directorate. It states NASA “shall” pursue the Mars Sample Return mission but contingent on “the availability of appropriations,” an acknowledgment that the mission’s fate will ultimately be determined through the budget process. It also directs NASA not to take any action to reduce operations of the Chandra X-ray Observatory until the agency completes a paradigm change review, which is expected to be complete soon, and the next triennial review of extended Astrophysics Division missions, the last of which occurred in 2022. NASA has proposed to quickly ramp down funding for Chandra due to budget constraints, sparking a campaign among astronomers to save the telescope.
Also On Our Radar
- Science ministers from the G7 countries have pledged to further cooperation on research security, large research infrastructures, engagement with Africa, ocean monitoring, and emerging technologies such as fusion energy.
- Prospective bidders in the competition to manage Jefferson Lab will receive details on the process at a Department of Energy webinar on Thursday.
- The National Science Foundation’s governing board will meet next week.
In Case You Missed It
All events are Eastern Time, unless otherwise noted. Listings do not imply endorsement. Events beyond this week are listed on our website.
Monday, July 15
COSPAR: 45th Scientific Assembly
(continues through July 21)
American Astronautical Society: Glenn Space Technology Symposium
(continues through Wednesday)
Brookings Institution: How advanced technologies are reshaping manufacturing
10:00 am - 12:00 pm
Brookings Institution: Putting technology to work for inclusive prosperity: Challenges for public policy
2:30 - 4:00 pm
Tuesday, July 16
National Academies: National Science, Technology, and Security Roundtable - capstone workshop
(continues Wednesday)
National Academies: Climate Crossroads Summit 2024
(continues Wednesday)
National Academies: Optimizing the USGS Mineral Resources Program science portfolio, meeting four
(continues Wednesday)
AEI: Life after Chevron: How will Congress and federal agencies adapt?
12:00 - 3:00 pm
Hudson Institute: Leading in the cyber competition with China
1:00 - 2:00 pm
NSF: Live from the Arctic: Understanding the dynamic ocean aboard the USCGC Healy
2:00 - 3:00 pm
National Academies: Transformative science and technology for DOD, seminar three
2:00 - 4:00 pm
Wednesday, July 17
National Academies: Feasibility assessment of veteran health effects of Manhattan Project (1942-1947) related waste, meeting five
(continues through Friday)
CSIS: Project on Nuclear Issues summer conference
(continues Thursday)
NIST: Artificial Intelligence for Materials Science (AIMS) workshop
(continues Thursday)
National Academies: Sustaining community engagement in genomics research workshop
8:30 am - 3:30 pm
ANSI: Brainstorming session for critical and emerging technologies: Enabling AI and machine learning through public-private partnerships
9:00 am - 5:00 pm
DOD: Defense Innovation Board meeting
10:30 am - 1:30 pm
DOE: Industrial Technology Innovation Advisory Committee
12:00 - 5:00 pm
Thursday, July 18
National Academies: Practices and standards for plugging orphaned and abandoned hydrocarbon wells: A workshop
(continues Friday)
DOE: Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility Pre-Proposal Conference
11:00 am - 1:00 pm
CNAS: AI catastrophic risks and national security: Taking stock of perceptions and approaches
2:00 - 3:00 pm
National Academies: Quadrennial review of the National Nanotechnology Initiative meeting
3:00 - 4:00 pm
RAND: AI security: Safeguarding large language models and why this matters for the future of geopolitics
4:00 - 6:00 pm
Friday, July 19
National Academies: Aeronautics Research and Technology Roundtable summer meeting
9:00 am - 5:00 pm
CNAS: Adapting NATO’s nuclear posture to current threats
10:30 - 11:30 am
Sunday, July 21
AAPM: 66th Annual Meeting and Exhibition
(continues through July 25)
Monday, July 22
National Academies: State-of-the-science and the future of cumulative impact assessment, meeting two
(continues Tuesday)
NIST: National Artificial Intelligence Advisory Committee meeting
1:00 - 4:00 pm
Know of an upcoming science policy event either inside or outside the Beltway? Email us at fyi@aip.org.
Deadlines indicated in parentheses. Newly added opportunities are marked with a diamond.
Job Openings
◆Optica: Senior editor and content director for Optics and Photonics News
(ongoing)
AAAS: Director, Sciline
(ongoing)
NSF: Public affairs specialist
(July 17)
NOAA: International relations specialist
(July 18)
◆NIST: Senior policy advisor, National Semiconductor Technology Center
(July 18)
NSF: Director, Geosciences Directorate
(July 23)
OSTP: Spring internship
(July 26)
CRS: Research librarian for natural resources, energy, and earth science
(July 26)
DOE: Fellowship in the DOE Office of Technology Transitions
(July 26)
◆APLU: President
(July 31)
Solicitations
Issues in S&T: Survey on who does S&T policy
(ongoing)
NSF: RFC on draft South Pole Station Master Plan
(July 17)
DOE: RFI on fusion public-private partnership framework
(July 22)
OSTP: RFC on nanotechnology EHS research strategy
(July 22)
NIH: RFI on commercialization policy
(July 22)
NSF: RFI on digital twins R&D
(July 28)
NASA: RFC on biosketch and disclosure policy
(July 30)
NOAA: RFI on the NOAA Space Weather Scales
(July 31)
DOE: RFI on DOE’s Environmental Justice Strategic Plan
(July 31)
Treasury: RFC on limiting outbound investment in certain technologies
(Aug. 4)
◆USGS: Call for nominations for the Advisory Committee on Landslides
(Aug. 5)
USGS: Call for nominations for the National Geospatial Advisory Committee
(Aug. 7)
DOE: RFI on equity action plan update
(Aug. 9)
House: RFC on NIH reform
(Aug. 16)
NIH: RFI on draft public access policy
(Aug. 19)
◆NTIA: RFC on the advancement of 6G telecommunications technology
(Aug. 21)
Know of an opportunity for scientists to engage in science policy? Email us at fyi@aip.org.
News and views currently in circulation. Links do not imply endorsement.
White House
White House: OSTP Director Prabhakar represents US at G7 science and technology ministerial meeting
White House: Biden-Harris administration announces new polar icebreaker partnership alongside Finland and Canada
E&E News: White House requires infrastructure to be raised above flood levels
Nextgov: Trump pledges to ax Biden’s AI executive order
CSET: 180 days after the executive order on AI: What comes next for biotech?
Congress
Roll Call: Senate appropriators ready emergency adds to spending bills
AAS: House advances science funding and NASA reauthorization bills
E&E News: How the Chevron ruling could change Congress
Fortune: The death of the Chevron doctrine complicates US lawmakers’ efforts to regulate AI — but there’s another way
(perspective by Dewey Murdick and Owen Daniels)
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL): Republicans introduce bill to stop taxpayer dollars from going to China’s military
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX): Cruz opens investigation into big tech funding salaries of Biden administration officials using IPA program
House Science Committee: Rep. Greg Lopez (R-CO) joins the Science Committee
Science, Society, and the Economy
New York Times: Maxine Singer, guiding force at the dawn of biotechnology, dies at 93
IEEE Spectrum: Inside the three-way race to create the most widely used laser
The Conversation: Can humanity address climate change without believing it? Medical history suggests it is possible
(perspective by Ron Barrett)
The Guardian: London’s Science Museum forced to cut ties with oil giant – and faces pressure over other sponsors
GAO: Science & tech spotlight: Textile recycling technologies
Education and Workforce
Science: Court exonerates Kansas professor in China research fraud case
Science: After suspension for sexual harassment, prominent biologist’s return to campus prompts dismay
Scientific American: Molecular biologist Nancy Hopkins took on MIT for discrimination against female scientists
Nature: How PhD students and other academics are fighting the mental-health crisis in science
Nature: Canada just hiked PhD and postdoc pay — here’s how to get your country to do it, too
(perspective by Kaitlin Kharas)
E&E News: EPA, union sign contract that could protect scientific integrity
Research Management
Science|Business: European Research Council head pleads for global openness at G7 science summit
FAS: Increasing the ‘policy readiness’ of ideas
(perspective by Tom Kalil)
Issues in Science and Technology: Enhancing regional STEM alliances
(perspectives)
Washington Post: OpenAI illegally barred staff from airing safety risks, whistleblowers say
Ars Technica: Peer review is essential for science. Unfortunately, it’s broken
(perspective by Paul Sutter)
The Conversation: When scientific citations go rogue: Uncovering ‘sneaked references’
(perspective by Lonni Besançon and Guillaume Cabanac)
Labs and Facilities
American Nuclear Society: Mark Peters named MITRE president and CEO
Oak Ridge National Lab: Troy Carter to lead Fusion Energy Division at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
ESS: Warm coupler conditioning starts in the ESS Superconducting Linac
NSF: NSF announces groundbreaking Leadership-Class Computing Facility project
AGU: AGU joins letter requesting planes needed for Arctic and Antarctic research
USGS: Bill Werkheiser selected as associate director for the Water Resources mission area
USGS: 50 years of USGS headquarters building in Reston, Virginia
Chemical & Engineering News: What does the new EPA methylene chloride rule mean for academic labs?
Nature: 5 new types of gravitational-wave detectors could reshape astrophysics
Science: California Academy of Sciences reeling from budget cuts
Computing and Communications
HPCwire: Generative AI to account for 1.5% of world’s power consumption by 2029
New York Times: AI’s insatiable appetite for energy
Nature: Ex-Meta scientists debut gigantic AI protein design model
HPCwire: LANL and OpenAI partner to advance AI safety in biological threat assessments
AP: UN adopts Chinese resolution with US support on closing the gap in access to AI
E&E News: Watchdog to probe artificial intelligence at EPA
Brookings: How the National Artificial Intelligence Research Resource can pilot inclusive AI
(perspective by Jennifer Wang and Mark Muro)
ITIF: The AI Act’s AI watermarking requirement is a misstep in the quest for transparency
(perspective by Justyna Lisinska and Daniel Castro)
Export Compliance Daily: Senator presses Commerce to address China’s evasion of chip controls
C4ISRNET: Defense Innovation Unit project makes supercomputers more accessible
Space
New York Times: NASA Europa Clipper mission imperiled by chips on spacecraft
Defense News: Russia wants 2,600 satellites in orbit by 2036. Is this realistic?
Breaking Defense: Turkey launches first mostly indigenous comms satellite, could appeal to Gulf amid space push
Wall Street Journal: Is wood the secret to cleaner, greener space satellites?
Scientific American: SpaceX dropped space junk on my neighbor’s farm. Here’s what happened next
(perspective by Samantha Lawler)
AP: Why NASA astronauts are delayed at the space station after Boeing Starliner launch
Ars Technica: NASA update on Starliner thruster issues: This is fine
SpaceNews: Chinese commercial rocket firm suffers 4th launch failure
Bloomberg: It’s too early to be fighting a space race with China
(perspective by F.D. Flam)
Weather, Climate, and Environment
NESDIS: NOAA’s GOES-U reaches geostationary orbit, now designated GOES-19
USGS: Five geomagnetic storms that reshaped society
National Academies: Thriving on our changing planet: A midterm assessment of progress toward implementation of the decadal survey
(report)
HPCwire: Argonne develops new kind of AI model for weather prediction
Science: To avoid sea level rise, some researchers want to build barriers around the world’s most vulnerable glaciers
E&E News: Climate change adds new challenge to wild history of hurricane forecasts
Nature: Blowout! Satellites reveal one of the largest methane leaks on record
Chemical & Engineering News: Most solvent waste from US academic labs ends up in the air
Energy
Nature: ITER delay: What it means for nuclear fusion
Wall Street Journal: China outspends the US on fusion in the race for energy’s holy grail
Power: Group selected to develop pilot nuclear fusion plant
Undark Magazine: Radioactive real estate: Finding a forever home for nuclear waste
American Nuclear Society: Florida studying new, advanced nuclear power
E&E News: Biden signs a big nuclear bill. Can it remake the industry?
American Nuclear Society: Fast burst reactors: A historical primer
GAO: Priority open recommendations: Department of Energy
(report)
E&E News: House Republicans advance cuts to clean energy programs
E&E News: California Democrats slam Biden ‘clean’ hydrogen rules
Defense
Breaking Defense: Space now a priority for NATO leaders, Euro leaders scramble to meet threats
Science|Business: A look inside NATO’s DIANA start-up accelerator
DOD: Artificial Intelligence Defense Technical Review explores scalability and federation
GAO: Actions needed at NNSA to improve integration of production modernization programs and projects
(report)
Space Review: Remembering Starfish Prime
(perspective by Ajey Lele)
DOD: DOD announces first award for the distributed bioindustrial manufacturing program
Biomedical
Stat: Anthony Fauci on presidents, bird flu, and turning down a multimillion-dollar job
(video interview)
Stat: The untold story of the Human Genome Project: How one man’s DNA became a pillar of genetics
Stat: Five takeaways from the Human Genome Project investigation
Nature: Bird flu could become a human pandemic. How are countries preparing?
Science: Stop H5N1 influenza in US cattle now
(perspective by Nicola Lewis and Martin Beer)
Issues in Science and Technology: A road map for a new era in biology and medicine
(audio interview)
Science: International scope of biomedical research ethics review
(perspective by Mark Rothstein, et al.)
International Affairs
swissinfo.ch: CERN has not completely cut ties with Russia
AP: Scientists, a journalist, and even a bakery worker are among those convicted of treason in Russia
Wall Street Journal: The boycott against Israel is spreading into new corners of society
Science|Business: Ukraine eyes closer research collaboration with EU
Science|Business: Ukrainian researchers embrace international collaboration
Research Professional: German funders worry over country’s competitiveness
Nature: Scientists relieved by far-right defeat in French election — but they still face uncertainty
Research Professional: Labour’s victory signals a reset for research
Science|Business: Horizon Europe’s fundamental research budget will rise to €2.7B next year
NASA: NASA deputy administrator strengthens ties in Japan and South Korea
University World News: Study shows drastic decline in US-China scientific exchange
Financial Times: Chinese EV laser maker fights back against Pentagon blacklisting