AGU offers ethics framework for geoengineering research
The American Geophysical Union released a framework last week proposing ethical principles for geoengineering research. Geoengineering, also known as climate intervention, involves large-scale attempts to alter the climate system with the purpose of countering global warming. The unintended consequences of large-scale deployment are largely unknown and any research into it must be grounded in sound ethical principles, the report states. The key principles emphasize responsible assessment of physical, environmental, and social consequences of the research and propose that potentially impacted groups be included in the discussion of the purposes and design of the research. Other principles include making funding and research processes transparent and requiring approval from an independent body for technologies with significant risks. The framework intends to encourage more global engagement around governance and practice of geoengineering research, the report states.
Lawmakers seeking details on US isotope supply risks
The House Energy and Commerce Committee is asking the Government Accountability Office to study the U.S. isotope market’s reliance on Russia. In a letter to GAO last week, committee leaders highlighted the Department of Energy’s efforts to develop domestic isotope production but lamented that the U.S. still depends “nearly exclusively” on Russia for 44 isotopes used in industrial and medical applications, citing testimony from 2022. The letter also notes that new DOE facilities intended for isotope production are still being designed or are under construction, with the Stable Isotope Production and Research Center at Oak Ridge National Lab not expected to start production until 2032. Specifically, the letter asks GAO to identify which isotopes are currently produced by DOE and determine what mitigation plans DOE and NNSA have in place in the event of a shortage.
GAO last reviewed DOE’s isotope program in 2012, but that review predominantly focused on problems with DOE’s pricing formula for selling isotopes. The report made passing reference to the fact that DOE purchased some isotopes from Russia, but it predated the sharp deterioration in U.S.-Russia relations stemming from events such as Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and 2022 invasion of Ukraine. In their letter, committee leaders noted that DOE is seeking a large increase for its isotope program in its latest budget request.
NSF commission shares ideas to improve merit review
A commission formed to assess the National Science Foundation’s process for reviewing grant applications shared its preliminary implementation guidance during a meeting last week. The commission, created in 2022, represents the first comprehensive review of NSF’s merit review process in more than a decade. While the commission has indicated that NSF’s processes for reviewing research applications are of a high standard, its guidance includes calls for greater transparency and increased training for reviewers and program officers, particularly in relation to the “broader impacts” criterion that NSF uses to assess how a research proposal might benefit society. The committee also suggests that NSF create an internal repository of solicitation-specific guidance to help identify common themes and terminology across NSF funding opportunities, require more regular reporting from awardees on criterion specific outcomes, and work to develop NSF-wide mechanisms to ensure safe and inclusive research environments. The commission’s final recommendations and implementation guidance will be shared with NSF’s governing board in December and considered for final approval by the board in February.
National Semiconductor Technology Center targets AI, sustainability for initial funding
The National Semiconductor Technology Center released a strategic plan last week that identifies three research areas for initial funding, centering on efficient and environmentally friendly chip designs. These include using AI to automate radio frequency circuit design, developing standardized test vehicles for materials and devices, and prototyping ways to destroy per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in manufacturing. These topics were chosen for the initial “Jump Start” award program to maximize engagement across the semiconductor ecosystem, the plan states. It also names energy efficiency using large language models and sustainability as potential areas to frame the NSTC long-term research agenda. Aside from research, the plan also outlines steps to bolster prototyping and the workforce for the U.S. semiconductor industry.
Also on our radar
- The President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology will meet Friday to consider approving reports on networking R&D and groundwater as well as a letter to the president on the “value of federal research and development.”
- NSF’s Mathematical and Physical Sciences Advisory Committee will meet Thursday and Friday to discuss EPSCoR funding, AI institutes, and research security, among other topics.
- The National Institute of Standards and Technology’s main advisory committee will meet Tuesday and Wednesday to discuss safety and AI work at NIST, global standardization, and the CHIPS Metrology Program, among other topics.
- A group of 82 Nobel Prize winners signed an open letter endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris for president last week. Eighteen of the signatories won the prize in physics.
- The former director for basic research at the Department of Defense, Bindu Nair, moved to the Department of Energy this month to lead its Office of Basic Energy Sciences.
- The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s former chief scientist, Sarah Kapnick, has returned to JPMorgan Chase to be the bank’s global head of climate advisory.
All events are Eastern Time unless otherwise noted. Listings do not imply endorsement. Events beyond this week are listed on our website.
Monday, October 28
DOD/Commerce: Annual Microelectronics Commons meeting and National Semiconductor Technology Center Symposium (continues through Wednesday)
LPI: Lunar Exploration Analysis Group annual meeting (continues through Wednesday)
National Academies: A science strategy for the human exploration of Mars (continues through Wednesday)
National Academies: Increasing diversity in the US ocean studies community, meeting three (continues Tuesday)
APS: The American Physical Society: Origins and adolescence
11:00 am
NASA: Earth Science Advisory Committee meeting
12:00 - 1:30 pm
RFF: Environmental justice in regulatory decision making
12:00 - 3:15 pm
National Academies: Committee on Law and Justice meeting
12:30 - 5:00 pm
Tuesday, October 29
NIST: Visiting Committee on Advanced Technology meeting (continues Wednesday)
Wilson Center: 2024 Canada-US Legal Symposium: AI regulation, governance, and liability
9:30 am - 2:00 pm
National Academies: Supporting family caregivers in STEMM: Graduate students and post-doc caregivers webinar
12:30 - 2:00 pm
SSURF: Equitable and effective peer review at user facilities
1:00 pm
CSIS: Quad Cancer Moonshot Initiative: Strategic US-Japan health strategy cooperation
1:00 - 2:00 pm
Hudson Institute: Advancing joint experimentation to solve operational problems
1:00 - 3:00 pm
BIS: Sensors and Instrumentation Technical Advisory Committee meeting
1:00 - 3:30 pm
ANS: State of Nuclear
3:00 - 4:00 pm
Wednesday, October 30
NASA: Planetary protection in advance of human missions virtual workshop (continues through Friday)
Wilson Center: Nuclear strain: Looking back at Brazil-US nuclear diplomatic relations
11:00 am - 12:30 pm
FLC: Identifying market opportunities for federal lab innovations
12:00 - 1:00 pm
NSF: From equity talk to equity walk, presentation by Tia McNair
12:00 - 1:00 pm
CSIS: Implementing the National Defense Industrial Strategy: A fireside chat with Laura Taylor-Kale
1:00 - 2:00 pm
APS: That’s not physics
2:00 pm
Thursday, October 31
NSF: Mathematical and Physical Sciences Advisory Committee meeting (continues Friday)
Johns Hopkins: Science and diplomacy, conversation with Stéphanie Balme
10:30 am -12:00 pm
CSIS: Staying ahead in the global technology race
2:00 - 4:00 pm
Friday, November 1
Planetary Science Institute: Making space: A workshop on space, SciArt, and society (continues through Sunday)
White House: President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology meeting
10:00 am - 2:30 pm
APS: A brief history of women in APS
2:00 pm
Politics and Prose: The hidden science of fighting outbreaks, book discussion with author Caitlin Rivers
7:00 pm
Monday, November 4
NRC: Advisory Committee on the Medical Uses of Isotopes meeting (continues Tuesday)
Hudson Institute: Navigating GPS vulnerabilities: Implications for US economic and national security
10:00 - 11:30 am
National Academies: Feasibility assessment of veteran health effects of Manhattan Project (1942-1947) - meeting seven
10:00 - 4:00 pm
APS: The American Physical Society and Cold War political activism
1:00 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
◆Johns Hopkins: Director, Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory
(ongoing)
American Chemical Society: Deputy editor in chief, Chemical and Engineering News
(ongoing)
American Chemical Society: Executive editor, policy and regulation
(ongoing)
American Association for Cancer Research: Senior science policy analyst
(ongoing)
AAAS: S&T policy fellowship
(Nov. 1)
APS: Congressional fellowship
(Nov. 1)
NRC: Director, Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research
(Nov. 7)
NSF: Deputy director, Electrical, Communications & Cyber Systems Division
(Nov. 8)
USGS: Science publishing network manager
(Nov. 11)
◆DOD: Director, Basic Research
(Nov. 12)
Library of Congress: Analyst in science and technology policy
(Nov. 12)
AIP: Congressional fellowship
(Dec. 1)
NSF: Office head, Office of International Science and Engineering
(Nov. 11)
Optica: Congressional fellowship
(Jan. 3)
STPI: Science policy fellowship
(Jan. 6)
AGU: Congressional fellowship
(Jan. 15)
Solicitations
FAS: Call for policy ideas for new administration, Day One Project
(ongoing)
◆National Academies: Call for experts for project on AI foundation models for scientific discovery
(Oct. 31)
◆Natcast: Request for nominations, Workforce Advisory Board
(Nov. 1)
USGCRP: RFC on the first National Nature Assessment
(Nov. 4)
Commerce: RFC on export controls for advanced technologies
(Nov. 5)
DOE: RFI on the Frontiers in AI for Science, Security, and Technology (FASST) initiative
(Nov. 11)
EPA: Request for nominations for Local Government Advisory Committee
(Nov. 14)
National Academies: Call for experts for study on workplace barriers, solutions, and policies for STEM professionals and students with disabilities
(Nov. 15)
NSF: RFI on research ethics provision in the CHIPS and Science Act
(Nov. 15)
NOAA: RFC on petition for rulemaking regarding weather modification activities
(Nov. 19)
DOD: RFC on rule requiring public access to results of federally funded research
(Nov. 25)
EPA: RFC on new technologies for quantifying facility methane emissions
(Nov. 27)
DOJ: RFC on National Institute of Justice draft public access plan
(Nov. 29)
NIST: RFI on safety considerations for chemical and/or biological AI models
(Dec. 3)
NIST: RFI on implementation of the National Standards Strategy for Critical and Emerging Technology
(Dec. 9)
USGS: RFC on draft chapters of the Biodiversity and Climate Change Assessment
(Dec. 16)
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
E&E News: National security adviser rails at low US science investment
FedScoop: OSTP director renews calls for more NAIRR, AI R&D funding
E&E News: White House working to create ‘critical minerals marketplace’
Business Insider: America’s chipmaking push will continue no matter who gets elected
Nature: The world needs a US president who respects evidence
(editorial)
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: An existential timeline of the Trump/Pence and Biden/Harris presidencies
(editorial)
CNAS: Sanctions by the numbers: Comparing the Trump and Biden administrations’ sanctions and export controls on China
(report)
Planetary Society: Space in the 2024 elections
The Guardian: What’s at stake for the climate if Trump wins?
(audio interview)
E&E News: How Trump 2.0 and Project 2025 could reshape chemical rules
Congress
House CCP Committee: TSMC chips to Huawei ‘a catastrophic failure of export control policy’
IEEE Spectrum: This startup shows why the US CHIPS Act is needed
(perspective by Samuel Moore)
American Nuclear Society: US lawmakers look to simplify export control to grow international nuclear partners
House Energy and Commerce Committee: Republicans release report detailing HHS’ failed COVID-19 public relations campaign
E&E News: Democrats call for hearings on hurricane misinformation
E&E News: Conservative Climate Caucus chair in danger of losing race
Science, Society, and the Economy
The Information: New rules for US tech investments in China under final review
Bloomberg: US extends 25% chip tax credit to wafers, including solar
NASA: NASA’s economic impact in 2023
(report)
Wall Street Journal: Boeing explores sale of space business
NSF: NSF advances 71 teams spanning nearly every US state and territory in the second Regional Innovation Engines competition
Science: Can science and Islam coexist? A chemical engineer–turned–theologian sees common ground
Education and Workforce
AAAS: Multidisciplinary working group: Empowering career pathways in STEMM
(report)
Nature: How I’m learning to navigate academia as someone with ADHD
(perspective by Ana Bastos)
American Nuclear Society: NNSA funds projects to expand MSI Partnership Program
E&E News: EPA issues guidance to staff facing violence, threats
Research Professional: One in three UK research supervisors feel ‘undervalued’ by university
Research Management
Retraction Watch: eLife latest in string of major journals put on hold from Web of Science
Nature: Journals with high rates of suspicious papers flagged by science-integrity start-up
Nature: Exposing predatory journals: Anonymous sleuthing account goes public
Retraction Watch: Reflecting on research misconduct: What’s next for the watcher community?
Scholarly Kitchen: Scholarly publishing: The elephant (and other wildlife) in the room
(perspective by Haseeb Irfanullah)
Chemical & Engineering News: Monitoring the papers that are fed to AI
Research Professional: Academies call for EU-wide rules on sharing publications
Science|Business: European universities are taking control of academic patenting
Research Professional: Australian chief scientist’s open-access proposal falls flat
Labs and Facilities
National Academies: Failure and collapse of the Arecibo Observatory telescope assessed by new report
Chemical & Engineering News: Can researchers use AI to take microscopy to the next level?
Research Professional: French research vessel gets ready to break the ice
Idaho National Lab: States moving toward advanced nuclear with boost from Idaho National Lab
Symmetry: An interactive map of the 17 national labs across the US
Research Professional: Progress hailed in tri-border bid for Einstein Telescope
Computing and Communications
Physics Today: Physics, AI, and the future of discovery
GAO: Generative AI training, development, and deployment considerations
(report)
Science|Business: AI tops €550M digital R&D agenda in Horizon Europe, leaked document shows
HPCwire: PNNL-Microsoft collaborate on cloud computing for chemistry, more to come
NASA: NASA chief AI officer on the Federal Executive Forum: How agencies are strategizing about AI
FedScoop: National Archives getting a big boost from AI to transform its search capabilities
The Information: How AI dealmakers are sidestepping regulators
(perspective by Stephanie Palazzolo)
University World News: Global university leaders flag dangers of AI access gap
Space
Space.com: Budget woes and aging infrastructure will force NASA to make tough choices, report says
SpaceNews: NASA delays decision on Chandra and Hubble cuts
NASA: NASA funds open-source software underpinning scientific innovation
SpaceNews: US eases export rules for space tech, but high-resolution radar satellites remain under tight control
Space Review: Weighing overall societal benefit: Case studies on deciding when to deorbit satellites (part 1)
NASA: NASA reveals prototype telescope for gravitational wave observatory
STPI: Trends in Russian space development
(report)
SpaceNews: Venus atmosphere sample return noted in China’s long-term space science roadmap
Reuters: Moon sample talks show space engagement by rivals US and China
Weather, Climate, and Environment
Science: ‘Daunting’: Hurricane-battered researchers assess damage from Helene and Milton
E&E News: NOAA does damage control on wild conspiracies about hurricanes
AP: Russia amplified hurricane disinformation to drive Americans apart, researchers find
Washington Post: Why more billion-dollar disasters like Helene and Milton are happening
E&E News: UN tells world: Keep it up, and 1.5 degrees ‘will be dead’
New York Times: The ‘greenest governor’ fights to save a landmark climate law
New York Times: Can biological engineering change the world?
Science: Twenty years of microplastic pollution research — what have we learned?
E&E News: DOE finalizes $162 million loan guarantee for monitoring methane leaks
E&E News: DOE awards $518 million for CO2 storage projects
Energy
Wired: A high-profile geneticist is launching a fusion-power moonshot
E&E News: US shale production may decline for first time since 2000
MIT: Study: Fusion energy could play a major role in the global response to climate change
Science News: Tech companies want small nuclear reactors. Here’s how they’d work
Power: What are microreactors and how soon could we see one in operation
FedScoop: Energy Department is looking at using AI to help with its nuclear accelerators
Nature: Will AI’s huge energy demands spur a nuclear renaissance?
E&E News: DOE announces green manufacturing funds for former coal communities
E&E News: Study reveals vast amounts of lithium in Arkansas
Defense
DefenseScoop: DOD braces for time, scale needed to modernize defenses against quantum hacking
Nature: Consider the ethical impacts of quantum technologies in defense — before it’s too late
(perspective by Mariarosaria Taddeo, et al.)
Breaking Defense: DOD, SBA announce first group of funds for small business investments to shore up tech innovation
Export Compliance Daily: Industry urges BIS to scale back, clarify proposed end-user controls
Financial Times: China’s Hesai to sue Pentagon after being reinstated to blacklist
Biomedical
Vanity Fair: Inside the bungled bird flu response, where profits collide with public health
The Guardian: Doctors trial world’s first mRNA vaccine against vomiting bug norovirus
Science: A scientific showdown seeks the biological ‘clock’ that best tracks aging
Issues in Science and Technology: Uncovering hidden bias in clinical research
(audio interview)
Nature: US plan to close the National Eye Institute shows faulty vision
(perspective from Stephen McLeod, et al.)
International Affairs
Nature: The US is the world’s science superpower — but for how long?
Science & Diplomacy: Science diplomacy
—
15 years on
(article collection)
Science|Business: Research commissioner designate outlines plans for Framework Programme 10
Science|Business: The Horizon papers
Research Professional: Commission launches EU-wide research data gateway
Research Professional: Danish government to invest €2 billion in green research
Science|Business: French researchers and start-ups raise alarm over spending cuts
Science: Pacific Island scientists to launch Academy of Sciences
New York Times: Russia’s warming Arctic is a climate threat. War has shut scientists out of it