Advertisement

DOE wants to become more like Bell Labs
Web edition : Tuesday, February 24th, 2009
Text Size
The leading supporter of physical science in America — the Energy Department — finances first-rate, groundbreaking basic research. Indeed, “this is absolutely one of the best things that DOE does,” crows Energy Secretary Steven Chu. However, this Nobel Prize winning physicist adds, his agency won’t win superlatives for helping translate such research into commercial developments.

Chu met, late last week, with reporters at the Platts Energy Podium, a newsmakers series in Washington, D.C.  In office only four weeks now, this former director of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory volunteers that he’s been spending “a considerable amount of time” trying to figure out how to see that industrial applications of DOE-funded research aren’t lost.

“I was at Bell Labs for nine years,” Chu notes. It was one of a handful of large, industrially funded research centers that saw the value of funding basic research to catalyze the next generation of technical advances and products. Indeed, he observes, “a lot of inventions that came out of Bell Labs actually fed the entire semiconductor industry.”

Right now, DOE’s first priority must be “focusing on economic recovery,” Chu says. But in terms of its long-term vision, “my dream would be that DOE — especially its national labs system — develop its centers of research and innovation” into something that industry recognizes and taps.
 
In fact, owing to the agency’s growing emphasis on renewables and alternative energy research, he expects DOE may soon fuel the development of “a green industry, where American has the opportunity to be a leader.”
Found in: Atom & Cosmos, Chemistry, Computers, Materials Science, Matter & Energy, Physics, Science & Society and Technology

Comments

Please alert Science News to any inappropriate posts by clicking the REPORT SPAM link within the post. Comments will be reviewed before posting.

Registered readers are invited to post a comment. To encourage fruitful discussion, please keep your comments relevant, brief and courteous. Offensive, irrelevant, nonsensical and commercial posts will not be published. (All links will be removed from comments.)

You must register with Science News to add a comment. To log-in click here. To register as a new user, follow this link.

Advertisement
Reader Favorites:
seperator
SN on the Web:
seperator