Steven Chu

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Steven Chu: Photo by Roy Kaltschmidt courtesy of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
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Steven Chu has been appointed by President-elect Barack Obama as Energy Secretary in his administration.[1]

Background

A biographical profile distributed by the Obama transition team stated that Chu is "director of Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, and professor of physics and molecular and cellular biology at University of California, Berkeley. Winner of the Nobel Prize for physics in 1997, Dr. Chu served on the technical staff at AT&T Bell Labs (1978 –1987) and was a professor in the Physics and Applied Physics Departments at Stanford University (1987 – 2004). One of the world's most distinguished scientists, Dr. Chu commands deep respect from his peers, deftly manages a complex governmental organization, and has a keen sense of public service. He successfully applied the techniques he developed in atomic physics to molecular biology, and since 2004, motivated by his deep interest in climate change, he has transformed the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab into a broad and innovative research program on energy technologies. He has a BS in physics from the University of Rochester and his Ph.D from UC-Berkeley."[1]

Notable Quotes

  • July 8, 2005: "We think energy efficiency and conservation can reduce consumption by as much as a factor of 5, but the final problem remains: we have got to stop the Co2 emissions".[2]
  • July 21, 2005: "Because of global warming, I stress that we have to find sources that do not add more CO 2 into the atmosphere. Because of this requirement, I have great concern over new investments in conventional coal-burning plants. There is a potential that carbon sequestration will allow us to convert coal into syngas (mostly carbon monoxide and hydrogen) and then capture and sequester CO 2 by-products under ground, but this technology is not yet proven. While we investigate the feasibility of this approach, we should look at other alternatives." [3]
  • "Fission energy has significant issues: long term waste storage and the potential proliferation of nuclear weapons materials. Despite these issues, it needs a second look, especially if radioactive waste can be greatly reduced by recycling and burning down long-lived radioactive products into shorter-lived waste without the separation of plutonium. People are now beginning to talk about reducing the amount of waste by a factor of at least a factor of 10- 20 and reducing the storage time to 1000 years instead of several hundred thousand years."

Articles and Resources

Related SourceWatch Articles

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Barack Obama, "President-elect Barack Obama announces key members of energy and environment team", Media Release, December 15, 2008.
  2. Steven Chu, ""Biological Solution to the Energy Crisis", Lecture at Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial Hall, Taipei, Taiwan, July 8, 2005.
  3. Steven Chu, "Synopsis of a Commonwealth Club Speech given on July 21, 2005", Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory website, accessed January 2009.

External Articles

Biographical notes

U.S. Senate Confirmation Hearing

Speeches, Articles and Interviews with Chu

General Articles


[1]

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  1. Steven Mufson and Philip Rucker, "Nobel Physicist Chosen To Be Energy Secretary: Browner, Two Others to Get Climate Posts," Washington Post, December 11, 2008.