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] He is currently the Director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, a position that he has held since the start of August 2004.[2] Since his appointment Chu has repeatedly emphasized the reality and potential severity of human-induced global warming.

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]

Joint Project with BP

As the director of the Energy Department-funded Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Chu helped broker the creation of the Energy Biosciences Institute, with $500 million in funding over ten years from BP. The institute includes the LBL, the University of Illinois and the University of California Berkeley. A LBL media release explained that "as part of its continuing drive to find longer term commercial alternatives to oil and gas, BP announced in 2006 that it would invest $500 million over the next ten years to establish the Institute, the first public-private institution of this scale in the world. The Institute’s emphasis on new fuels meshed with UC Berkeley’s and Berkeley Lab’s research aims to develop sustainable sources of energy and Illinois’ efforts to develop biofuel feedstocks. The three formed a strategic partnership to submit a proposal to BP, which was selected in February 2007 from among five international proposals."[3]

The project was Chu pitched BP's deal to the UC-Berkeley Academic Senate, one-third of whose members voted against it. Chu also promoted the institute on campus, saying "money" was the only reason more biofuels research wasn't already underway. The university's compromise agreement gave BP half of the seats on the board governing the institute. As Energy Secretary, Chu will likely "face pressure to partner with corporations in pursuing technological solutions to climate change," notes Harkinson in Mother Jones. "As the incoming Obama administration prepares to spend liberally to develop cleaner sources of energy, the structure of corporate-government partnerships will determine how the profits of that research return to taxpayers, and how rigorously scientists evaluate the downsides of controversial technologies such as biofuels."[4]

In an opinion column in the San Francisco Chronicle Chu and the chancellor of UC Berkley, Robert J. Birgeneau, defended the deal: "In these partnerships, universities must protect the academic integrity of faculty. The terms of the partnership must be based on fundamental principles that allow for open and timely dissemination of research results. Agreements must respect our primary commitment to the education of our students, and support our ability to make research results available for public benefit in a diligent and timely manner. The contract with BP for the EBI, which is being drafted for approval this summer, will meet these requirements. ... Faculty who mistrust industrial partnerships should not be allowed to block other faculty who want to partner with industry," they wrote.[5]

They proclaimed that it would "serve as a model for large-scale academic-industry partnerships that will play an increasingly important role in solving the major global problems of the 21st century."[5]

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".[6]
  • July 21, 2005: "The overwhelming consensus among atmospheric scientists is that the earth is warming up, and the mostly likely cause is our emission of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide. In the last 140 years, the average temperature of the Globe has warmed up by ~ 1.2° F. Since 1860, 19 of the 20 warmest years have all occurred since 1980; the 11 warmest years occurred all since 1990. 1998 was the warmest year in the instrumental record, and probably the warmest in 1,000 years. 2002 was the second warmest year."[7]
  • July 21, 2005: "Because of global warming, I stress that we have to find sources that do not add more CO2 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."[7]
  • July 21, 2005: "Unfortunately, there appear to be no magic bullets to solve the energy problem. While efficiencies play a huge role in defining how much energy we consume, we must also develop a diversified portfolio of investments to develop sustainable, CO2-neutral sources of energy."[7]
  • July 21, 2005: "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."[7]
  • July 21, 2005: "Beyond nuclear energy, our most likely option is solar energy, such as solar cells and wind. Modern wind generation is becoming economically competitive, but it cannot supply the majority of our energy needs. Photovoltaic generation needs improvement in cost and/or efficiency by a factor of 5 -10 before large-scale deployment can occur. If generation of electricity via wind or photovoltaics is to become major fraction of our energy portfolio, it will be essential to develop efficient methods to convert electricity into stored energy that we can use on demand. We must do more research into the conversion of electrical energy into chemical energy so that we can produce electricity on demand."[7]

Articles and Resources

Related SourceWatch Articles

References

  1. Jump up to: 1.0 1.1 Barack Obama, "President-elect Barack Obama announces key members of energy and environment team", Media Release, December 15, 2008.
  2. "Director Announces New Berkeley Lab Senior Management Team", Media Release, February 22, 2005.
  3. "Energy Biosciences Institute Begins Ground-Breaking Research Into New, Cleaner Sources of Energy", Media Release, November 13, 2007.
  4. Josh Harkinson, "Is Steven Chu BFF With BP?", Mother Jones, December 18, 2008.
  5. Jump up to: 5.0 5.1 Robert Birgeneau and Steven Chu, "On Our Energy Future: UC-BP partnership offers path to energy independence", San Francisco Chronicle, April 15, 2007.
  6. Steven Chu, ""Biological Solution to the Energy Crisis", Lecture at Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial Hall, Taipei, Taiwan, July 8, 2005.
  7. Jump up to: 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 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

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