Last month, a subcommittee of the U.S. House of
Representatives quietly voted to gut funding for the U.S. Department of
Energy’s (DOE’s) efforts to promote innovative energy research. The DOE’s Advanced
Research Projects Agency – Energy (ARPA-E) was first on the chopping block. The
subcommittee voted to slash its funding from the current level of $252 million
to just $50 million—an 80% cut. On top of that, the subcommittee cut funding
for the DOE’s work on renewable energy in half.
ARPA-E was created by the 2007 America COMPETES Act,
signed into law by then President George W. Bush. The agency is modeled after
the successful Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)—credited for
transformative innovations like GPS and computer networking. ARPA-E is intended
to facilitate small government grants for basic research into transformative
energy technologies that are too risky for the private sector. Since its first
funding allocation from the Obama administration in 2009, ARPA-E awardees have
already doubled the world-record energy density for a rechargeable lithium-ion
battery and pioneered a near-isothermal compressed air energy storage system.
ARPA-E’s numerous success stories and proven funding model
have given it a measure of bipartisan support. ARPA-E is a major component of
the Obama administration’s push for clean energy jobs, drawing high praise from
Vice President Biden. Notably, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney agrees
with the administration on this point: “Government has a role to play in
innovation in the energy industry. History shows that the United States
has moved forward in astonishing ways thanks to national investment in
basic research and advanced technology.” In addition to Romney, other key
Republican lawmakers have voiced support for ARPA-E: Senator Lisa Murkowski of
Alaska and Senator Lamar Alexander of Tennessee both spoke at ARPA-E’s annual
summit in February. Considering the fact that ARPA-E has already attracted over
$450 million in private sector funding, its bipartisan support should come as
no surprise.
This recent move to axe clean energy funding does nothing to truly address
our budget woes and hurts our footing in the international race towards a clean
energy future. As President Obama laid out in his landmark speech on climate
change, it is time for Americans to come together and create a smart, clean,
low-carbon economy that protects future generations from the threat of climate
change. Programs like ARPA-E provide the vital funding needed to see innovative
energy technologies through to commercialization.
Now is not the time to cut these vital programs. We must continue supporting
clean energy research and inspiring the next great generation of scientists and
engineers.
Source: http://blogs.scientificamerican.com
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