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November 10, 2003
Energy Secretary Spencer
Abraham Announces Department of Energy 20-Year
Science Facility Plan
Sets Priorities for 28 New, Major
Science Research Facilities
WASHINGTON, DC – In a speech at the National Press
Club today, U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham outlined
the Department of Energy’s Office of Science 20-year
science facility plan, a roadmap for future scientific
facilities to support the department’s basic science
and research missions. The plan prioritizes new, major
scientific facilities and upgrades to current facilities.
The 28 facilities cover the range of science supported
by the DOE’s Office of Science, including fusion
energy, materials science, biological and environmental
science, high energy physics, nuclear physics and advanced
scientific computation.
“This plan will be the cornerstone
for the future of critical fields of science in America.
These facilities will revolutionize science –
and society,” said Abraham. “With this plan
our goal is to keep the United States at the scientific
forefront.
“These facilities are needed
to extend the frontiers of science, to pursue opportunities
of enormous importance, and to maintain U.S. science
primacy in the world. Investment in these facilities
will yield extraordinary scientific breakthroughs –
and vital societal and economic benefits.”
The Office of Science priority list
for new facilities will help the department plan its
potential future scientific investments. The list identifies
12 facilities as near-term priorities. Priority one
is ITER, an international collaboration to build the
first fusion science experiment capable of producing
a self-sustaining fusion reaction, called a “burning
plasma.” Priority two is an UltraScale Scientific
Computing Capability, to be located at multiple sites,
that would increase by a factor of 100 the computing
capability available to support open scientific research.
Four facilities tied for Priority
three: the Joint Dark Energy Mission, a space-based
probe, being considered in partnership with NASA, designed
to understand “dark energy” which makes
up more than 70 percent of the universe; the Linac Coherent
Light Source that would provide laser-like radiation
10 billion times greater in power and brightness than
any existing x-ray light source; a Protein Production
and Tags Facility that would mass produce and characterize
tens of thousands of proteins per year; and the Rare
Isotope Accelerator that would be the world’s
most powerful research facility dedicated to producing
and exploring new rare isotopes not found naturally
on earth.
Six other facilities complete the
near-term priorities. Eight facilities are identified
as midterm priorities and eight as far-term priorities.
“This list of 28 facilities outlines to an important
extent the future of science in America – and
indeed the world,” Abraham said. “These
facilities cover the critical areas where discoveries
can transform our energy future, boost economic productivity,
transform our understanding of biology, and provide
revolutionary new tools to deal with disease.
“They can make major and
necessary contributions to national security –
and give us the ability to understand matter at its
most fundamental level.”
“At each stage along the process of discovery,
America’s economy grows stronger, with new tools
to improve human health, generate new industries, improve
our everyday lives, or boost efficiency – the
things that help give our nation its competitive edge,”
he added. “And we need science to maintain that
competitive edge – especially in high technology,
which every day becomes more central to our economy.”
DOE’s Office of Science prepared
the list over the last year with input from the scientific
community, DOE laboratories and advisory committees.
In brief, Office of Science program managers first identified
46 facilities they believed are required for world scientific
leadership over the next 20 years. Six independent advisory
committees reviewed the facilities, recommended 53 facilities
for construction and assessed each according to two
criteria: scientific importance and readiness for construction.
Dr. Raymond L. Orbach, director of the Office of Science,
prioritized the facilities across the scientific disciplines.
While it is the department’s intent to give priority
to these facilities, many steps need to occur prior
to deciding whether and when to propose construction.
These include, long-term budget estimates, project research
and development, conceptual design work, engineering
design work and scientific reviews. In addition, potential
funds for the facilities need to be identified within
the President’s budget priorities, and any proposed
projects would obviously be subject to congressional
approval.
A number of the facilities would
be located at DOE national laboratories because they
are upgrades to existing machines. The locations of
the remaining facilities would be determined through
site selections open to laboratories and universities.
Throughout its history, DOE’s
Office of Science has designed, constructed and operated
many of the nation’s most advanced, large-scale
research and development user facilities, of importance
to all areas of science. These state-of-the art facilities
are shared with the science community worldwide and
contain technologies and instruments that are available
nowhere else. Each year, these facilities are used by
more than 18,000 researchers from universities, other
government agencies, private industry and foreign nations.
The Spallation Neutron Source, scheduled to be completed
in 2006, is the last, large-scale DOE user facility
under construction.
A document describing all 28 facilities
and the prioritization process, Facilities for the Future
of Science: A Twenty-Year Outlook, is available at www.sc.doe.gov.
Secretary Spencer Abraham's speech
Media Contact(s):
Jeff Sherwood, 202/586-5806
Number: R-03-262
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