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Remarks by Dr.
Raymond L. Orbach
Director, Office of Science
U.S. Department of Energy
on behalf of the U.S. Government
to the International Press Corps
at the ITER Agreement Initialing Ceremony
Brussels, Belgium
May 24, 2006
As you may know, fusion energy is an important
component of the President’s Advanced
Energy Initiative, given its potential to become
an attractive long-range option for the U.S.
clean energy portfolio. The Department of Energy’s
Fusion Energy Sciences program also contributes
to President Bush’s American Competitiveness
Initiative, which commits the Administration
to doubling Federal spending on the most critical
basic research in the physical sciences over
the next decade.
ITER is a Presidential Initiative that ranks
number one on the U.S. Department of Energy’s
list of approximately 30 large-scale research
facilities for the future, and the Bush Administration’s
commitment to ITER and basic scientific research
is unwavering.
As we mark the transition from negotiation
to execution of the ITER Agreement, I would
like to take a minute to reflect on how important
this international fusion research effort is.
The ITER Agreement, which had its origins in
diffusing international conflict of the second
half of the 20th Century, will likely be an
important milestone for peace and prosperity
in the 21st Century and beyond.
ITER was first officially proposed at the U.S.-USSR
Geneva Summit in November 1985, when it was
recognized that joint activities were needed
that would help defuse the tension of the arms
race of the Cold War. Upon his return from Geneva,
President Reagan told the American people that,
“…as a potential way of dealing
with the energy needs of the world of the future,
we have…advocated international cooperation
to explore the feasibility of developing fusion
energy.” Immediately following the standoff
over nuclear disarmament at the Reykjavik U.S.-USSR
Summit in October 1986, a proposal to implement
the concept of a fusion experimental research
facility was made and led to the 1988 start
of the ITER Conceptual Design Activities.
President Reagan sent a message to the United
States Congress that remains true to this day.
He said, “It is becoming increasingly
important that we all reach beyond our borders
to form partnerships in research enterprises.
There are areas of science, such as high energy
physics and fusion research, where the cost
of the next generation of facilities will be
so high that international collaboration among…nations
may become a necessity. We welcome opportunities
to explore with other nations....” On
behalf of President Bush, the United States
Government, and its citizens, I would like to
reaffirm our desire to work with the international
community on this and other important research
projects.
We are about to converge, from a rich spectrum
of talent and perspectives, on an unprecedented
scale, for the betterment of the world in which
we live. It is quite striking that, through
our multilateral framework, more than half of
the global population will be supporting an
international team of some of the world’s
finest scientists, engineers—even a few
policymakers—working in unison toward
a common research goal.
My colleagues at the Department of Energy in
Washington, DC have a favorite saying about
the importance of basic research to creating
transformational solutions to the problems facing
humankind. We like to remind each other that
“the transistor was not developed through
continuous improvement of the vacuum tube.”
While we are working to make existing energy
technologies cleaner and more efficient, we
must find entirely new methods to put power
on the grid for inventions—like the transistor—that
elevate the human condition.
ITER has the potential to free the quickly
growing global economy and population from the
looming constraints of decreasing energy supplies
and the unfortunate effects of environmental
degradation.
It is for these reasons of international peace,
prosperity, and environmental security that
President George W. Bush led the United States
to once again participate in ITER. As you may
know, President Bush recently announced plans
for the United States Government to double its
strategic financial commitment to the most critical
basic research programs in the physical sciences
over the next 10 years and to pursue radical
new technologies for the secure utilization
of environmentally sound and economically efficient
energy sources.
As we now complete the signing of the ITER
Agreement, the United States thanks our international
partners for their strong and continued leadership
on this important multinational endeavor at
the forefront of science, and looks forward
to the collaboration itself as well as the benefits
of our shared labor.
Thank you.
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