Congress, just in one a generation, represents a valuable open door to help Yankees seriousness and success. Moon. In its fast-paced history, the U. is not lacking in meaningful mechanical achievements. More importantly, this multitude of achievements traces its foundations to extensive government funding.
Congress provides guidance to expand during this legacy by reviving the agencies'
responsibilities for developing seriousness. The Senate passed the US Competition and Innovation Act (USICA) (68 - 32) in Gregorian calendar month
2021 and with it the House of Representatives to the United States. COMPETE Act of 2022 (America COMPETE) in February 2022. A package of seriousness should have a major impact in maintaining the Extrude environment by birthing and rejuvenating
fundamental tasks in marketing, building and protecting the search community, which together create a great Achieving a form of simple electricity, power provide substantial dynamic
advances.
As Congress works to reconcile the House and Senate
bills, BPC recommends the following bipartisan provisions be included in the
final bill:
·
Native Clean Energy Innovation Program (Sec.10642 of
America COMPITE)
·
• Institution for Energy Security and Innovation (Sec.2528 of
USICA und Sec.10751 of America COMPITE)• Boost Technology Transfer (America COMPETES Title VI, Subtitle C)
·
• Strong Popularity of DOE Sports to Boost Key Regions for Innovation (USICA Sec. 2117 and America COMPETES Redivision B, Title I)
Increasing innovation, invention, and
entrepreneurship in a diverse array of regions
Clean
energy investments can create economic opportunities for Americans, in addition
to significant climate benefits. However, these opportunities will only be
realized if energy and climate programs are designed at the onset with the
intention of benefitting the American people. Currently, innovation is
concentrated in just a few key cities – a 2019 report co-authored
by Brookings and ITIF finds that from 2005 to 2017, just five metro areas
accounted for more than 90% of the nation’s innovation sector growth. As we
consider how to improve the nation’s competitiveness, Congress should ensure
that Americans across the country benefit from the wealth creation, economic
development, and employment opportunities that such investments are certain to
bring.
In the final legislation, Congress
should include the Regional Clean Energy Innovation Program (Sec. 10642 of
America COMPETES), a bipartisan provision that would authorize
DOE to invest in regions across the country to promote innovation clusters
dedicated to making the important advances needed in clean energy.
Building
on existing federal programs that support commercialization
Nonprofit energy foundation
Expansion of development, creation and operation in one of the districts are showcase projects. The clean energy companies are
starting to open doors for the Yankees, but the big environmental benefits. The first is to support the American public. Modernization is currently only being tapped in one of the city's key areas: a 2019 record of
, written jointly by Brookings and ITIF, shows that from 2005 to 2017 only five underground areas have grown more
than 90%. the improvement of the developing region of the country.As we recall the simplest way to work in the country's intensity, Congress must ensure that the country's Americans favor the country's wealth creation, economic turn of events, and open doors to business that such projects will certainly will
bring. Completion of the ordinance will require Congress to incorporate the Regional Clean Energy Innovation Program (Sec.10642 of
America COMPETES), a bipartisan partnership that will authorize DOE to allocate resources in over
districts across the country to encourage development groups that are
devote to the necessities of life -great advances in simple electricity. Rise of
grant agency apps to support development Greater coordination, through a nonprofit
energy foundation, will ensure that the most promising U.S. energy technologies
receive robust funding and support to make their way to market. Our nation
needs solutions in technologies spanning from carbon capture systems, to
long-duration energy storage, to clean hydrogen, to advanced nuclear reactors,
and so much more, to address climate goals. DOE has the experts who understand
the ins and outs of our nation’s energy system and what technologies are needed
to fulfill our long-term strategy for achieving net-zero emissions. The private
sector understands the commercial market, customer needs, and what technologies
are most likely to succeed financially. Both sets of expertise are needed. A
nonprofit foundation will enable this collaboration while sidestepping the
inevitable bureaucracy of the federal government.
Commercialization
programs
A competitiveness bill presents a
significant opportunity to supercharge DOE commercialization programs by
supporting and expanding programs housed under the OTT. This small but mighty
office, with a budget of $20 million in fiscal year 2021, has significant
potential to disrupt our nation’s commercialization landscape. Congress should
include Energizing Technology Transfer provisions (Division B, Title VI,
Subtitle C of America COMPETES) to help unlock the
commercialization of critical technologies relevant to DOE’s broad mission and
bolster public-private partnerships with DOE national labs through greater
support for OTT programs. This includes programs to:
- foster
interest in commercialization in undergraduate students, building an
entrepreneurial pipeline of diverse thinkers,
- make it
easier for entrepreneurs and small businesses to utilize DOE national lab
facilities and equipment, allowing our nation’s inventors access to
world-class, multi-million-dollar scientific facilities, and
- support clean
energy incubators and accelerators across the nation, providing essential
services to early-stage companies and entrepreneurs to help strengthen
innovation ecosystems across the nation.
Investing
in a variety of technology sectors
One
of the cornerstones of both the House and Senate bills is advancing U.S.
competitiveness in ‘key technology focus areas’, including in artificial
intelligence and machine learning, quantum information science, high
performance computing, advanced manufacturing, and biotechnology. The DOE’s
Office of Science is leading the nation in investments in these key areas
through partnerships with universities, the national labs, and the private sector.
A few examples are listed below:
- High-performance computing: The DOE’s
national labs are home to several of the world’s fastest computers,
which frequently beat international competitors in Japan and the China as
new computers are brought online on a periodic basis. The DOE Office of
Science collaborates with private sector
companies to develop and build these supercomputers.
- Biotechnology: The DOE
Office of Science has a long history of investing in biotechnology
and bioscience, including in genomics, structural biology, and
bioimaging. Notably, the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines developed
to combat the COVID-19 virus trace their origins to experiments performed
on equipment at DOE’s Argonne National Lab.
- Quantum Information Sciences
(QIS): The DOE Office of Science oversees the nation’s
five National QIS Research Centers.
Through this national network housed at DOE national labs and U.S.
universities, DOE is poised to establish the world’s first quantum internet.
Growing these existing DOE programs with
a greater focus on public-partnerships could rapidly accelerate
commercialization of these key technologies. DOE has several programs to
support industry-specific public-private partnerships, such as through the DOE Energy
Innovation Hubs and Manufacturing
USA Institutes, which bring together key stakeholders from industry,
academia, and the national labs to advance technologies from the earliest
stages of research to the point of commercialization. As the federal agency
that spearheaded the commercialization of solar power and wind power, DOE knows
how to do this, and with additional authorization, DOE can do this again. Final
legislation should authorize DOE to invest in commercialization of the key
technology areas (Sec. 2117 of USICA) and basic research
in these key areas (Sec. Division B, Title I of America COMPETES) that are
essential to our nation’s competitiveness.
Conclusion
We
are at a critical moment in US future. Congress can pass legislation that would
secure America’s place on the global innovation stage for years to come. The
bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act showed the American people
that Democrats and Republicans can come together to make investments in
critical infrastructure and clean energy and essentially put a down payment on
accelerating our fight against climate change. Getting a bipartisan
competitiveness bill to the President’s desk would expand the federal tools
available to effectively develop and commercialize clean energy technologies
while securing U.S. leadership, security, and prosperity.
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