Obama Budget Increases Funding for Energy Research and Nuclear Power

The Obama administration would like to see more nuclear power plants, among other forms of new electricity generation














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Under the administration's request, funding for ARPA-E would be pulled out of the Office of Science and funded separately.

The Office of Science would also see a significant jolt in funding under the president's request. The administration would provide the office, which operates the bulk of DOE's research and development programs as well as 10 of the nation's 17 national laboratories, with $5.12 billion, an increase of about 4.5 percent over fiscal 2010 appropriated levels.

Contributing to that boost is a $226 million increase in basic research and laboratory funding.

A program funding basic energy research would get a 12 percent boost over fiscal 2010 appropriated levels to discover new ways to produce, store and use energy. The $1.8 billion request for basic energy sciences would support fundamental research as well as two innovative programs championed by Chu: the energy frontier research centers and energy "innovation hubs."

In its funding request for fiscal 2010, the administration called for funding eight hubs in various energy and engineering disciplines, but Congress provided appropriations for three. The request for fiscal 2011 does not specify whether the additional six hubs should be funded.

Renewable energy

As with the overall DOE budget, the administration is asking Congress for a 5 percent increase for the energy efficiency and renewable energy section of the budget.

The requests reflect a sharp turn toward Democratic-favored sources of energy such as wind and solar and energy-saving methods such as weatherization. Those increases come at the expense of the George W. Bush administration's favorites like hydropower and hydrogen.

Weatherization programs are the biggest winner. The administration sought $385 million, an 83 percent increase from the $210 million that Congress approved last year.

The request for wind power jumped 54 percent, from $80 million last year to $123 million this year. The administration also wants a big boost in solar programs, seeking a hike from $225 million last year to $302 million this year, which would be a 34 percent increase.

The budget proposal recommends a 21 percent cut for the hydrogen technology program, taking it from $174 million to $137 million. But that is not unexpected.

President George W. Bush had made the idea of hydrogen cars the centerpiece of his renewable energy and energy independence plans. But the Obama administration essentially sought to nix the program. It requested zero dollars for the hydrogen program and suggested limiting research to nonvehicle fuel cells.

The Senate did not share the same disdain and put $190 million in the bill. In conference, lawmakers settled on the $174 million figure.

Hydropower, a favorite of Western developers, would also take a cut if Obama gets his way. The administration is seeking to slice the program's funds from $50 million to $41 million, a 9 percent cut.

The administration's 2011 budget also includes $500 million to cover initial fees, or "credit subsidies," to support the $3 billion to $5 billion in loan guarantee authority for energy efficiency and renewable energy projects.


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  1. 1. JamesDavis 03:16 PM 2/2/10

    Give President Obama a little time and he just might be able to pull us out of the Bush disaster.

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  2. 2. Tom O H 03:41 PM 2/2/10

    I m just waiting for the greenies to jump in here and start complaining that "nuclear is not the way to go" and we should all be using solar power and riding bicycles blah blah blah.....

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  3. 3. DarthSensate 04:33 PM 2/2/10

    I would like to see the Thorium LFTR type technology pursued. I was under the impression that, aside from the corrosive salts and plumbing issues, the tech was fairly well tested and feasible.

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  4. 4. Chryses 06:49 AM 2/3/10

    As the President is advocating an increase in nuclear generated power, he might have waited until after an alternative waste repository had been selected before terminating the current effort.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  5. 5. JamesDavis in reply to Chryses 07:54 AM 2/3/10

    Chryses: If the President wants the new technology used in the nuclear reactors, they will use spent nuclear waste from the old reactors and emmit hardly no spent waste.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  6. 6. Soccerdad 07:58 AM 2/3/10

    He may be advocating an increase in nuclear power by his words, but he doesn't actually want an increase in nuclear power. It's just a bone to the right to coax them to go along with his mostly ill conceived energy ideas., like government investment in money losing technologies.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  7. 7. Chryses in reply to JamesDavis 08:15 AM 2/3/10

    JamesDavis,

    A big 'if'.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  8. 8. Chryses in reply to Soccerdad 08:17 AM 2/3/10

    Soccerdad,

    You can, of course, sunstantiate your claim?

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  9. 9. dbakerpe 08:25 AM 2/3/10

    DOE has a terrible track record at picking research projects that become economical technologies. Better to just cut taxes on energy companies and let them use the money for R&D.

    The only thing holding up nuclear energy is the defacto 'no risk' regulations enforced by the NRC. Since it is impossible to produce electricity without risk, they won't permit any new plants. The only reason you need loan guarantees is to cover the risk of the government changing the rules during construction, which NRC almost always does.

    The TMI event and full scale core melt experiments DOE did in the '80's proved that the huge offsite consequences previously assumed are impossible. NRC's authority to make hugely expensive regulations needs to be repealed in favor of an insurance system covering the consequences that are actually possible. Then loan guarantees aren't needed.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  10. 10. wamcconnell 11:12 AM 2/3/10

    Obama is the most anti-science president since William Henry Harrison. While SciAm was screeching and gnashing teeth over W's science policy, you headlined this story "Obama Budget Increases Funding for Energy Research and Nuclear Power" to mask that this president is chopping away at science with a broad ax. Maybe someday SciAm will return to the fold of Science instead of political posturing.

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  11. 11. coco77 03:28 PM 2/3/10

    �Way to go? If numbers in the article are OK, then the total budget is 54 BIllon. Nuclear alone gets 26 Billon, almost 50% and all other technologies will have to share the leftovers. Last year wind alone added 10GW to the system, menwhile nuclear has not added a sigle MW in more than 25 years. �Where is that money going?

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  12. 12. sethdayal 09:59 PM 2/3/10

    Loan guarantees are paid for by the industry at rate set by the GAO based on cost. Their value is a few hundred million, sort of like your uncle signing on your loan. After Shoreham where a Greenpeace sponsored village selectman ten miles from the plant was able to cancel the license for a just built nuke plant, no investor will trust the Nuclear Rejection Commission.

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  13. 13. Ghandhi 10:46 PM 2/3/10

    Hello Tom O H... seems your part of the problem... Green is not the way to go according to your expertise? What is wrong with being able to someday end the need for nuclear power. The huge wasted dollars could easily be used to get rid of this home based threat. $36 billion towards solar and wind technology per year would out do nuclear.

    Obama, the USA has been about it's economy for some time... giving breaks and hand outs to the wealthy. Any buisnessman, investor or real estate agency knows that when the econemy is down that is when to buy, build or invest. What a nation should be doing is looking ahead... is the existing infrastructures up to par... is the existing road/rail system and the countless vehicles adequately engineered to it's optimum... where are the high speed trains in this equation ( they are better suited to mass transportation than airlines if done right )? Nuclear < Green...

    Where are your people who can puzzle together how things are done now, what is being researched or already achieved globaly today, pulling ideas and people from varios walks of life together using a common sence approach for better long term planning...

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  14. 14. Georgy 07:31 AM 2/4/10

    It is possible to respect the USA for such activity in search of breaches of clean energy. We can give such technological help and be the participants of such breach. It we already worked out and can offer technology of receipt of clean energy and small reconstruction small resources.
    Academician G.Z.

    >6=> C2060BL !( 70 B0:CN 0:B82=>ABL 2 ?>8A:0E ?@>@K2>2 G8AB>9 M=5@388. K <>65< 40BL B0:CN B5E=>;>38G5A:CN ?><>IL 8 1KBL CG0AB=8:0<8 B0:>3> ?@>@K20. -B> <K C65 @07@01>B0;8 8 <>65< ?@54;>68BL B5E=>;>38N ?>;CG5=8O G8AB>9 M=5@388 =51>;LH8<8 @5AC@A0<8 8 <0;>9 @5:>=AB@C:F88.
    :045<8: G.Z.

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  15. 15. Soccerdad in reply to Chryses 09:34 AM 2/4/10

    Chrysis,

    One cannot substantiate a claim about another's true intent until after the fact. We can examine Obama's record of honesty in past claims to predict the likelihood of making good on present claims.

    He said he was going to accept public funding for his presidential campaing.
    He later declined public funding so he was free to spend more.

    He derided Hillary for proposing an individual insurance mandate and ran attack ads claiming that he would not support such a thing.
    He supported an individual mandate in both the House and Senate bills.

    He cut a deal with big pharma and insurance companies to partially protect them if they did not oppose his healthcare takeover.
    He later reneged on the deals and heaped more taxes on these industries than promised.

    He promised to broadcast healthcare negotiations on CSpan
    He declined to push for the broadcast of the White House / congress negotiations. These were held in private despite a request from CSpan to be admitted.

    He promised a new tone in Washington and pledged to work with the other party to get things done.
    He has not spoken to the House Minority Leader in over a year.

    These are just a few examples of promises made which he did not even try to honor. They were simply words to get what he wanted. I think nuclear will be the same. He'll use it to pick off a few republicans, then will find an excuse later to continue blocking nuclear.

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  16. 16. lakota2012 in reply to Soccerdad 01:20 PM 2/4/10

    Soccerdad:
    "He may be advocating an increase in nuclear power by his words, but he doesn't actually want an increase in nuclear power."
    -------------------------

    Chryses:
    "Soccerdad, you can, of course, sunstantiate your claim?"
    -------------------------


    Yep...just more partisan politics and propaganda without any substance -- still making unsubstantiated claims!


    A nuclear power plant design invented at Argonne National Lab 24 years ago has none of the drawbacks of conventional nuclear plants

    One of our country's leading experts on global warming, Jim Hansen, recently re-discovered the IFR. Those who have been briefed on the IFR believe it is an essential technology we must develop to combat climate change and should be restarted immediately. This led to Hansen including restarting 4th generation nuclear power as one of his 5 top priorities for President Obama (see the bottom of page 7 in Hansen's Tell Barack Obama the Truth -- The Whole Truth).

    Energy Secretary Chu, the President of MIT, and the renewable experts at the most recent Aspen Institute Energy Forum all agree that it is not responsible to believe that you can solve the climate crisis without nuclear.

    http://skirsch.com/politics/globalwarming/ifr.htm



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  17. 17. Wayne Williamson 08:17 PM 2/4/10

    Nice article Kate,Katherine,Jenny and Mike...Its nice to see someone(s) do a good summarization of a pile of papers;-)

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  18. 18. spacer 11:35 PM 2/4/10

    In Canada it is more difficult to get funding. The Government makes money on selling oil from the tar sands.
    So, the discovery of tapping power out of the aether, like Tesla did for his Pierce Arrow Car in 1931 ( and what the Flying Saucers do), has not got a chance in hell to be developed here even though the patents have been granted. The system could also have been used for real spacecraft.

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  19. 19. Georgy 04:46 AM 2/5/10

    A mister Obama sees the prospect of energy correctly. We have также- warm a reactor on a cluster fuel is consonant with atomic technology. Without extrass in an atmosphere and radiation contamination. It economic advantageously and ecologically clean energy. It is jointly possible quickly to realize such projects small resources.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  20. 20. Georgy 04:57 AM 2/5/10

    A mister Obama sees the prospect of energy correctly. We have также- warm a reactor on a cluster fuel is consonant with atomic technology. Without extrass in an atmosphere and radiation contamination. It economic advantageously and ecologically clean energy. It is jointly possible quickly to realize such projects small resources.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  21. 21. elderlybloke 04:30 PM 2/7/10

    Hello wamcconnell,

    How can you deprive George Bush of that well deserved title.
    Mr. Obama seems to live in the real world and not in some strange theological parallel universe.

    ps . I do not live in the USA,so I am not politically motivated.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  22. 22. eco-steve 02:49 PM 2/16/10

    What about the economics of this decision.
    If the reactor uses safe technology it won't be economical.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
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