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Nobel Prize Winning Physicist As Energy Secretary 498

bledri writes "Officials close to the Obama transition team say that Physics Nobel Laureate Steven Chu is the likely candidate for Energy Secretary. Some are worried that Chu is not politically savvy enough, but I'm hopeful that a scientist will base policy on evidence. Discuss among yourselves."
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Nobel Prize Winning Physicist As Energy Secretary

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  • Terrible Idea (Score:4, Interesting)

    by capt.Hij ( 318203 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:01AM (#26073135) Homepage Journal
    Just because someone is a great scientist does not mean the person is a good administrator or a good politician. The sad truth is that politicians will not care if he has a Nobel Prize and will think nothing of tearing him down for no reason other than they can. Everybody has limitations, and it would be better to get someone who can listen to scientists and engineers and also be a great administrator.
    • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Nerdfest ( 867930 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:03AM (#26073149)
      It's dangerous to tear down someone who is vastly smarter than you, especially when they're right about something. The danger of doing it may temper some of the sillier political games.
      • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

        by gravesb ( 967413 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:11AM (#26073201) Homepage
        Not really. Someone without political savvy won't see the games until it is too late. I hope that he does well, and that his experiences encourage this kind of meritocracy in the future. However, it is far easier to appoint a technocrat to the cabinet position and surround him with brilliant academics. Let them provide him with the best courses of action, and let him go through the stupid political games to accomplish those. Of course, that requires a president who is willing to force their secretaries to listen to the academics. But if you are willing to appoint an academic to a cabinet post, then surely you are willing to make a cabinet secretary listen to his advisors.
        • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Interesting)

          by sam0vi ( 985269 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:54AM (#26073485)

          it is far easier to appoint a technocrat to the cabinet position and surround him with brilliant academics

          And that's exactly what they are doing. It's just that the technocrat in this case would be the President, and the academics would be his staff, whose primary goal is to advise him. How far along the chain of command do you want to place the smart guys? Down on the basement? Don't forget they are just coming with the ideas; every single decision is the President's.

          • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:4, Interesting)

            by gravesb ( 967413 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @09:00AM (#26073529) Homepage
            There is too much for the president to handle for him to be in that role. That's why they created cabinet positions, OPM, and the like. The executive branch is too large for the president to be the main political player. Besides, you need someone playing the political games when the President is doing figure head stuff. Someone with some savvy needs to be down in the weeds why the president is glad-handing.
            • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

              by blind biker ( 1066130 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @10:14AM (#26074229) Journal

              There is too much for the president to handle for him to be in that role. That's why they created cabinet positions, OPM, and the like. The executive branch is too large for the president to be the main political player. Besides, you need someone playing the political games when the President is doing figure head stuff. Someone with some savvy needs to be down in the weeds why the president is glad-handing.

              You just described the vice president. And never was this description best fitted than in this case, with the VP being more experienced than the president himself.

              I completely support the appointment of a Nobel laureate scientist to important govt positions. The problem is not the scientist's lack of political experience, the problem is the system - which is not just broken but fetid-rotten.

              • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

                by lysergic.acid ( 845423 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @01:59PM (#26077699) Homepage

                well, part of the reason it's broken is because we have career politicians/lawyers/corporate executives running everything. i think one of the smartest moves made by India as a society was to elect a scientist as president. and while that may never happen in the U.S., having science-related cabinet positions filled by scientists is the next best thing.

                in itself this may not fix all of the problems inherent to our political system, but it will at least put people who have some intelligence & integrity in positions of power. also, by putting policy decisions in the hands of scientists/academics rather than conventional politicians, you introduce the possibility of change/reform for the first time. otherwise, if every government official fits the same mold of the archetypal politician you're just setting yourself up for more of the same.

                the idea that someone needs to be a career politician who knows how to "play political games" in order to be a good politician is patently false. you might need to be experienced in making backroom deals, giving kickbacks, pandering to interest groups, etc. in order to sleaze your way up to the top in politics, but if someone is simply being appointed straight to the top, then that clearly isn't requisite anymore. and in this case it would indeed be better to appoint a non-politician who hasn't been corrupted by years of being in Washington (and political fund-raising) and will not compromise their morals so easily.

            • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

              by docgiggles ( 1425995 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @11:02AM (#26074871)
              I think that having a scientist rather then an administrator is key for change in the Obama administration because it shows that people who actually know their fields will be chosen to lead them. Also, as a Nobel winner, he has been proven to be extremely intelligent and a good choice
          • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Informative)

            by tnk1 ( 899206 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @03:40PM (#26079499)

            Lets be clear here, the Cabinet secretaries are not the "advisors" of the President in any way but as a formality. The functional component of their advisory role is presenting reports compiled by their subordinates.

            Additionally, Secretaries are not simply responsible to the President, they are also confirmed by the Senate and they will frequently be called afterwards to give testimony to Congress.

            These people are executives in their own right running large government bureaucracies. That is a huge reason why the corporate executives that many love to hate frequently end up in charge of Cabinet departments. Their past experience is often just as applicable, and possibly more applicable to the realities of running a department.

            There is no reason to believe that a Nobel laureate cannot run such a department, and many such scientists do go on to run large research projects with a decent number of colleagues and staff, but the point is entirely valid that you do need a skillset beyond sheer research ability to be a cabinet secretary.

            Indeed, the true answer to most of the dreams of those who would try and see science be less politicized would probably be someone with the skills of a consummate bureaucrat whose one necessary redeeming quality is the faith in the well-researched reports of his expert scientist subordinates. This individual would then have the savvy to get that report into the hands of the president and get him to act on its well-researched recommendations. The individual would also have the ability to cause the bureaucracy to actually carry out the President's and his intent.

            It is possible that in 1789, one man in the Secretary of State or Treasury or Energy (had it existed then) would have been selected and useful for his own knowledge and skills rather than bureaucratic finesse or political adeptness. That is not the case today and it is important for people to bear that in mind.

            Don't forget they are just coming with the ideas; every single decision is the President's.

            No. No. No. Not in the slightest. I'd be surprised if the president makes more than 2% of the actual decisions that operate the government. If you think he does, please obtain a copy of the National Budget and try and read it and understand every page of it before the next budget is released. And I mean the proposed budgets, not the ones that are adopted AFTER Congress gets its hands on it.

            The President sets policy, just as any executive does, but he can only act on the information he is given, he only has so much time in a day to make decisions, and he simply has no way to adequately supervise the people who implement his desires.

            The cabinet secretaries make *real* decisions every day, just as real and important as the President's, if perhaps more limited in scope. The President can order whatever he likes, but he can't do it himself. He can't even give orders to the military unless they are passed through the Secretary of Defense to the unified Combatant Commanders. There are probably huge swaths of governmental actions that a president technically controls that he doesn't even think about more than once a month. Who is making decisions independently in that time? The cabinet secretaries and undersecretaries.

        • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Stormy Dragon ( 800799 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @10:10AM (#26074183)

          With no offense to Steven Chu, this sort of post is why I have to hope his time as the Secretary of Energy goes very poorly. The idea that there is one correct policy and that all we need to do is get a scientist smart enough to tell us what Science says that is come from a gross misunderstand of the nature science.

          Any real policy involves trade offs between what's best for a large number of different groups, each of which has different needs, goals, tolerance for risk, etc. Deciding how to make those tradeoffs and select who's interests take priority in any given situation is largely subjective. While science can help determine how feasible a given proposal is (and even then, it's more in the realm of engineering than science), it's silent on which solution is best.

          The general public needs to get over its delusion that scientists are some sort of priesthood that exists to tell them The One True Way and save them the trouble of having to understand issues well enough to make their own informed decisions about what is best.

          • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Wonko the Sane ( 25252 ) * on Thursday December 11, 2008 @10:17AM (#26074265) Journal

            The general public needs to get over its delusion that scientists are some sort of priesthood that exists to tell them The One True Way and save them the trouble of having to understand issues well enough to make their own informed decisions about what is best.

            Mankind needs to get over its delusion that some sort of priesthood exists to tell them the One True Way.

          • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Palpitations ( 1092597 ) * on Thursday December 11, 2008 @11:08AM (#26074979)

            Any real policy involves trade offs between what's best for a large number of different groups, each of which has different needs, goals, tolerance for risk, etc. Deciding how to make those tradeoffs and select who's interests take priority in any given situation is largely subjective. While science can help determine how feasible a given proposal is (and even then, it's more in the realm of engineering than science), it's silent on which solution is best.

            I'd like to direct you to Dr. Chu's opening speech [youtube.com] from UC Berkeley's California & The Future of Environmental Law & Policy event. While 45 minutes is far too short to go over everything (and far too long for a crowd that almost never bothers to RTFA), he addresses some of the points you make. This is from back in 2005 or so, I gather, but it's clear he has a good grasp on the challenges and potential solutions to be found. I can only imagine that he's refined his positions and proposals since then, but is the first related thing I found when I looked this morning. There's probably something more recent and relevant out there.

            In any case, I applaud this choice. It sure beats the venture capitalist/CEO/treasury wonk we've got now (in his credit, he does have an Sc.D. in chemical engineering - but it seems like he's never used it, preferring to go into the financial sector instead). Before him, we had a law professor. Before that, someone who studied French/poli-sci/foreign affairs. Before that, another lawyer. I'm sure you get the idea... There has never been someone with anywhere near his credentials appointed to the job.

          • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:4, Insightful)

            by radl33t ( 900691 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @12:07PM (#26075851)
            You hope the government fails because of a slashdot comment? Let me get this straight then, you want to "teach" the general public a lesson that scientists are fallible. In order to do this, you call for the failure of US energy policy through 2012. Nice plan.

            You're deeply confused. "science" isn't going to make any decisions. Steven Chu is going to make decisions. From all accounts, he's a capable guy. I'll take someone with roots in physical science, a clear understanding of numbers, and the ambition to get stuff done over a clueless political gamesman any day of the week. I find irony in your description of "real policy" , as it sounds very similar, from my experience, to a description of "real research."
          • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

            by orielbean ( 936271 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @12:12PM (#26075923)
            So you think a politician is better equipped to weigh long-term decision making in the realm of science, vs a scientist who might possibly understand the language, risks, methodology used in describing potential crises and future developement? Good luck with that. That's where we are today - crippled by the religion of politics where only the loudest hungry voice or needy lobbyist is heard. God forbid a person with knowledge earned is asked to weigh evidence and drive policy.
          • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

            by DragonWriter ( 970822 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @01:35PM (#26077267)

            With no offense to Steven Chu, this sort of post is why I have to hope his time as the Secretary of Energy goes very poorly. The idea that there is one correct policy and that all we need to do is get a scientist smart enough to tell us what Science says that is come from a gross misunderstand of the nature science.

            I think its more likely that Steven Chu was chosen to head the Department of Energy because he is an effective current administrator of a major Department of Energy research facility who, in that role, has done lots of work (including establishing partnership with outside entities) on policy issues that are important to the President-Elect than because the President-Elect views scientists as a mystical priesthood and Chu as the priest most in touch with the deity "Science".

            Chu is a Nobel laureate, but he's not just a Nobel laureate.

      • by Throtex ( 708974 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @09:39AM (#26073809)

        Just because you can split the atom of a molecule doesn't mean you can lead the nation with a microphone.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by tehcyder ( 746570 )

        It's dangerous to tear down someone who is vastly smarter than you, especially when they're right about something

        I've always found it much more dangerous tearing down stupid people, they're less likely to worry about the rights and wrongs of an argument and much more likely to take it personally.

    • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:04AM (#26073161)

      Just because someone is a great scientist does not mean the person is a good administrator or a good politician.

      Out of curiosity; do you think current politicians make good politicians?

    • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:04AM (#26073169)
      So you'd prefer to see yet another career politician shoe-horned into a job which they are barely qualified to understand? I'd much rather see people who understand the implications of their policies. It's time to end the idiocracy and get on with fixing things.
    • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Informative)

      by Sockatume ( 732728 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:11AM (#26073205)
      He's director of Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, a 4000-staff, 1000-student (ish) research facility with a half-billion dollar budget. I'd say he's got the "administrator" part down.
      • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

        by stephanruby ( 542433 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:33AM (#26073341)
        Plus he's got a Nobel prize. Do you realize how many scientists want that prize? I say that's his political qualification right there.
    • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Jugalator ( 259273 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:12AM (#26073211) Journal

      Everybody has limitations, and it would be better to get someone who can listen to scientists and engineers and also be a great administrator.

      So you mean this one can't?

      Just because scientists can be poor politicians, it doesn't mean all are, and this bright guy could just maybe have skills in both departments. These are things they may have found out before moving their eyes to this guy. I'm far from certain Obama in person looked at Nobel prize winners and said "Hey, let's try this guy!"

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Joebert ( 946227 )
      That's Obamas job.
    • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:39AM (#26073373) Homepage

      Just because someone is a Administrator or politician does not mean they are a GOOD administrator or GOOD politician.

      After seeing the corrupt and just plain old EVIL members of the senate and house, let along cabinet positions. If he does his job honestly he will be better than those that were in the position for the past 8 years.

      Cripes we have people in other countries comparing Dick Cheney to Saddam Hussein. And from some of his actions, I dont think a great scientist will have any problem doing a fantastic job in that position.

      I just hope he has the intestinal fortitude to tell members of the congress and other parts of the government that they are flat out stupid when they make a suggestion that is absurd.

      • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Vellmont ( 569020 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @10:31AM (#26074451) Homepage


        Just because someone is a Administrator or politician does not mean they are a GOOD administrator or GOOD politician.

        That's true of any job. I guess I don't really understand your point. That we shouldn't assume someone we don't know will be good at a job they've never done?

        I don't know if he'll be any good at being Energy secretary. I did see him speak a couple years ago at the Nobel Conference on Energy, and he was a great speaker with very good ideas. From what I recall one of his main messages was "Fail fast", in other words try a lot of ideas and see which ones work and which don't quickly. IMO that's really _exactly_ what we need to do. I will say this though. The past Energy secretaries certainly haven't done jack-squat for energy policy in this country, and the vast majority of them were politicians. So it's not like the politicians have some great track record that Chu has to live up to.

      • by Arthur Grumbine ( 1086397 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @11:44AM (#26075527) Journal

        ...I just hope he has the intestinal fortitude...

        I would more want testicular fortitude in the candidate. Although the implication that Congress makes someone who opposes them too sick-to-their-stomach to continue is interesting...

    • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:4, Informative)

      by TapeCutter ( 624760 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:40AM (#26073383) Journal
      Contrary [bbc.co.uk] examples [wikipedia.org] everywhere [wwnorton.com]. Noteworthy scientists are used to being "torn down" and often it IS personal.
    • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Colonel Korn ( 1258968 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @10:35AM (#26074495)

      Your mistake is assuming that a great scientist isn't a great administrator. Chu has been leading LBL with incredible success for four years, and under his leadership LBL has become the most focused national lab, and that focus is on alternative energy generation and storage. I've never met anyone who had a better understanding of both the science and practicality of alternative energy than Steven Chu. Picking Chu is Obama's best choice to date.

    • Re:Terrible Idea (Score:5, Informative)

      by BenSnyder ( 253224 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @12:20PM (#26076073) Homepage

      Obama's pick to solve the energy crisis [salon.com]

      "You should interview Steven Chu," the scientist at the Joint Genome Institute in Walnut Creek, Calif., told me. "He already has one Nobel Prize. [nobelprize.org] He wants to get a second one for solving the energy crisis."

      That was two years ago, and I sorely regret not following through and landing an interview with Chu, a physicist who has dedicated his post-Nobel Prize career to the development of alternative sources of energy. Because as Barack Obama's nominee for secretary of energy, Steven Chu is going to get a chance to make his dreams come true, with the full backing of the U.S. government.

      Since 2004, Chu has served as the director of the University of California-managed Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, spearheading, among other things, a massive research effort in solar power. [nanohub.org] To get a sense of the man's interests, here's the second sentence of his bio at the LBNL Web site. [lbl.gov] (LBNL, located in Berkeley, Calif., should be distinguished from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, which does weapons research for the U.S. government.)

      Chu, an early advocate for finding scientific solutions to climate change, has guided Berkeley Lab on a new mission to become the world leader in alternative and renewable energy research, particularly the development of carbon-neutral sources of energy.

      Environmentalists and climate change activists are understandably delighted. [climateprogress.org] Consider this: For eight years the United States has boasted an Energy Department that for all intents and purposes was a subsidiary of the U.S. oil industry. Now, should he be confirmed, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist who specializes in climate change and renewable energy and already knows how to run a decent-size bureaucracy is going to be in charge of realizing Obama's bold promises to lead the United States toward an energy-sustainable future. Symbolically speaking, one would be hard put to draw a sharper contrast between the Bush and Obama eras than what is achieved by this single appointment.

      That said, Steven Chu is no stranger to Big Oil. He was instrumental in helping U.C. Berkeley land one of the biggest corporate bonanzas ever -- $500 million from British Petroleum to establish the Energy Biosciences Institute, an ambitious joint venture [salon.com] that has been controversial from the get-go at Berkeley because of its plans to use oil money to do research and development into energy crops and other biofuel wizardry.

      And, as I noted after seeing him talk in early 2007 [salon.com] at a symposium titled "Domestic Bioenergy: Weaning Ourselves From Foreign Oil Addiction," held at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, he is on record as being a bit hyperbolic as to the potential of biofuels.

      There is enough marginal, unused agricultural land in the United States to generate the biomass necessary to reach the one-third goal [of displacing annual American gasoline consumption with biofuels,] without displacing food production, said Steven Chu, the Nobel physics prize winner who runs the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. And the laws of thermodynamics won't need to be broken -- there is more than enough energy hitting the earth every day as sunlight to supply all of humanity's energy needs.

      You can find plenty of scientists who will dispute such assertions, [salon.com] right

  • Great! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by D-Cypell ( 446534 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:01AM (#26073137)

    For the first time in *at least* 8 years, I am quite jealous of you US guys. If you ask me, people in senior positions are are not 'politically savvy enough' is *exactly* what the world needs right now.

  • by circletimessquare ( 444983 ) <circletimessquar ... m minus language> on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:15AM (#26073221) Homepage Journal

    we have to move beyond coal and oil, for all of the obvious environmental and geopolitical reasons. we can't keep dumping carbon into our atmosphere, we can't keep funding saudi wahabbism, russian neoimperialism, and venezuelan blowhards. the only we are going to do this is through science

    so hopefully, we'll get the following out of washington dc:

    1. more nuclear power plants
    2. more funding for fusion research
    3. now that we have nationalized the car industry, we put a gun to the heads of the fuckers and detroit and force them to make more, cheaper electric cars. force this on them as a priority
    4. the infrastructure to allow for battery swapping nationwide

    of course, the american consumer has to be dragged kicking and screaming out of his SUV and into a post-oil and coal future. so be it. the only person who is going to be the visionary to do this is a scientist. he has plenty of support in his bully pulpit role from those of us who "get it". we finally just elected an administration it seems that also gets it

    where it= oil and coal need to go the way of history

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by zoney_ie ( 740061 )

      More fuel-efficient cars, even just to European standards, should be an initial goal. Very little needed - in fact they could start by just selling European GM and Ford models, instant plus without all the time, money, effort and energy requirements of starting from scratch with manufacture of new technology.

      The electric tech is not necessarily a great idea. The batteries and all that's involved there is a nasty messy business, not at all "eco-friendly". The electricity still has to be generated, and there'

      • but all of the downside, including what you listed above, is not as big a downside as that of oil and coal

        environment: we pollute our air
        geopolitics: we fund our enemies

        those two take the cake when compared to nuclear and electric being "messy" and all the other minor issues you list. especially regarding nuclear: lookup pebble bed reactors. we can get 10x the amount of energy out of uranium, and thorium, and produce 1/10th the waste that lasts 2 centuries rather than 10,000 years. nuclear is a no-brainer. the french and japanese have been doing it for decades, deriving most of their energy from nuclear

        the french and japanese need to show the way to americans who, like you, seem to suffer from tunnel vision. it doesn't have to be oil and coal. we are using a suboptimal source for our energy needs. all of the downside to nuclear and electric do not stack up as much as the downside of oil and coal

        and then we really need to master fusion, in a century, at least. because oil and coal sources are just going to get deeper and more expensive, and uranium and thorium sources aren't going to last forever either

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by speroni ( 1258316 )

        Ironically many of the European cars which are more fuel efficient, don't meet the American Emissions Standards, so we can't just switch it over. (Need to review the regulation at least)

        Nuclear waste isn't as large of a problem as people imagine. If you were to take all the nuclear waste from the entire history of all nuclear plants in the US and stacked them on a football field, you wouldn't even have a stack 10m high. Moving forward with reprocessing plants and such, the amount of waste is very low.

        As for

  • by jamie ( 78724 ) * Works for Slashdot <jamie@slashdot.org> on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:18AM (#26073245) Journal

    Salon has a story today on Obama's pick to solve the energy crisis [salon.com]:

    "You should interview Steven Chu," the scientist at the Joint Genome Institute in Walnut Creek, Calif., told me. "He already has one Nobel Prize. He wants to get a second one for solving the energy crisis."

    That was two years ago, and I sorely regret not following through and landing an interview with Chu, a physicist who has dedicated his post-Nobel Prize career to the development of alternative sources of energy. Because as Barack Obama's nominee for secretary of energy, Steven Chu is going to get a chance to make his dreams come true, with the full backing of the U.S. government.

    Since 2004, Chu has served as the director of the University of California-managed Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, spearheading, among other things, a massive research effort in solar power. To get a sense of the man's interests, here's the second sentence of his bio...:

    Chu, an early advocate for finding scientific solutions to climate change, has guided Berkeley Lab on a new mission to become the world leader in alternative and renewable energy research, particularly the development of carbon-neutral sources of energy.

    Environmentalists and climate change activists are understandably delighted. Consider this: For eight years the United States has boasted an Energy Department that for all intents and purposes was a subsidiary of the U.S. oil industry. Now, should he be confirmed, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist who specializes in climate change and renewable energy and already knows how to run a decent-size bureaucracy is going to be in charge of realizing Obama's bold promises to lead the United States toward an energy-sustainable future. Symbolically speaking, one would be hard put to draw a sharper contrast between the Bush and Obama eras than what is achieved by this single appointment.

    • by jamie ( 78724 ) * Works for Slashdot <jamie@slashdot.org> on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:35AM (#26073353) Journal

      And hey, here's more. I'm just 8 minutes into this talk and I'm already on his side.

      Steve Chu: A New Energy Program [fora.tv]

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:48AM (#26073431)

      Environmentalists and climate change activists are understandably delighted. Consider this: For eight years the United States has boasted an Energy Department that for all intents and purposes was a subsidiary of the U.S. oil industry. Now, should he be confirmed, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist who specializes in climate change and renewable energy and already knows how to run a decent-size bureaucracy is going to be in charge of realizing Obama's bold promises to lead the United States toward an energy-sustainable future. Symbolically speaking, one would be hard put to draw a sharper contrast between the Bush and Obama eras than what is achieved by this single appointment.

      Try to put aside your prejudices and look at the actual facts on the ground.

      If one were to draw a break between Secretaries of Energy, it ought to be drawn in 2004.

      The Secretaries under Clinton and Bush's first term -- namely, Hazel O'Leary, Federico Pena, Bill Richardson, and Spencer Abraham -- were essentially a bunch of politicians and lawyers. They had little or no scientific or engineering background, and showed little interest in any matters far beyond politics or big business.

      But the current Secretary of Energy, Sam Bodman, was a professor of Chemical Engineering at MIT. As a chemical engineer, his work had much to do with the practical side of energy technology. He's done a good job during the last four years.

      Steven Chu is a Nobel prize winning physicist whose best known work is a technique for the supercooling of gases. As Director of LBNL, he must also have picked up quite a lot of administrative experience and political savvy.

      They are both much more qualified and capable than their pre-2004 predecessors.

      • by Shag ( 3737 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @10:51AM (#26074737) Journal

        the current Secretary of Energy, Sam Bodman, was a professor of Chemical Engineering at MIT. As a chemical engineer, his work had much to do with the practical side of energy technology. He's done a good job during the last four years.

        I agree; Bodman is no dummy. But practically speaking, he's spent very little time working in science, and almost all of that before 1970. From 1971-2004, he was working in finance - heck, he did a stint as Deputy Secretary of the Treasury! It's good to be well-rounded and all that, of course...

    • by Colonel Korn ( 1258968 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @10:39AM (#26074553)

      Note that national labs didn't have anything like the focus on renewable energy that Chu created at LBL until he did that a few years ago. This man is a very effective politician, a great scientist, and a real visionary.

  • by Mutatis Mutandis ( 921530 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:20AM (#26073255)

    Chu must have reasonable political skills, as he the director of the Berkeley Lab, an organization with 4000 people and a budget of half a billion. The management of a scientific organization of this nature is usually quite challenging, if only because many of the people employed by it are (necessarily) independent-minded and headstrong. There is more back-stabbing in academic labs than in Washington DC.

    Putting a scientist in charge of energy policy is a good idea. A factually justified, realistic energy policy is urgently needed.

    Besides, during the last few years people in the public research departments have been demoralized by a political leadership that made it clearly felt that it couldn't care less about scientific data and factual reality. The DoE needs a leader who has the confidence of its staff. Chu could be that leader.

  • Entitlement (Score:3, Interesting)

    by unlametheweak ( 1102159 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:35AM (#26073355)

    Some are worried that Chu is not politically savvy enough

    Politically savvy people don't make good politicians or bureaucrats, but unfortunately that's what they usually become.

    Let's hope this is an appointment and not a popularity contest. If he's smart and he has the entitlement to succeed then things may go well.

  • Great news (Score:4, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 11, 2008 @08:52AM (#26073471)

    This is great news coming from an administration that chooses people based on competence rather then connections and theocratic similarities.

    The current buddy-buddy system got the US in the biggest hole in over 3 decades ( we may even have to go back a century ).

    I admit I don't know too much about the apointee but winning a Nobel in Physics is not a small feat and indicates a factual based personality, which is exactly what we MUST have right now, and something that we always should have in any higher position.

    There is hope ...

    • Re:Great news (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Notquitecajun ( 1073646 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @09:33AM (#26073755)
      Wait, what? Most of Obama's appointments are Clinton retreads or Chicagoland pols. Chu is one of the first appointments that more or less goes with the whole "change" mantra.
      • Re:Great news (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ratnerstar ( 609443 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @10:29AM (#26074405) Homepage
        Speaking purely for myself, the "change" I was looking for when I voted for Barack Obama was a shift towards competence and practicality in government. I want Obama to choose the best -- the smartest, the most savvy, the most accomplished, the hardest working -- people to help him lead the country, and I don't give a damn whether they used to be in the Clinton administration.

        When I look at his appointments so far, I see three extremely respected economists, an absolutely superb and forward thinking Defense Secretary, a Nobel laureate for Energy, a woman with international recognition and appeal for State, a HHS secretary with a record of working for universal health care, and a tough bastard as CoS to push the agenda through. That's what I want.

        I don't know what change you were looking for, but I'm happy.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          "Change" I thought wasn't going to be the old-style politics of the left during the Clinton era. Real, complete change would have been bringing in people with little to no experience in Washington politics. All I see are the same old Democrats.
          • Re:Great news (Score:4, Insightful)

            by ratnerstar ( 609443 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @10:59AM (#26074845) Homepage

            So what you really want is the illusion of change. You want to see new faces, but don't care what actually gets accomplished. As for me, I want competent people who know how to get things done. I want action to meet the serious challenges this country faces.

            You're entitled to your opinion, of course. But given the record high approval ratings we've seen for the Obama transition, I'd say most Americans see things my way.

  • by DustyCase ( 619304 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @09:12AM (#26073599)
    An anonymous source says that Chu has solved the pickle matrix, and has made significant progress on the rebigulator. DOE should be a piece of cake.
  • by CFBMoo1 ( 157453 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @09:13AM (#26073607) Homepage

    Obama has impressed me and I hope he keeps going. I am worried, I just know Rod Sterling is waiting to spring the gotcha on everybody and that Twilight Zone music will crank up.

  • by Phoenix666 ( 184391 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @09:21AM (#26073669)

    He also has a Nobel prize and has become a moral authority on climate change and energy ever since his film, "Inconvenient Truth." He has deep experience in government and has done extensive thinking about energy and environmental policy. In short, he both knows what he's talking about and can get things done.

    Perhaps Chu has that, too, but his lack of name recognition will constrain his effectiveness.

    • by Shag ( 3737 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @10:42AM (#26074601) Journal

      He also has a Nobel prize and has become a moral authority on climate change and energy

      I saw Al Gore speak less than 2 hours ago (at Polska Akademii Nauk, introducing a presentation by Wieslaw Maslowski, an expert on the arctic ice cap) and during his remarks, he repeatedly pointed out that although he's worked to improve his understanding of things, he is a layman. Yes, he has a Nobel prize - but it's the Peace prize, not one in the sciences. That makes him a moral authority, but not a scientific authority, as he isn't a scientist.

      There is no doubt in my mind that he's a brilliant politician and policy guy, and great at raising public awareness, but I'm sure all the scientists at the numerous Department of Energy labs will be happier with Chu in charge.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by pipatron ( 966506 )

      He would possibly have been a better pick, but he didn't want the position.

  • by glaswegian ( 803339 ) * on Thursday December 11, 2008 @09:48AM (#26073915)
    Looks like they did a lot of research to narrow down that Energy secretary short list. Arnie the actor, Colin the military guy (or the football player? [wikipedia.org]) or a Nobel prize winning energy scientist. I dunno, my my gut feeling is to go with the Nobel prize scientist, but then I don't have much political savvy...
  • by liegeofmelkor ( 978577 ) on Thursday December 11, 2008 @11:52AM (#26075629)

    Wait, has anyone on this forum ever talked to Nobel Laureates in any sciences? Or read about them?

    The vast majority (I'd ballpark it at 80% from completely non-scientific, anecdotal experience) of Nobel Prize winners IN SCIENCE are ego-driven megalomaniacs that are addicted to prestige and influence (since salary rarely goes into 7 digits for professors, its rarely the largest motivator). As such, they've dedicated their lives to feeding their addiction, working their way up from assistant professor to Director of [Weighty Gov. Funding Cash Cow], and navigating the political landscape comes as easily as breathing.

    This is no surprise. In nearly any field, there are many more workers whose merit-based achievement qualifies them for advancement than open positions for advancement, so its the self-promoters who actually land the boss's job. Sometimes the value of the work is so strong it outweighs political maneuvering, but its the exception more than the rule. The fact is, every year there are a very limited number of Nobels to hand out, and MANY researchers who have done science of a caliber to deserve them.

    The fact that Chu has a Nobel AND is a Director of a Gov. Cash Cow should indicate strongly enough his political experience. The only question remaining is whether he can transplant himself into a wholly new network of players in the politic game.

    P.S. I've met Chu. He's a nice guy, and from my inexperienced scientist viewpoint, he's got what it takes to play with the big boys in Washington.

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