[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Skip to Main Content

Latest News

December 15, 2008
Volume 86, Number 50
p. 6

Government

Obama's Picks For DOE, EPA

DOE lab head, former New Jersey environment chief selected

Jeff Johnson

PRESIDENT-ELECT BARACK OBAMA made public several key energy and environmental appointments. Among them are Nobel Prize-winning physicist and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Director Steven Chu to lead the Department of Energy and former commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Lisa P. Jackson to head the Environmental Protection Agency.

LBNL
Chu is Obama's choice to lead the Energy Department.

Chu, 60, has been a vocal advocate for increased basic research funding and has led efforts at LBNL and in the scientific community to intensify energy and climate-change-related research. He brings strong science, research, and leadership skills to DOE, say scientists familiar with his work.

He received a doctorate in physics in 1976 from the University of California, Berkeley, conducted research at AT&T Bell Laboratories after graduation, and was a member of the Stanford University department of physics from 1987 until 2004, when he was appointed to lead LBNL. He comes from a family of scholars who emigrated from China in the early 1940s. Chu won the Nobel Prize in 1997 with a team that developed methods to cool and trap atoms by using laser light.

Jackson, 46, had been commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, where she had worked since 2002. Prior to that, Jackson, a chemical engineer, worked at EPA for 16 years.

The coalition of state environmental groups, Environment America, and its sister group Environment New Jersey backed Jackson's nomination. However, the organization Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility criticized the nomination. The group said Jackson had politicized environmental decisions and retaliated against objecting employees.

In addition to Chu and Jackson, Carol M. Browner, a former EPA head, was selected to join the next Administration. She will take a newly created White House position advising Obama on environment, energy, and climate change. Nancy Sutley, Los Angeles deputy mayor for energy and environment, was selected to chair the Council on Environmental Quality.

Also last week, Obama formally nominated former South Dakota senator Tom Daschle to head the Department of Health & Human Services. In a move similar to the recent announcements, Daschle's appointment was leaked to the press weeks before it was made formal.

Save/Share »

Chemical & Engineering News
ISSN 0009-2347
Copyright © 2009 American Chemical Society

Related Stories

Tools

Save/Share »

Login

Note

Our log-in process has changed. You need an ACS ID to access member-only content.


Username:

Password:

Questions or Problems?

Adjust text size:

A- A+

Articles By Topic