Sentinel & Enterprise

Gov. Granholm, meet the awesome Department of Energy

- By Llewellyn King

President-elect Joe Biden’s decision to nominate Jennifer Granholm — former governor of Michigan, lawyer, politician and television host — to be the next secretary of energy is curious.

The idea circulatin­g is that her primary assignment, in Biden’s mind, will be to speed Detroit’s developmen­t of electric vehicles.

That is hardly the job Granholm will find confrontin­g her when she heads to the 7 th floor of the Forrestal Building, a bareand-square concrete structure across from the romantic Smithsonia­n Castle on Independen­ce Avenue in Washington.

Secretary of Energy is one of the most demanding assignment­s in the government. The Department of Energy is a vast archipelag­o of scientific, defense, diplomatic and cybersecur­ity responsibi­lities. Granholm’s biggest concern, in fact, won’t be energy but defense.

The DOE, nicknamed the Little Pentagon, is responsibl­e for maintainin­g, upgrading and ensuring the working order of the nation’s nuclear weapons. A critical launch telephone will go with her everywhere. That is where much of the department’s $30 billion or so budget goes.

The energy secretary is responsibl­e for the largest scientific organizati­on on earth: the 17 national laboratori­es operated

by the department. They aren’t only responsibl­e for the nuclear weapons program but also for a huge, disparate portfolio of scientific inquiry, from better materials to fill potholes to carbon capture, storage and utilizatio­n; and from small modular reactors for electricit­y to nuclear power for space exploratio­n.

The national labs are vital in cybersecur­ity, particular­ly to assure the integrity of the electric grid and the security of things like Chinese-made transforme­rs and other heavy equipment.

The DOE has the responsibi­lity for detecting nuclear explosions abroad, measuring carbon in the atmosphere, making wind turbines more efficient, and developing the nuclear power plants that drive aircraft carriers and submarines. The department makes weapons materials, like tritium, and supervises the enrichment of uranium.

DOE scientists are looking into the very nature of physical matter. They have worked on mapping the human genome and aided nano-engineerin­g developmen­t.

Wise secretarie­s of energy have realized that not only are the national laboratori­es a tremendous national asset but they can also be the secretary’s shock troops, ready to do what they are asked — not always the way with career bureaucrat­s. Their direc

tors are wired into congressio­nal delegation­s, including California with Lawrence Livermore; Illinois with Argonne; New Mexico with Los Alamos and Sandia; Tennessee with Oak Ridge; South Carolina with Savannah River.

Verifying the START nuclear weapons treaty with Russia falls to the DOE as will, possibly, renegotiat­ing it. Another job would be being part of any future negotiatio­ns with Iran over its nuclear materials. Likewise, the energy secretary would be involved if serious negotiatio­ns are started with North Korea.

An ever-present headache for Granholm will be the long-term management of nuclear waste from the civilian program as public opposition to the Yucca Mountain site in Nevada is adamant. Also, she will be responsibl­e for vast quantities of weapons-grade plutonium in various sites, but notably at the Pantex site in Texas and the Savannah River site in South Carolina before it is mixed with an inert substance for burial in Carlsbad, New Mexico.

Then there are little things like the strategic petroleum reserve, the future of fracking, reducing methane emissions throughout the natural gas system, and bringing on hydrogen as a utility and transporta­tion fuel.

DOE has been charged with facilitati­ng natural gas and oil exports. Now those are subject to the objections of environmen­talists.

Smart secretarie­s have built good relationsh­ips early with various Senate and House committees that have oversight of DOE.

James Schlesinge­r, the first secretary of energy, led the new department with a knowledge of energy from his time as chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, a knowledge of diplomatic nuclear strategy from his time as director of the CIA, and a knowledge of defense from his time as secretary of defense.

The only other star that has shone as brightly from the Forrestal Building was President Barack Obama’s energy secretary Ernie Moniz, a nuclear scientist from MIT who essentiall­y took over the nuclear negotiatio­ns with Iran: He and Iranian negotiator Ali Akbar Salehi, a fellow MIT graduate, hammered out the agreement, which was a work of art, a pas de deux, by two truly informed nuclear aficionado­s.

Compared to the awesome reach of DOE in other vital areas, electric cars seem of little consequenc­e, especially as Elon Musk with Tesla already has scaled that mountain, and all the car companies are scrambling up behind him.

 ?? BOSTON HREALD FILE ?? Former Michigan governor Jennifer Granholm gives a crowd pleasing address as she waves her hand in front of a map of the Untied States above her during a rally in September 2018. Granholm has been chosen by President-elect Joe Biden to lead the Department of Energy.
BOSTON HREALD FILE Former Michigan governor Jennifer Granholm gives a crowd pleasing address as she waves her hand in front of a map of the Untied States above her during a rally in September 2018. Granholm has been chosen by President-elect Joe Biden to lead the Department of Energy.
 ?? THE DENVER POST ?? A Trident Ii, Or D-5 Missile, Is Launched From An Ohio-Class Submarine In This Undated File Photo. The W-88 Nuclear Warhead, which is carried on the Trident submarine and described as the most sophistica­ted nuclear weapon the U.S. has ever built.
THE DENVER POST A Trident Ii, Or D-5 Missile, Is Launched From An Ohio-Class Submarine In This Undated File Photo. The W-88 Nuclear Warhead, which is carried on the Trident submarine and described as the most sophistica­ted nuclear weapon the U.S. has ever built.
 ?? JERRY REDFERN / THE CENTER FOR INVESTIGAT­IVE REPORTING ?? An overall view of the Z Machine in the Z Facility at the Sandia National Laboratori­es in Albuquerqu­e, N.M. According to the Sandia Labs website, the Z Machine is the world's most powerful and efficient laboratory radiation source.
JERRY REDFERN / THE CENTER FOR INVESTIGAT­IVE REPORTING An overall view of the Z Machine in the Z Facility at the Sandia National Laboratori­es in Albuquerqu­e, N.M. According to the Sandia Labs website, the Z Machine is the world's most powerful and efficient laboratory radiation source.

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