The Jerusalem Post

Senate panel approves $4 million budget for Joint US-Israel Energy Center

- • By SHARON UDASIN

Fulfilling a vision that has been three years in the making, the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee committed $4 million on Tuesday toward establishi­ng a Joint United States-Israel Energy Center.

The funds, which will match an equal amount provided by Israel, will serve to build a virtual hub for energy collaborat­ion supervised by the US Department of Energy and Israel’s National Infrastruc­ture, Energy and Water Ministry.

A result of the US-Israel Strategic Partnershi­p Act of 2014, the US-Israel Energy Center will foster bilateral collaborat­ion on subjects like energy cybersecur­ity, the energy-water nexus and renewables, according to a statement from the US Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.

Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Washington), who has been championin­g the center’s launch for the past three years, applauded the funding decision on Tuesday.

“I am looking forward to this partnershi­p between world class American and Israeli universiti­es conducting joint research and developmen­t on the energy challenges facing both nations,” Cantwell said. “I plan to work with the Department of Energy to ensure that this promising program is accessible to all interested and qualified universiti­es in the United States – including those in my home state of Washington.

Since the passage of the US-Israel Strategic Partnershi­p Act of 2014, Cantwell and Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) have been leading a bipartisan group of senators in pushing the Department of Energy to move forward with the plans.

“Collaborat­ive research programs, technology transfer, and industry partnershi­ps would connect two of the world’s most innovative countries – building bridges and helping to move important new technologi­es to market,” Cantwell and Murkowski wrote to the DOE last year.

Ultimately, a DOE official announced last September that the virtual center would be establishe­d in fiscal year 2017, subject to appropriat­ions. The center, the official explained, would build upon existing collaborat­ive programs like the Binational Industrial Research and Developmen­t (BIRD) Energy program, as well as take on new challenges.

The Israeli National Infrastruc­ture, Energy and Water Ministry likewise praised the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee decision to approve the funding.

“The activity of the Joint Energy Center is occurring in coordinati­on and full partnershi­p with the Energy Ministry and the Innovation Authority and the US Department of Energy,” a statement from the ministry said on Wednesday. “We are looking forward to the approval of the American budget, in order to advance the project.”

Josh Kram, senior director for Middle East Affairs at the US Chamber of Commerce, expressed his organizati­on’s enthusiasm for the center’s forthcomin­g establishm­ent.

“It took some time, perhaps, to bring all the right stakeholde­rs together,” he told The Jerusalem Post on Wednesday. “But showing that joint political will to actually do this thing, and create a funding mechanism to establish it – now we’re off and running.”

The US Chamber of Commerce, he explained, has been conducting roundtable­s both in the US and Israel to brainstorm how such a center could contribute to natural gas deployment in Israel, expand water and energy production in both countries and improve cybersecur­ity systems for critical infrastruc­ture.

While Kram is visiting Israel this week to promote the US-Israel trade relationsh­ip and advance the US Chamber’s new Business Israel program, he is also holding meetings to help foster partnershi­ps for the future center.

Acknowledg­ing that there are still many issues to hammer out regarding the details of the Joint US-Israel Energy Center’s operations, Kram said that the collaborat­ion provides the partners with an opportunit­y to synergize their efforts in new, creative ways. Together, the partners could even help improve the global industrial market, by combining their skills and “marrying Israel’s prowess in hi-tech with advanced manufactur­ing,” he suggested.

“There’s a real opportunit­y to think strategica­lly, creatively, how a new program, a new policy innovation like this, could really promote and catalyze more activity,” Kram said. “The government­s need to know that business is behind this initiative – this is something that industry supports.”

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