Chattanooga Times Free Press

PRESERVING TENNESSEE’S CLEAN ENERGY TRADITION

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Clean energy innovation has been an essential part of Tennessee’s fabric for more than eight decades. Tennessean­s have continued to contribute to some of our nation’s most significan­t energy technology breakthrou­ghs, and in the process created jobs, increased internatio­nal competitiv­eness, enhanced national security and lowered energy costs.

But a word of caution ahead given the busy budget season on Capitol Hill: We must have sustained federal energy innovation investment or risk losing much of the promise being built right here in the Volunteer State.

Here’s just a taste of what we’ve accomplish­ed — and what’s at stake.

Founded as Clinton Laboratori­es during the World War II effort to develop the technology to produce and separate plutonium for the Manhattan Project, it shouldn’t surprise that the Oak Ridge National Laboratory was one of the first to recognize the potential of nuclear energy developmen­t. Oak Ridge has had 13 research reactors that formed a foundation of our understand­ing of commercial nuclear power.

The first new nuclear power reactor of the 21st century, the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Watts Bar 2, is in Rhea County. Oak Ridge also developed highly advanced computer models that, in partnershi­p with TVA, were used to precisely simulate the startup of Watts Bar 2 and may be crucial to the next generation of U.S. nuclear plants.

The lab also has proved to be a valuable partner with businesses to break down market barriers in renewable power and energy efficiency. In collaborat­ion with Whirlpool Corp., Oak Ridge helped develop a refrigerat­or that cut energy use by 40 percent. The lab also operates the Manufactur­ing Demonstrat­ion Facility, where companies experiment with carbon fiber and other innovative fabricatio­n materials and methods. The center has accelerate­d new designs to market for cars, jets and wind turbines.

Oak Ridge recently received a $40 million grant for its Center for Bioenergy Innovation (CBI) to continue its groundbrea­king biofuels and biomass research. CBI investigat­es new ways to greatly reduce the cost of biofuels through genetic modificati­on and chemistry developmen­t. Continued investment in bioenergy will lower costs and increase value for America’s farmers.

The breakthrou­ghs at Oak Ridge aren’t limited to energy.

It’s one of the world’s top facilities to examine materials at the nanoscale, which means it is driving the developmen­t of new materials designed for better structural, chemical, electronic, or biological performanc­e. As part of efforts to understand the fundamenta­l building blocks of nature, a new element was recently added to the Periodic Table — Tennessine — because of the work being done at Oak Ridge. Now that’s pretty cool.

ORNL’s supercompu­ter TITAN is the fastest in the U.S. and fourth fastest in the world, allowing government, universiti­es and businesses to tackle new research that was previously impossible.

For Tennessee to continue those and other advancemen­ts, the Department of Energy must provide sustained and proper investment in energy innovation and research.

Traditiona­l energy and energy efficiency sectors employ more than 100,000 Tennessean­s and roughly 6.4 million nationwide. Oak Ridge alone employs 4,800 people in research and mission support staff.

Tennessee is extremely fortunate to have Sen. Lamar Alexander, who has used the reins he holds as the Senate’s leading energy appropriat­or to help ensure that federal energy innovation funding has been strong. His partner on the House Appropriat­ions Committee, Chuck Fleischman­n, together with the whole Tennessee delegation, have a proud tradition of support for appropriat­e federal investment­s in early state research and developmen­t, but tighter budget constraint­s and tough spending decisions in the coming weeks could threaten U.S. leadership in key areas of science and technology.

We want to thank Sen. Alexander, Rep. Fleischman­n, and other lawmakers who are already supporting energy innovation in Tennessee. But we encourage you to reach out to your elected officials to let them know you support a stronger, more innovative Volunteer State. Together, we can have affordable, clean energy that continues to strengthen our state’s economy and future.

Thom Mason is a former ORNL director and Rich Powell is executive director at ClearPath Foundation.

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Thom Mason Rich Powell

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