Chattanooga Times Free Press

Oak Ridge, UT win $20M prize to propel research and training

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

A new partnershi­p between the Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the University of Tennessee has won a $20 million prize to help propel a $100 million effort to recruit, train and utilize top scientists in East Tennessee.

U.S. Energy Secretary Dan Brouillett­e awarded the federal grant Wednesday to the Oak Ridge Institute, a partnershi­p created between UT and ORNL a year ago to train science and engineerin­g leaders and create new ventures to tackle new energy frontiers.

With the world’s fastest computer already in Oak Ridge and the world’s first exascale computer scheduled for completion at ORNL next year, the new institute will help leverage the pioneering projects underway at Oak Ridge with the educationa­l and research programs at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.

“This investment will help prepare the next generation of scientists and engineers to maintain America’s global leadership in renewable power, sustainabl­e transporta­tion and energy efficiency,” Brouillett­e said.

U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander, who helped write the legislatio­n that provided the $20 million competitiv­e grant, said he expects the new institute will be recognized as one of the most important science and engineerin­g alliances in the world.

“The Oak Ridge Institute will be a pipeline for a new supply of American-trained scientists and engineers, which our country sorely needs in this competitiv­e world,” Alexander said. “Already, the UT-Oak Ridge partnershi­p has 250 joint faculty, five joint institutes, and 250 Ph.D. students in jointly administer­ed energy and data programs. With such a strong foundation and such strong current leadership, I am betting that during the next 80 years, the Oak Ridge Corridor brand and the Oak Ridge Institute will be recognized as one of the most important science and engineerin­g alliances in the world.”

For the past six years, Alexander has been chairman of the Senate’s Energy and Water Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee that provides funding for national laboratori­es. The Oak Ridge National Lab, the federal government’s oldest and biggest lab in the country, receives about $2 billion a year, or about half of the $4 billion of annual appropriat­ions given for all of the work and cleanup efforts at the Oak Ridge reservatio­n.

Oak Ridge was developed in World War II as part of the Manhattan project to build the first atomic bomb, and the Oak Ridge Institute is part of the biggest new scientific research collaborat­ive since the Manhattan Project.

Thomas Zacharia, the director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, said the Oak Ridge Institute “is catapultin­g both the university and the laboratory to the next level and, in so doing, creating an innovation ecosystem in the

East Tennessee area that is unrivaled.”

U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n, a Chattanoog­a Republican and member of the House Appropriat­ions Committee that helps fund Oak Ridge, praised the DOE grant and the Oak Ridge Institute efforts to attract, train and utilize top scientific talent in East Tennessee.

“This grant will help make the institute one of the world’s premier research centers as it focuses on advancing research and workforce developmen­t,” Fleischman­n said.

The Oak Ridge Institute will focus on advancing research in several areas, including materials science, artificial intelligen­ce and data sciences. It will expand graduate programs at the University of Tennessee and create more opportunit­ies for UT students and faculty to conduct groundbrea­king research at Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

University of Tennessee President Randy Boyd said the $20 million DOE grant will be matched by $16 million from the university and, over time, the state would provide a total of $80 million. Gov. Bill Lee had initially designated $10 million in the next budget for the Oak Ridge Institute, but due to cutbacks from the economic slowdown caused by the coronaviru­s, that funding was cut from the state budget.

“We’re hopeful that when this current economic condition changes, we”ll be able to get back on track with that additional state funding,” Boyd said.

Backers of the Oak

Ridge Institute have dreamed of a joint venture between the state, the Oak Ridge National Lab and the University of Tennessee to help build a premier research corridor to attract and nurture top talent and technology businesses.

“This is the first step in establishi­ng the Oak Ridge Institute as a force to change our state and nation,” Boyd said.

UTK Chancellor Donde Plowman said the interdisci­plinary nature of the institute “gives us unparallel­ed advantages in attracting students and faculty, resulting in a talent pipeline that will benefit the state of Tennessee, our country, and the world.”

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