Page added on April 17, 2009
Steven Chu has likened his arrival in Washington as President Obama’s energy secretary to being thrown into the deep end of the pool — and he boasted this week that he hadn’t yet drowned. The Nobel Prize-winning physicist and PhD moved from running a research lab in California to taking over a sprawling federal agency with a $70 billion annual budget and 114,000 employees. “I still have my head above water,” he joked in a wide-ranging interview in his office.
His expertise is in developing alternative forms of energy, such as solar and wind power, and he believes — for starters — that the country needs to take better advantage of existing technologies. Most important, he says, scientists have come to appreciate that the energy crisis is such a huge economic and environmental problem that many are changing careers to help. “So with more intellectual, top-quality intellectual horsepower going into this, the possibility and the probability of a really transformational breakthrough will be much higher.”
Romano: Do people get it? How would you rate our nation’s understanding of the energy crisis?
Chu: I think virtually all Americans are uneasy about our growing dependency on imported oil. . . . [But] it’s hard for people to actually think deeply about what will be happening 30, 50 years from today [on global warming]. Most societies have not had to grapple with the fact that something 50 years down the road can have some grave consequences.
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