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‘Today, more than ever before, science holds the key to our survival as a planet
and our security and prosperity as a nation,’ Obama said in a weekly radio and
video address.
‘It's time we once again put science at the top of our agenda and worked to
restore America's place as the world leader in science and technology.’ Obama's
comments were a clear reference to President George W. Bush's administration
which has been accused of downplaying scientific findings on climate change and
genetic research.
Signalling a break with Bush policies on global warming, Obama named John
Holdren, an award-winning environmental policy professor at Harvard University,
to head the Office of Science and Technology Policy and co-chair the president's
Council of Advisors on Science and Technology.
Obama called Holdren ‘one of the most passionate and persistent voices of our
time about the growing threat of climate change.’ Holdren, 64, led the Pugwash
Conferences on Science and World Affairs, an international group of prominent
scientists that won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1995. He won a MacArthur Foundation
‘genius award’ in 1981 for his arms control work, and a number of environmental
science awards.
Holdren, a Washington Beltway insider, served as former President Bill Clinton's
science and technology adviser in the 1990s.
Underscoring the importance of genetic research, the president-elect also named
Eric Lander and Harold Varmus as co-chairmen of the council of advisors.
Lander is founding director of the Broad Institute, which played a leading role
in the Human Genome Project which in 2003 succeeded in mapping the location of
about 20,500 genes on the 23 pairs of human chromosomes.
Varmus, a co-recipient of a 1989 Nobel Prize for studies of the genetic basis of
cancer, has served as president and chief executive of Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center in New York since January 2000.
Obama expressed confidence that together the two men will ‘remake’ the group
‘into a vigorous external advisory council’ that will shape his thinking on
scientific aspects of his policies.
The nominees also include Jane Lubchenco, a world-renowned environmental expert
and marine biologist from Oregon, who will head up the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, an agency that monitors global weather patterns and
issues storm forecasts.
Lubchenco in an October interview with US media said he had noticed a shift in
public attitude on global warming and accused the Bush administration of being
anti-science after reports surfaced that it had redacted official scientific
documents recommending action on climate change, endangered species and
environmental pollution.
These recent picks, along with the naming of Nobel-prize laureate physicist
Steven Chu last week to head the Department of Energy, indicated Obama will work
to unwind the energy and climate change policies of the Bush administration,
which refused to ratify the Kyoto Protocol on climate change.
‘None of the great interlinked challenges of our time – the economy, energy,
environment, health, security, and the particular vulnerabilities of the poor to
shortfalls in all of these – can be solved without insights and advances from
the physical sciences, the life sciences, and engineering,’ Holdren said in a
statement Friday.
Obama made no direct reference to a controversial 2001 decision by Bush to limit
federal funding for embryonic stem cell research, despite pleas by many
scientists who believe it could offer promise in fighting degenerative diseases
like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
The president-elect warned that promoting science is ‘about ensuring that facts
and evidence are never twisted or obscured by politics or ideology,’ an apparent
reference to the Bush administration's response to research on global warming.
The nominations came as Obama rounded out his cabinet before his January 20
inauguration.
On Friday, he tapped Democratic Representative Hilda Solis of California as
labor secretary and former Republican Congressman Ray LaHood of Illinois as
transportation secretary.
Obama left Saturday for Hawaii, where he will spend the Christmas holidays with
family and friends but will continue to do transition work, his office said.
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