U.S. is falling behind in science and engineering — and China can’t wait for us to stumble | Opinion

In January, the National Science Board, part of the National Science Foundation, published its biennial report on Science and Engineering Indicators. It captures how the United States compares to other countries from the perspective of degree production, investments in research and development, and scientific articles and patents (as a proxy for technical prowess).

Basically, we’re falling behind on every major measure, which means we may not have enough trained people and core competencies to combat climate change, defeat contagious viruses or compete in the growing market for advanced energy systems.

This is a dangerous signal.

Not only have we closed the borders (even to students) and raised the walls (literally and figuratively) to shared knowledge, we have diluted educational achievement standards at home and outsourced critical manufacturing capabilities overseas. Turning the tide will require new educational policy, targeted federal funding and visionary executive leadership. Investment in science reveals verifiable facts that we use to live longer, happier, more-affordable lives. It also leads to products and services that we can sell in foreign markets. China is eager to assume any mantle we abandon or neglect.

There’s no better example of where misbegotten technology policy has hurt us than the energy sector. The United States should be leading in every topic from reducing greenhouse gas emissions to clean electricity generation. China today has almost three times our renewable generative capacity; in 2019 a quarter of their net-new capacity was solar.

Small modular nuclear reactors, or SMRs, are one example of where science-based decisions could better inform our energy policy. Many people immediately reject nuclear power as a viable energy option because of two false perceptions: that it is fundamentally unsafe and that there is no good way to dispense with spent radioactive fuel. However, even well-respected former anti-nuclear advocates, such as Michael Schellenberger, have changed their minds on this. Electricity from nuclear plants can be created safely, affordably and without turning radioactive material into weapons.

Hydrogen-based fuel cells are another example. They produce electricity in a way that exhausts only water and heat. The global market is still relatively small — only about $5 billion today — but one analyst believes it could grow to $40 billion in six years; another believes that in 2032, more than 5 million hydrogen-fueled cars will be sold worldwide, worth over $250 billion.

Almost every major foreign manufacturer has scaled a fuel cell electric vehicle (FCEV) to production, but the United States is virtually invisible in the market. Unwisely retreating from FCEVs unnecessarily limits the country from competing in advanced energy manufacturing and transportation.

There are three decisions we can make that would put the United States on proper footing.

First, we need to agree that voluntarily relinquishing technological leadership is going to severely hurt our economy and our global political influence. Pushing a coal-based agenda or ripping up environmental regulations is not going to make us cleaner, healthier, more productive or more employable. The last Quadrennial Energy Review predicted that 1.5 million new jobs will be created in the energy sector between 2016 and 2030; in fact, according to the 2020 U.S. Energy and Employment Report, there were 54,000 net new jobs in just energy efficiency alone.

Second, we need to get serious about exposing our children to core concepts of science, technology, engineering and mathematics, the STEM curricula. Just because K-12 public education is typically a local or state issue doesn’t mean that we can afford to live in regional isolation, where some school boards promote fundamental physics and others fundamentalist philosophy. Willful ignorance is not consistent with our values and freedoms.

Finally, we need leadership attention and an actionable agenda on where and how to invest precious resources into research, technology transfer and export commercialization. And we need to make sure that the international playing field is safe, fair and level for everybody. That means constructive engagement with our partners, and clear and enforceable rules for our competitors.

It means less bluster and polemic outrage, and more product demonstrations and value creation.

Greg Douquet is a former Marine Corps colonel, co-founder and managing partner of Red Duke Strategies LLC, and co-director of the Atlantic Council Global Energy Center’s Veterans Advanced Energy Project. Peter L. Levin is a co-founder and CEO of Amida Technology Solutions, and a senior adjunct fellow at the Center for a New American Security.

(c) 2020 The Baltimore Sun

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