Birgeneau:
'This is going to be a phenomenal place…'
Chancellor sees the broad dimensions of energy research at Berkeley, and its
promise of a transformational impact on society
The day following
the announcement of BP funding for the Energy Biosciences Institute
(EBI) — led by Berkeley and with Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as
partners — Chancellor Birgeneau sat down with Public Affairs
for a discussion about the implications of this research for Berkeley.
Why is
Berkeley the place where this kind of initiative will take hold
and eventually bear fruit?
First, it is because of the extraordinary talent we have here in science and
engineering and the powerful combination of facilities and people we have on
campus and at LBNL, in such areas as molecular biology, bioengineering, synthetic
biology, and environmental policy. On the agricultural side, we have some outstanding
work in the College of Natural Resources, and we found an ideal partner in
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Among other things, they have
thousands of acres on which they can grow experimental new plants — compared
to the two acres we have down on Oxford Street.
Secondly,
this is research that is just so well-suited to both us and
Illinois, as public institutions with a commitment to research
that will serve the public. Finally, the state of California
and the Bay Area in particular have played leadership roles
in environmental issues, so it is only common sense that we
at Berkeley would want to lead in the really tough research
that has to be done to solve this problem.
I think
it is important to emphasize that there are not going to
be any easy solutions. These are really challenging problems — if
there were easy solutions, people would have implemented
them already. Also, for our work to have an impact, it does
have to be transitioned into the marketplace, so this is
a case where a partnership with a major energy company like
BP is of fundamental importance.
How
did this winning collaboration come about?
Having served on an advisory committee to the director at LBNL, even
before my arrival at Berkeley, I was aware that there were opportunities
that could be more fully realized if the campus and the lab increased
their interactions with each other. Of course, knowing [LBNL Director]
Steve Chu and having a long friendship with him greatly facilitated this.
Steve came to LBNL with a great passion for meaningful research on climate
change and energy self-sufficiency.
At Berkeley,
there were already many people, such as Dan Kammen, who were
leaders in energy policy and research. Indeed, there was
a high level of excitement because of the Helios project.
Also, many people — including Steve Chu, Paul Ludden,
and myself — had good relations with colleagues at
Illinois.
Because
of all of this, I believe that we were very well positioned
to respond to the request for proposal from BP.
|

• Berkeley,
LBNL, Illinois join forces with BP: Energy giant selects
research partners to identify and develop carbon-neutral
fuel sources in a multidisciplinary challenge
'Our
generation's moon shot'
Excitement and purpose were palpable at the press conference announcing
formation of the Energy Biosciences Institute.
• EBI
proposal: A summary of the plan submitted to BP for
creation of the Energy Biosciences Institute lays out the
qualifications of the partners and their vision for the
institute.
• Crafting
the winning proposal: Work on the BP proposal was fueled
by Berkeley's scientific and techinical expertise, a large
number of take-out sandwiches, and just enough printer
toner.
• Energy@Berkeley: This
new website showcases how UC Berkeley and LBNL are pooling
their vast expertise in energy technology, policy and transportation.
• BP
Biofuels: Energy Biosciences Institute
• Initiative
will put Illinois at forefront of farm bioenergy production U.
of I. press release
• Glossary
of alternative-fuel terms
|
The timing could
not have been better for us. Our unprecedented success was truly
a layering of events — of successful leadership and connections
that resulted in an academic-national laboratory-industry partnership
that has the potential to change our world.
How do
you see deploying this funding?
It will be in various areas of research, and that will be the responsibility
of the director and the board that is going to oversee the EBI. This will be
a dynamic basic research effort, and we expect it to evolve over time.
A number of Berkeley
faculty were already beginning to turn their research toward addressing
energy issues when this opportunity for resources came along. It
is not just biofuels — there are many other alternative energy
approaches. For example, with LBNL we have a major proposal in to
the Department of Energy under the rubric of the Helios project for
support for other approaches to energy self-sufficiency. So we see
tremendous symbiosis between the biofuels/synthetic biology approach
in the EBI and other approaches. Our plan is that Helios, EBI, and
many of these other efforts will all be in one building. So this
is going to be a phenomenal place with a variety of important research
addressing energy self-sufficiency.
Have the
details been worked out on how the EBI will be governed?
We have agreed on a general framework, but we do not have a contract — we
will be working in the coming weeks on that. There will be a shared governance
structure. We are currently expecting a governing board of eight people, including
a director who will be a Berkeley faculty member and an associate director
who is a BP employee.
What impact
will the EBI have on students?
This isn't just about research, it is also about education, and we cannot underestimate
the EBI's long-term educational value. It will present really exciting opportunities
for students to work with world leaders on important scientific, engineering,
social science, and economic problems that will have a major impact on society.
There is huge graduate-student demand to take part in research in this area,
so having Berkeley play a leadership role has obvious benefits for them. In
addition, I am certain that there will be many opportunities for undergraduates
to participate, and that many courses will emerge as a result of the research
this funding generates. Part of our goal is to educate the next generation
of scientists and engineers who will lead these areas of energy research.
Do you
have a sense of what direction this research will take, what breakthroughs
might be already on the horizon and where the most fruitful possibilities
are?
Of course, we are very hopeful that the major breakthrough for transportation
fuels will come from EBI. But our energy challenges are so great. I recently
spoke to a friend in Boston who mentioned that the cost of heating homes is
phenomenal there because of the harsh winter, $500 dollars a month for an average
family home. It's a lot of money. So who knows whether or not with LBNL's Molecular
Foundry and the ability to use nanoscience to create completely new materials,
we will develop solar cells that are significantly more efficient and easy
to fabricate in bulk than existing cells. One really does not know where the
breakthrough is going to come; there are so many different possibilities.
This is separate
from the EBI, but frankly I agree with George Smoot that we need
to see a resumption of nuclear power as a source of energy, because
it does not contribute to global climate change. I think paranoia
about nuclear waste is entirely misplaced and inappropriate. People
in our nuclear engineering department can give you very compelling
reasons why nuclear energy can help us address environmental issues.
Enhanced research in nuclear engineering here and elsewhere can allow
us to design reactors that are as safe as possible and to determine
the optimal methods for handling nuclear waste. I think it is really
time for the United States to readdress the nuclear power issue in
a serious way.

Chancellor Robert Birgeneau
(Peg Skorpinkski photo) |
You've
said that this is our generation's moon shot. In 10 year's
time, what is our goal?
We will want to end up taking this research from the laboratory to the
fuel pump. It is a scenario that takes us from finding the optimal plants
for biofuels, to manufacturing the optimal microbes through synthetic biology
techniques to convert those plants into sugars, and then developing and
implementing chemical processes on a massive, commercial scale to take
us from the sugars to an alcohol, something easier to handle than ethanol… |
This has to be
implemented on a phenomenal scale, so imagine the boon to agriculture — you
could conceivably use up some significant part of the state of Illinois
for these crops. But we have to end up with plants, grasses, poplar
trees, and the like that use a minimal amount of nitrogen fertilizer — unlike
corn, which is actually quite energy-intensive. Also, you would like
a plant that is a perennial, that does not have to be replanted every
year … Steve Long at Illinois works with a grass called Miscanthus
that grows at incredible density, up to 14 feet tall, needs little
or no fertilizer, and lasts 10 to 15 years.
Now I am a physicist,
not a plant biologist or agriculture person, so I have no idea if
that specific plant will end up being what is actually used.… Or
suppose instead the optimal plant is a woody species such as a poplar
tree, which grows incredibly rapidly — then the chemistry is
more challenging, converting wood into sugars or a simple chemical
compound that can be converted into alcohols. This is where the whimsical
picture of an artificial termite comes in.
Do you
expect that in the 10-year length of this contract we will see
an impact on the market?
That would be very optimistic. But that is because of the scale of the challenge,
and the landmass for plants that has to be handed over for this purpose. Then
there are the chemical plants that would need to ramp up, and other aspects
of development. If 10 years from now all of the steps are identified and in
place, I think that will be a significant accomplishment.
This is
an unusually close partnership with industry. What are the benefits
and challenges?
Obviously,
there will be challenges in keeping all of the intellectual property
issues straight, and we are working those out now. But the benefit
is that there are now incredible resources coming into a very important
area of research, which students really want to pursue. We want to
have an impact on society; students are idealistic, they want to do
things that are relevant to the welfare of mankind. Here there is no
ambiguity: one absolutely has to have an industrial partner to take
us from the laboratory to the fuel pump. It is not going to happen
any other way, and I think it will be extraordinarily educational for
us to see firsthand how this transition actually takes place.
People sometimes
worry that an industrial partnership would affect our choices in
research and that we would start doing things that we would not want
to do otherwise. It is actually very much the opposite. This is research
that we very much want to do, but where it is a challenge to obtain
the requisite funding. Because the ultimate goal is to have an impact
on the marketplace, who knows better how to do this than a major
energy company like BP?
So our
faculty, LBNL, and Illinois will propose projects they are interested
in pursuing, and the EBI governance board would fund those research
areas.
It will work both ways. The governance board, including our faculty — remember,
the director will be one of our faculty members — will say, "We
feel with confidence that we need to do research in a particular area, and
they will then either identify a faculty member who can do it now, or look
to recruit a faculty member from elsewhere who is a world expert in the field.
And Berkeley
is going to hire 10 or so new faculty as part of this effort?
Almost all of this will happen by natural turnover. I have had conversations
with deans, who want to build up this area of research anyway, and intended
to do so, whether BP came along or not. Their own plans looking forward are
to hire faculty who are experts in areas related to this research effort.
So this
is a blossoming area at the moment?
Sure, that's correct. It has grown as people started to think more about the
energy crisis. There has been a lot of research already in this country and
around the world…. I do not know if the war in Iraq has contributed to
sensitivity on this issue, but there is a broad-based consensus that we need
to find transportation fuels that are alternatives to those you pump out of
the ground.
We have
political, corporate, and academic will and purpose all coming
together in this effort. Are there other pieces that need to coalesce
for success?
Of course we will need continuing state support, and for research areas that
are complimentary to synthetic biology, we need federal-government support,
either coming directly to campus or indirectly through LBNL. There is also
another component: one of the attractions for BP is that Berkeley is in the
Bay Area, which is very entrepreneurial. Ultimately, then, no matter what the
energy solution is, it will need industries that support it. The Bay Area is
optimal for that — we have proven before and we will prove again that
this is a great place for creating all kinds of new businesses to support these
technologies. We are a center for biotech, nanotech, and….
Energytech?
Yes, I like it. You've coined a word.
Where do
you see this effort going beyond the next decade?
This is a huge amount of money that BP is dedicating, but it is actually a
start, not an end. We do have another $70 million coming in state support for
infrastructure for Helios and EBI, and we hope for very significant funding
from the Department of Energy for biofuels and for other alternative energy
research. Of course, we plan for this effort to be a tremendous success, so
although BP has made a commitment for 10 years, we are very hopeful that the
partnership will continue beyond that. This is the scale that is going to be
necessary to make a meaningful impact on these energy challenges. We are just
really proud that it is going to happen here at Berkeley.