The current five-year contract, held by Columbus, Ohio-based non-profit Battelle Memorial Institute, expires on Sept. 30, 2007. Battelle has managed PNNL since its inception in 1965; the lab was created that year to provide research support for Hanford, a nuclear weapons facility created during World War II as part of the top-secret Manhattan Project to build an atomic bomb. The Hanford nuclear reservation is now the most contaminated nuclear site in the US, with cleanup costs currently estimated at nearly $60 billion.
Raymond L. Orbach, director of the DoE Office of Science, said in a statement that the decision to put the PNNL contract out to bid in no way reflects on Battelle’s performance, calling it a "prudent management decision."
“The competitive process is the best method to provide the American taxpayer an optimum management team for PNNL, one of our outstanding national laboratories,” Orbach said.
PNNL has a staff of approximately 3900 and an annual budget of approximately $650 million. In addition to its main Richland complex, PNNL operates a marine research facility in Sequim, Wash., and has offices in Portland, Ore.; Seattle and Tacoma, Wash.; and Washington, DC. More than half of its research is conducted for the Energy Department, with the homeland security and defense departments comprising another 25 percent. Private work and research for other national agencies accounts for the rest of PNNL's research. For more information, visit: www.pnl.gov