For example, a comprehensive national policy will help ensure that decades of work in the Department of Energy laboratories, particularly the National Renewable Energy Lab, is applied to enabling solar energy manufacturing in America, said Arthurs.
Arthurs reiterated SPIE’s “unequivocal support” for R&D, but said that U. R&D no longer assured high value manufacturing jobs in the US. He agreed with earlier testimony on concerns about the devastating effect that the drive to increase immediate-term shareholder value has had on the US economy.
“The focus on shareholder value has mitigated against the long view for R&D, and at least in part led to the divergence of the corporate interest from the national interest,” Arthurs said. “R&D is vitally important, but unless there is return on corporate and national R&D, a healthy US R&D manufacturing symbiosis, R&D will dry up.”
He cautioned that the recent expansion in federal R&D funding to improve the nation’s competitiveness and innovation infrastructure “will be futile — if the end result does not include emphasis on capital investment in manufacturing technologies and the training of American workers.”
“The US may continue to be world leaders in the science of LEDs or the semiconductor lasers that power the Internet, but the location of the semiconductor foundries and the know-how to manufacture in volume suggest that these “green manufacturing” jobs will be outside the US,” Arthurs said.
Arthurs recommended that the government expand funding for the Technology Innovation Program (TIP) at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) as well as the set-aside amounts for the Small Business Innovation Research Program (SBIR) within science agencies.
“The TIP Program at NIST is a small step in the right direction, but its funding is totally inadequate,” he said. “The excellent SBIR program should be expanded and the evaluation process should place more emphasis on local job creation.”
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