ICAN -- These 50 universities help build U.S. nuclear weapons
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Nearly
50 U.S. universities are involved in the research and design of U.S. nuclear
weapons, largely in secret and in contradiction of their mission
statements. Students and faculty must demand their universities stop helping to
build weapons of mass destruction.
Types
of involvement by university:
University
of California
The
University of California has been involved in the management of the Los Alamos
National Laboratory and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory - two of the
nation’s primary nuclear weapons labs - since their inception. Multiple UC
campuses have research partnerships with facilities in the nuclear weapons
complex... Read more
Texas
A&M University
From
managing a nuclear weapons lab to partnering with production facilities, the
Texas A&M System has connections to many different segments of the U.S.
nuclear weapons complex. The university has a publicly stated “commitment to
the nuclear weapons industry.” ... Read more
Johns
Hopkins University
Johns
Hopkins University receives more than twice as much funding from the Department
of Defense than any other university due to the work of its Applied Physics
Laboratory; in 2019 the funding ceiling for its ongoing contract was extended
beyond $7 billion. This work includes research for the U.S. military’s nuclear
weapons systems, despite the fact that the university’s mission statement
includes the call “to bring the benefits of discovery to the world.”... Read more
University
of New Mexico
More
than 3,800 New Mexicans have been poisoned by fallout from U.S. nuclear weapons
tests and uranium mining. Despite this well-documented local harm and the
devastating environmental and humanitarian effects of nuclear weapons around
the world, the University of New Mexico has recently deepened its partnerships
with nuclear weapons labs and other nuclear weapons production sites, even
making an unsuccessful bid to manage one of these labs in 2016... Read more
Aiken
Technical College
Aiken
Technical College is one of five institutions that divide $2 million in annual
funding from the National Nuclear Security Administration for workforce development
grants in support of staffing needs at the Savannah River Site. Staff at this
site help recycle tritium from old warheads, an element that increases the
yield of nuclear weapons, to reuse in new warheads. The Trump Administration
proposed that this site begin production of plutonium pits in addition to those
produced at Los Alamos. If this proposal is approved, the site’s workforce
needs would grow more acute.
Amarillo
College
Amarillo
College partners with the Pantex facility to provide hazardous materials
training to thousands of Pantex employees. The Pantex Plant is responsible for
the dismantling of retired warheads and the reassembly of warheads undergoing
life extension projects.
Augusta
Technical College
Augusta
Technical College is one of five institutions that divide $2 million in annual
funding from the National Nuclear Security Administration for workforce
development grants in support of staffing needs at the Savannah River Site.
Staff at this site help recycle tritium from old warheads, an element that
increases the yield of nuclear weapons, to reuse in new warheads. The Trump
Administration proposed that this site begin production of plutonium pits in
addition to those produced at Los Alamos. If this proposal is approved, the
site’s workforce needs would grow more acute.
Augusta
University
Augusta
University is one of five institutions that divide $2 million in annual funding
from the National Nuclear Security Administration for workforce development
grants in support of staffing needs at the Savannah River Site. Staff at this
site help recycle tritium from old warheads, an element that increases the
yield of nuclear weapons, to reuse in new warheads. The Trump Administration
proposed that this site begin production of plutonium pits in addition to those
produced at Los Alamos. If this proposal is approved, the site’s workforce
needs would grow more acute.
California
Institute of Technology (Caltech)
Caltech
is listed by Sandia National Laboratories as a partner in its Campus Executive
Program, but the Caltech communications office noted they were not aware of an
active partnership with Sandia. The Campus Executive program aims to build
deeper relational connections between the laboratory and different universities
for the purpose of research collaboration and future workforce recruitment. In
FY2018, Sandia invested $18.7 million in research across its Campus Executive
and Academic Alliance universities. Sandia National Laboratories focuses on the
non-nuclear components of nuclear weapons and on nuclear weapons systems
integration, for example connecting warheads to their missile delivery systems.
Sandia also performs simulated experiments to test the safety and reliability
of nuclear weapons.
Carnegie
Mellon University
Carnegie
Mellon University is a partner in Sandia National Laboratories’ Campus
Executive Program. This program aims to build deeper relational connections
between the laboratory and different universities for the purpose of research
collaboration and future workforce recruitment. In FY2018, Sandia invested
$18.7 million in research across its Campus Executive and Academic Alliance
universities. Sandia National Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear
components of nuclear weapons and on nuclear weapons systems integration, for
example connecting warheads to their missile delivery systems. Sandia also
performs simulated experiments to test the safety and reliability of nuclear
weapons.
Cornell
University
Cornell
University is a partner in Sandia National Laboratories’ Campus Executive
Program. This program aims to build deeper relational connections between the
laboratory and different universities for the purpose of research collaboration
and future workforce recruitment. In FY2018, Sandia invested $18.7 million in
research across its Campus Executive and Academic Alliance universities. Sandia
National Laboratories focuses on the nonnuclear components of nuclear weapons
and on nuclear weapons systems integration, for example connecting warheads to
their missile delivery systems. Sandia also performs simulated experiments to
test the safety and reliability of nuclear weapons.
Cornell
University, in partnership with others, was awarded funding in 2017 for a
Stewardship Science Academic Alliance Center of Excellence. The
Multi-University Center of Excellence for Pulsed-Power-Driven High Energy
Density Science will receive $15 million in research grants in total. While the
Stewardship Science Academic Alliance program funds basic, unclassified
research, it seeks and funds proposals that have relevance to the stewardship
of the nation’s nuclear stockpile.
George
Washington University
George
Washington University was awarded funding in 2018 for a Stewardship Science
Academic Alliance Center of Excellence. The Capital/DOE Alliance Center will
receive $12.5 million in research grants over five years. While the Stewardship
Science Academic Alliance program funds basic, unclassified research, it seeks
and funds proposals that have relevance to the stewardship of the nation’s
nuclear stockpile.
Georgetown
University
Georgetown
is listed as a university partner on the website of Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory. According to administration at Georgetown, the university has a
formal agreement with the laboratory and collaborates in the areas of
neuroscience, physics and cancer, with the lab hosting graduate students for
summer internships. The Lawrence Livermore lab provides design and engineering
for several nuclear warhead types and conducts simulated experiments to
evaluate warheads.
Georgia
Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)
Georgia
Tech is one of Sandia National Laboratories’ five Academic Alliance partner
universities. These partnerships help Sandia “identify promising candidates at
top universities before graduation and promote joint technology development
research between graduate students and SNL researchers, pursuing topics with
national security applications.” All Academic Alliance schools are also designated
as a Campus Executive university partner by Sandia. In FY2018, Sandia invested
$18.7 million in research across its Campus Executive and Academic Alliance
universities. Sandia National Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear
components of nuclear weapons and on nuclear weapons systems integration, for
example connecting warheads to their missile delivery systems. Sandia also
performs simulated experiments to test the safety and reliability of nuclear
weapons.
Kansas
State University
Kansas
State University entered into a Master Collaboration Agreement with the
operator of the Kansas City National Security Campus on November 11, 2015. The
operator Honeywell has initiated at least ten “Master Collaboration Agreements”
with universities since 2015 “to facilitate closer collaboration on research
and development of new technology to meet national security needs.” The work at
the Kansas City National Security Campus centers on the manufacturing of
non-nuclear components necessary for nuclear weapons.
A
copy of Honeywell’s agreement with Kansas State University does not commit
specific funding to the university, but facilitates the submission of purchase
orders from the site contractor to the university for specific “[r]esearch and
development projects as well as testing and/or evaluation services projects.”
In addition, the agreement allows for “non-monetary collaborative engagements”
such as “faculty/engineer exchanges and technical information exchanges.”
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT)
MIT
operates the Lincoln Laboratory, a research center funded by the Department of
Defense. The Lincoln Laboratory produces an enormous volume of research for the
Department of Defense. In 2019, it received a contract modification that
brought its total multiyear contract face value to $9.6 billion. This contract
involves “advanced technology research and development activities that focus on
long-term technology development as well as rapid system prototyping and
demonstration.” The Air Force Life Cycle Management Center is the contracting
agency.
References
to nuclear weapons development are hard to find on the laboratory’s website,
but one profile of a highlighted engineer notes her work on command and control
terminals that “underpin the highly assured SATCOM system for the nation’s
nuclear weapon forces.” A 2018 statement to Congress from Department of Energy
Secretary Rick Perry also noted the department’s intention to initiate at
Lincoln a new line of production of radiation-hardened microelectronics necessary
for maintenance of the nuclear stockpile. The NNSA’s FY2020 Stockpile
Stewardship Management Plan notes that the NNSA is “engaging” with the Lincoln
Laboratory in this regard.
The
Lincoln Lab has been closely involved in work on ballistic missile defense
systems, which many experts have argued decrease strategic stability and lead
to further nuclear weapons development. It maintains a staff presence at the
Reagan Test Site in the Marshall Islands, which is a facility responsible for
tests of both ballistic missiles and missile defense systems.
MIT
also maintains some connections with the Draper Laboratory, a lab that used to
be part of the university but became independent in the 1970s in response to
student protests. The Draper Laboratory is currently fulfilling a $370 million
contract for nuclear missile guidance systems. MIT students are eligible to
become fellows at Draper and the immediate past president of MIT sits on Draper
Laboratory’s Board of Directors.
MIT’s
classified research policy creates two standards. The policy states, “The
profound merits of a policy of open research and free interchange of
information among scholars is essential to MIT's institutional responsibility
and to the interests of the nation as a whole.” Any limited exceptions to this
policy in the national interest must be approved by the Provost, except if they
take place at Lincoln Laboratory, which receives a blanket exemption from the
policy.
MIT
is also a partner in Sandia National Laboratories’ Campus Executive Program.
This program aims to build deeper relational connections between the laboratory
and different universities for the purpose of research collaboration and future
workforce recruitment. In FY2018, Sandia invested $18.7 million in research
across its Campus Executive and Academic Alliance universities. Sandia National
Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear components of nuclear weapons and on
nuclear weapons systems integration, for example connecting warheads to their
missile delivery systems. Sandia also performs simulated experiments to test
the safety and reliability of nuclear weapons.
Metropolitan
Community College
The
Metropolitan Community College partners with the site contractor at Kansas City
National Security Campus to provide machinist and toolmaker trainings. The work
at the Kansas City National Security Campus centers on the manufacturing of
nonnuclear components necessary for nuclear weapons.
Missouri
University
The
Missouri University College of Engineering entered into a Master Collaboration
Agreement with the operator of the Kansas City National Security Campus on June
6, 2017. The operator Honeywell has initiated at least ten “Master
Collaboration Agreements” with universities since 2015 “to facilitate closer
collaboration on research and development of new technology to meet national
security needs.” The work at the Kansas City National Security Campus centers
on the manufacturing of non-nuclear components necessary for nuclear weapons.
New
Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology (New Mexico Tech)
New
Mexico Tech is connected to Los Alamos National Laboratory through the New
Mexico Consortium. The Consortium works to foster research collaborations and
economic development opportunities in a variety of scientific areas. The Los
Alamos National Laboratory provides design and engineering for several nuclear
warhead types, conducts simulated experiments to evaluate warheads, and has the
capacity to produce plutonium pits, the core material for nuclear warheads.
New
Mexico Tech is a partner in Sandia National Laboratories’ Campus Executive
Program. This program aims to build deeper relational connections between the
laboratory and different universities for the purpose of research collaboration
and future workforce recruitment. In FY2018, Sandia invested $18.7 million in
research across its Campus Executive and Academic Alliance universities. In
2016, New Mexico Tech joined Lockheed Martin, Purdue University, and New Mexico
State University in an unsuccessful bid to manage Sandia. Sandia National
Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear components of nuclear weapons and on
nuclear weapons systems integration, for example connecting warheads to their
missile delivery systems. Sandia also performs simulated experiments to test
the safety and reliability of nuclear weapons.
Northern
New Mexico College
Northern
New Mexico College signed a five-year agreement in 2019 with the operator of
Los Alamos National Laboratory to form an associate’s degree program in
Radiation Protection. While declining to share details about the agreement,
Northern New Mexico College staff noted the career opportunities that the
program will provide to students and the program’s support of the laboratory’s
national security mission. National Nuclear Security Administration
Administrator Lisa Gordon-Haggerty highlighted this program when speaking to
Congress as a way for the lab to “bring in a new pipeline of radiological
technicians to do work in plutonium operations.” The Los Alamos National
Laboratory provides design and engineering for several nuclear warhead types,
conducts simulated experiments to evaluate warheads, and has the capacity to
produce plutonium pits, the core material for nuclear warheads.
Pittsburgh
State University
Pittsburg
State University entered into a Master Collaboration Agreement with the
operator of the Kansas City National Security Campus on March 28, 2017. The
operator Honeywell has initiated at least ten “Master Collaboration Agreements”
with universities since 2015 “to facilitate closer collaboration on research
and development of new technology to meet national security needs.” The work at
the Kansas City National Security Campus centers on the manufacturing of
non-nuclear components necessary for nuclear weapons.
Purdue
University
Purdue
University is one of Sandia National Laboratories’ five Academic Alliance
partner universities. These partnerships help Sandia “identify promising
candidates at top universities before graduation and promote joint technology
development research between graduate students and SNL researchers, pursuing
topics with national security applications.” All Academic Alliance schools are also
designated as a Campus Executive university partner by Sandia. In FY2018,
Sandia invested $18.7 million in research across its Campus Executive and
Academic Alliance universities. In 2016, Purdue joined Lockheed Martin, New
Mexico State University, and New Mexico Tech in an unsuccessful bid to manage
Sandia. Sandia National Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear components of
nuclear weapons and on nuclear weapons systems integration, for example
connecting warheads to their missile delivery systems. Sandia also performs
simulated experiments to test the safety and reliability of nuclear weapons.
Roane
State Community College
Roane
State Community College partnered with the Y-12 National Security Complex to
provide workforce development training with funding from a state Department of
Labor grant. The Y-12 Complex sources the enriched uranium necessary for
nuclear weapons.
Stanford
University
Stanford
is a partner in Sandia National Laboratories’ Campus Executive Program. This
program aims to build deeper relational connections between the laboratory and
different universities for the purpose of research collaboration and future
workforce recruitment. In FY2018, Sandia invested $18.7 million in research
across its Campus Executive and Academic Alliance universities. Sandia National
Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear components of nuclear weapons and on
nuclear weapons systems integration, for example connecting warheads to their
missile delivery systems. Sandia also performs simulated experiments to test
the safety and reliability of nuclear weapons.
Stanford
also receives funding under the Predictive Science Academic Alliance Program
(PSAAP) II for its Exascale Computing Center. PSAAP is an Advanced Simulation
and Computing initiative funded by the National Nuclear Security Administration
(NNSA) that has roots that date back to 1997. Since the NNSA can no longer
actively test nuclear weapons, it funds universities to develop advanced
simulation capabilities. PSAAP II, the recent iteration of this initiative,
started in 2014 and provided $14.4 million annually for five years to six
different centers. In 2019, a funding opportunity announcement was made for the
next five years, with award announcements expected late in 2019 and estimated
to total $20 million per year, subject to appropriation authority. The
announcement emphasized that proposals should consider simulation capabilities
within a discipline “of interest” to the NNSA’s mission.
Texas
Tech University
Texas
Tech is listed as a “Key University Partner” by Consolidated National Security,
LLC, the managing contractor for the Pantex Plant and the Y-12 National
Security Complex, “demonstrating expertise in aligned research interests,
strength in academic and research disciplines, successful working relationships
with university faculty and administration, and extensive programmatic and
research interactions supporting key CNS initiatives.” The Pantex Plant is
responsible for the dismantling of retired warheads and the reassembly of
warheads undergoing life extension projects and is the storage location for
thousands of plutonium pits. The Y-12 Complex sources the enriched uranium
necessary for nuclear weapons.
University
of Arizona
The
University of Arizona is a partner in Sandia National Laboratories’ Campus
Executive Program. This program aims to build deeper relational connections
between the laboratory and different universities for the purpose of research
collaboration and future workforce recruitment. In FY2018, Sandia invested
$18.7 million in research across its Campus Executive and Academic Alliance
universities. Sandia National Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear
components of nuclear weapons and on nuclear weapons systems integration, for
example connecting warheads to their missile delivery systems. Sandia also
performs simulated experiments to test the safety and reliability of nuclear
weapons.
University
of Arkansas
The
University of Arkansas entered into a Master Collaboration Agreement with the
operator of the Kansas City National Security Campus on May 8, 2017. The
operator Honeywell has initiated at least ten “Master Collaboration Agreements”
with universities since 2015 “to facilitate closer collaboration on research
and development of new technology to meet national security needs.” The work at
the Kansas City National Security Campus includes the manufacturing,
evaluation, and testing of non-nuclear components necessary for nuclear
weapons.
University
of Colorado - Boulder
The
University of Colorado - Boulder is a partner in Sandia National Laboratories’
Campus Executive Program. This program aims to build deeper relational
connections between the laboratory and different universities for the purpose
of research collaboration and future workforce recruitment. In FY2018, Sandia
invested $18.7 million in research across its Campus Executive and Academic
Alliance universities. Sandia National Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear
components of nuclear weapons and on nuclear weapons systems integration, for
example connecting warheads to their missile delivery systems. Sandia also
performs simulated experiments to test the safety and reliability of nuclear
weapons.
University
of Florida
The
University of Florida is a partner in Sandia National Laboratories’ Campus
Executive Program. This program aims to build deeper relational connections
between the laboratory and different universities for the purpose of research
collaboration and future workforce recruitment. In FY2018, Sandia invested
$18.7 million in research across its Campus Executive and Academic Alliance
universities. Sandia National Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear
components of nuclear weapons and on nuclear weapons systems integration, for
example connecting warheads to their missile delivery systems. Sandia also
performs simulated experiments to test the safety and reliability of nuclear
weapons.
A
2016 memorandum of understanding between Sandia and the University of Florida
highlights the objectives of each party in such an agreement. The agreement
notes that each side wants to benefit from the capabilities of the other,
partner in research and create job opportunities for students.
The
University of Florida also receives funding under the Predictive Science
Academic Alliance Program (PSAAP) II for its Center for Compressible Multiphase
Turbulence. PSAAP is an Advanced Simulation and Computing initiative funded by
the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) that has roots that date
back to 1997. Since the NNSA can no longer actively test nuclear weapons, it
funds universities to develop advanced simulation capabilities. PSAAP II, the
recent iteration of this initiative, started in 2014 and provided $14.4 million
annually for five years to six different centers. In 2019, a funding
opportunity announcement was made for the next five years, with award
announcements expected late in 2019 and estimated to total $20 million per
year, subject to appropriation authority. The announcement emphasized that
proposals should consider simulation capabilities within a discipline “of
interest” to the NNSA’s mission.
University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
The
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is one of Sandia National
Laboratories’ five Academic Alliance partner universities. These partnerships
help Sandia “identify promising candidates at top universities before
graduation and promote joint technology development research between graduate
students and SNL researchers, pursuing topics with national security
applications.” The agreement between Sandia and the University of Illinois,
acquired through a Freedom of Information Act request, notes how the two
entities “will have visible and substantive presences on each others’ campuses.
This includes offices, shared staff, sabbaticals, and programmatic integration
of researchers, faculty and students.” All Academic Alliance schools are also
designated as a Campus Executive university partner by Sandia. In FY2018,
Sandia invested $18.7 million in research across its Campus Executive and
Academic Alliance universities. Sandia National Laboratories focuses on the
nonnuclear components of nuclear weapons and on nuclear weapons systems
integration, for example connecting warheads to their missile delivery systems.
Sandia also performs simulated experiments to test the safety and reliability
of nuclear weapons.
The
University of Illinois also receives funding under the Predictive Science
Academic Alliance Program (PSAAP) II for its Center for Exascale Simulation of
Plasma-Coupled Combustion. PSAAP is an Advanced Simulation and Computing
initiative funded by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) that
has roots that date back to 1997. Since the NNSA can no longer actively test
nuclear weapons, it funds universities to develop advanced simulation
capabilities. PSAAP II, the recent iteration of this initiative, started in
2014 and provided $14.4 million annually for five years to six different centers.
In 2019, a funding opportunity announcement was made for the next five years,
with award announcements expected late in 2019 and estimated to total $20
million per year, subject to appropriation authority. The announcement
emphasized that proposals should consider simulation capabilities within a
discipline “of interest” to the NNSA’s mission.
University
of Kansas
The
University of Kansas entered into a Master Collaboration Agreement with the
operator of the Kansas City National Security Campus on February 16, 2016. The
operator Honeywell has initiated at least ten “Master Collaboration Agreements”
with universities since 2015 “to facilitate closer collaboration on research
and development of new technology to meet national security needs.” The work at
the Kansas City National Security Campus centers on the manufacturing of
nonnuclear components necessary for nuclear weapons.
University
of Michigan
The
University of Michigan is a partner in Sandia National Laboratories’ Campus
Executive Program. This program aims to build deeper relational connections
between the laboratory and different universities for the purpose of research
collaboration and future workforce recruitment. In FY2018, Sandia invested
$18.7 million in research across its Campus Executive and Academic Alliance
universities. Sandia National Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear
components of nuclear weapons and on nuclear weapons systems integration, for
example connecting warheads to their missile delivery systems. Sandia also
performs simulated experiments to test the safety and reliability of nuclear
weapons.
The
university was awarded funding in 2018 for a Stewardship Science Academic
Alliance Center of Excellence. The Center for Laboratory Astrophysics will
receive $5 million in research grants over five years. While the Stewardship
Science Academic Alliance program funds basic, unclassified research, it seeks
and funds proposals that have relevance to the stewardship of the nation’s
nuclear stockpile.
University
of Missouri - Kansas City
The
University of Missouri - Kansas City entered into a Master Collaboration
Agreement with the operator of the Kansas City National Security Campus on
March 14, 2017. The operator Honeywell has initiated at least ten “Master
Collaboration Agreements” with universities since 2015 “to facilitate closer
collaboration on research and development of new technology to meet national
security needs.” The work at the Kansas City National Security Campus centers
on the manufacturing of non-nuclear components necessary for nuclear weapons.
University
of Nebraska
The
University of Nebraska manages the National Strategic Research Institute, a
university affiliated research center with the Department of Defense that
received a five-year, $92 million contract renewal in 2018. The Institute is
affiliated with the U.S. Strategic Command, which has “assigned
responsibilities [that] include strategic deterrence; nuclear operations; space
operations; joint electronic spectrum operations; global strike; missile
defense; and analysis and targeting.” However, the five research focus areas
listed for the institute emphasize detection and defense from weapons of mass
destruction, not nuclear weapons capabilities.
University
of Nevada - Las Vegas
In
2016, the University of Nevada - Las Vegas entered into a subcontracting
agreement with the contractor for the Nevada National Security Site. The
agreement lasts through September 2020 and, at the time of signing, had an
estimated value of $8,000,000. The university agreed to provide “research,
services, and fabrication support” in a number of specified scientific and
engineering domains. Specific work and funding provided under the contract is
determined by individual task orders. The Nevada National Security Site is the
location of nearly 1,000 tests of nuclear weapons in past decades, leading to
serious health impacts for nearby residents and participating military
personnel. Currently, staff at the site conduct simulated experiments to test
the reliability and performance of nuclear weapons. The site also hosts
“subcritical experiments” that allow for the evaluation of nuclear weapons
materials under certain conditions, but do not cause a “self-sustaining nuclear
chain reaction.
Also
at the University of Nevada - Las Vegas, the Nevada National Security Site
helped to offer a new graduate certificate in Nuclear Criticality Safety
Engineering.
University
of Nevada - Reno
The
University of Nevada - Reno developed a new Graduate Certificate in Nuclear
Packaging in partnership with the Department of Energy. A Nevada National
Security Site engineer was the first to complete the program. The Nevada
National Security Site is the location of nearly 1,000 tests of nuclear weapons
in past decades, leading to serious health impacts for nearby residents and
participating military personnel. Currently, staff at the site conduct
simulated experiments to test the reliability and performance of nuclear
weapons. The site also hosts “subcritical experiments” that allow for the
evaluation of nuclear weapons materials under certain conditions, but do not
cause a “self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction.”
University
of Notre Dame
The
University of Notre Dame was awarded funding in 2017 for a Stewardship Science
Academic Alliance Center of Excellence. The Actinide Center of Excellence will
receive $12.5 million in research grants in total. While the Stewardship
Science Academic Alliance program funds basic, unclassified research, it seeks
and funds proposals that have relevance to the stewardship of the nation’s
nuclear stockpile.
The
University of Notre Dame also receives funding under the Predictive Science
Academic Alliance Program (PSAAP) II for its Center for Shock Wave-processing
of Advanced Reactive Materials. PSAAP is an Advanced Simulation and Computing
initiative funded by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) that
has roots that date back to 1997. Since the NNSA can no longer actively test
nuclear weapons, it funds universities to develop advanced simulation
capabilities. PSAAP II, the recent iteration of this initiative, started in
2014 and provided $14.4 million annually for five years to six different
centers. In 2019, a funding opportunity announcement was made for the next five
years, with award announcements expected late in 2019 and estimated to total
$20 million per year, subject to appropriation authority. The announcement
emphasized that proposals should consider simulation capabilities within a
discipline “of interest” to the NNSA’s mission.
University
of Rochester
The
University of Rochester hosts the Laboratory for Laser Energetics. While not a
national laboratory, it nonetheless receives substantial funding from the
Weapons Activities Appropriation in the NNSA, $80 million in FY2019 and an
estimated $409.9 million for FY2019-2023. The lab hosts the OMEGA Laser
Facility and, according to the lab’s director, the lab’s primary mission is to
support the NNSA and the nation’s nuclear weapons capabilities. Its funding
supports the laboratory facilities and staff as well as a number of fellowships
for graduate students at other universities. Laboratory employees only conduct
basic, unclassified research at the lab; on rare occasions, the facility will
close to allow national laboratory researchers to conduct classified research.
Early
in 2018, the Trump’s Administration proposed major cuts to the laboratory for
FY2019 and eliminating all funding over three years time. A lobbying campaign
led by New York’s Congressional delegation successfully reversed the proposal
and increased funding to the laboratory. In addition to highlighting the jobs
at the lab, both Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand noted its
importance to national security. The president of the University of Rochester
claimed it was the “largest university-based U.S. Department of Energy program
in the U.S.”
University
of South Carolina - Aiken
The
University of South Carolina - Aiken is one of five institutions that divide $2
million in annual funding from the National Nuclear Security Administration for
workforce development grants in support of staffing needs at the Savannah River
Site. Staff at this site help recycle tritium from old warheads, an element
that increases the yield of nuclear weapons, to reuse in new warheads. The
Trump Administration proposed that this site begin production of plutonium pits
in addition to those produced at Los Alamos. If this proposal is approved, the
site’s workforce needs would grow more acute.
University
of South Carolina - Salkehatchie
The
University of South Carolina - Salkehatchie is one of five institutions that
divide $2 million in annual funding from the National Nuclear Security
Administration for workforce development grants in support of staffing needs at
the Savannah River Site. Staff at this site help recycle tritium from old
warheads, an element that increases the yield of nuclear weapons, to reuse in
new warheads. The Trump Administration proposed that this site begin production
of plutonium pits in addition to those produced at Los Alamos. If this proposal
is approved, the site’s workforce needs would grow more acute.
University
of Tennessee
The
University of Tennessee is listed as a “Key University Partner” by Consolidated
National Security, LLC, the managing contractor for the Pantex Plant and the
Y-12 National Security Complex, “demonstrating expertise in aligned research
interests, strength in academic and research disciplines, successful working
relationships with university faculty and administration, and extensive
programmatic and research interactions supporting key CNS initiatives.”
Formal
partnership between Y-12 and the University of Tennessee, Knoxville dates to
2011. A press release at the time noted, “Under the MOU, the two plan to expand
their partnership and are considering several jointly funded research projects
and the possibility of initiating joint research institutes or centers of
excellence to solve complex national security and manufacturing-related
problems facing our nation.” A 2014 article from the business school gave an
update, “Today, both sites are reaping the benefits of this unique partnership,
which brings valuable expertise to Y-12 in a variety of disciplines while
providing unique educational and research opportunities for UT students and
faculty.” The Y-12 Complex sources the enriched uranium necessary for nuclear
weapons.
University of Texas at Austin
The
University of Texas at Austin is one of Sandia National Laboratories’ five
Academic Alliance partner universities. These partnerships help Sandia
“identify promising candidates at top universities before graduation and
promote joint technology development research between graduate students and SNL
researchers, pursuing topics with national security applications.” All Academic
Alliance schools are also designated as a Campus Executive university partner
by Sandia. In FY2018, Sandia invested $18.7 million in research across its
Campus Executive and Academic Alliance universities. In 2016, the University of
Texas joined Boeing, Battelle, the University of New Mexico and Texas A&M
University in an unsuccessful bid to manage Sandia.
Sandia
National Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear components of nuclear weapons
and on nuclear weapons systems integration, for example connecting warheads to
their missile delivery systems. Sandia also performs simulated experiments to
test the safety and reliability of nuclear weapons.
The
university was awarded funding in 2018 for a Stewardship Science Academic
Alliance Center of Excellence. The Center for Astrophysical Plasma Properties
will receive $7 million in research grants over five years. While the
Stewardship Science Academic Alliance program funds basic, unclassified
research, it seeks and funds proposals that have relevance to the stewardship
of the nation’s nuclear stockpile.
University
of Utah
The
University of Utah receives funding under the Predictive Science Academic Alliance
Program (PSAAP) II for its Carbon-Capture Multidisciplinary Simulation Center.
PSAAP is an Advanced Simulation and Computing initiative funded by the National
Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) that has roots that date back to 1997.
Since the NNSA can no longer actively test nuclear weapons, it funds
universities to develop advanced simulation capabilities. PSAAP II, the recent
iteration of this initiative, started in 2014 and provided $14.4 million
annually for five years to six different centers. In 2019, a funding
opportunity announcement was made for the next five years, with award
announcements expected late in 2019 and estimated to total $20 million per
year, subject to appropriation authority. The announcement emphasized that
proposals should consider simulation capabilities within a discipline “of
interest” to the NNSA’s mission.
University
of Wisconsin - Madison
The
University of Wisconsin - Madison is listed as a partner by Sandia National
Laboratories in its Campus Executive Program, although the university’s public
records office did not find any record of a formal partnership agreement
between the two entities. This program aims to build deeper relational
connections between the laboratory and different universities for the purpose
of research collaboration and future workforce recruitment. In FY2018, Sandia
invested $18.7 million in research across its Campus Executive and Academic
Alliance universities. Sandia National Laboratories focuses on the non-nuclear
components of nuclear weapons and on nuclear weapons systems integration, for
example connecting warheads to their missile delivery systems. Sandia also
performs simulated experiments to test the safety and reliability of nuclear
weapons.
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