Energy, Climate Change,
and Our Environment

The President has taken unprecedented action to build the foundation for a clean energy economy, tackle the issue of climate change, and protect our environment.

Energy and Environment Latest News

  • Department of Energy Announces Call for Nominations for Fermi Award

    Our colleagues at the U.S. Department of Energy recently announced a call for nominations for the 2010 Enrico Fermi Award. This Presidential Award is the oldest science and technology award given by the U.S. government and one of the most prestigious.

    The Fermi Award is bestowed by the President upon an individual or individuals of international stature in recognition of exceptional scientific, technical, engineering, and/or management achievements related to the broad missions of the U.S. Department of Energy and its programs. Nominations are made via an electronic submission process at http://www.orau.gov/fermi. The deadline for submitting nominations is 11 p.m. EDT on June 15, 2010.

    The award has a rich history. It started when President Eisenhower and the Atomic Energy Commission honored Enrico Fermi with a special award for his lifetime of accomplishments in physics and, in particular, for the development of atomic energy. That award was bestowed on November 16, 1954, just 12 days before the Italian-born naturalized American citizen and winner of the 1938 Nobel Prize in Physics died of cancer at the age of 53. The Enrico Fermi Presidential Award was established in 1956 as a memorial to Fermi, who achieved the first nuclear chain reaction—and thereby initiated the atomic age—on December 2, 1942, in a squash court under the stands of the University of Chicago's football stadium. The first Fermi Award recipients included physicists John von Neumann, Ernest 0. Lawrence, Hans Bethe, and Edward Teller.

    The Enrico Fermi Award is given to encourage excellence in energy science, and technology research; to show appreciation to scientists, engineers, and science policymakers who have given unstintingly over their lifetimes to benefit mankind through energy science and technology; and to inspire people of all ages through the example of Enrico Fermi himself—whose achievements opened new scientific and technological realms—and the Fermi Award laureates, who have continued in his tradition. The Fermi Award is administered on behalf of the White House by the Department of Energy's Office of Science.

    Fermi Award winners receive citations signed by the President of the United States and the Secretary of Energy, a gold medal bearing the likeness of Enrico Fermi, and a $375,000 honorarium. In the event the Award is given to more than one individual in the same year, the recipients share the honorarium.

    For more information about the Enrico Fermi Award, visit: http://www.science.doe.gov/fermi/index.htm.

    For a complete list of recipients, visit: http://www.science.doe.gov/fermi/html/Award.htm.

  • Earth Day Live Chat with Carol Browner

    [UPDATE: This event has now concluded.]

    [UPDATE: The Earth Day live chat with Carol Browner will now take place at 12:30 PM EDT on Thursday, April 22.]

    Ed. Note: Tomorrow, Vice President Biden will kick off five days of Administration events around the 40th anniversary of Earth Day. As one of these events, Carol Browner, Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change, will join us at 12:30PM EDT [updated to reflect time change] Thursday via WhiteHouse.gov/live or Facebook to discuss making President Obama’s energy and climate change vision into a reality.

    It has been three months since the last time we had a chance to chat with you about clean energy and climate change.  Since then, President Obama has made significant progress towards building the foundation for a new clean energy economy.  You can visit our Earth Day website for examples of recent progress toward the President’s goal of a future economy powered by clean energy technology and a diverse energy portfolio that increases our energy independence while reducing carbon pollution.

    We hope you join us on Earth Day for an opportunity to discuss these critical issues and how the Administration is working to improve the environment, transform American infrastructure for greater energy-efficiency, and build a clean energy economy that supports the jobs of the future.

    Heather Zichal is Deputy Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change.

  • Preparing our Youth for the Clean Energy Jobs of the Future

    Growing up on a ranch in the San Luis Valley of Colorado, my parents taught me the importance of hard work, getting an education, and protecting the natural resources that were the source of our livelihood.  Because of their encouragement, my brothers and sisters and I– all eight of us - became first-generation college graduates.

    Today, our youth face high unemployment rates, rising health risks such as childhood obesity, and less time spent in the great outdoors. The unemployment crisis facing today’s youth is particularly acute in the African-American and Hispanic communities. 

    This afternoon, I spoke at the National Capitol Forum on Hispanic Higher Education, hosted by the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU), about preparing our nation’s youth – particularly Hispanic youth - for the clean energy jobs of the future. 

    The Department of the Interior provides thousands of jobs protecting, conserving and restoring our nation’s natural resources and building a new foundation for the clean energy economy of tomorrow. And, over the next seven years, 40% of our Interior’s workforce will retire. This presents us with both a challenge and an opportunity.  As youth face unprecedented unemployment rates, young Americans are in a unique position to find work in America’s Great Outdoors. The Department of Interior is leading the charge, putting thousands of young people to work, especially during the summer, when they need jobs the most.

    But we need to do more than just provide young people with a job; we need to provide them with a career path. Under President Obama’s leadership, building the new clean energy economy will help provide these careers while making America more competitive in the global marketplace. Working with HACU member institutions, we are developing a Conservation Curriculum for colleges and universities that will build a pathway to green careers with a special emphasis on young Latinos and Latinas.

    Partnerships like this one will help diversity the workforce for green agencies like Interior, but will also help diversity the clean energy workforce of the future. 

    Ken Salazar is Secretary of the Interior

  • Creating a 21st Century Strategy for America's Outdoors

    President Obama signed a Presidential Memorandum launching the America’s Great Outdoors Initiative today, which focuses on promoting community-level efforts to conserve outdoor spaces. As part of the initiative, members of the administration will host regional sessions with groups and individuals across the country to discuss ideas on how to protect America’s natural landscape and form a 21st century strategy conservation agenda.

    The President said that the initiative is not a “big federal agenda being driven out of Washington,” but an effort to collect the best ideas on conservation that local communities support and reconnect Americans to the outdoors. He explained that the initiative will build on successful conservation efforts being lead by local and state governments, tribes, and private groups, while helping farmers, ranchers, and property owners to protect their lands. The outdoors initiative will also help families spend more time outdoors by building on the First Lady’s Let’s Move initiative.

    America’s Great Outdoors Initiative will be lead by the Secretaries of the Interior and Agriculture, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the Chair of the Council of Environmental Quality. They will work in coordination with the Departments of Defense, Commerce, Housing and Urban Development, Health and Human Services, Labor, Transportation, Education, and the Office of Management and Budget.

    President Obama Signs Memorandum on America's Great Outdoors Initiative

    President Barack Obama signs a presidential memorandum at the America's Great Outdoors Conference at the Department of the Interior in Washington, D.C. Watching, from left, are Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality Nancy Sutley, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa P. Jackson, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, Assistant Secretary of the Army Jo-Ellen Darcy, Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere Jane Lubchenco, and Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Dr. Dorothy Robyn. April 16, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)

    The initiative follows a public lands bill that the President signed into law last year that designated 2 acres of wilderness, over 1,000 miles of wild and scenic rivers, and three national parks, marking the most significant lands bill in decades. 

    The President reflected on Theodore Roosevelt’s commitment to the outdoors and “legacy of conservation that still enhances our lives.”

    [W]e are working faithfully to carry on the legacy of Teddy Roosevelt in the 21st century.  But we also know that we must adapt our strategies to meet the new challenges of our time.  Over the last century, our population grew from about 90 million to 300 million people, and as it did, we lost more and more of our natural landscape to development.  Meanwhile, a host of other factors –- from a changing climate to new sources of pollution -– have put a growing strain on our wildlife and our waters and our lands.

    So rising to meet these challenges is a task and an obligation, but it’s one that government cannot and should not meet alone.  There are roughly 1,600 privately run land trusts in this country that have protected over 10 million acres through voluntary efforts.  And by working with farmers and ranchers and landowners, the Department of Agriculture’s Conservation Reserve Program has protected over 30 million acres, and its Natural Resource Conservation Service -– a service that is 75 years old this year –- has protected almost 3 million more.  So together, we are conserving our working lands in a way that preserves the environment and protects local communities.

    President Obama followed in Roosevelt's footsteps on a trip to Yellowstone National Park last summer, a longtime tradition of American Presidents. Watch footage of the First Family's visit to Yellowstone.

    Download Video: mp4 (96MB) | ()

     

  • Streaming All Morning: White House Conference on America's Great Outdoors

    Ed. Note: Bumped to the top of the blog.

    All morning the White House and Department of the Interior will be hosting the America’s Great Outdoors Conference, addressing the challenges, opportunities and innovations surrounding modern-day land conservation and the importance of reconnecting Americans and American families to the outdoors. 

    The conference will feature remarks from President Obama, CEQ Chair Nancy Sutley, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar, Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, and EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson. 

    Conference Schedule:

    9:00 AM – Opening Remarks

    • Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar
    • Council on Environmental Quality Chair Nancy Sutley
    • Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack
    • Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson

    10:10 AM  - Remarks by President Obama

    11:15 AM – Panel Discussion: Conserving working lands for the benefit of all Americans

    • Secretary Tom Vilsack, Moderator: A conversation about innovative partnerships that conserves and restore working lands to benefit landowners, water resources, and both rural and urban communities and that create opportunities for Americans to reconnect with farms, ranches, and working forests.

    12:30 PM: Panel Discussion: Connecting people to our lands, water and wildlife

    • Secretary Ken Salazar, Moderator: A discussion about locally-driven strategies and partnerships to conserve our public lands, historic and cultural places, wildlife habitat, and urban parks and about how to connect the next generation with the outdoors.

    1:30 PM – Closing Remarks by Secretary Salazar

  • Building a New Foundation for Energy and the Environment

    In the last 15 months, President Obama and his Administration have made significant progress in changing the way America thinks about energy and the environment, making the vision of a 21st century clean energy economy a reality.  From historic investments in clean energy infrastructure and technology; improved efficiency for buildings, appliances and automobiles; more diverse energy production from domestic and renewable sources; and reduced emissions that contribute to climate change – the President’s comprehensive strategy has put Americans back in control of their energy future, created new jobs and laid the foundation for long-term economic security, and led by example in exercising good stewardship of our environment.  

    To continue the progress, we need your help.  President Obama believes, "...that change won’t come from Washington alone. It will come from Americans across the country who take steps in their own homes and their own communities to make that change happen." So today, in honor of the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day, President Obama is challenging Americans to take action to change our nation’s energy and environmental future. 

    Download Video: mp4 (86MB) | mp3 (3MB)

    Visit WhiteHouse.gov/earthday to learn more about what you can do in your homes, communities, schools and businesses to answer the President’s call-to-action to help lay a new foundation for energy and the environment.

    Anthony Russell is the Communication Advisor for the White House Office of Energy and Climate Change