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Apr 4 -- Comment period extended to April 18, 2023. https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2023-06880
 
1) Feb 15 -- The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) publishes the following questions regarding potential engagement with the Foundation for Energy Security and Innovation (FESI), directed to be established under the CHIPS and Science Act. The purpose of this RFI is to seek input on how DOE stakeholders may engage with the FESI directly, and how DOE may engage with the FESI and the communities it will serve. Interested parties are requested to answer some or all of the questions at their discretion. Responses to the RFI must be received no later than 5 p.m. (ET) on March 27, 2023.

DOE is renowned for its research prowess, technology expertise, and ability to leverage American ingenuity to invent early-stage clean energy technologies. To help meet the Administration's climate, jobs, and economic goals, it is imperative that our early-stage technologies are successfully guided through to demonstration and deployment. Only then will DOE-invested technologies activate their fullest potential to help combat the global climate crisis. The Office of Technology Transitions (OTT) works to develop policies, share lessons learned, and improve the Department's ability to commercialize. At the highest level, commercialization is the process of taking an idea and bringing it to market—or progression across the research, development, demonstration, and deployment (RDD&D) continuum to obtain market viability. The RDD&D continuum provides a useful framework for mapping the stages of a technology's progression to commercialization—starting with research into an innovative idea and ending with commercial scale deployment.

The commercialization pathway for clean technologies is nonlinear and often fails because of inadequate support infrastructure including capital, tooling, as well as market, manufacturing, and industry expertise—not because of the technology's fundamentals. Commercialization support infrastructure on a national, regional, and local scale are essential to ensuring economics are addressed and critical ecosystem players are onboard. The economic and business model requirements for deployment, as well as a technology's societal considerations, can and should shape the technical problem definition and design of solutions at all stages of the RDD&D continuum. OTT is charged with thinking through this problem set and working collaboratively across DOE to maximize our commercialization outcomes. Given the importance and complexity of OTT's commercialization mandate, it is essential the DOE explore and leverage all authorities granted to the Agency. This includes a new DOE opportunity in the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022—the Foundation for Energy Security and Innovation (FESI).

There has been much interest in the establishment of this new foundation, and DOE has received inquiries regarding future activities with FESI. In order to obtain a wide array of perspectives from stakeholders, DOE, through this RFI, is seeking input on how it might engage with the FESI and the communities it will serve.

The FESI is to be established as an independent non-profit entity by the DOE pursuant to authorization in the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022 (section 10691) (Pub. L. 117-167), signed into law by President Biden on August 9, 2022. The mission of FESI is two-fold: (1) to support the mission of the Department of Energy generally; and more specifically, (2) to increase private and philanthropic sector investments to accelerate the commercialization of energy technologies. The statute provides FESI with broad authority to carry out its mission.
 
To accomplish this mission, Congress authorized the FESI to engage with the private sector to raise funds that support efforts to “create, characterize, develop, test, validate, and deploy or commercialize innovative technologies that address crosscutting national energy challenges”.

To facilitate establishment of FESI so it may begin achieving its mission, Congress has mandated that DOE appoint and convene a Board of Directors to include statutorily required ex officio non-voting members from DOE, as well as appointed voting members. The CHIPS and Science Act of 2022 identified the DOE ex officio members of the Board as the Secretary of Energy, the Under Secretary for Science, the Under Secretary for Nuclear Security, and the DOE Chief Commercialization Officer.

To assist with identifying potential initial voting members of the Board, Congress mandated DOE consult with the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to develop a list of well-qualified individuals that represent a diverse set of stakeholders.

Following appointment of the initial Board of Directors and establishment of FESI, the Department of Energy's Secretary will also appoint liaisons from across DOE, including from the Office of Technology Transitions (OTT) and the Undersecretaries for and Infrastructure, among others, to collaborate and coordinate with the Foundation. As specified in the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022, collaboration and coordination with OTT and other relevant DOE offices is essential to ensure that the FESI supports the DOE mission without duplicating existing commercialization and other activities and programs carried out by the DOE.

To help identify and prioritize opportunities for DOE to engage and partner with the FESI, DOE is seeking information from potential stakeholder groups including, but not limited to:

-- Philanthropic and non-profit organizations.
-- Community stakeholders.
-- DOE's National Laboratory foundations.
-- Potential investors in companies developing technologies aligned with the DOE mission.
-- Industry stakeholders, especially those representing diverse regions, sectors, and communities.
-- Other potential stakeholders or collaborators of FESI.

1. Which aspects of the DOE mission and energy technology commercialization can you identify as potentially benefitting from FESI's involvement?

2. Once the FESI is established, what mission areas would you recommend DOE prioritize working on with the FESI?

3. In what ways would you recommend DOE seek support of the FESI to carry out the mission areas identified?

4. To assist DOE in understanding and potentially better aligning with stakeholder interest, in what ways would you recommend DOE engage with organizations to determine what they seek to accomplish?

5. How would you envision DOE engage with the FESI to:

a. Better support communities wishing to participate in the energy transition?
b. Better support industry and small businesses wishing to participate in the energy transition?
c. Drive long-term climate and clean energy strategy?
d. Broaden participation in energy technology development among individuals from historically underrepresented groups or regions?
e. Support the commercialization of energy technologies?
f. Support workforce development?
g. Foster collaboration and partnerships with researchers from the Federal Government, State governments, institutions of higher education, including historically Black colleges or universities, Tribal Colleges or Universities, and minority-serving institutions, federally funded research and development centers (FFRDCs), industry, and nonprofit organizations for the research, development, demonstration and deployment of transformative energy and associated technologies?

6. What potential challenges should DOE be aware of to proactively manage given the intent to establish the FESI?

7. What other ways could the establishment of FESI support the DOE missions? How could DOE engage effectively with the FESI on these activities?

FRN: https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2023-03199
Correction: https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2023-04951
 
2) Feb 9 [news release] -- The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today released a Request for Information (RFI) seeking public and stakeholder input on the Department’s first ever agency-related Foundation. Authorized by President Biden’s bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act of 2022, the Foundation for Energy Security and Innovation (FESI) will support DOE to carry out its critical mission to ensure America's continued security and prosperity through transformative science and technology solutions. A key aim of FESI is to accelerate the commercialization of new and existing energy technologies by raising and investing funds through engagements with the private sector and philanthropic communities. The Foundation will help DOE provide additional resources, tools, and capacities for potential partners and communities across the country—supporting solutions-driven research and innovation that strengthens America’s energy and national security while helping achieve the Biden-Harris Administration's ambitious clean energy goals. . . .

News release: https://www.energy.gov/articles/doe-launches-foundation-energy-security-and-innovation
 
3) Vanessa Z. Chan, DOE Chief Commercialization Officer and Director, Office of Technology Transitions [blog]

. . . DOE is hard at work making billion-dollar investments to help de-risk clean energy technologies so that the private sector can help with the final stages of commercialization, demonstration and deployment.  But more is needed. The FESI, by design, can go beyond the Department to act nimbly and flexibly at a regional and national scale. For example, the FESI could:

-- Tackle systemic and widely distributed federal, state, and local deployment challenges such as those faced by local energy offices as they navigate the deployment of clean energy technologies.
-- Invest and incubate early-stage start-up companies commercializing DOE-funded and other critical energy technologies.
-- Build public-private partnerships to decarbonize sectors that span several federal agencies as well as state and local governments, along with a diverse array of private-sector interests, such as agriculture, construction, or marine transport.
-- Support education and training of new researchers in energy technology fields as well as enhance public education and awareness regarding the role and value of DOE-sponsored RDD&D.
-- Provide direct assistance to underrepresented groups and regions to facilitate participation in funding opportunities, bringing in new stakeholders and ideas into the DOE family.
-- Create a forum for the national laboratories and their associated foundations to network and share knowledge, and respond as a system to cross-cutting national challenges. . . .

The ARPA-E Summit in Washington, D.C. will host a panel on March 24, 2023, at 9 a.m. ET to discuss lessons learned from existing agency-related foundations and opportunities for the FESI.

https://www.energy.gov/technologytransitions/articles/agency-related-foundation-will-propel-doe-new-heights

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