With a new administration taking charge at the White House, the increased funding for federal science and technology that began with the economic stimulus bill could be just a down payment on much bigger investments to come. Calling science “more essential for our prosperity, our security, our health, our environment, and our quality of life than it has ever been,” President Obama in April announced his goal of growing US S&T expenditures to a level of 3% of gross domestic product. Saying that his target represented “the largest commitment to scientific research and innovation in American history,” Obama noted it would exceed the high watermark set in 1964, at the height of the space race. In 2007 total US R&D expenditures equaled 2.66% of GDP, according to NSF statistics. At its 1964 peak, the ratio was 2.88%.

In the years ahead, Obama’s spending goals will collide head-on with his insistence that the massive federal budget deficit be brought under control. But for now, at least, the federal funding spigots have been opened for S&T through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, which Obama signed into law in February. The $787 billion stimulus, meant to revive the flagging US economy, appropriated massive increases for S&T programs at the Department of Energy (DOE), NSF, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and other S&T funding agencies. (See Physics Today, April 2009, page 22.) Compared with ARRA, the S&T increases in Obama’s fiscal year 2010 request are puny. Still, the budget proposal, unveiled three months late on 14 May, presents the first detailed blueprint of the administration’s priorities for S&T. The plan places far greater emphasis on developing alternative energy sources and slowing climate change than did the budgets proposed by President George W. Bush.

On the other hand, Obama adopts the objectives of Bush’s American Competitiveness Initiative, which sought to double over 10 years the basic research budgets of NSF, DOE’s Office of Science, and NIST’s core laboratory programs—the programs that supply most of the federal investment for basic research in the physical sciences. Congress, which embraced that same goal with passage of the America COMPETES Act in 2007, jeopardized the 10-year timetable by failing to follow through with the required appropriations in both FY 2007 and 2008. This year, the $5.2 billion supplied by ARRA to the three agencies, combined with increases provided in the FY 2009 omnibus appropriations act, has made up the shortfall and put the doubling back on schedule for now. Obama’s 2010 budget seeks $12.6 billion for the programs, an increase of $731 million, or 6.1%, above the 2009 base (not including ARRA funds). In addition, his 2010 proposal spells out projections for completing the doubling effort in 2016; the three agencies would get $19.5 billion, twice the $9.7 billion they received in FY 2006.

The new administration says its budget request will place a “special emphasis” on basic and applied research that it believes will fundamentally improve understanding of nature, revolutionize key fields of science, and foster radically new technologies. After a four-year period, ending in 2008, where funding failed to keep pace with inflation, the FY 2009 enacted level and the 2010 request represent a “real-dollar turnaround in federal research investments across the spectrum of the sciences and engineering,” according to a budget summary issued by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. But the $59 billion research portfolio it proposes for basic and applied research is up just 0.6%, or $376 million, compared with the current year level (excluding ARRA funding). And more than half of those funds—$30.8 billion—will go to one agency, NIH.

The 2010 budget provides $1.6 billion for the multiagency National Nanotechnology Initiative, a slight cut of $17 million, or 1%, from the 2009 enacted level. That reduction is due to the proposed elimination in FY 2010 of earmarks—congressionally mandated projects—that were included in the FY 2009 Department of Defense budget. Like his predecessor, Obama is counting on the elimination of earmarks to pay for much of the increase he seeks for the R&D programs of the agencies. The 2010 budget proposes $3.7 billion for the more than 100 federal science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education programs, an increase of $98 million, or 2.7%, over the current level for those programs. In addition for those programs, ARRA provides $276 million, which will be spent over 2009 and 2010.

Following are some highlights for the agencies that supply most of the funding for physical sciences research.

Department of Energy. Arguably, no federal scientific agency has seen such a reordering of its priorities with the change of administrations as has DOE. That shift was presaged by Obama’s choice of Steven Chu to head the agency; the Nobel laureate physicist refocused his career in 2004 on using clean energy sources more efficiently to combat climate change. DOE’s share of ARRA is more than $38 billion, with energy efficiency and renewable energy programs alone receiving $16.8 billion next year. Another $4.5 billion is allocated to the electricity delivery and energy reliability office, primarily to support the development of a “smart grid,” which will be needed to accommodate major increases in solar and wind electricity generation. The fossil energy research program is getting $4.5 billion in ARRA funds.

But only a fraction of the stimulus funding—$5.5 billion—goes to energy R&D, according to the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The AAAS calculates that $2.5 billion of the ARRA monies are for R&D to increase energy efficiency and improve the competitiveness of renewable energy sources such as wind, solar, geothermal, and biofuel. Another $1 billion will support R&D toward reducing or eliminating emissions of carbon dioxide from fossil fuel burning.

Separately, basic physical sciences programs administered by DOE’s Office of Science will receive $1.6 billion from ARRA. Most of that will pay for long-needed upgrades to the infrastructure and equipment at the national laboratories. However, the three largest national labs—Sandia, Lawrence Livermore, and Los Alamos—are not eligible for ARRA funding because they are operated by DOE’s National Nuclear Security Administration.

For FY 2010, the budget for the Office of Science comes back to Earth, with a request of $4.9 billion, a 3.9% increase from the current year’s base budget. The basic energy sciences program, which administers the numerous scientific user facilities at the national labs, would get a 7% increase from the current year’s base—not counting its $555 million share of ARRA funding—to $1.7 billion next year. Advanced scientific computing research would jump almost 11% next year, to $409 million.

The request includes a new budget line of $10 million for the Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy, a DOE entity that Congress first authorized in 2007 to stimulate research on radically new ways to produce energy. Although Bush ignored the congressional authorization, Obama has embraced ARPA-E and has already provided $400 million for it through ARRA. According to the DOE request, ARPA-E will identify and promote “radical or breakthrough advances that can potentially produce transformative results and complement other ongoing research focusing on driving known technological solutions toward their fundamental limits.” Patterned after the successful Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), ARPA-E is expected to hasten advances in energy technologies to the proof-of-concept and prototyping phases and, for smaller-scale projects, into the demonstration phase. The search for an ARPA-E director, who will be a presidential appointee requiring Senate confirmation, was under way at press time. Eschewing peer review, the new office will empower carefully chosen program managers to pick and choose research proposals.

The FY 2010 budget proposal includes $70 million for two of the eight proposed “energy innovation hubs” that will be administered by the Office of Science. Those centers, which will employ multidisciplinary teams of experts, will focus on two grand energy challenges: the creation of fuels directly from sunlight without the use of plants or microbes, and advanced methods of electrical energy storage. Chu told a Senate committee in May that he strongly hopes the researchers who will staff the hubs will be housed in a single location.

The budget request proposes $115 million for a new DOE–NSF program to encourage US students to take up careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, with an emphasis on fields that work on clean energy.

NSF. The $3 billion in ARRA funding appropriated for NSF amounted to half the agency’s 2008 total budget. Two-thirds of the supplement will be used to fund thousands more research proposals, the majority of which either have already been reviewed and deemed to be of high quality or are currently in the review process. Those grants are expected to be awarded by September. Highly rated proposals that were rejected on or after 1 October 2008 due to a lack of available funding will be reconsidered. All ARRA-funded grants will be standard NSF grants, with durations of up to 5 years, and funding of new principal investigators and high-risk, high-return research projects will be a top priority, according to NSF director Arden Bement. But ARRA monies will not be used to supplement existing grants.

Of the remaining $1 billion from ARRA, $400 million will supplement NSF’s major research facilities and equipment construction account, $300 million will go for competitively selected grants to help universities finance major research instrumentation, and $200 million will pay for grants to upgrade academic infrastructure. Science and mathematics education programs will receive $100 million.

Although another $3 billion increase for NSF isn’t in the cards for FY 2010, Obama’s request does propose an 8.5% increase, taking the agency to slightly more than $7 billion. The 2010 request will increase by 11% the amount of funding available for grants, Bement told the National Science Board in May. Investments in networking and information technology research reach $1.1 billion in the 2010 budget, an increase of 11%. Research in large-scale networking, high-end computing, human–computer interaction, and the social, economic, and workforce aspects of advanced computing and communications technologies receive the largest increases.

For 2010 NSF will invest $390 million in three programs to strengthen America’s science and engineering workforce. During Obama’s first term, Bement said, the agency will triple the number of new graduate research fellowships to support outstanding young students. New fellowships will number 1654 in 2010, up from this year’s 1228 and on course to reach 3000 in 2013. More funding will be available for the faculty early career development program, which supports the teaching and research efforts of junior faculty deemed likely to become future academic leaders. NSF also plans to expand its advanced technology education program for expanding the nation’s high-tech workforce.

The change in administrations is evidenced by proposed increases for NSF’s climate change research activities. The NSF budget requests $10 million in FY 2010 funding for a climate change education program whose goal is to encourage a new generation of environmentally engaged scientists and engineers. Its awards will go toward increasing public understanding and engagement; developing resources for learning; informing local and national science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education policy; and preparing a professional climate science workforce. Building on its $299 million request—an increase of $80 million, or 36%, from 2009—for the 13-agency climate change science program, NSF will spend $198 million for interdisciplinary climate research. That research will address ecosystem vulnerability, the carbon cycle, ocean acidification, abrupt climate change, dynamics of water in the environment, and weather extremes.

The budget would increase funding for the NSF-wide faculty early career development program by 11.6%, to almost $209 million. And beginning next year, each of NSF’s research divisions will set aside at least $2 million ($92 million across NSF) to explore methodologies and leverage ongoing activities that foster transformative research.

NASA. Although the space agency would receive a 10% increase for its R&D programs in FY 2010, it is nearly all designated for human spaceflight programs. The basic science programs would see a decline of 8.7%, with particularly sharp cuts proposed for Earth science and astrophysics. Acting administrator Christopher Scolese said NASA had followed guidance from the National Research Council in emphasizing space-based Earth science research, including the development of new sensors in support of the administration’s goal of deploying a global climate research and monitoring system.

With the remaining space shuttles scheduled to be retired in 2010, Obama has ordered an independent review and recommendations for the future of the space agency’s human spaceflight program. Former Lockheed Martin Corp chairman Norman Augustine has been appointed to head the 10-member advisory panel, which is to deliver its recommendations to NASA in August. Under the current schedule, a replacement human space transport system won’t become available until 2015, and during the interim US astronauts will have to rely on Soyuz vehicles operated by the Russian Federal Space Agency to get to and from the International Space Station. The FY 2010 request includes a placeholder budget of $3.5 billion, a slight increase from current-year funding, for development of the new launch rocket and crew vehicle, which are collectively known as Constellation systems. Those numbers will be adjusted to comport with the Augustine committee findings. Another $400 million from ARRA has been appropriated to the Constellation program.

NASA’s aeronautics research program, which has eroded steadily over the past several years, would finally level off at around $500 million under the Obama budget. Despite the addition of $150 million in ARRA funds, the program will fall far short of where it was in 2006, when nearly $900 million was spent.

Department of Defense. The change at the White House seemingly did little to affect the presidential attitude toward basic research funded by the Pentagon. That relatively small slice of DOD’s mammoth research, development, test, and evaluation (RDT&E) portfolio is of paramount interest to academic institutions, which perform the bulk of the department’s basic research, known as 6.1. While Obama’s request of $1.8 billion for basic science falls 1.5% below the current year, the White House said its request would be a “substantial increase” if $150 million in congressional earmarks were excluded. As it has done in past years, Congress is likely to add to the Pentagon’s basic research budget and to continue earmarking.

Table I.

Department of Energy R&D programs

  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) 3     
Total DOE   24 032  33 748  26 394  −21.8 
DOE R&D   9 807  10 621  10 740  1.1 
Office of Science R&D programs   4 083  4 758  4 942  3.9 
Total high-energy physics (HEP)   703  796  819  2.9 
Proton accelerator-based physics   372  402  443  10.1 
Research  123  126  127  1.2 
University research  55  57  58  1.2 
National laboratory research  66  68  69  1.2 
University service accounts  0.0 
Facilities  249  277  316  14.1 
Tevatron operations and improvements  171  203  239  17.7 
Large Hadron Collider project and support  66  74  87  16.2 
Alternating Gradient Synchrotron support  0.0 
Other facilities  12  11  10  −9.4 
Electron accelerator-based physics   57  31  26  −14.7 
Research  21  17  14  −13.0 
University research  −10.0 
National laboratory research  11  −15.5 
Facilities  36  14  12  −7.5 
Nonaccelerator physics   76  101  99  −1.5 
Theoretical physics   60  65  67  3.7 
Advanced tech R&D (accelerators and detectors)   138  197  183  −6.9 
Total nuclear physics   424  512  552  7.8 
Medium-energy nuclear physics   107  122  131  7.6 
Research  33  43  47  10.2 
University research  18  19  20  7.5 
National laboratory research  15  18  20  10.2 
Other research  0.5  18.7 
Operations  74  79  84  6.2 
Heavy-ion nuclear physics   182  200  219  9.6 
Research  36  47  53  12.6 
University research  13  14  15  9.8 
National laboratory research  23  27  30  12.2 
Other research  —  21.5 
Operations (primarily RHIC)   146  154  167  8.6 
Low-energy nuclear physics   83  95  117  23.5 
Research  53  53  70  32.9 
University research  19  21  26  24.5 
National laboratory research  31  29  42  43.4 
Other research  −20.9 
Operations (primarily ATLAS and HRIBF)  29  42  46  11.5 
Nuclear theory   34  40  43  10.3 
Isotope research and development   —  25  19  −6.0 
Construction   17  31  22  −29.2 
Total fusion energy sciences   295  403  421  4.6 
Science   155  172  176  3.4 
Facility operations   117  207  222  7.0 
Enabling R&D  23  23  23  1.2 
Total basic energy sciences (BES) §   1 253  1 572  1 685  7.2 
Materials sciences  234  342  381  11.5 
Chemical sciences, geosciences, and energy  
biosciences (CGEB)  217  293  338  15.5 
Scientific user facilities operations  708  792  812  2.5 
Research  11  20  24  21.3 
Major items of equipment  30  34  25  −26.4 
Advanced Light Source, LBNL  50  52  54  3.6 
Advanced Photon Source, ANL  112  118  127  7.7 
National Synchrotron Light Source, BNL  38  41  42  3.6 
National Synchrotron Light Source-II, BNL  20  10  −80.0 
Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, ORNL  19  20  21  5.6 
Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, SNL/LANL  18  20  21  5.6 
Molecular Foundry, LBNL  18  20  21  5.5 
Center for Nanoscale Materials, ANL  18  21  22  5.5 
Center for Functional Nanomaterials, BNL  18  20  21  5.5 
Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, SLAC  32  34  35  3.4 
High Flux Isotope Reactor, ORNL  54  59  61  3.6 
Intense Pulsed Neutron Source, ANL  0.0 
Manuel Lujan Jr Neutron Scattering Ctr, LANL  11  11  11  3.6 
Spallation Neutron Source, ORNL  174  177  184  3.6 
Combustion Research Facility, SNL   —  —  — 
Linac Coherent Light Source, SLAC  15  20  20  2.5 
Linac for LCLS  60  92  95  3.6 
SBIR/STTR  —  19  19  3.7 
Construction  93  145  154  6.0 
Advanced scientific computing research   342  369  409  10.9 
Biological and environmental research   531  602  604  0.4 
Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy   —  15  10  #  
Energy efficiency and renewable energy   1 236  1 447  2 018  39.4 
Fossil energy R&D **   727  876  618  −29.5 
Nuclear energy   714  515  403  −21.7 
Total National Nuclear Security Administration R&D   3 017  3 035  3 040  0.2 
Total weapons activities R&D  1 863  1 843  1 740  −5.6 
Science campaigns  286  317  317  0.0 
Engineering campaigns  168  150  150  0.0 
Advanced simulation and computing  575  556  556  0.0 
Inertial confinement fusion   470  437  437  0.0 
All other weapons R&D  363  280  383  −27.0 
Nonproliferation and verification R&D  380  364  297  −18.3 
Naval reactors  775  828  1 003  21.1 
Environmental management R&D   21  32  55  70.2 
  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) 3     
Total DOE   24 032  33 748  26 394  −21.8 
DOE R&D   9 807  10 621  10 740  1.1 
Office of Science R&D programs   4 083  4 758  4 942  3.9 
Total high-energy physics (HEP)   703  796  819  2.9 
Proton accelerator-based physics   372  402  443  10.1 
Research  123  126  127  1.2 
University research  55  57  58  1.2 
National laboratory research  66  68  69  1.2 
University service accounts  0.0 
Facilities  249  277  316  14.1 
Tevatron operations and improvements  171  203  239  17.7 
Large Hadron Collider project and support  66  74  87  16.2 
Alternating Gradient Synchrotron support  0.0 
Other facilities  12  11  10  −9.4 
Electron accelerator-based physics   57  31  26  −14.7 
Research  21  17  14  −13.0 
University research  −10.0 
National laboratory research  11  −15.5 
Facilities  36  14  12  −7.5 
Nonaccelerator physics   76  101  99  −1.5 
Theoretical physics   60  65  67  3.7 
Advanced tech R&D (accelerators and detectors)   138  197  183  −6.9 
Total nuclear physics   424  512  552  7.8 
Medium-energy nuclear physics   107  122  131  7.6 
Research  33  43  47  10.2 
University research  18  19  20  7.5 
National laboratory research  15  18  20  10.2 
Other research  0.5  18.7 
Operations  74  79  84  6.2 
Heavy-ion nuclear physics   182  200  219  9.6 
Research  36  47  53  12.6 
University research  13  14  15  9.8 
National laboratory research  23  27  30  12.2 
Other research  —  21.5 
Operations (primarily RHIC)   146  154  167  8.6 
Low-energy nuclear physics   83  95  117  23.5 
Research  53  53  70  32.9 
University research  19  21  26  24.5 
National laboratory research  31  29  42  43.4 
Other research  −20.9 
Operations (primarily ATLAS and HRIBF)  29  42  46  11.5 
Nuclear theory   34  40  43  10.3 
Isotope research and development   —  25  19  −6.0 
Construction   17  31  22  −29.2 
Total fusion energy sciences   295  403  421  4.6 
Science   155  172  176  3.4 
Facility operations   117  207  222  7.0 
Enabling R&D  23  23  23  1.2 
Total basic energy sciences (BES) §   1 253  1 572  1 685  7.2 
Materials sciences  234  342  381  11.5 
Chemical sciences, geosciences, and energy  
biosciences (CGEB)  217  293  338  15.5 
Scientific user facilities operations  708  792  812  2.5 
Research  11  20  24  21.3 
Major items of equipment  30  34  25  −26.4 
Advanced Light Source, LBNL  50  52  54  3.6 
Advanced Photon Source, ANL  112  118  127  7.7 
National Synchrotron Light Source, BNL  38  41  42  3.6 
National Synchrotron Light Source-II, BNL  20  10  −80.0 
Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, ORNL  19  20  21  5.6 
Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, SNL/LANL  18  20  21  5.6 
Molecular Foundry, LBNL  18  20  21  5.5 
Center for Nanoscale Materials, ANL  18  21  22  5.5 
Center for Functional Nanomaterials, BNL  18  20  21  5.5 
Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, SLAC  32  34  35  3.4 
High Flux Isotope Reactor, ORNL  54  59  61  3.6 
Intense Pulsed Neutron Source, ANL  0.0 
Manuel Lujan Jr Neutron Scattering Ctr, LANL  11  11  11  3.6 
Spallation Neutron Source, ORNL  174  177  184  3.6 
Combustion Research Facility, SNL   —  —  — 
Linac Coherent Light Source, SLAC  15  20  20  2.5 
Linac for LCLS  60  92  95  3.6 
SBIR/STTR  —  19  19  3.7 
Construction  93  145  154  6.0 
Advanced scientific computing research   342  369  409  10.9 
Biological and environmental research   531  602  604  0.4 
Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy   —  15  10  #  
Energy efficiency and renewable energy   1 236  1 447  2 018  39.4 
Fossil energy R&D **   727  876  618  −29.5 
Nuclear energy   714  515  403  −21.7 
Total National Nuclear Security Administration R&D   3 017  3 035  3 040  0.2 
Total weapons activities R&D  1 863  1 843  1 740  −5.6 
Science campaigns  286  317  317  0.0 
Engineering campaigns  168  150  150  0.0 
Advanced simulation and computing  575  556  556  0.0 
Inertial confinement fusion   470  437  437  0.0 
All other weapons R&D  363  280  383  −27.0 
Nonproliferation and verification R&D  380  364  297  −18.3 
Naval reactors  775  828  1 003  21.1 
Environmental management R&D   21  32  55  70.2 
*

Figures are rounded to the nearest million. Changes are calculated from unrounded figures.

Transferred from the Office of Nuclear Energy in FY 2009.

FY 2010 request includes $135 million for the US contribution to ITER. The FY 2009 appropriation was $124 million.

§

Starting in FY 2010, BES adopted a new budget structure, including the creation of a new line item for scientific user facilities, to better reflect its subprogram activities. Budgets for those facilities were formerly included in the materials sciences and CGEB budgets. The table shows FY 2008 and FY 2009 funding adjusted to the new budget structure to facilitate year-to-year comparisons.

Starting in FY 2009, the Combustion Research Facility funding is included in the request for the chemical physics research program.

#

New office established in FY 2009 with $15 million appropriation and $400 million in funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

**

Does not include $3.4 billion in ARRA funding for clean coal and carbon sequestration demonstrations.

ANL, Argonne National Laboratory. ATLAS, a Torroidal LHC Apparatus. BNL, Brookhaven National Laboratory. HRIBF, Hollifield Radioactive Ion Beam Facility. LANL, Los Alamos National Laboratory. LBNL, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. ORNL, Oak Ridge National Laboratory. RHIC, Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. SBIR, Small Business Innovative Research program. SNL, Sandia National Laboratories. STTR, Small Business Technology Transfer program.

Table II.

Department of Homeland Security R&D programs

  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) *     
Total DHS   47 330  52 482  55 115  5.0 
Total DHS R&D   1 315  1 447  1 334  −7.7 
Science and technology              
Border and maritime  25  33  40  21.6 
Chemical and biological countermeasures  208  200  207  3.2 
Command, control, and interoperability   57  75  80  7.2 
Explosives countermeasures  78  96  121  25.6 
Homeland Security Institute   −100.0 
Human factors  14  12  15  21.0 
Infrastructure and geophysical   64  76  45  −41.0 
Innovation  33  33  44  33.3 
Laboratory facilities  104  162  154  −4.6 
Test and evaluation standards  28  29  29  0.0 
Transition  30  29  45  56.5 
University programs  49  50  46  −8.5 
Management and administration  139   132   142   7.6 
Total science and technology   830  933  968  3.8 
Domestic Nuclear Detection Office   485  514  366  −28.8 
Coast Guard   19  18  20  11.1 
  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) *     
Total DHS   47 330  52 482  55 115  5.0 
Total DHS R&D   1 315  1 447  1 334  −7.7 
Science and technology              
Border and maritime  25  33  40  21.6 
Chemical and biological countermeasures  208  200  207  3.2 
Command, control, and interoperability   57  75  80  7.2 
Explosives countermeasures  78  96  121  25.6 
Homeland Security Institute   −100.0 
Human factors  14  12  15  21.0 
Infrastructure and geophysical   64  76  45  −41.0 
Innovation  33  33  44  33.3 
Laboratory facilities  104  162  154  −4.6 
Test and evaluation standards  28  29  29  0.0 
Transition  30  29  45  56.5 
University programs  49  50  46  −8.5 
Management and administration  139   132   142   7.6 
Total science and technology   830  933  968  3.8 
Domestic Nuclear Detection Office   485  514  366  −28.8 
Coast Guard   19  18  20  11.1 
*

Figures are rounded to the nearest million. Changes are calculated from unrounded figures.

Funding transferred to transition category in FY 2009.

Table III.

NASA R&D programs

  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) *     
Total NASA   17 402  17 782  18 686  5.1 
NASA R&D   11 182  10 401  11 439  10.0 
Science, aeronautics, and exploration   8 544  8 508  8 947    
Total science   4 733  4 903  4 477  −8.7 
Planetary science              
Discovery  136  247  213  −13.7 
New Frontiers  115  264  264  0.0 
Technology   65  65  89  37.1 
Planetary science research  183  162  162  −0.2 
Mars exploration   709  382  416  9.0 
Lunar quest program  41  105  104  −1.3 
Outer planets  62   101   98   −2.5 
Total planetary science   1 313  1 326  1 346  1.5 
Astrophysics              
Astrophysics research  102  135  152  12.5 
Cosmic Origins  870  819  667  −18.5 
Physics of the Cosmos  149  128  148  15.1 
Exoplanet Exploration   157  68  46  −32.1 
Astrophysics Explorer  118   131   108   −17.4 
Total astrophysics   1 396  1 281  1 121  −12.5 
Earth science              
Earth systematic missions  546  899  715  −20.4 
Earth system science pathfinder  107  118  64  −46.5 
Multimission operations  143  148  150  1.2 
Earth science research  358  437  397  −9.1 
Applied sciences  40  48  32  −32.6 
Earth science technology   43   54   46   −15.1 
Total Earth science   1 237  1 705  1 405  −17.6 
Heliophysics‡ c              
Heliophysics research  183  196  179  −8.8 
Deep space mission systems  210  — 
Living with a star  218  239  212  −11.1 
Solar terrestrial probes  72  123  143  16.2 
Heliophysics explorer program  48  31  69  121.0 
Near Earth networks  41  — 
New Millennium  15   3   2   −33.3 
Total heliophysics   788  592  605  2.3 
Exploration systems §              
Constellation systems   2 676  3 033  3 505  15.5 
Advanced capabilities #   623   472   458   −3.1 
Total exploration systems   3 299  3 505  3 963  13.0 
Aeronautics research   511  650  507  −22.0 
Space operations              
International Space Station  1 685  2 060  2 267  10.0 
Space shuttle   3 295  2 982  3 157  5.9 
Space and flight support  446   723   751   4.0 
Total space operations   5 427  5 765  6 176  7.1 
Cross-agency support **   3 251  3 356  3 401  1.3 
  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) *     
Total NASA   17 402  17 782  18 686  5.1 
NASA R&D   11 182  10 401  11 439  10.0 
Science, aeronautics, and exploration   8 544  8 508  8 947    
Total science   4 733  4 903  4 477  −8.7 
Planetary science              
Discovery  136  247  213  −13.7 
New Frontiers  115  264  264  0.0 
Technology   65  65  89  37.1 
Planetary science research  183  162  162  −0.2 
Mars exploration   709  382  416  9.0 
Lunar quest program  41  105  104  −1.3 
Outer planets  62   101   98   −2.5 
Total planetary science   1 313  1 326  1 346  1.5 
Astrophysics              
Astrophysics research  102  135  152  12.5 
Cosmic Origins  870  819  667  −18.5 
Physics of the Cosmos  149  128  148  15.1 
Exoplanet Exploration   157  68  46  −32.1 
Astrophysics Explorer  118   131   108   −17.4 
Total astrophysics   1 396  1 281  1 121  −12.5 
Earth science              
Earth systematic missions  546  899  715  −20.4 
Earth system science pathfinder  107  118  64  −46.5 
Multimission operations  143  148  150  1.2 
Earth science research  358  437  397  −9.1 
Applied sciences  40  48  32  −32.6 
Earth science technology   43   54   46   −15.1 
Total Earth science   1 237  1 705  1 405  −17.6 
Heliophysics‡ c              
Heliophysics research  183  196  179  −8.8 
Deep space mission systems  210  — 
Living with a star  218  239  212  −11.1 
Solar terrestrial probes  72  123  143  16.2 
Heliophysics explorer program  48  31  69  121.0 
Near Earth networks  41  — 
New Millennium  15   3   2   −33.3 
Total heliophysics   788  592  605  2.3 
Exploration systems §              
Constellation systems   2 676  3 033  3 505  15.5 
Advanced capabilities #   623   472   458   −3.1 
Total exploration systems   3 299  3 505  3 963  13.0 
Aeronautics research   511  650  507  −22.0 
Space operations              
International Space Station  1 685  2 060  2 267  10.0 
Space shuttle   3 295  2 982  3 157  5.9 
Space and flight support  446   723   751   4.0 
Total space operations   5 427  5 765  6 176  7.1 
Cross-agency support **   3 251  3 356  3 401  1.3 
*

Figures are rounded to the nearest million. Changes are calculated from unrounded figures.

Reflects a reorganization of NASA’s astrophysics programs beginning in FY 2009.

Reflects a reorganization of NASA’s heliophysics programs beginning in FY 2009.

§

The Obama administration has commissioned an external review of NASA’s human space flight development activities. Based on that review, a revised budget request for exploration systems is expected in August.

Constellation systems include the crew exploration vehicle, the crew launch vehicle, ground and mission operations, commercial cargo, and other related costs.

#

Advanced capabilities include the lunar precursor robotic program, the human research program, and the exploration technology development program.

**

Beginning in FY 2009, budgets for all NASA programs and projects include only direct costs, such as labor and travel. Indirect charges, such as operation and management of the NASA centers and agency headquarters, are provided in a cross-agency support category.

Table IV.

Department of Defense R&D programs

  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) *     
Research, development, test, and evaluation (RDT&E)              
Total basic research (6.1)   1 600  1 825  1 798  −1.5 
US Army  
In-house independent research  20  20  20  0.0 
Defense research sciences  165  198  173  −12.6 
University research initiatives  79  90  88  −1.3 
University and industry research centers  109   130   96   −26.2 
Total US Army   373  438  377  −13.8 
US Navy              
University research initiatives  97  109  99  −8.4 
In-house independent research  16  17  18  4.8 
Defense research sciences  377   420   414   −1.5 
Total US Navy   490  546  531  −2.7 
US Air Force              
Defense research sciences  275  314  321  2.2 
University research initiatives  116  137  132  −3.5 
High-energy laser research  12  13  13  −4.1 
Total US Air Force   404  464  466  0.0 
Defensewide basic research programs              
DTRA basic research initiative  15  22  48  117.0 
Defense research sciences   168  202  226  11.7 
National defense education program  42  69  90  30.2 
Government-industry cosponsorship of             
university research  −100.0 
DEPSCoR  20  15  −100.0 
Chemical and biological defense research  82   61   59   −3.6 
Total defensewide basic research programs   332  374  424  13.2 
Applied research (6.2)   4 854  5 173  4 247  −17.9 
Advanced technology development (6.3)   5 788   6 644   5 604   −15.6 
Total science and technology (6.1-6.3)   12 243  13 643  11 649  −14.6 
Other RDT&E §   67 205   68 087   67 295   −1.1 
Total RDT&E   79 448  81 730  78 944  −3.4 
Medical research   955  903  613  −32.0 
  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) *     
Research, development, test, and evaluation (RDT&E)              
Total basic research (6.1)   1 600  1 825  1 798  −1.5 
US Army  
In-house independent research  20  20  20  0.0 
Defense research sciences  165  198  173  −12.6 
University research initiatives  79  90  88  −1.3 
University and industry research centers  109   130   96   −26.2 
Total US Army   373  438  377  −13.8 
US Navy              
University research initiatives  97  109  99  −8.4 
In-house independent research  16  17  18  4.8 
Defense research sciences  377   420   414   −1.5 
Total US Navy   490  546  531  −2.7 
US Air Force              
Defense research sciences  275  314  321  2.2 
University research initiatives  116  137  132  −3.5 
High-energy laser research  12  13  13  −4.1 
Total US Air Force   404  464  466  0.0 
Defensewide basic research programs              
DTRA basic research initiative  15  22  48  117.0 
Defense research sciences   168  202  226  11.7 
National defense education program  42  69  90  30.2 
Government-industry cosponsorship of             
university research  −100.0 
DEPSCoR  20  15  −100.0 
Chemical and biological defense research  82   61   59   −3.6 
Total defensewide basic research programs   332  374  424  13.2 
Applied research (6.2)   4 854  5 173  4 247  −17.9 
Advanced technology development (6.3)   5 788   6 644   5 604   −15.6 
Total science and technology (6.1-6.3)   12 243  13 643  11 649  −14.6 
Other RDT&E §   67 205   68 087   67 295   −1.1 
Total RDT&E   79 448  81 730  78 944  −3.4 
Medical research   955  903  613  −32.0 
*

Figures are rounded to the nearest million. Changes are calculated from unrounded figures.

Includes the basic research budgets of DOD agencies such as DARPA, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency; DTRA, Defense Threat Reduction Agency; MDA, Missile Defense Agency; and the Office of the Secretary of Defense.

DARPA’s basic research budget. The bulk of DARPA’s budget is provided from the applied research (6.2) and advanced technology development (6.3) categories. DARPA’s overall FY 2010 budget would increase 3.8%, to $3.2 billion.

§

Includes RDT&E categories 6.4 through 6.7.

Table V.

American Recovery and Reinvestment Act R&D funding

  (millions of dollars) *
Total Department of Energy R&D   5500 
Office of Science     
High-energy physics     
Nuclear physics   155 
Biological and environment research  166 
Basic energy sciences  555 
Advanced scientific computing research  157 
Fusion energy sciences  91 
Science laboratories infrastructure  198 
Science program direction 
Workforce development for teachers and scientists  12 
SBIR/STTR  19 
Unallocated ARRA funding   12  
Total Office of Science   1600 
Energy     
Energy efficiency and renewable energy   2500 
Fossil energy   1000  
Total energy   3500 
Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy   400 
Total NASA   1002 
Science     
Earth science     
Astrophysics   75  
Total science   400 
Exploration   400 
Aeronautics research   150 
Cross-agency support   50 
Inspector general  
Total NSF   3002 
Research and related activities  2000 
Major research equipment and facilities  400 
Major research instrumentation  300 
Academic research infrastructure  200 
Education and human resources  100 
Inspector general 
Total NIST   580 
Scientific and technical research and services  220 
Construction of research facilities  360 
Total NOAA   830 
Department of Defense   200 
  (millions of dollars) *
Total Department of Energy R&D   5500 
Office of Science     
High-energy physics     
Nuclear physics   155 
Biological and environment research  166 
Basic energy sciences  555 
Advanced scientific computing research  157 
Fusion energy sciences  91 
Science laboratories infrastructure  198 
Science program direction 
Workforce development for teachers and scientists  12 
SBIR/STTR  19 
Unallocated ARRA funding   12  
Total Office of Science   1600 
Energy     
Energy efficiency and renewable energy   2500 
Fossil energy   1000  
Total energy   3500 
Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy   400 
Total NASA   1002 
Science     
Earth science     
Astrophysics   75  
Total science   400 
Exploration   400 
Aeronautics research   150 
Cross-agency support   50 
Inspector general  
Total NSF   3002 
Research and related activities  2000 
Major research equipment and facilities  400 
Major research instrumentation  300 
Academic research infrastructure  200 
Education and human resources  100 
Inspector general 
Total NIST   580 
Scientific and technical research and services  220 
Construction of research facilities  360 
Total NOAA   830 
Department of Defense   200 
*

Figures are rounded to the nearest million.

New office established in FY 2009.

R&D items only.

Table VI.

NSF R&D programs

  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) *     
Total NSF   6084  6490  7045  8.5 
Research and related activities (R&RA)              
Mathematical and physical sciences (MPS)              
Mathematical sciences  212  226  246  8.9 
Astronomical sciences  218  229  251  9.7 
Physics   252  274  296  7.9 
Chemistry  195  211  239  12.9 
Materials research  263  282  309  9.5 
Multidisciplinary activities  33   33   39   17.8 
Total MPS   1171  1256  1380  9.9 
Geosciences (GEO)              
Atmospheric sciences  230  245  269  10.0 
Earth sciences  158  171  187  9.3 
Ocean sciences  313  330  359  8.7 
Innovation and collaborative education and research  57   61   94   53.5 
Total GEO   758  807  909  12.6 
Engineering (less SBIR/STTR)   540  574  632  10.1 
SBIR/STTR  109  119  133  11.2 
Biological sciences   616  656  733  11.8 
Computer & Information Science & Engineering (CISE)              
Computer and network systems  174  188  210  11.4 
Computing and communication foundations  144  157  175  11.4 
Information and intelligent systems  139  150  168  11.5 
Information technology research  78   78   81   3.2 
Total CISE   535  574  633  10.3 
Office of cyberinfrastructure   185  199  219  9.9 
US polar programs              
Arctic sciences  91  98  109  10.6 
Antarctic sciences  59  65  72  11.1 
Antarctic infrastructure and logistics  240  247  274  10.8 
Polar environmental safety and health  14.5 
US Coast Guard polar icebreaking  51   54   54   0.0 
Total polar programs   447  471  516  9.6 
Arctic research commission   6.7 
Social, behavioral, and economic sciences   228  240  257  6.9 
Office of international science and engineering   48  44  49  11.3 
Integrative activities   214   241   271   12.3 
Total R&RA   4853  5183  5733  10.6 
Major research equipment and facilities   167  152  117  −22.8 
Education and human resources   766  845  858  1.5 
Agency operations and award management   282  294  318  8.3 
National Science Board   7.7 
Inspector general   12  12  14  16.7 
  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) *     
Total NSF   6084  6490  7045  8.5 
Research and related activities (R&RA)              
Mathematical and physical sciences (MPS)              
Mathematical sciences  212  226  246  8.9 
Astronomical sciences  218  229  251  9.7 
Physics   252  274  296  7.9 
Chemistry  195  211  239  12.9 
Materials research  263  282  309  9.5 
Multidisciplinary activities  33   33   39   17.8 
Total MPS   1171  1256  1380  9.9 
Geosciences (GEO)              
Atmospheric sciences  230  245  269  10.0 
Earth sciences  158  171  187  9.3 
Ocean sciences  313  330  359  8.7 
Innovation and collaborative education and research  57   61   94   53.5 
Total GEO   758  807  909  12.6 
Engineering (less SBIR/STTR)   540  574  632  10.1 
SBIR/STTR  109  119  133  11.2 
Biological sciences   616  656  733  11.8 
Computer & Information Science & Engineering (CISE)              
Computer and network systems  174  188  210  11.4 
Computing and communication foundations  144  157  175  11.4 
Information and intelligent systems  139  150  168  11.5 
Information technology research  78   78   81   3.2 
Total CISE   535  574  633  10.3 
Office of cyberinfrastructure   185  199  219  9.9 
US polar programs              
Arctic sciences  91  98  109  10.6 
Antarctic sciences  59  65  72  11.1 
Antarctic infrastructure and logistics  240  247  274  10.8 
Polar environmental safety and health  14.5 
US Coast Guard polar icebreaking  51   54   54   0.0 
Total polar programs   447  471  516  9.6 
Arctic research commission   6.7 
Social, behavioral, and economic sciences   228  240  257  6.9 
Office of international science and engineering   48  44  49  11.3 
Integrative activities   214   241   271   12.3 
Total R&RA   4853  5183  5733  10.6 
Major research equipment and facilities   167  152  117  −22.8 
Education and human resources   766  845  858  1.5 
Agency operations and award management   282  294  318  8.3 
National Science Board   7.7 
Inspector general   12  12  14  16.7 
*

Figures are rounded to the nearest million. Changes are calculated from unrounded figures.

Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) programs, a mandatory set-aside of 2.8% of NSF’s external research budget.

Table VII.

Department of Commerce (NOAA and NIST) R&D programs

  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) *     
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration R&D              
Total   625  700  644  −8.0 
NIST R&D              
Total   601  644  652  1.2 
Scientific and Technical Research Service   440  472  535  13.3 
Technology Innovation Program §   65  65  70  7.7 
Construction of research facilities   160  172  117  −32.0 
  FY 2008 actual FY 2009 estimate FY 2010 request FY 2009–10 percent change
   (millions of dollars) *     
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration R&D              
Total   625  700  644  −8.0 
NIST R&D              
Total   601  644  652  1.2 
Scientific and Technical Research Service   440  472  535  13.3 
Technology Innovation Program §   65  65  70  7.7 
Construction of research facilities   160  172  117  −32.0 
*

Figures are rounded to the nearest million. Changes are calculated from unrounded figures.

Includes congressional earmarks of $47 million in FY 2009 and $52 million in FY 2008.

Includes NIST’s laboratories.

§

Formerly the Advanced Technology Program.

Overall, the $78.9 billion request for RDT&E slashes $1.9 billion, or 3.4%, from the FY 2009 budget. The budget attributes the decline to the lower priority given to several weapons systems and to the elimination of some earmarks. DARPA, which supports high-risk research, would receive a 3.8% increase, to $3.2 billion.

Department of Homeland Security. A 3.8% increase to the budget of DHS’s science and technology directorate, to $968 million, was offset by a 29% plunge in funding for the Domestic Nuclear Detection Office (DNDO), from $514 million to $366 million. Within S&T, R&D for explosives countermeasures would jump more than 25%, reaching $121 million, and border and maritime security R&D would swell almost 22%. High-risk research that has the potential to produce breakthrough technologies would climb 33%, to $44 million. DNDO’s drop was due to an absence of acquisitions planned for 2010; a slight increase is proposed to the office’s R&D program.

NIST. The $652 million requested for NIST’s intramural laboratories will enhance the agency’s research capabilities by providing new equipment and facilities for basic research in health information technology, digital smart grid technology, carbon measurements, and other areas. Separately, the budget would sustain NIST’s external programs, including $125 million (a $15 million increase over the 2009 enacted level) for the Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP), which aims to improve the competitiveness of US manufacturers. But Obama is seeking only a $5 million increase for the Technology Innovation Program, a grants program that supports early-stage, high-risk technology development. Begun during the administration of President George H. W. Bush, the program was then known as the Advanced Technology Program. Once envisioned by President Clinton as growing to $1 billion a year, the ATP became a perennial lightning rod for conservatives who branded it as corporate welfare. The younger Bush proposed to kill the program with each budget request, but Congress allowed it to limp along at a low level of funding—just $65 million in the current year.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Obama’s $644 million request for NOAA’s R&D operations is 8% below the current-year level. Although the agency is receiving $830 million from ARRA, none of that is for R&D purposes.

Trends in research by agency, FY 1995-2010

Federal support for basic and applied research will fall from a record high of $71.9 billion this year to $59 billion in fiscal 2010, under the budget proposed by President Obama. Excluding the $13.3 billion that was appropriated earlier this year in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, some of which will be spent in FY 2010, year-to-year spending would rise 0.4%. The Obama request would add considerably to R&D programs that promote clean forms of energy and mitigate climate change. Department of Defense R&D would be pared nearly $2 billion, or 2%, with nonmilitary R&D seeing an increase of $2.2 billion, or 3.6%. The Obama administration has pledged to continue an effort begun by President George W. Bush in FY 2007 to double the budgets of key basic physical sciences research programs by 2016. Obama has promised further growth for R&D in the years ahead as he aims for the US to achieve a spending level equal to 3% of gross domestic product. The federal government today pays for about one-third of total US R&D.

OFFICE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY

Trends in research by agency, FY 1995-2010

Federal support for basic and applied research will fall from a record high of $71.9 billion this year to $59 billion in fiscal 2010, under the budget proposed by President Obama. Excluding the $13.3 billion that was appropriated earlier this year in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, some of which will be spent in FY 2010, year-to-year spending would rise 0.4%. The Obama request would add considerably to R&D programs that promote clean forms of energy and mitigate climate change. Department of Defense R&D would be pared nearly $2 billion, or 2%, with nonmilitary R&D seeing an increase of $2.2 billion, or 3.6%. The Obama administration has pledged to continue an effort begun by President George W. Bush in FY 2007 to double the budgets of key basic physical sciences research programs by 2016. Obama has promised further growth for R&D in the years ahead as he aims for the US to achieve a spending level equal to 3% of gross domestic product. The federal government today pays for about one-third of total US R&D.

OFFICE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY
Close modal