- Coupled Human and Natural Ecosystems. Universities traditionally build expertise along disciplinary lines. Most of the issues raised in this report, however, require interdisciplinary analysis and integration. Economic diversification and enhanced value from natural resource extraction, for example, simply can not happen in the state without close attention to human and environmental impcts. SJR44 recognized the importance of such considerations by calling for the simultaneous improvement of the economy, environment, and human health.
UA has started to develop capacity to deal effectively with such tough interdisciplinary issues through a new NSF supported Integrated Graduate Education and Research Training (IGERT) program focused on regional resilience and adaptation, complemented by an even newer EPSCoR proposal to extend the IGERT educational/graduate student focus into faculty research. Similar concerns about adaptation and impact are starting to permeate national programs in weather and climate change, and opportunities for competitive grants should continue to grow.
In spite of these positive beginnings, the pedagogical and research vocabularies, techniques, and even reward systems differ greatly between natural sciences, engineering, social sciences and the humanities. It will take years of dedicated effort to develop the new paradigms and approaches needed to holistically address the ‘entangled values’ of economy, environment, and human activity. New ways of thinking, teaching, and researching are required; this is truly an intellectual frontier. Expertise in total ecosystem sustainability is badly needed everywhere. UA already has taken some important steps to build capacity in these difficult skills, and with continued effort and support has a truly unique opportunity for world leadership.
In addition to strengthening its R&D capabilities and leadership in these six thematic areas, UA, with state support, can undertake some specific R&D-oriented initiatives to stimulate within Alaska both aspects of R&D that we have stressed in this report: enhancing the state economy, and fostering knowledge to improve protect the health of Alaskans and Alaska’s environment, while contributing to the solution of important national and international problems.
- UA Research to Broaden Alaska’s Economic Base. By virtue of its already extensive research base, UA possesses some valuable intellectual property. Among its new initiatives is UAF’s Center for Nanoscience Technology, which is explicitly designed to foster the development of microelectronic technology, which can lead to new, high-tech business in the state. Similarly, the Arctic Energy Office’s program is designed to stimulate UA-industry cooperative projects. UA should work with industrial leaders in the state to assess other opportunities, including
- an in-depth assessment of the commercial potential of research already underway,
- mechanisms for expanding the nascent technology hub in Anchorage and “tech park” in Fairbanks,
- closer relationships between engineering and science, and business and economics faculties and institutes, and
- support for the change to AS 14.40, the UA governing legislation, needed to enable UA researchers to participate in business development in areas related to their research (footnote 5).
- UA Research as a Knowledge Enterprise. One of the major recommendations from this report is the development of an “Alaska Observing Network” to conduct and coordinate the long-term monitoring, process studies, data management, and modeling needed to address many of the R&D themes we have identified. The backbone of the envisioned network would comprise five monitoring “systems,” one each consisting of in-situ sensors and data collection programs focused on oceans (this is evolving as CAOS), terrestrial resources, atmosphere and space, and humans, plus one that would collect and provide satellite data to the other four. All of these would feed their data into a central data management system that would also serve as a portal to data collected by other researchers, and both provide data to and collect it from process studies. This data would in turn feed and support computer models designed to produce analyses, nowcasts, and forecasts, and to answer questions posed by decision makers. We note that the concept of an such an integrated observational network or “enterprise” on a regional scale, designed to address simultaneously a wide range of physical, chemical, biological, and ecological questions both individually and globally, is also a central theme of the US Climate Change Research Program.
Fielding and operating such a network will require the coordinated efforts of a very large number of federal and state agencies and other participating and sponsoring organizations. Only UA in the state, however, has the breadth of disciplines needed to envision, define, coordinate and manage the entire complex of systems. UA already manages or participates in most of the existing monitoring systems, sensor networks, and data collection and evaluation processes in the state and its waters; it coordinates or operates the wide band and remote communications links and satellite data receivers needed for the science; it operates the ARSC where the major models would run; and it has started to develop the data management and portal system in the Geographical Information Network of Alaska (GINA). It will require a major, long-term commitment on the part of UA to lead such an effort. However the observing network is a key component of the state’s R&D future, and the University will benefit significantly from it.
Ways to Ensure the Federal and State Governments Work Together
The state and federal governments own some 87% of the land in Alaska, and share responsibility for regulating activities throughout the state and its waters. While the agendas and interests of federal and state agencies do not always coincide, both need information about the land, water, and its natural and human resources. Thus we believe that R&D, as outlined in this report, is the common ground for collaboration. State and federal agencies are much more likely to come to common conclusions if they base their analyses and decisions on information that has been jointly collected in a cooperative research program. And when there are disagreements in interpretation, at least the differences can be traced back to a point of common origin.
We therefore believe that our basic recommendations for R&D to meet state needs, simultaneously offer the best opportunity for ensuring that the state and federal governments “work together to identify and assess areas of high economic potential from resource development and tourism on federal and state lands, water, and airspace of Alaska,” as requested by SJR44. To restate the basic points:
-- State promotion and coordination of R&D will ensure that the state is aware of, and can provide guidance to, federal as well as state, university, industrial, and other R&D in Alaska.
-- Collaboration and partnership, particularly when it involves shared laboratory facilities and equipment, ensures common understanding and standards. Collocation also naturally encourages cooperation and sharing.
-- Expertise at the University of Alaska is equally accessible to federal and state agencies, and UA can serve as a common ground for partnerships and cooperative units and programs.
-- The centerpiece of our “R&D as an enterprise” recommendations, development of an Alaska Observing Network, or Alaska Resource Assessment Network, requires close state and federal cooperation for definition, management, funding, and operations. It is an inherently joint venture. The best of our current observing systems (e.g. the Alaska Volcano observatory and the state seismic network) are based on state-federal-UA partnerships; CAOS is being designed from the start as a collaborative venture.
Federal and state cooperation in R&D toward the development of economic potential must also be based on financial burden sharing. Most R&D in Alaska is now supported by the federal government, and is therefore directed primarily toward federal interests. Because many of these R&D programs and even facilities are designed to develop value that is captured largely outside of Alaska, this is appropriate. Further, the state can not hope to match either the programmatic breadth or the resources of agencies like NIH, NSF, DOI or DOC. The state does, however, have the responsibility to contribute financially to the degree that the R&D serves its particular needs. There are four principal state roles:
-- Oversight and coordination of R&D in the state, to improve its efficiency and thus cost-effectiveness, for both federal and state governments; while the state can not direct federal R&D, it can help the federal agencies optimize their efforts, and reduce their costs through partnership, coordination, and sharing.
-- Incentivization of industrial R&D. Expanded industrial participation in R&D is not only critical to sustainable economic growth, but to the degree that the objective is to exploit the economic potential of state and federal lands through tourism and resources development, industry should share the costs of the R&D that identifies opportunities and improves feasibility.
-- Provision of adequate facilities. The federal government will not fund directly facilities for state agency and university R&D. However much of the capital outlay can be recaptured through indirect cost recovery from federally supported research, and the expanded economic base associated with a robust R&D program. Further, the federal government does either rent or build facilities for its own personnel. To the degree that the state can provide opportunities for collocation and facility sharing, a significant portion of its own capital and O&M costs can be offset.
-- Cost match, and start-up costs. Many federal programs require a cost match. To the degree that the state desires to attract such funds, it must provide the needed resources. Similarly, the state should bear the burden for building capacity and maintaining excellence in areas where it wishes to attract additional long-term federal support. Federal programs like EPSCoR can help, but their rules are not always commensurate with state needs.
Ultimately, capturing the “high economic potential from resource development and tourism on federal and state lands, water, and airspace of Alaska” is a political process. R&D can not be expected to resolve all of the associated issues. It can, however, provide a solid and shared foundation of knowledge for making decisions and building consensus. Further, cooperation in R&D can largely be conducted out of the political limelight, while building bridges among constituencies. At its best, the R&D process -- and certainly the basic research component -- is unbiased and transparent. R&D should be conducted in such a way that its results are trusted by all factions. Only if the state and federal governments cooperate in building the basis upon which decisions can be based, can they be expected to work together to achieve common economic and political goals.
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