Title: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
1Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
- Non Defense Programs Work and Work for Others
- at
- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
- Samuel Brinker
- Assistant Manager for National Security
Implementation - Livermore Site Office
2LLNL is a Broad Based Science Lab
- Primary mission is supporting the safe and
reliable nuclear stockpile - LLNL also uses capabilities in science and
technology to support other national research
needs - Three major funding sources
- Non NNSA DOE programs
- Work for Others (WFO)
- Dept. of Homeland Security (DHS)
- Laboratory Directed Research and Development
(LDRD)
3Core Scientific Competencies at LLNL
- BioSciences, BioTechnology, and Bio-Defense
- Chemistry Material Science, Forensic Facility
- Defense and Nuclear Technologies
- Energy and Environmental Science/Technologies
- Mathematics and High Performance Computational
Sciences - Engineering Manufacturing Technologies/Lasers
- Non Proliferation, Homeland Defense Technologies,
and International Security - Physics and Space Sciences/Technologies
4Non NNSA DOE Programs
- LLNL receives funding from many DOE offices,
including - Science
- Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
- Environmental Management
- Fossil Energy
- Counterintelligence
- Civilian Radioactive Waste Management
- Intelligence
- Total funding is on the order of 130-150 mil per
year
5Non NNSA DOE Work Proposal Process
- LLNL submits Field Work Proposals to LSO and DOE
Program offices for review - Program Offices review proposals, decide which to
fund based on technical merit, funds available,
etc. - Work is authorized and funds transfer by Work
Authorizations - Work scope is determined in a collaborative
process - Programs have established areas of
interest, LLNL tries to address those areas
6Work for Others
- Work for Others (WFO) is the performance of work
for non-Department of Energy (DOE) entities by
DOE/National Nuclear Security Administration
(NNSA) personnel and/or their respective
contractor personnel or the use of DOE/NNSA
facilities for work that is not directly funded
by DOE/NNSA appropriations.
7Benefits of Work for Others
- To provide assistance to governmental entities in
accomplishing goals that may be otherwise
unattainable and to avoid duplication of effort - To provide access to highly specialized or unique
DOE/NNSA facilities, services, or technical
expertise when private sector facilities are
inadequate - To facilitate technology transfer to industry for
further development or commercialization - To maintain core competencies and enhance the
science and technology base
8Requirements for WFO
- Work is consistent with or complementary to the
NNSA mission (fits operational boundary of site) - Work will not place the facility in direct
competition with the domestic private sector - Work will not adversely impact other NNSA
programs - Work will not create a detrimental future burden
on NNSA resources - Scope of the proposed work is well defined
- Other statutory requirements and governing
documents are met
9WFO Work Process
- The WFO Process Complies with Work For Others
Order 481.1C and other applicable orders and
directives - An idea or need is identified
- Potential sponsor discusses proposed work with
the LLNL or with NNSA - LLNL Receives award in response to Broad Agency
Announcements or Research Announcements - LLNL prepares a proposal based on sponsors
requirements - Site Office reviews, accepts/rejects proposal
10Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
- DHS work has special status in accordance with
the Homeland Security Act of 2002. - A MOA between DOE and DHS was signed February
2003. - DHS-funded work at a DOE national laboratory will
be performed on an equal basis to other missions - The Secretary of Energy will make the resources
and expertise of the DOE National Laboratories
available to DHS on mutually acceptable terms - Costs charged DHS will be consistent with the
cost of similar work performed for DOE
11Total Cost of Non-NNSA Work at LLNL
Million
12Number of Projects
13Work Breakdown by Funding Source
Million
1,077
1,202
1,271
1,453
1,483
14Laboratory Directed Research and Development
(LDRD)
- The LDRD Program funds an investment portfolio of
high-risk, high-potential-payoff RD projects
that foster the development of new scientific and
technical capabilities - Initiated in 1992, the Program has been very
successful - LDRD Program is currently authorized at a maximum
of 8 of the Laboratorys Operating Budgets.
15Benefits of LDRD
- LDRD Funds Innovative Basic and Applied Research
Activities (gt50 new patents are LDRD funded) - Provides Management an Investment Tool to look 5
to 10 years ahead for RD opportunities or new
missions. - LDRD Supports Research projects that
- Enhance LLNLs core competencies
- Drives the Technical Vitality at LLNL
- Essential Element for Recruiting and Retention at
LLNL - Creates new capabilities to meet national
security and national emerging needs at LLNL. - Excellent tool for recruiting and retaining world
class scientists
16LDRD Investment Examples
- Advanced Manufacturing (EUVL)
- Bio-Detection (APDS, BAMS)
- Heavy Element Discovery (2 new elements)
- Laser Guide Star/Adaptive Optics
- Laser communications (SATRN)
- Fresnel Lens Remote Surveillance (EyeGlass)
- Visalia Site cleanup
17LDRD Process Overview
- LLNL issues internal annual Call for Proposals
- Crosscutting Peer Reviews review and rank
proposals - LSO reviews and approves each project
- Program is closely reviewed (Financial Management
Review, HQ Program Review, etc.) - LSO assesses the LDRD Program through contract
performance measures annually
18LDRD Costs by Year
19 20LDRD Program 2006 LLNL Scientists Analyze
Stardust from NASA Mission
21LDRD investment in Adaptive Optics has enabled a
wide array of new programs and science
22Adaptive Optics Investment comes full circle