The U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science leads the world in the conception, design, construction, and operation of large-scale research facilities.
In November 2003, in the landmark publication Facilities for the Future of Science: A Twenty-Year Outlook, DOE proposed a portfolio of 28 prioritized new scientific facilities and upgrades to current facilities spanning the scientific disciplines to ensure the U.S. retains its primacy in critical areas of science and technology well into the next century.
When it was published four years ago, the Facilities Outlook was the first long-range facilities plan prioritized across disciplines ever issued by a government science funding agency anywhere in the world.
An August 2007 DOE Office of Science publication, Four Years Later: An Interim Report on 'Facilities for the Future of Science: A Twenty-Year Outlook,' shows that the agency has made significant progress in deploying the scientific facilities and instruments that the United States needs to capture world scientific leadership, extend the frontiers of science, and support DOE's missions.
Office of Science Advisory Committees’
Recommendations
Facilities for the Future
of Science benefited from the assistance
of the U.S. scientific community as represented
through the six Office of Science Advisory Committees: