Department of Energy (DOE) - Emerging Technology Policy Careers (2024)

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Overview

The Department of Energy (DOE) manages national energy policy, sponsors scientific research, and maintains the nuclear arsenal alongside the DOD. It plays a crucial role in funding and policy related to science, technology, and national security. The DOE is the largest US government funder of physical science research, most of which is conducted through DOE-operated national laboratories.

DOE has actively funded research into AI and computing for decades, especially in its national labs. The labs operate some of the world’s most powerful supercomputers, which are used for AI research and large-scale training runs, among other things. Via its Office for Critical and Emerging Technology and other components, the DOE also plays an important role in AI policy. The Biden Administration’s October 2023 Executive Order on AI assigned significant responsibilities to DOE, including in AI talent development and technical AI evaluations to protect against threats from weapons of mass destruction or to critical infrastructure.

Background on DOE

Department of Energy (DOE) - Emerging Technology Policy Careers (1)
  • Government context: the Department of Energy (DOE) is one of 15 executive departments in the US government; the Secretary is a member of the US president’s cabinet and National Security Council
  • Main activities: oversees national energy policy and production, sponsors science research (the largest non-life-science funder and second-largest science budget after National Institutes of Health), and maintains the nuclear stockpile in coordination with DOD
  • Budget: small-to-mid-sized compared to other executive departments ($148.68 billion annually, 1.25% of the federal budget in 2023 — though this largely reflects influx from the Inflation Reduction Act for a Loan Programs Office, which massively increased DOE’s budget in FY 2022-2024. The DOE’s annual budget will likely return closer to FY21 levels of around $61 billion.)
  • Staff: 14,382 employees (quite small relative to the budget), though this number is misleading given DOE’s heavy reliance on ~95,000 contractors—many of whom work at DOE laboratories around the country
  • Brief history: DOE was created under the Carter Administration in response to the 1970s oil crisis in the US, when it became a national priority to secure energy independence from OPEC—both through domestic fossil fuel production and by sourcing clean energy alternatives. There was also an increasing need to better regulate and promote private sector nuclear energy development. DOE combined prior agencies, including the Federal Energy Administration and the Energy Research and Development Administration. Over its history it has broadened the scientific fields it works on.

Organizational structure

Department of Energy (DOE) - Emerging Technology Policy Careers (2)

DOE is headed by a Secretary of Energy, appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. Other senior leadership positions are also politically appointed, such as the Deputy Secretary, Chief of Staff, Under Secretaries, Assistant Secretaries, and heads of the offices that directly report to the Secretary or Deputy Secretary.

DOE is organized into five main offices, labeled S1 to S51:

  1. Office of the Secretary of Energy (S1)
  2. Office of the Deputy Secretary of Energy (S2)
  3. Office of the Undersecretary for Infrastructure (S3)
  4. Office of the Undersecretary for Science and Innovation (S4)
  5. Office of the Undersecretary of Nuclear Security (S5)

The Secretary (S1) and Deputy Secretary (S2) oversee the Department, with S3, S4, and S5 reporting to them. S1 and S2 also oversee 21 smaller offices listed on the right of the org chart. Many—though not all—of these smaller offices have administrative functions, such as finance (Office of the Chief Financial Officer) or legal (Office of the General Counsel).

DOE also oversees 17 national laboratories that produce federally-funded research (see map). Management of these labs is headed by different parts of the DOE org chart. The Office of Science (located in S4) oversees 10 of the labs, while the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) (S5) oversees 3 labs, including Los Alamos.The Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management (FECM) supports DOE’s only government owned and operated laboratory, the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL).

Much of DOE’s work and budget is dedicated to the funding and production of scientific research. Similar to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), DOE funds both in-house research, taking place within DOE and its labs, and external research conducted by outside organizations, such as universities.

The DOE and AI policy

DOE has been involved in AI research for decades, notably by funding machine learning and other AI research in its national labs. It also has a long history of regulating dual-use technology through its oversight over nuclear research and weapons stockpiles. Some experts expect DOE to play a significant role in AI policy given both its research investments and its unique position at the intersection of domestic science/technology policy and national security.

In 2019, DOE established the Office for Artificial Intelligence and Technology (AI) to coordinate AI efforts across the labs and the Department. In 2023, DOE replaced this office with the Office for Critical and Emerging Technology (CET), following President Biden’s October 2023 Executive Order on AI (EO). The EO requires DOE to:

  1. establish a pilot program for AI talent development with the goal of training 500 new researchers by 2025,
  2. write a report on AI’s potential to improve the electric grid and permitting processes,
  3. develop tools to apply AI foundation models to basic and applied science,
  4. develop DOE evals and testbeds for AI to evaluate the risk of outputs that could pose nuclear, chemical, biological, critical infrastructure, and energy-security threats.

Advances in the national labs

DOE has a long history of driving advances in earlier AI technologies (before machine learning) and in computing, including supercomputers. Many national labs have been involved in AI-related research, including (but not limited to) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), Argonne National Laboratory (ANL), Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBL), Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), and the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL).

One of DOE’s most notable AI-related efforts involves investment in supercomputing. In 2018, ORNL announced the procurement of the world’s most advanced supercomputer (Summit) in partnership with IBM. Since then, ANL has also partnered with Intel to train the second-largest supercomputer, Aurora on language and scientific data to produce AuroraGPT.Other research on neural network architectures, learning methodologies, AI applications, and AI’s societal impacts are underway at various other labs. More information about how the national labs are involved in research on emerging technologies can be found in our national labs and FFRDC guide.

DOE offices working on AI (policy)

There are several DOE offices and components that those interested in AI and policy may find professionally relevant, including (not necessarily comprehensive):

  1. Office of the Undersecretary for Science and Innovation (S4): S4 oversees 10 of DOE’s national labs and is the epicenter of R&D in the Department (org chart on p. 142)
    1. Office of Critical and Emerging Technology (CET): created in 2023 and headed by Helena Fu (also DOE’s Chief AI Officer), mandated to oversee and coordinate DOE work on a wide range of emerging technology (from AI and biotech to quantum computing)
    2. Office of Science (SC): largest funder of fundamental physical science research with a budget of $8.1 billion
      1. Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR): funds much of the supercomputing work specifically at the Office of Science labs, predominantly Oak Ridge, Argonne, and Berkeley
      2. Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E): advances high-potential, high-impact energy technologies that are too early for private-sector investment (similar to other ARPAs in DOD and the Intelligence Community) (org chart on p. 8)
  2. Office of the Undersecretary of Nuclear Security (NNSA – S5): NNSA is a semi-autonomous nuclear security vertical of DOE; well set-up to liaise between industry and the national security establishment (org chart on p. 174)
    1. Advanced Simulation and Computing Program (ASC): super-computing program run by the NNSA to simulate, test, and maintain the US nuclear stockpile; parallel to ASCR (see above)
    2. Office of Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation (DNN): works to prevent nuclear proliferation; investing in a venture called “STEEL THREAD” to develop foundation models and assess trustworthiness to assist with nonproliferation efforts
  3. Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management (FECM): largest contributor, through in-house and external research, to DOE’s AI Use Case Inventory at over 70% of the more than 180 projects listed.
    • Research and Innovation Center (NETL – RIC): leverages science-based models, AI, and machine learning (AI/ML) methods, data analytics, and high-performance computing to accelerate applied technology development for clean, efficient, and affordable energy production and utilization.

Working at DOE

DOE hires applicants from a wide range of backgrounds, ranging from law and consulting to science, technology, and academia. The national labs employ a lot of scientists (often with STEM degrees) but they also offer many policy-oriented “analyst” roles. Advantages of working for the national labs include being able to work nationwide (since the labs are spread out all over the country), earning more than employees in government agencies, and (sometimes) getting a security clearance. Also, after working at a national lab for several years, there are often opportunities to transition into government.

One common path to working at DOE is its ORISE STEM Internships and Fellowships. Interns and fellows are placed in offices around the Department, and many are able to transition into full-time jobs afterward. Another great early-career opportunity is the NNSA Graduate Fellowship Program (NGFP) run by Pacific Northwest National Lab and sponsored by the DOE’s National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA).

To find open positions at DOE, visit USAJOBS filtering for “Department of Energy”, and check out its Careers page, which may include postings not listed on USAJOBS. You can also follow DOE on LinkedIn to stay updated about their activities and new job postings. If you’re looking for DOE internships, fellowships, and other early-career opportunities, check out the Federal Internship Finder and the USAJOBS Federal Internship Portal, and filter for “Department of Energy”.

If you want to apply, check out our federal agency application advice section for guides to USAJOBS, federal resumes, interviewing for federal positions, and more.

Further reading

Footnotes
  1. A note about the organizational chart: DOE has gone through significant organizational changes in 2022 and 2023, mostly involving the creation of a new under secretary—Office of the Under Secretary for Infrastructure (S3)—as a result of the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) and the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). Second, in December 2023, the Department announced that the Artificial Intelligence and Technology Office (AI) would be shuttered and, in parallel, announced the creation of the Office of Critical and Emerging Technology (CET) in S4 (not yet reflected in the linked organizational chart). ↩︎
Other agency profiles

Department of Commerce (DOC)

Department of Defense (DOD)

Department of Homeland Security (DHS)

Department of State (DOS)

Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

Department of Energy (DOE) - Emerging Technology Policy Careers (2024)

FAQs

What is the office of critical emerging technologies? ›

The Office of the Special Envoy for Critical and Emerging Technology (S/TECH)'s mission is to ensure the United States implements an international strategy that furthers its competitive advantages across the constellation of critical and emerging technologies that are transforming societies, economies, and national ...

Why is the Department of Energy important? ›

The mission of the Energy Department is to ensure America's security and prosperity by addressing its energy, environmental and nuclear challenges through transformative science and technology solutions.

What is the job of the US Department of Energy? ›

The Department of Energy (DOE) manages the United States' nuclear infrastructure and administers the country's energy policy.

What is the Department of Energy AI strategy? ›

DOE aims to build energy-efficient AI supercomputers, which could help address the challenge of advancing this technology without causing energy consumption to skyrocket, which Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm has identified as a top concern.

Which technology will be in demand in 2025? ›

Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning

One of the most prominent emerging skills in 2025 is artificial intelligence (AI). More specifically, demand for generative AI and machine learning skills has soared. AI technology has the power to automate processes and improve workplace efficiency.

What are the emerging and critical technologies? ›

The government has laid out a plan to boost R&D in emerging and critical technologies like Quantum Technologies, Artificial intelligence (AI), Semiconductors, Clean Energy, Green Hydrogen and Bioeconomy.

What are three interesting facts about the Department of Energy? ›

Today, the DOE contributes to the future of the nation by ensuring our energy security, maintaining the safety and reliability of our nuclear stockpile, cleaning up the environment from the legacy of the Cold War, and developing innovations in science and technology.

What are the top priorities of the Department of Energy? ›

It focuses on enhancing global energy security through countering malign influence, diversifying supplies, and increasing energy access. At the same time the office is committed to increasing U.S. energy exports and trade to enhance growth.

What are the three major functions of the Energy Department? ›

The Department of Energy (DOE) is responsible for advancing the energy, environmental, and nuclear security of the United States; promoting scientific and technological innovation in support of that mission; sponsoring basic research in the physical sciences; and ensuring the environmental cleanup of the nation's ...

What does doe mean in salary? ›

DOE is an acronym that stands for “depends on experience.” Employers use this in job descriptions instead of listing a specific salary if the candidate's salary expectations could depend on how much previous work experience they have had in a related role or field.

What agencies fall under the Department of Energy? ›

Divisions and Offices
  • Chief Counsel's Office.
  • Efficiency.
  • Energy Assessments.
  • Energy Research and Development.
  • Fuels and Transportation.
  • Office of Compliance Assistance and Enforcement.
  • Office of Governmental and International Affairs.
  • Office of the Public Advisor, Energy Equity, and Tribal Affairs.

Who runs the Department of Energy? ›

Jennifer Granholm

Why does the Department of Energy have a spy agency? ›

To provide DOE, other US Government policy-makers, and the Intelligence Community with timely, accurate, high-impact foreign intelligence analyses. To ensure that DOE's technical, analytical, and research expertise is made available to the intelligence, law enforcement, and special operations communities.

What company is leading the AI revolution? ›

While Nvidia is the clear leader in AI hardware, Microsoft has established itself as the leader in AI software.

Which company is the AI leader? ›

Largest AI companies by market cap as of July 2024:

Apple. Microsoft. Alphabet. NVIDIA.

What is the Critical technologies Policy Office? ›

The Critical Technologies Policy Coordination Office (CTPCO) was established in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet to provide coordinated, whole-of-government advice on technology developments, opportunities and risks, and to recommend actions to promote and protect critical technologies.

What is critical emerging technology CET? ›

CETs are defined as subsets of advanced technologies that may significantly impact U.S. national security. The critical and emerging technology areas in the 2024 update are: Advanced Computing. Advanced Engineering Materials.

Who is leading the critical technology? ›

Here is a list of the top countries and universities according to the ASPI's Critical Technology Tracker report: Top Countries: China: leads in 37 out of 44 technologies. United States: comes second in the majority of the 44 technologies.

What are examples of critical technologies? ›

Types of current, emerging and critical technologies
  • quantum computing and quantum sensing.
  • blockchain.
  • virtual and augmented reality.
  • robotics.
  • artificial intelligence (AI)
  • machine learning.
  • 5G and 6G communications.
  • cybersecurity.

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