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Jane Lubchenco

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Current Position: Undersecretary of Commerce and Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration (NOAA) (since March 2009)

Boss: Commerce Secretary Gary Locke

Why She Matters

Lubchenco, a scientific rock star whose record has been described as “path-breaking” and “stunning,”Dean, Cornelia, “NOAA Chief Believes in Science as Social Contract,” The New York Times, March 23, 2009   heads NOAA, the agency in the Commerce Department that measures and regulates the oceans and air.

Lubchenco’s confirmation added another environmental specialist to the list of scientists in high places in the Obama administration.  After her confirmation, Lubchenco echoed Obama when she pledged to use the “best science as our guide,”Jane Lubchenco Confirmed as NOAA Administrator,” NOAA Web site, March 19, 2009to protect America’s oceans and atmosphere.

Environmentalists want Lubchenco, a world-renowned marine biologist, to crack down on fishing practices they argue are threatening to destroy the ocean’s ecosystems. Lubchenco has also been vocal about the dangers of climate change and the need to reduce the emissions that lead to it. She took a lead role in the federal government's efforts to clean up the April 2010 BP oil spill.

Though she spent nearly three decades teaching at Oregon State, she isn’t be intimidated by Washington politics. Lubchenco has “devoted much of her career to encouraging scientists to become more engaged in public policy debates,” The Washington Post reported.Eilperin, Juliet, “Lubchenco Will Helm National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,” 44 Blog, The WashingtonPost.com, December 18, 2008

The first woman to head NOAA, she reports to Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and leads a $4 billion agency and its nearly 13,000 employees stationed all over the U.S. and around the world.Jane Lubchenco Confirmed as NOAA Administrator,” NOAA Web site, March 19, 2009  

Path to Power

Lubchenco grew up in Colorado and went to Colorado College. After earning a bachelor’s degree in 1969, she went to the University of Washington to earn a master’s degree in 1971.

She did her doctoral work at Harvard. After completing her Ph.D. in ecology in 1975, she taught at Harvard for two years.Biographical information taken from “Biographical Sketch,” Oregon State University Web site

In 1977, she joined the faculty of Oregon State University as a professor of marine biology.

Lubchenco and her husband, fellow marine ecologist Bruce Menge, shared a faculty position, which allowed them to balance work with having a family.  “As far as we know that had never been done before,” she told the New York Times.Dean, Cornelia, “NOAA Chief Believes in Science as Social Contract,” The New York Times, March 23, 2009  

The couple’s son, Duncan Lubchenco Menge, is now a post-doctoral fellow at the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis.

Eventually, the shared faculty position became two separate jobs, and Lubchenco and Menge spent the next 30 years working in the same lab and jointly building a database on information about the Oregon coast.

In nearly three decades at OSU, Lubchenco became an academic darling, with what the Scripps Institution of Oceanography’s Jeremy B.C. Jackson called “some blockbuster papers, cited a thousand times.”Dean, Cornelia, “NOAA Chief Believes in Science as Social Contract,” The New York Times, March 23, 2009 Indeed, the marine biologist has been ranked in the 99.5th percentile on a scale of the most cited academics.

Lubchenco’s work focused on the interaction between humans and the environment, including biodiversity, climate change, sustainability and the state of coastal marine ecosystems. Biographical information taken from “Biographical Sketch,” Oregon State University Web site

In 1993, she won a MacArthur “genius” grant, which awards $500,000 to a handful of Americans judged to be the most creative in their fields.  That’s just the cherry on top of the long list of coveted prizes and awards for Lubchenco, which include a Pew fellowship, eight honorary degrees, the 2002 Heinz Award in the Environment, the 2003 Nierenberg Prize for Science in the Public Interest and more.

Lubchenco is also a member of some of the most prestigious scientific societies in the world, including the National Academy of Sciences and Britain’s Royal Society. In 1997, she was president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, an honor she shares with Obama White House science adviser John P. Holdren.

In the late 1990s, Lubchenco served two terms on Bill Clinton’s National Science Board, which advised the president and Congress and oversaw the National Science Foundation.

In December 2008, President Obama announced she was his choice to head the National Oceanographic and Atmosphere Administration. She was confirmed by the Senate on March 19, 2009. Lubchenco took a leave of absence from Oregon State University to head NOAA.

The Issues

NOAA both measures and protects the ocean and atmosphere, and Lubchenco may be the most prestigious scientist ever to lead the agency.

"That's exactly the right signal,” said Andrew Rosenberg, who served as deputy director of NOAA's Fisheries Service under Bill Clinton. "It's saying that science agencies have a role in policy,” he said. “It establishes NOAA as one of those key scientific agencies."Eilperin, Juliet, “Lubchenco Will Helm National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,” 44 Blog, The WashingtonPost.com, December 18, 2008

Protecting Fish and Oceans

“America's fisheries [populations of fish caught commercially] are among the best-managed in the world,” Grist.com reported.  “But that's just because there's not much competition.”

lubchenco.jpgBy all accounts, Lubchenco has her work cut out for her in regulating the increasingly problematic fishing industry. Many of the species Americans eat for dinner have been over-fished to the brink of extinction, and destructive practices such as trawling along delicate reefs can destroy entire ecosystems.

Still, environmentalists predict most fish populations could make a comeback with the right limits and government regulations. Congress has called for an end to over-fishing by 2011, but most fisheries are not on track to meet that deadline. Even for those species where fishing is regulated, limits are sometimes twice as high as what scientists recommend.

In fact, before she headed NOAA, Lubchenco criticized the agency for not acting aggressively enough to stop over-fishing.Eilperin, Juliet, “Lubchenco Will Helm National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,” 44 Blog, The WashingtonPost.com, December 18, 2008  “Ocean conservation has lagged far behind land conservation,” she told the New York Times.Revkin, Andrew C., “Sea Champion Picked for Ocean, Air Agency,” December 18, 2008

Lubchenco supports catch shares, or a practice by which fishermen buy “shares” in fisheries that grow in value as the fish population recovers.

“The oceans have long been thought to be so vast and bountiful that they must be impervious to human depredation,” Lubchenco told the Times. “The evidence is now overwhelming that even the immense oceans are depleted and disrupted. Turns out that oceans are more vulnerable – and more valuable – than we thought.”Revkin, Andrew C., “Sea Champion Picked for Ocean, Air Agency,” December 18, 2008

Climate Change

Lubchenco created a climate-change information service within NOAA to offer information about changing climate conditions “to help businesses, elected officials and regulators make good decisions on issues like where to put buildings or roads or wind farms.”Dean, Cornelia, “NOAA Chief Believes in Science as Social Contract,” The New York Times, March 23, 2009  It is modeled on the National Weather Service, which NOAA also runs.

“It is no longer enough to know what the wind patterns were for the last hundred years,” she told the New York Times.

“You want to know what they will be for the next hundred years — and they undoubtedly won’t be the same. So there are huge opportunities to provide services to the country.”Dean, Cornelia, “NOAA Chief Believes in Science as Social Contract,” The New York Times, March 23, 2009

Lubchenco is comfortable living on the border between science and politics. She has advised the White House and the United Nations and has testified before Congress. She co-chaired a 2004 Oregon panel that advised the governor and recommended actions the state should take to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions.

Green Economy

After her confirmation, Lubchenco said she suspected NOAA could play a key role in developing the green jobs that President Obama proposed in his February 2009 stimulus bill, especially in coastal areas, the Associated Press reported.OSU’s Lubchenco Confirmed as Head of NOAA,” The Associated Press, March 19, 2009

Science in the Public Sphere

Lubchenco believes that scientists should be involved in policy debates, and has encouraged her colleagues to promote innovative ideas beyond the rarified air of the scientific community.

In 1998, she founded the Aldo Leopold Leadership Program, which trains experienced scientists in ways to communicate to laymen, especially to politicians and the media.Aldo Leopold Leadership Program Web site

She also helped organize a program to make details about marine conservation available to politicians and the public called the Communication Partnership for Science and the Sea. She was a founding director of ClimateCentral.org, a web site that offers what Lubchenco calls “credible” information about climate change.Dean, Cornelia, “NOAA Chief Believes in Science as Social Contract,” The New York Times, March 23, 2009  
 

The Network

Lubchenco is a past president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, as is Obama’s White House science adviser, John P. Holdren. (Holdren also joins Lubchenco as a member of the elite club of MacArthur “genius” grant recipients.)

Bill Clinton appointed her to two terms on his National Science Board, which advises the President and Congress and oversees the National Science Foundation.

Lubchenco went to Colorado College with Marcia McNutt, the head of Obama's U.S. Geological Survey. “I’ve known Marcia and worked with her for a very long time,” Lubchenco said. “We start off with great respect for each other.” Interior Secretary Ken Salazar is also a Colorado Colleg

Colorado College Bulletin, November 2009

McNutt graduated from Colorado three years ahead of Interior Secretary Ken Salazar.

[photos: Pete Souza/ White House]

 

Footnotes

 
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Jane Lubchenco's World

Profiles    
Gary Locke U.S. Ambassador to China (since August 2011) David M. Kennedy National Ocean Service Acting Assistant Administrator Thad W. Allen National Incident Commander of the BP Oil Spill John Holdren Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy; Co-Chair, President's Council of Advisers on Science and Technology Sherburne Abbott Outgoing associate director for environment and energy, Office of Science and Technology Policy (since April 2009); Incoming Vice President for Sustainability Initiatives, Syracuse University Marcia K. McNutt Director, U.S. Geological Survey David Titley Oceanographer and U.S. Navy Navigator John L. "Jack" Hayes Assistant Administrator for Weather Services
Institutions    
Environmental Protection Agency The EPA’s mission is straightforward: to protect human health and safeguard the natural environment in the nation’s states, territories and tribal lands. Interior Department The Department of the Interior was catapulted into a sharp spotlight in the spring of 2010 as it took point for the federal government’s response to the British Petroleum Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. White House The mission of the EOP is to advise the president. Former presidential aide and historian Theodore Sorensen said some presidents use the EOP “as a farm league, some use it as a source of experts and implementers, and some use it as Elba.” Energy Department The U.S. Department of Energy, established in 1977 under President Carter, implements the policies that bring energy to U.S. homes and businesses, engages in the sometimes contradictory goals of weapons development for the U.S. military and delves into research to improve the country’s energy future and cleaning up the environment. Justice Department The three strategic goals listed in the Justice Department’s 2008 Citizens’ Report are: prevent terrorism and promote the nation’s security; prevent crime, enforce federal laws and represent the rights and interests of the American people; and ensure the fair and efficient administration of justice. Senate On July 16, 1787, the framers of the U.S. Constitution created what is known as a bicameral, or two chamber, legislature, with the Senate as the upper house. Commerce Department The U.S. Department of Commerce (DOC) is charged with supporting the country’s economic stability and growth, both domestically and on the world stage, a mission especially critical during the national and global economic crisis. House of Representatives The first session of the "people's house" convened on March 4, 1789. The House speaker is second in line to the presidency behind the vice president in the event of the president's death.
Issues
Environment From climate change to the BP oil spill, environmental experts are in high demand all over the federal government. Energy Energy experts are all over the federal government and we're here to help you find who you're looking for. BP Oil Spill Get the inside scoop on the key government officials and departments making real-time decisions about the massive Deepwater Horizon spill and its consequences for the Gulf Coast.

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