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Federal R&D Funding Trends In Five Agencies: NSF, NASA, NIST, DOE (Civilian) and NOAA (open access)

Federal R&D Funding Trends In Five Agencies: NSF, NASA, NIST, DOE (Civilian) and NOAA

This report includes a brief analysis of federal research and development funding trends for the past six years as well as R&D funding projects to FY2000.
Date: January 17, 1997
Creator: Davey, Michael E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
TFA Tank Focus Area - multiyear program plan FY98-FY00 (open access)

TFA Tank Focus Area - multiyear program plan FY98-FY00

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) continues to face a major radioactive waste tank remediation problem with hundreds of waste tanks containing hundreds of thousands of cubic meters of high-level waste (HLW) and transuranic (TRU) waste across the DOE complex. Approximately 80 tanks are known or assumed to have leaked. Some of the tank contents have reacted to form flammable gases, introducing additional safety risks. These tanks must be maintained in a safe condition and eventually remediated to minimize the risk of waste migration and/or exposure to workers, the public, and the environment. However, programmatic drivers are more ambitious than baseline technologies and budgets will support. Science and technology development investments are required to reduce the technical and programmatic risks associated with the tank remediation baselines. The Tanks Focus Area (TFA) was initiated in 1994 to serve as the DOE`s Office of Environmental Management`s (EM`s) national technology development program for radioactive waste tank remediation. The national program was formed to increase integration and realize greater benefits from DOE`s technology development budget. The TFA is responsible for managing, coordinating, and leveraging technology development to support DOE`s four major tank sites: Hanford Site (Washington), Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL) (Idaho), …
Date: September 1, 1997
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory institutional plan FY 1998--2002 (open access)

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory institutional plan FY 1998--2002

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory`s core mission is to deliver environmental science and technology in the service of the nation and humanity. Through basic research the lab creates fundamental knowledge of natural, engineered, and social systems that is the basis for both effective environmental technology and sound public policy. They solve legacy environmental problems by delivering technologies that remedy existing environmental hazards, they address today`s environmental needs with technologies that prevent pollution and minimize waste, and they are laying the technical foundation for tomorrow`s inherently clean energy and industrial processes. The lab also applies their capabilities to meet selected national security, energy, and human health needs; strengthen the US economy; and support the education of future scientists and engineers. The paper summarizes individual research activities under each of these areas.
Date: 1997
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
FY 1998-2001 Transportation Improvement Program: San Antonio-Bexar County Metropolitan Area (open access)

FY 1998-2001 Transportation Improvement Program: San Antonio-Bexar County Metropolitan Area

Report describing activities and plans of the Transportation Improvement Program, which outlines a program of federally-assisted transportation projects that will be implemented over a three year period in the San Antonio - Bexar County area.
Date: April 28, 1997
Creator: San Antonio Metropolitan Planning Organization
System: The Portal to Texas History