The White House announced its intention to nominate Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory and University of California, Berkeley engineer
and scientist Arun Majumdar to become the first director of the U.S. Department
of Energy's Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E).

Arun Majumdar
ARPA-E's goals are to create technologies that have the potential to
reduce the nation's reliance on foreign energy supplies, reduce energy-related
greenhouse gas emissions, and improve energy efficiency. It focuses on high-risk,
high-payoff technologies that promise to transform the energy landscape.
Majumdar's nomination must undergo Senate confirmation.
A mechanical engineer and materials scientist, Majumdar's wide-ranging
expertise spans energy efficiency technology research and implementation in
the U.S. and abroad, as well as materials science innovations such as using
nanotechnology to harness the energy lost as heat during the production of electricity.
He views the nomination as an honor and a call to duty.
"It is a rare privilege and an honor when the President asks you to serve
the nation in such a capacity," says Majumdar. "I came to this country
as an immigrant and am deeply appreciative and indebted to this nation for opening
the doors and welcoming me with open arms. I have received so much. This is
my way of stepping up and paying back."
Adds Interim Berkeley Lab Director Paul Alivisatos, "I am very excited
and pleased that a scientist of Arun Majumdar's distinction and caliber
has been nominated by the President to serve as the head of ARPA-E. Arun's
leadership and energy at Berkeley Lab's Energy and Environmental Technologies
Division has been exemplary, and he will be greatly missed."
Majumdar took the helm of Berkeley Lab's Environmental Energy Technologies
Division in 2007. The division conducts research in advanced energy technologies,
atmospheric sciences, energy-efficient building technologies, energy analysis,
and indoor environmental quality. Majumdar has also served as Berkeley Lab's
Associate Laboratory Director for Energy and Environmental Sciences since February
2009.
He has been a member of the University of California, Berkeley faculty since
1997, where he holds the Almy and Agnes Maynard Chair Professorship in the College
of Engineering.
While serving as head of the Environmental Energy Technologies Division, Majumdar
further cemented the Lab's role as a world-renowned leader in energy efficiency
research.
Earlier this year, he helped forge ties between Berkeley Lab and China's
Tsinghua University to promote the shared development and implementation of
building energy efficiency, a move intended to reduce energy consumption and
greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S and China.
In a similar partnership, he helped usher in a joint research and development
program between the U.S. and India. The Berkeley-India Joint Leadership on Energy
and the Environment, announced last year, brings together researchers from Berkeley
Lab and UC Berkeley, and other U.S. and Indian universities and institutions.
Its goal is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions while maintaining sustained economic
growth in both nations.
And in keeping with his roots as a leading materials scientist and mechanical
engineer, Majumdar recently developed a way to use silicon nanowires to capture
and use the energy lost as heat during the production of electricity. The futuristic
technology could someday be used to convert the large amounts of waste heat
into useful electricity. His research interests include energy conversion, transport,
and storage ranging from molecular and nanoscales to large energy systems.
If confirmed by the Senate, Majumdar will resign from Berkeley Lab and the
University of California. Ashok Gadgil will then serve as interim director of
the Lab's Environmental Energy Technologies Division.
Among his many positions, Majumdar has served as director of the Berkeley Nanosciences
and Nanoengineering Institute, an umbrella organization for expanding and coordinating
Berkeley research and educational activities in nanoscale science and engineering.
He is the founding chair of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers'
Nanotechnology Institute. He also served as a member of the Council of Materials
Science and Engineering at the Department of Energy, and on the Advisory Committee
to the Engineering Directorate of the National Science Foundation.
Majumdar is a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and the
American Association for the Advancement of Science. He is also a member of
the U.S. National Academy of Engineering. He received a Ph.D. in mechanical
engineering from the University of California, Berkeley in 1989.