The central matter facing UC as they search for the next Director is should LLNL be uniquely focused on weapons work, or expanding its sponsor suite. This question has been danced around since the transition, but still remains an open subject. In the last six years, between the two facilities, six leaders have been tasked with program funding diversification in an effort to migrate towards a multi-sponsor lab (LLNL: Doesburg, Albright, Warner; LANL: Beason, Reese, Wallace). Internally some have regarded this as a fool’s errand, while others have watched SNL benefit from non-weapons programmatic projects. In its typical schizophrenic fashion, NNSA has sent mixed signals on how these efforts are viewed – derisively calling them work for “others” and simultaneously making a big deal out of the cooperation agreement that was signed with DOD, DHS, and IC. The multiple attempts by multiple lab leaders to move the needle on WFO funding have led to very limited success, and in most cases have actually decreased external support. As the next Director is selected, it is worth a critical examination of why WFO only increased under one of the above six leaders. Perhaps the enterprise is not ready for diversification, and should uniquely focus on weapons work. From all accounts, this is clearly the path that LANL has taken most recently, and maybe LLNL should follow that lead as well.
Tri-Valley Cares needs to be on this if they aren't already. We need to make sure that NNSA and LLNL does not make good on promises to pursue such stupid ideas as doing Plutonium experiments on NIF. The stupidity arises from the fact that a huge population is placed at risk in the short and long term. Why do this kind of experiment in a heavily populated area? Only a moron would push that kind of imbecile area. Do it somewhere else in the god forsaken hills of Los Alamos. Why should the communities in the Bay Area be subjected to such increased risk just because the lab's NIF has failed twice and is trying the Hail Mary pass of doing an SNM experiment just to justify their existence? Those Laser EoS techniques and the people analyzing the raw data are all just BAD anyways. You know what comes next after they do the experiment. They'll figure out that they need larger samples. More risk for the local population. Stop this imbecilic pursuit. They wan...
Comments
1) Turn it into a University. California can always use a new one. LLNL has a great campus and would be perfect. Classes could start immediately. Scientists all become professors!!!!!
2) Turn it into an amusement ride. Little cars in canals can take people through the NIF building to see robotic scientists dressed as Lincoln wasting huge sums of public taxes firing lasers at dust specs while children sing in the background. "It's a dumb world after all!!!!!"
3) Sell it to a corporation: Oracle is always buying stuff, sell it to them. Maybe Facebook wants a new corporate campus or even Google.
4) Turn it into a movie studio. LLNL and NIF would be great backdrops for Sci-Fi epics: A film about a lone survivor of an epidemic of stupidity that kills everyone else, but he has to constantly fight hoards of NIF Zombies. That has Oscar written all over it! Schwarzenegger would take the staring roll with Jeremy Irons as the leader of the NIF Zombies.
5) Let Mythbusters fire canons at the buildings to see if they can punch holes through them. It would be must see TV.
6) Let LLNL decay much like Detroit then cut retired employee pensions. That seems to be the current government plan.
The B83 is going to be retired. There has been talk of removing one of the legs of the triad, probably silo launched missiles (W87, W78). Also, RRW was cancelled.
Where is this future of weapons work?
Diversification through WFOs is only given lip service by LLNL and LANL because the politicians in those states say they want it. It has grown for over a decade at SNL because that lab executed a coordinated plan and rewarded those who went the WFO route. The only thing you'll get for going the WFO route at LLNL and LANL is job insecurity. It's a fool's errand.
The reason that WFOs at both LLNL and LANL are largely done as a patchwork of smaller projects lead by independent PIs is because the Program Managers at these labs do very little to find and then grow the so-called "Big WFO Projects" that the lab upper management says they want. The labs have also placed a bloated, over-burdened cost structure onto WFOs that make them the most expensive labor you can do at these sites regardless of the facilities that might (or might not) be needed to carry out the WFO work. Both LLNL and LANL upper management are, in fact, promoting WFO failures!
SNL may grow or hold stable but LLNL and LANL are both destined to continue to shrink. Little will stop the current process under the "for-profit" LLCs that have taken hold of these two labs. As long as Bechtel can collect their $100 million per year profit fees, they'll be happy with the state of LLNL and LANL. They collect those fees in a manner that is largely irrelevant to the size of these labs. In fact, the smaller the labs and the less critical the work, the easier these two labs are to manage.
Sick? Yes, but that's the managerial system that has been put into practice at LLNL and LANL. It won't be changing anytime soon.
The reason that WFOs at both LLNL and LANL are largely done as a patchwork of smaller projects lead by independent PIs is because the Program Managers at these labs do very little to find and then grow the so-called "Big WFO Projects" that the lab upper management says they want. The labs have also placed a bloated, over-burdened cost structure onto WFOs that make them the most expensive labor you can do at these sites regardless of the facilities that might (or might not) be needed to carry out the WFO work.
Well said 4:37pm!
Not to mention the disapproval committees filled with clueless dolts where you have to explain every little detail to perform some of the requested work from the WFO sponsor. I've had WFO sponsors shake their head in disbelief at the idiocy and kneejerk policies of LLNL. "This is why we goto Sandia" they say.
Bechtel is probably quite happy with a do nothing congress. If decisions really start to be made in Washington then labs shrink and fees drop. As long as the battle between the parties continues, it's party time at Bechtel HQ!!!!!
Political Deadlock is good for us all.
http://www.fire.pppl.gov/FY14_Budget_NNSA_ICF_IgnYld.pdf
It's the rather lengthy FY 2014 congressional budget overview from the NNSA for the "Inertial Confinement Fusion Ignition and High Yield Campaign". It's a summary of the expected work to be done mostly on NIF, Omega, and Z, into the future. One thing that stands out is the Advanced Ignition Demonstration Goal - by FY 2019 to "demonstrate an advanced ignition platform that meets the refined
requirements of the Stockpile Stewardship Program (SSP)". I'm assuming that this means get ignition by end of FY 2019.
It's clear from the document, that despite the large budget drops in FY14 and FY15 across the ICF/HED programs, NIF will still be central to Weapons Physics work.
I also find it interesting that for FY 2015 and beyond, it is expected that NIF will "demonstrate operation of the Advanced Radiographic Capability
(ARC) at NIF, and engineer a polar-drive target insertion cryostat for the NIF", and demonstrate the "development of the fourth-harmonic probe beam and the Compton
gamma spectrometer on NIF".
The document writers also shuts out the scientific community from using Z and NIF. That's a big loser.
There is an interesting read available at
http://www.fire.pppl.gov/FY14_Budget_NNSA_ICF_IgnYld.pdf
Almost reads like the numbers were put in place after the text was written. And note this gem, "The FY 2014 Request reduces the level of facility operations at the NIF in the ICF campaign and eliminates support for conduct of experiments by external users at NIF and Z. External users of the major HED facilities will now be directly charged for experimental time." That basically means, there will be no external users at all, since no one can afford the true costs involved.
The B83 is going to be retired. There has been talk of removing one of the legs of the triad, probably silo launched missiles (W87, W78). Also, RRW was cancelled.
Where is this future of weapons work?
December 10, 2013 at 3:43 PM
No worries, Bret Knapp will steal the W76/W88/W78/B61 from Los Alamos now that he returned. Also, he deliberately installed "weak" management (e.g. Craig Leasure, John Benner, etc.) at Los Alamos that roll over and die when Knapp tells them to.