Portal:2020 DOE Transition Book/Intro: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Transition 2020 - Corporate Overview cover.png|200px|thumbnail|right|2020 Transition Book Cover|link=Transition book#Department of Energy]] | [[File:Transition 2020 - Corporate Overview cover.png|200px|thumbnail|right|2020 Transition Book Cover|link=Transition book#Department of Energy]]The [[Department of Energy|United States Department of Energy]] (DOE) is entrusted with a broad and diverse portfolio across its major mission areas of nuclear security, science, energy, and environmental remediation. At its core, DOE is a science and technology powerhouse with an unparalleled network of 17 National Laboratories. DOE spearheads innovation to successfully address national security challenges, promote energy independence, create jobs, increase economic prosperity, and boost U.S. manufacturing competitiveness. The Laboratory network provides a unique capability to the Nation in that it serves not only DOE’s missions but also provides research and development support to multiple other Federal departments and agencies (e.g., [[Department of Defense]]; [[Intelligence Community]]; [[NASA|National Aeronautics and Space Administration]]; and [[National Institutes of Health]]), as well as numerous universities and industry partners. | ||
This book is broken into three parts: | |||
* [[ | * [[Corporate overview (2020 Presidential transition)|Book 1 - Corporate overview]] | ||
* [[Portal:2020 DOE Transition Book/Book 2|Book 2 - Issue Papers]] | |||
* [[ | * [[Portal:2020 DOE Transition/Book 3|Book 3 - Organization Overviews]] | ||
* [[ | |||
Latest revision as of 11:24, 21 December 2024
The United States Department of Energy (DOE) is entrusted with a broad and diverse portfolio across its major mission areas of nuclear security, science, energy, and environmental remediation. At its core, DOE is a science and technology powerhouse with an unparalleled network of 17 National Laboratories. DOE spearheads innovation to successfully address national security challenges, promote energy independence, create jobs, increase economic prosperity, and boost U.S. manufacturing competitiveness. The Laboratory network provides a unique capability to the Nation in that it serves not only DOE’s missions but also provides research and development support to multiple other Federal departments and agencies (e.g., Department of Defense; Intelligence Community; National Aeronautics and Space Administration; and National Institutes of Health), as well as numerous universities and industry partners.
This book is broken into three parts: