President-elect Joe Biden is expected to nominate former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm to be the next secretary of energy, a source familiar with transition discussions tells NPR's Franco Ordoñez.
Granholm will bring experience in promoting clean-energy manufacturing as Biden tries to implement a sweeping $2 trillion climate plan.
The selection was first reported by Politico.
Granholm has been Michigan's attorney general and served two terms as governor until 2011. She was also an energy advisor to Hillary Clinton and is an adjunct professor at the University of California Berkeley law school.
When Chrysler and General Motors faced bankruptcy after the Great Recession, Granholm worked with the Obama administration on a bailout that pushed them to invest in green technology like battery storage. Since then, automakers have dramatically ramped up production plans for electric cars.
"Prior to the pandemic, clean energy was one of the fastest growing industries in Michigan, supporting over 125,000 jobs," she wrote in a recent The Detroit Newsop-ed. Now, she says, "low-carbon recovery measures" are needed to create jobs and help a middle class that's been battered by the pandemic's economic collapse.
Biden also frames his climate plan as an opportunity to create good jobs. The plan aims to make the country's power sector carbon-neutral by 2035, but relies on technologies that haven't even been developed, or at least not yet commercialized.
The DOE leads research into key areas experts consider essential to addressing climate change, including: boosting electric vehicles and renewable energy, reducing the carbon footprints of buildings, capturing carbon from power plants and reinvigorating the nuclear power industry.
If confirmed by the Senate, Granholm will lead a DOE that is sometimes called "the department of everything" because its mandates extend beyond energy.
The agency was created in 1977, but has its roots in the Manhattan Project to build an atomic bomb during World War II.
The Energy Department portfolio includes managing the security of the country's nuclear weapons stockpile, 17 national labs across the country, renewable energy and energy efficiency programs, the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, and the clean-up of nuclear and chemical pollution leftover from the Cold War.
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