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Steven Chu

By Bill McKibben

source: Times Inc.

McKibben is an environmentalist and a scholar-in-residence at Middlebury College. He is the author of The End of Nature

美國能源部長、1997年諾貝爾物理學獎得主朱棣文

(文章作者:環境保護論者、《自然的終結》作者、大學教授比爾.麥奇本)

此篇文章選自"時代雜誌2009全球100位最具影響力人物"。

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One of the hardest things about being a scientist may be learning how not to sound like one. Steven Chu has mastered the skilland that's good for all of us. America's newly installed Secretary of Energy, Chu, 61, won the Nobel Prize in 1997 for his esoteric studies in physics, but he has also focused his energies on studying biology down at the molecular level.


Perhaps Chu's greatest impact, however, has been in the area of energy. Long a vocal advocate of weaning the U.S. from its dependence on fossil fuels, he was picked by President Barack Obama for both his ability and his candor. With the future of the earth's climate dependent on rethinking the ways we consume energy, both skills will be needed in equal measure, but it's the candor part that might be the most refreshing.


During his first interview in office, with the Los Angeles Times, Chu said straightforwardly that California's agriculture couldn't survive the melt of the Sierra Nevada snowpack, which might well happen by century's end if we don't get our climate-change act together. That may seem like a self-evident truth to anyone who's been paying attention, but it's the kind of truth we haven't been hearing from government officials in a long time. Steven Chu's candor might just be the start of a newand honesttrend.