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Office of Environment, Health, Safety and Security | Department of Energy Office of Environment, Health, Safety and Security The Office of Environment, Health, Safety and Security (EHSS) is the Department of Energy’s (DOE) central organization with enterprise-level responsibilities for health, safety, environment, and security; providing corporate-level leadership and strategic vision to establish, sustain, coordinate, and integrate these vital programs.
EHSS is responsible for policy development and technical assistance; safety analysis; and corporate safety and security programs. The Director, Office of Environment, Health, Safety and Security advises DOE elements and senior Departmental leadership, including the Deputy Secretary on all matters related to environment, health, safety, and security across the complex.
The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) health and safety programs help ensure protection of workers and the public from the hazards associated with Department operations. Worker health and safety policy, program tools and assistance resources are available for current and former DOE Federal, contractor, and subcontractor workers who work at Department of Energy facilities.
Former Worker Medical Screening Program Worker Safety and Health Program (10 CFR 851) Workplace Substance Abuse Programs at DOE Sites (10 CFR 707) Occupational Radiation Protection Program Voluntary Protection Program Chronic Beryllium Disease Prevention Program (10 CFR 850) Health Studies and Activities The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) health and safety programs help ensure protection of workers and the public from the hazards associated with Department operations.
Worker health and safety policy, program tools and assistance resources are available for current and former DOE Federal, contractor, and subcontractor workers who work at Department of Energy facilities. Information on DOE O 420.
1C, Facility Safety DOE Federal Quality Council: DOE Directives DOE Accident Prevention and Investigation Program The Office of Nuclear Safety establishes and maintains nuclear safety policy, requirements, and guidance including policy and requirements relating to hazard and accident analysis, facility design and operation, and QA.
DOE Technical Standards Program Risk Assessment Technical Experts Working Group (RWG) Beyond Design Basis Events Information on DOE O 420. 1C, Facility Safety 10 CFR Part 830 Nuclear Safety Technical Positions Natural Phenomena Hazards Program The U. S.
Department of Energy (DOE) complies with all applicable environmental laws and regulations and establishes its own environmental requirements to ensure workers, the public, and the environment is protected from hazards associated with all Department operations.
Corporate Analysis of DOE Safety Performance Corporate Operating Experience Program Radiation Protection of the Public and Environment Preventing nuclear weapons materials and technologies from falling into the hands of adversaries seeking to develop weapons of mass destruction is the top priority of the Department of Energy’s corporate security programs.
Initial and Comprehensive Security Briefing Department of Energy Security Briefing for Other Governmental Agency Personnel Department of Energy Access Authorization Termination Briefing for Other Governmental Overview of Access Authorization Process for Applicants Since the advent of the nuclear age, the United States has been dedicated to preventing the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
In order to stop the spread of nuclear weapons-related technology, Congress gave the Atomic Energy Commission (now the Department of Energy [DOE]), authority to control nuclear weapons-related information. This task has gained even greater importance in recent years with an increasing number of nations seeking to gain nuclear weapons or improve existing capabilities, and the growing potential for nuclear terrorism.
The United States must ensure adversaries cannot obtain the information, technology, or materials that will assist them to carry out attacks. While it is important to have adequate protection systems in place, the first step to ensure our success in preventing such attacks is identifying what must be protected.
Classification Policy, Guidance & Reports DOE Classification Training International Meetings and Forums Office of Health and Safety Participates in 50th Anniversary Ceremonies of RERF, Visits Fukushima Environmental and Legacy Management International Meetings and Forums International Meetings and Forums International Meetings and Forums Dr. Vaswani Marks 50 Years of Care for Marshallese Environmental and Legacy Management Former Worker Program New Mexico Screening Expansion Environmental and Legacy Management Unspoken DOE achievement by Bill Richardson The Office of Environment, Health, Safety and Security's leadership plays a critical role in advancing the office's mission.
The Department’s CMO functions as an integral member of the Department’s Environment, Health, Safety and Security (EHSS) organization. The Department synthesizes operational information to support continuous environment, health, safety and security improvements.
DOE’s corporate safety reporting and analysis programs and activities are established to manage a number of viable safety indicators applicable to most DOE contractor operations that provide Departmental leadership, line management, and stakeholders with timely information to gauge the success of Departmental safety program implementation.
DOE operational and occurrence data are collected through various reporting mechanisms and provided through internet-based tools, one of which is databases. Departmental Representative to the DNFSB Ensures effective cross-organizational leadership and coordination to resolve DNFSB-identified technical and management issues.
DOE Differing Professional Opinions Work processes for DOE employees (Federal, contractor, and subcontractor) to raise concerns for assessment and ensure appropriate actions are taken. DOE Employee Concerns Program The DOE ECP encourages the free and open expression of employee concerns by DOE federal, contractor, and subcontractor personnel. Department of Energy Technical Standards Program NOTICE: TSP document collection has moved.
The new site provides a central location for both DOE Directives and DOE Technical Standards information. Interactive DOE USACCESS Map allows users to locate DOE credentialing services within geographic locations. Office of Environment, Health, Safety and Security 1000 Independence Avenue, SW This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Colleges and universities, businesses, nonprofit institutions may apply, Private nonprofit institutions/organizations, universities, research organizations, and state and local governments. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows recent federal obligations suggest $25,809,602 (2025). Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Yes — Epidemiology and Other Health Studies Financial Assistance Program is offered by Department of Energy and this listing comes from SAM.gov, an official U.S. federal source. Federal applications generally require registrations (for example SAM.gov or an agency submission portal), so allow extra lead time.
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The Department of Defense FY2026 Defense University Research Instrumentation Program (DURIP) provides funding for U.S. universities to acquire research equipment and instrumentation in areas important to national defense, including AI and machine learning hardware. The program is administered jointly by the Army Research Office (ARO), Office of Naval Research (ONR), and Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR), with approximately $34 million available and 95 awards anticipated. DURIP funds the acquisition of specialized computing hardware for AI/ML research (GPU clusters, TPUs, neuromorphic processors), robotics and autonomous systems testbeds, sensor arrays and data collection systems for machine learning training, high-performance computing infrastructure for defense-relevant AI research, and laboratory equipment for human-AI interaction studies. The program specifically supports equipment that enhances research-related education in DoD-priority disciplines. While general-purpose computing is not eligible, computing equipment directly supporting DoD-relevant AI research programs qualifies. No cost sharing is required.
Vinnova, Sweden's national innovation agency, funds projects developing applied AI solutions for Swedish industry through its Advanced Digitalization Programme. Each project can apply for between 2 and 10 million SEK (approximately $190,000 to $950,000 USD) covering up to 50% of eligible project costs. The total call budget is 60 million SEK. Projects run for 12-24 months and focus on two key areas: Intelligent Edge (AI for real-time application in the sensor chain) and AI-based decision support. All projects must address industrial needs and integrate gender equality and climate change perspectives. Scientific publications must be open access. A parallel call also funds AI and cybersecurity projects at 1-10 million SEK per project with a 50 million SEK total budget.
On April 20, 2026, the White House declared grid, natural gas, LNG, petroleum, and coal 'essential to national defense,' unlocking DPA Title III loans, loan guarantees, and purchase commitments through DOE. Here is how this non-traditional financing works, who qualifies, why the September 30 sunset matters, and how energy companies and their supply chains should position now.
Read articleOn June 2, 2026, the Department of Energy's Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation selected two demonstration-scale facilities — Phoenix Tailings (with MIT and the University of Minnesota) for $66 million, and the Colorado School of Mines (with ElementUSA, PNNL, Principal Mineral, and Rare Earth Technologies Inc.) for the balance — under the Rare Earth Elements Demonstration Facility Program. Both projects pull rare earths from industrial waste — red mud at the Gramercy refinery in Louisiana, and a mix of mine and refining tailings elsewhere. Here is what the selections tell researchers, small businesses, and downstream magnet customers about where DOE thinks the chokepoint actually is, and what to do before the next demonstration-scale solicitation opens.
Read articleThe Energy Department's flagship Early Career Research Program is funded at $145M for FY2026 — $79M in current-year dollars, the rest contingent on FY27 appropriations. Full applications are due June 2 from the ~150 researchers DOE pre-cleared in March. Here's what the program rewards, why this year's announcement leans hard into Executive Order 14303 on Gold Standard Science, what untenured PIs at academic institutions vs. national labs should expect, and how to position for the FY27 pre-application gate next March.
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