A Research Center for Kazakhstan

The heart of Central Asia is dominated by the Republic of Kazakhstan, a nation with ambitious plans for the future. Kazakhstan’s robust growth for the past decade has been based on exporting raw materials, notably oil, gas, and metals, includin

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The heart of Central Asia is dominated by the Republic of Kazakhstan, a nation with ambitious plans for the future. Kazakhstan’s robust growth for the past decade has been based on exporting raw materials, notably oil, gas, and metals, including uranium. Making the transition to industrial diversity is a major development goal.

Inside Kazakhstan, the main source of energy is coal. The ninth largest country in the world, Kazakhstan has the world’s seventh most carbon-intensive economy; moreover, it must cope with a grim environmental legacy from its half century as part of the USSR. The new government, signatory to the Kyoto Accords and host to the Central Asian Regional Environmental Center, is sensitive to issues of sustainable growth and the environment.

“Kazakhstan is determined to launch world-class research centers modeled on the best Western institutions as quickly as possible, with an eye to near-term scientific results,” says Steve Gourlay, director of the Lab’s Accelerator and Fusion Research Division, who in the summer of 2010 flew to Kazakhstan’s capital, Astana, in response to an invitation from the newly opened Nazarbayev University (NU) to help found a national Center for Energy Research there. “There’s no doubt the Berkeley Lab name is a draw, since we have a reputation for the best energy science.”

Programs are being coordinated through DOE’s Office of Policy and International Affairs, whose Kazakhstan expert is Michael Cohen. A round dozen U.S. universities, national labs, and other institutions are helping establish centers in such disciplines as energy, life sciences, economics, educational policy, and scientific instrumentation. Gourlay heads Berkeley Lab’s team.

“The Kazakhs want programs they can sink their teeth into, of benefit to the nation,” Gourlay says. “But in the long run, their success depends on home-grown scientific expertise.” At present the most promising students are given scholarships, known as Bolashak (“Future”) Scholarships, for study abroad. But they often stay abroad to work. “There’s no shortage of Kazakh scientists around the world,” Gourlay says. An important goal for the new centers is to provide young scientists with challenging and rewarding work at home.

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