Prof Ernest Moniz, MIT Professor Emeritus and Founding Trustee of The Cyprus Institute, Receives Inaugural Public Policy Award from American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Ernest J. Moniz, MIT professor emeritus, nuclear physicist, former United States Secretary of Energy, and a founding Trustee of The Cyprus Institute, is the recipient of the American Academy of Arts and Science’s inaugural Award for Excellence in Public Policy and Public Affairs. The award, presented at an April 11 ceremony, was created to recognize excellence, independence, and effectiveness in public service. The American Academy of Arts and Sciences, founded in 1780, is one of the oldest learned societies in the United States and is dedicated to honoring excellence and leadership, working across disciplines and divides, and advancing the common good. Membership in the academy is achieved through a thorough petition, review, and election process and has been considered a high honor of scholarly and societal merit ever since the academy was founded during the American Revolution by John Adams, John Hancock, James Bowdoin, and others.
When presenting the award, former US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter, a fellow physicist, shared his admiration for Moniz as a thoughtful colleague who provided sound council when they served together in President Obama’s cabinet. “I was very grateful to have him as a colleague,” said Carter.
Moniz reflected on collaborating with Carter on nuclear defense issues, developing the Iran nuclear deal with then-Secretary of State John Kerry, and leading technology initiatives to address climate change during his tenure as Secretary of Energy.
“It gave me a chance to apply a scientific manner of thought to important problems, especially in global affairs,” he said, adding, “When a President has among his priorities two of your mission areas—the clean energy and climate mission and the nuclear security mission—that’s a pretty good time to be in that position.”
In addition to being a key coalition builder for the Paris Agreement, Moniz played a central role in developing and launching Mission Innovation, a multi-national initiative dedicated to advancing clean energy. That initiative, he said, made “a statement that technology innovation in clean energy is at the core of the solutions to climate change.”
Moniz spoke about employing “science statesmanship” to engage across party lines and internationally, with a “pragmatic, step-by-step approach” to achieve sustained progress. He underscored the importance of building political coalitions around “low-carbon and social equity” measures.
He credited his mentor, the late MIT Institute Professor Herman Feshbach, with encouraging his participation in public affairs and public policy. “He was a person who was dedicated to the dialogue—the scientific exchange, and exchanges more broadly—as absolutely fundamental to risk reduction,” Moniz said of Feshbach, who was also a past president of the Academy.
“Ernie’s work combines deep intellect and broad impact,” said David W. Oxtoby, the Academy’s current president. “Ernie exemplifies values that are important to the American Academy by applying scholarship to service and bringing policy concerns to academia. He is the perfect choice for our inaugural recipient of the Award for Excellence in Public Policy and Public Affairs.”
“I’m very, very honored to receive this award and it will give me further inspiration to take steps forward on the way to longer-term solutions,” said Moniz.
Moniz was on the MIT faculty from 1973 until 2013, when he became US Secretary of Energy. He is now the Cecil and Ida Green Professor of Physics and Engineering Systems Emeritus and special advisor to the MIT President. He was the founding director of the MIT Energy Initiative. He is president and chief executive officer of the Energy Futures Initiative, a Washington-based energy technology and policy innovation nonprofit, as well as co-chair of the board of directors and CEO of the Nuclear Threat Initiative.
Prof. Moniz played a crucial part in the development of The Cyprus Institute and is a Founding Trustee of the Cyprus Research and Educational Foundation (CREF), the organization that oversees The Cyprus Institute. Initial planning for the establishment of CREF and CyI took place from 2000 to 2004 under the aegis of the Cyprus Development Bank, led at the time by Mr John Joannides and Mr Andreas Mouskos. Supported by Mr Alecos Stamatis and a team of outstanding scholars they shaped the core vision and undertook the overall coordination, research and planning of the project. The team of academics consisted of Prof Ernest J. Moniz of MIT, the late Professor Guy Ourisson, (founding President of Louis Pasteur University and former President of the Academy of Sciences in France), Prof Frank Rhodes (former President of Cornell University) and Prof Herwig Schopper, (former Director General of CERN). Prof Costas N. Papanicolas, from the University of Athens, served as the principal investigator and coordinator of the team. Following the formal establishment of CREF in 2004 and the launching of The Cyprus Institute in 2005, Prof. Moniz served as a member of the Board of Trustees of CREF and on various scientific advisory boards for the Institute.