Podcast

PODCAST | Implementing Semiconductor Industrial Policy with Speed

Angela Cleri

The CHIPS and Science Act was among the most ambitious pieces of industrial policy legislation in decades, allocating tens of billions of dollars towards building domestic capacity for semiconductor manufacturing and reducing reliance on foreign supply chains. While passing the bill was a monumental feat, implementing the policy is a whole separate challenge. In this episode, host Angela Cleri speaks with Mike Schmidt, the former Director of the CHIPS Program Office to talk about the challenges and successes of executing large-scale industrial policy within systems of government that are not designed to move fast. 

 

Guest

Mike Schmidt, Former Director, CHIPS Program Office 

Host & Producer

Angela Cleri, Ph.D., Materials Science and Engineering
2023-2024 ACS Congressional Fellow at the U.S. Senate
2024-2025 AAAS STPF at the Department of Energy
2025-2026 AAAS STPF at the National Institute of Standards and Technology
 

Disclaimer

This blog does not necessarily reflect the views of AAAS, its Council, Board of Directors, officers, or members. AAAS is not responsible for the accuracy of this material. AAAS has made this material available as a public service, but this does not constitute endorsement by the association.

Tags

Podcast
Science
Science Policy

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Authors

Angela Cleri

Cleri, Angela: Fellowship 2023-2024 Cleri, Angela: Fellowship 2024-2025 Cleri, Angela: Fellowship 2025-2026

I completed my PhD at Penn State in materials science and engineering with a focus on semiconductor thin film synthesis for infrared nanophotonic applications. During this time, I became very involved in a science advocacy and science communication. After graduate school I made a career pivot to spend a year on Capitol Hill as an Congressional Science Fellow sponsored by the American Chemical Society. I served in Senator Sherrod Brown's personal office as a science policy advisor with a focus on labor, trade, manufacturing, and economic development.

Following my time on the Hill, I transitioned to the Executive Branch where I served as a AAAS Science & Technology Policy Fellow at the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations with the Hydrogen Hubs Project Management team. In this position, I worked on project management oversight for a Hydrogen Hub consisting of $925 million in federal cost share and various project developers executing clean hydrogen demonstration projects aimed at creating a regional clean hydrogen economy.