Sen. John Barrasso warned that secret climate meetings between US Department of Energy officials and companies controlled by the Chinese Communist Party could compromise taxpayer-funded research in a letter to Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm.
The missive slams Granholm for the “misguided interactions,” which were only made public after they were uncovered by the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, on which Barrasso (R-Wyo.) serves as ranking member.
“DOE is openly inviting the compromise of our nation’s taxpayer-funded research, development, and technical expertise,” he wrote.
“This is a dangerous gamble with our future economic and national security that must end immediately.”
The letter outlines four of the sit-downs that have occurred with leaders in the People’s Republic of China (PRC) since last October, which “went beyond mere diplomatic courtesies” and were “shielded from the American public’s scrutiny, with coverage found exclusively within Chinese media outlets.”
On Oct. 11, the Energy Department’s China office director, Stephanie Duran, met with China Construction Technology Company president Sun Ying in Beijing to “deepen cooperation” on “clean energy and carbon emission reduction” between the company and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, a DOE facility managed by the University of California.
Barrasso said the collaboration “reveals a severe miscalculation” on the actual intentions of the state-owned Chinese company, despite claims that it merely wants to reduce carbon emissions.
Chao Ding, a researcher at the Bay Area US lab, traveled five days after that meeting to visit Zhengzhou University in China, where he made suggestions to the school’s dean, Wu Xuehong, about the construction of a new research facility.
“Whether known or unknown to Mr. Ding, Wu Xuehong is an enthusiastic member of the CCP and sworn member of the college’s support arm of the United Front Work Department (UFWD),” Barrasso noted.
“It is almost certain that [China] is targeting a significant number of DOE experts for their specialized knowledge and technological insights,” he added.
US scholars have previously remarked on the dangers of the Chinese influence campaign, he said.
One month after the research meet-up, DOE’s deputy assistant secretary for carbon management, Noah Deich, sat down with then-Chinese vice minister of science and technology Zhang Guangjun in Beijing.
They discussed “relevant science and technology issues,” according to a report in a Chinese outlet.
Zhang had previously served at the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, which has co-opted US research and adapted it for the Chinese military, according to a July 2020 report from Stanford University’s conservative Hoover Institution.
Additionally, Deputy Secretary David Turk met virtually with Chinese government officials on Jan. 12, 2024, to help launch a joint “Working Group on Enhancing Climate Action in the 2020s,” which the State Department disclosed but the Energy Department did not.
The goal of the group is to share information about reducing carbon…
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