Dr. Susan Hubbard is Deputy Director for Science and Technology at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the largest of the U.S. Department of Energy’s multi-program science and energy labs. With more than 7,000 scientists and engineers, Oak Ridge is advancing innovation across nuclear energy, grid resilience, AI, quantum computing, isotopes, and advanced manufacturing. In this episode, Susan shares how the national labs’ mission has evolved since the Manhattan Project, how companies and startups engage with Oak Ridge through user facilities and partnerships, and what role the labs will play in shaping the future of energy and technology amid today’s geopolitical and industrial shifts.
Episode recorded Aug 18, 2025 (Published Sept 2, 2025)
In this episode, we cover:
- [03:03] Dr. Hubbard’s early career and hydrogeophysics
- [05:31] Permafrost thaw in the Arctic
- [07:11] Earth system complexity
- [09:00] Transition from geophysicist to ORNL leadership
- [12:17] ORNL’s user facilities, including Frontier supercomputer
- [13:56] Isotopes for medicine, security, and Mars exploration
- [15:45] Neutron scattering and world-leading materials research
- [17:25] Large-scale 3D additive manufacturing for energy
- [19:25] How DOE priorities shape research directions
- [22:04] Public-private partnerships in nuclear and fusion
- [26:54] ORNL’s role in ITER and advanced fusion materials
- [30:51] Local enthusiasm for nuclear in Tennessee
- [31:54] Building the future grid: reliability, cybersecurity, AI
- [33:17] High-performance computing simulations of energy systems
- [37:23] Quantum computing, AI, and labs of the future
- [43:41] How startups engage with ORNL (CRADA, Innovation Crossroads)
- [48:02] U.S. R&D evolution: Manhattan Project to today
Enjoyed this episode? Please leave us a review! Share feedback or suggest future topics and guests at info@mcj.vc.
Connect with MCJ:
*Editing and post-production work for this episode was provided by The Podcast Consultant