WTTW Chicago Tonight to feature Illinois Tech's 2017 Darsh Wasan
President Barack Obama’s science and technology adviser, John P. Holdren, will deliver a lecture on climate change at the Illinois Institute of Technology on Thursday.
Holdren served as Obama’s adviser from January 2009 to January 2017, making him the longest-serving science adviser in the position's history, which dates back to World War II. Holdren, now a professor of environmental policy at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, also served as the Senate-confirmed director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy under Obama.
Holdren’s visit is part of the IIT Armour College of Engineering Darsh T. Wasan Lecture series, established in 2008 to bring top international leaders to speak on topics of global concern. Holdren’s lecture is titled “Global Climate Change and U.S. Interests: What We Know, What We Expect, and What We Should Do.”
According to a 1976 law codifying the position, as White House science adviser, Holdren was tasked with providing the president with scientific and technical advice in “areas of national concern” ranging from national security to the environment.
President Donald Trump has taken longer than any president to nominate someone as science adviser, according to an analysis published Monday by the Washington Post. The position is currently vacant.
Holdren’s lecture is scheduled for 3 p.m. Thursday at IIT’s Hermann Hall ballroom, 3241 South Federal St. in Chicago.
The lecture is free and open to the public, but registration is required.
Contact Alex Ruppenthal: @arupp | aruppenthal@wttw.com | 773.509.5623