Allison M. Macfarlane directs the School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia. She is the former director of the Institute for International Science and Technology Policy at George Washington University, where she was Professor of Science Policy and International Affairs. She was the chairman of the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) from July 9, 2012, to December 31, 2014.
Early life
Macfarlane was educated at the University of Rochester, where she earned B.Sc. in Geological Sciences[1] in 1987. At Massachusetts Institute of Technology she earned a Ph.D. in Geology in 1992. She held fellowships at Radcliffe College, Harvard University, Stanford University, and MIT.
Career
She was assistant professor of earth science and international affairs at Georgia Tech from 2003-4.[2] Macfarlane was also an associate professor of environmental science and policy at George Mason University.[3]
When NRC commission chair Gregory Jaczko was forced to step down[5] in May 2012, Macfarlane was appointed to complete the term.[2] She was confirmed for a full five-year term by the United States Senate on July 1, 2013.[6]
As Chairman of the NRC, Macfarlane prioritized the lessons learned from the North Anna and Fukushima incidents, as well as improving the NRC's communication with public stakeholders and paying more attention to the back end of the fuel cycle in an era when more U.S. nuclear power plants were decommissioned than built.
She also pushed to make the NRC a more family-friendly workplace. She had raised questions a decade earlier about the suitability of the Yucca Mountain site for long-term geologic disposal of high-level nuclear waste. Supporters of Yucca Mountain expected her to stall licensing of Yucca Mountain, but she complied with a court order that ruled her predecessor's actions illegal and directed the NRC to continue its licensing review.[citation needed]
In her 2006 book, Uncertainty Underground, Macfarlane criticized plans to store spent nuclear fuel in Yucca Mountain.[9] She said the seismic and volcanic activity as well as oxidation would make the nuclear waste unstable. Macfarlane supported storing nuclear waste at reactor sites in dry casks and the allocation of billions to find a suitable geologic repository for storage over the next few decades.[10][11]