Dr. Fred Singer
Information gathered by the American Policy Roundtable
Biography
Source -
Science and Environmental Policy Project
S.
Fred Singer is internationally known for his
work on energy and environmental issues. A
pioneer in the development of rocket and
satellite technology, he devised the basic
instrument for measuring stratospheric ozone and
was principal investigator on a satellite
experiment retrieved by the space shuttle in
1990. He was the first scientist to predict that
population growth would increase atmospheric
methane--an important greenhouse gas.
Now
President of The Science & Environmental Policy
Project, a non-profit policy research group he
founded in 1990, Singer is also Distinguished
Research Professor at George Mason University
and professor emeritus of environmental science
at the University of Virginia. His previous
government and academic positions include Chief
Scientist, U.S. Department of Transportation
(1987- 89); Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Policy, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(1970-71); Deputy Assistant Secretary for Water
Quality and Research, U.S. Department of the
Interior (1967- 70); founding Dean of the School
of Environmental and Planetary Sciences,
University of Miami (1964-67); first Director of
the National Weather Satellite Service
(1962-64); and Director of the Center for
Atmospheric and Space Physics, University of
Maryland (1953-62)...(more) |