Summary
This 2017 policy report by Hart and Kearney examines the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) as a versatile mechanism for driving U.S. energy innovation. The authors, affiliated with the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, appear to evaluate ARPA-E's institutional design and its capacity to catalyse energy research and development across diverse technology areas. The paper likely positions ARPA-E as a model for mission-oriented innovation policy, though without access to the full text, specific findings and policy recommendations remain uncertain.
UK applicability
Whilst the paper focuses on U.S. policy, its analysis of ARPA-E's institutional design and innovation governance may inform UK energy research funding and policy frameworks, particularly in light of the UK's own innovation agency structures and energy transition priorities post-2017.
Key measures
As suggested by the title, likely programme metrics, innovation outputs, or policy effectiveness measures related to ARPA-E's energy innovation initiatives
Outcomes reported
The paper appears to examine the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) as a policy instrument and its role in driving energy innovation across the United States. The study likely assesses how ARPA-E's programme design contributes to broader energy innovation outcomes.
Topic tags
Dig deeper with Pulse AI.
Pulse AI has read the whole catalogue. Ask about this record, its theme, or how the findings apply to UK farming and policy — every answer cites the underlying studies.