[Full disclosure, the SETI Institute is a content partner with Space News' online sister publication, SPACE.com].
But the
center's immediate goal, according to Scott Hubbard, a visiting scholar at Stanford University and the Carl Sagan chair at SETI, is raising $4 million to $6 million
over the next three years to sustain its top astrobiology researchers. Hubbard,
the former director of NASA Ames Research Center, said about half of the
institute's $14 million annual budget comes from NASA in the form of
competitively awarded, peer-reviewed research grants.
NASA's
astrobiology budget, the source of most of that grant money, is facing a steep
decline. Under NASA's 2007 budget proposal, currently before Congress, the U.S. space agency would spend $32.5 billion on astrobiology in the year ahead--half of
what it spent on astrobiology in 2005.
Hubbard
said in an interview that if NASA goes through with the proposed cut, SETI
would expect to see its NASA grant funding reduced by about 20 percent--making
it impossible to sustain without outside help the nearly 50 astrobiology
researchers it has on staff.
Astrobiology,
a discipline NASA has been funding for about 10 years, is the hardest hit in
NASA's proposal to reduce its overall scientific research and analysis spending
by about 15 percent in the year ahead. NASA is under pressure from the hundreds
of research scientists it funds and their allies in Congress to reverse course
on the proposed reductions, and the SETI Institute is part of that fight.
But Hubbard
said SETI's intent in establishing the Carl Sagan Center for the Study of Life
in the Universe is to introduce a measure of long-term stability to the
astrobiology community, not protest the current proposed cuts.
"Cleary
[SETI Chief Executive Officer] Tom Pierson and [SETI trustee] Barry Blumberg
and the entire science community are working the political process to try to
get the funds restored," Hubbard said. "But federal funding for anything can go
up and down, so let's try to broaden our portfolio and be here for the long
haul and not just wring our hands about it."
SETI is no
stranger to seeking private funding to sustain its activities. The institute's
well-known radio searches for signals from other intelligent life in the
universe has been entirely funded by about $6 million a year in private
donations since Congress cut off federal funding for the efforts in 1993.