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Associate Professor of Engineering
Senior Fellow, Benson-Bertsch Center for International Trade and Security

David Gattie is an Associate Professor of Engineering in the ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµâ€™s College of Engineering, School of Environmental, Civil, Agricultural and Mechanical Engineering and a Senior Fellow in the ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµâ€™s (UGA) Benson-Bertsch Center for International Trade and Security and School of Public & International Affairs. He earned his B.S. and Ph.D. from UGA and has 14 years of private industry experience as an energy services engineer and environmental engineer. David conducts research in the area of energy policy and integrated energy resource planning for the power sector and leads UGA’s Energy Security Studies Program (ESSP)—a collaboration between UGA’s College of Engineering and School of Public & International Affairs and administered through UGA’s Center for International Trade & Security. Research at ESSP is focused on the U.S. national security implications of energy and energy technologies within the challenges of 21st century great power competition. David also has provided testimony before the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee on energy, climate and nuclear power policy, various state legislative bodies and the Georgia Public Service Commission.

Education
+

  • Ph.D. ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ, 1993
  • B.S., Agricultural Engineering, ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ, 1983

Areas of Expertise +

  • Energy systems
  • Energy and national security
  • Power generation
  • Energy policy

Selected Publications +

1. Gattie, D. 2025. Restoring America’s Relationship with Nuclear Power as a National Security Priority. The National Interest, June 4, 2025.
2. Gattie, D. 2025. U.S. Energy: Prioritizing National Power and Competitive Advantage. NAPE EXPO, p. 59, Spring Issue.
3. Gattie, D. 2025. U.S. Energy Strategy: Prioritizing Peace Through Strength. The National Interest. January 29, 2025.
4. Gattie, D. 2024. Competitive Advantage as a National Security Objective for US Civilian Nuclear Power Policy. Georgetown Journal of International Affairs. Published online, June 3, 2024.
5. Gattie, D. and Duncan, C. 2024. US-China EV Battery Competition and the Role of South Korea. Energy Innovation Reform Project US-Korea Energy Series, Working Paper No.4. Series editor, Paul J. Saunders.
6. Gattie, D. and Hewitt, M., 2023. National Security as a Value-Added Proposition for Advanced Nuclear Reactors: A US Focus. Energies, 16(17), p.6162.
7. Gattie, D and Hewitt, M. 2022. The U.S. Can’t Lose the Global Nuclear Energy Race. The National Interest. December 17, 2022.
8. Gattie, D, and Hewitt, M. 2022. Energy Sovereignty Will Be the Westphalian Principle of the 21st Century, The National Interest. February 22, 2022.
9. McFarlane, R, and Gattie D. (2021). Nuclear Affairs. The National Interest, (176): 69-75).
10. Gattie, DK. 2021. South Korea’s Summit Solution Dreams and Zero Carbon Realities. The National Interest. March 30, 2021.
11. Gattie, DK. 2021. President Biden’s Executive Order on Climate Change: Implications for the US Industrial Base. Policy Brief for Global America Business Institute. February 24, 2021.
12. Gattie, D. K., and Massey, J. N. K. (2020). Twenty-First-Century US Nuclear Power: A National Security Imperative. Strategic Studies Quarterly, 14(3): 122-143.
13. Gattie, DK. 2020. U.S. Energy, Climate and Nuclear Power Policy in the 21st Century: The Primacy of National Security. The Electricity Journal, 33(1):106690.
14. Gattie DK, Darnell JL, Massey JNK. 2018. The Role of U.S. Nuclear Power in the 21st Century. The Electricity Journal, 31(10):1-5.
15. Gattie, DK. 2018. A Strategic Policy Framework for Advancing U.S. Civilian Nuclear Power as a National Security Imperative. The Electricity Journal, 31(1):23-32.
17. Gattie, DK. 2017. Incorporating Stability and Resilience in Energy Policy for the U.S. Power Sector: Recommendations for the Trump Administration. The Electricity Journal, 30(1):47-54.

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