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How one US scientist is adapting to life abroad after DOGE cuts

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Why This Matters

Sarah Weisberg's relocation from the US to Denmark highlights the growing trend of American scientists seeking international opportunities amid domestic federal funding cuts. This shift underscores the impact of political and budgetary changes on scientific careers and the global mobility of researchers. For consumers and the tech industry, it signals a potential increase in international collaboration and innovation driven by diverse scientific talent.

Key Takeaways

Fish scientist Sarah Weisberg relocated to Denmark after job cuts at the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.Credit: Ellie Heywood

In late 2024, Sarah Weisberg started her ‘dream job’ at an office of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) called NOAA Fisheries. She was working as a fish biologist at the Northeast Fisheries Science Center in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, helping to research and inform management of fishing and marine resources. Along with her husband, Weisberg — who had completed her PhD in marine science at Stony Brook University in New York earlier that year — even bought a house in Rhode Island to be closer to her new job.

Just five months later, in February 2025, Weisberg was one of thousands of federal workers let go without warning during a massive government downsizing led by the US Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). NOAA Fisheries alone lost 545 employees in the cuts; 234 were at regional science centres, such as Weisberg’s office. Similar cuts came to other federally funded scientific organizations, including the National Institutes of Health and NASA.

The DOGE cuts are just one part of the changing research landscape in the United States, which is causing its scientists to increasingly consider international positions. A Nature poll of 1,200 US scientists, published in March 2025, found that 75% were considering looking for scientific positions abroad, and a Nature analysis in April 2025 found that the number of US scientists applying for jobs abroad had risen by 32% from 2024.

When Weisberg lost her job at NOAA early last year, she tapped her professional network. Less than a month later, she hopped on a plane to Copenhagen to start a new job as a professional-advice officer at the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), where she works with researchers to provide scientific guidance to policy experts. Now, she bikes to work daily and enjoys taking her dog on train adventures. She tells Nature how she decided to leave the United States, how her work has changed and how she’s adjusting to Danish life.

What was your scientific career in the United States like before the move?

My dissertation research was federally funded by the NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service–Sea Grant Fellowship, which is essentially a workforce-development programme for people who will become the next generation of scientists working at NOAA Fisheries.

I was hired by NOAA Fisheries, specifically the Northeast Fisheries Science Center, after I completed my PhD in September 2024, and I was extremely excited to start work. In my field, my position had been the most desirable type of job, from both a scientific perspective and an impact perspective — and from a quality-of-life perspective, too. Jobs at NOAA were considered stable.

One project that I worked on most while there was the State of the Ecosystem report. It’s an annual report that collates information about marine ecosystems, focusing particularly on what has happened in the past year. It covers everything from water temperature, to fish, to fishing, to socio-economic dimensions.

But then I was terminated in February 2025, during my probationary period, because of the downsizing of the federal government. As soon as it seemed as if cuts were being made at other agencies, I felt vulnerable. It was very sudden — we had one hour’s notice, and we were not given severance pay.

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