Omar Yaghi, who shared the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, has taken a full-time position at Tsinghua University in Beijing to direct a new AI-assisted materials-discovery institute -- a high-profile brain-drain moment that ties together three of the year's biggest themes: AI for science, US science-funding cuts, and US-China competition. Yaghi told Scientific American that US science was "not so encouraging because of the cutting back on grants" and that American researchers were not embracing what he sees as an artificial-intelligence revolution.
Key facts
- Omar Yaghi, 2025 Nobel laureate in chemistry (UC Berkeley), was officially welcomed to Tsinghua on July 3, 2026 to lead a new AI-materials institute.
- He is best known for metal-organic frameworks (MOFs); more than 100,000 types have been created for gas storage, catalysis, water harvesting, and drug delivery.
- He had been an honorary professor at Tsinghua since 2022; the move is now full-time.
- Reported by Jenna Ahart and Mohana Basu in Nature, July 8, 2026. Nature.
The hook is the specificity of the reason. This is not a general grievance about academia -- Yaghi named AI explicitly as a motivator, saying US researchers were not embracing the AI revolution in the way he wanted to pursue it. A Nobel laureate choosing his next lab specifically to work on AI-assisted materials discovery, and choosing China to do it, is a pointed signal about where he thinks that work will be best supported.
Background for the non-expert: metal-organic frameworks are Yaghi's signature contribution -- crystalline materials so full of internal pores that a gram can have the surface area of a football field. That makes them powerful for capturing gases, pulling drinking water out of desert air, and speeding up chemical reactions. The catch is that the space of possible MOFs is astronomically large, which is exactly the kind of enormous search problem AI is suited to accelerate. Pairing the field's leading figure with AI-driven discovery is a natural fit, and it is the fit Tsinghua is buying.
The context sharpens the significance. The move comes amid Trump-administration cuts to US science spending and new limits on international research partnerships, while China has been actively recruiting US-based talent -- some cities and provinces offering lump sums and monthly allowances. Yaghi's companies (Atoco and WaHa) say the move will not affect their business, with Atoco's CEO framing it as something that will "multiply the opportunities for transformative discoveries." Tsinghua describes the institute's aim as tackling "complex problems beyond any single field" and bridging "Eastern and Western intellectual traditions."
Think of it like a star coach with a championship record leaving a league that just slashed its budgets for a rival league that is building a brand-new training facility around exactly the strategy he wants to run. The individual decision is understandable; the aggregate signal -- about where the resources and ambition are flowing -- is the real story.
Why it matters: this is the human face of a structural shift. It pairs with the day's arguments that AI value and infrastructure are decentralizing away from where they started -- George Hotz on commodification, Satya Nadella on distributing the learning loop -- and with the hardware-sovereignty stories from China (a domestic 2D-semiconductor line, DeepSeek's own inference chip). A Nobel laureate relocating to lead an AI-science institute in Beijing is a data point in the same trend: talent, compute, and ambition redistributing along new lines.
The honest caveat: one high-profile move is not a mass exodus, and Yaghi's case has idiosyncratic features -- a long prior tie to Tsinghua (honorary professor since 2022) and active companies that anchor him partly in the US. His framing that US science is discouraging is a personal view, not a measured trend, and reasonable people will read the funding cuts and AI-engagement gap differently. What is verified and solid is the fact itself, reported by Nature: a sitting Nobel laureate has made China the full-time home of his next chapter, and he named AI and US grant cuts as the reasons.
Originally published on Ground Truth, where every claim is checked against the primary source.
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