Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 101— - NANOTECHNOLOGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT › § 7501
The President must run a National Nanotechnology Program using the right agencies, councils, and the National Nanotechnology Coordination Office. The Program must set goals, priorities, and ways to measure progress for federal nanotech work. It must fund research and development and make sure different agencies work together. The Program will support basic study of matter at the nanoscale, give grants to individual researchers and teams, build user facilities and research centers, and create competitive interdisciplinary centers that share ideas, work with universities, national labs, states, and industry, use regional expertise, link to micrometer-scale research, and be placed in many locations while encouraging participation by Historically Black Colleges and Universities, minority institutions, and States in the EPSCoR program. The Program must help keep the United States a leader in nanotech, boost industry and productivity through steady long-term support, speed up private-sector use including startups, promote interdisciplinary work and training, and encourage use of existing processes and technologies. It must also study and address ethical, legal, environmental, and other societal concerns — including possible uses of nanotech to enhance human intelligence or to build artificial intelligence that exceeds human capacity — by funding research, making centers work on these issues, integrating that work with technical research, and using public input (for example, citizens’ panels, consensus conferences, and educational events). The National Science and Technology Council must plan, manage, and coordinate the Program. The Council must set goals and program areas, work with the Defense Nanotechnology Research and Development Program and the National Institutes of Health, and create or update a strategic plan no later than 5 years after the most-recent strategic plan and every 5 years after that. The plan must list near- and long-term objectives, a schedule for near-term goals, metrics, steps to move lab results into use, support for long-term funding, and how money will be allocated for interagency projects. The Council must propose a coordinated budget to OMB, share information with academia, industry, and state programs, use SBIR/STTR where appropriate, find gaps in research, and consider advice from the Advisory Panel and public input. Each year, when the President sends a budget to Congress, the Council must report to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation and the House Committee on Science showing current and next-year agency budgets with breakouts, progress toward goals, how Advisory Panel advice was used, and how SBIR/STTR funds support the plan.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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15 U.S.C. § 7501
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73