Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 16B— - FEDERAL ENERGY ADMINISTRATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - FEDERAL ENERGY ADMINISTRATION › § 774
The Administrator must send a report to the President and Congress no later than one year after this chapter starts. That report must give a full, independent look at actual oil and gas reserves and resources in the United States and on the Outer Continental Shelf. It must say how much oil and major petroleum products the country can produce now and how much production could grow each year for the next ten years if all available technology and capacity were used. The report must also give ideas to make federal energy data and its collection work better. The Federal Trade Commission will prepare the data work for the Administration, and other federal agencies must share estimates and data unless the law forbids it. After May 7, 1974, the Administrator must send an annual report to the President and Congress. Each yearly report must review major actions taken, explain how those actions affected civilian energy needs, project midterm and long-term fuel supplies and possible shortages, and recommend steps to avoid shortages while protecting health, jobs, and fair sharing of burdens. It must list who got federal funds and summarize information-gathering activities. The report must analyze ways to meet energy needs, including tax and non-tax options and conservation. Within 30 days after the chapter starts the Administrator must issue preliminary summer fuel-use guidelines for citizens, and must give interim reports to Congress when asked. The detailed analysis must cover effects of conservation and compare alternative methods for meeting needs for each of the next five fiscal years and again for the tenth fiscal year, including costs, risks, advantages, and recommended laws.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
15 U.S.C. § 774
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73