Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 118— - SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY › § 9302
Not later than 2 years after January 1, 2021 (by January 1, 2023), the Entity must work with people from industry, universities, national labs, the Federal Government, and international partners to create and update a shared definition of "sustainable chemistry." It must make a simple framework with key features and ways to measure sustainable chemistry. The Entity must check how sustainable chemistry is doing in the United States, including important industries, technologies, market priorities, and barriers to new ideas. It must help coordinate and support Federal research, development, demonstration, technology transfer, commercialization, education, and training in sustainable chemistry, including budget coordination and public‑private partnerships when useful. It must find Federal rules that block or could help sustainable chemistry, point out major scientific roadblocks, and try to stop overlapping Federal funding and duplicate research. In making the framework, the Entity must get advice from stakeholders, look at existing Federal and international approaches (including those like the Organisation for Economic Co‑operation and Development), and consider other useful definitions. By January 1, 2023, the Entity must send a report to the named Senate and House committees — Senate: Committee on Environment and Public Works; Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation; Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry; Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions; and Committee on Appropriations — and House: Committee on Science, Space, and Technology; Committee on Energy and Commerce; Committee on Agriculture; Committee on Education and Labor; and Committee on Appropriations. The report must summarize federally funded sustainable chemistry activities, list money each agency spends, assess the current U.S. state of sustainable chemistry and Federal roles, analyze progress and give recommendations, evaluate steps to avoid duplication and improve coordination, and evaluate duplicative funding and research with suggestions to fix it. The Entity must also send the report to the Comptroller General. After the first report, the Entity must send a follow‑up report with the financial, progress, coordination, and duplication information every 3 years until the Entity ends.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 9302
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73