Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 12— - FEDERAL REGULATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF POWER › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - REGULATION OF ELECTRIC UTILITY COMPANIES ENGAGED IN INTERSTATE COMMERCE › § 824p
The Energy Secretary must study electric transmission congestion and capacity not later than 1 year after August 8, 2005, and then at least every 3 years. After each study, and after hearing from states, tribes, and others, the Secretary can name areas as national-interest transmission corridors if they have or are likely to have serious transmission problems. In deciding, the Secretary may look at things like harm to local economies, protection of energy security, national energy goals, defense needs, connecting power sources to the grid, using existing rights-of-way, avoiding sensitive environmental and cultural sites when possible, and lowering costs for consumers. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission can issue permits to build or change transmission lines in those named corridors when a state lacks siting authority, fails to act in time, or conditions or denies approval in ways that block needed projects, and when the project is for interstate transmission, is in the public interest, will cut congestion, fits national energy policy, and uses existing structures where reasonable. Permit applicants must apply in writing and give notice. States, federal agencies, tribes, landowners, and others get a chance to be heard. If a permit holder cannot agree with a landowner after trying in good faith, the holder may use eminent domain in federal or state court, but only to get a right-of-way used just for the line and with just compensation equal to fair market value on the date of taking. The Energy Department will lead and coordinate all federal permits and environmental reviews, make one combined review document, set prompt deadlines (with final federal permits and reviews to be done within 1 year when the law allows), offer a 60-day pre-application check, and give the President a 90-day deadline to decide appeals when an agency denies or misses a deadline. Agencies must adopt rules and an interagency agreement soon after August 8, 2005. States may form multistate siting compacts (with Congress’s OK) to handle siting instead; environmental laws still apply, and some protected federal lands are excluded from the special appeal process. The section also does not apply in the area mentioned in section 824k(k)(2)(A).
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16 U.S.C. § 824p
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73