Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 108— - NUCLEAR WASTE POLICY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - DISPOSAL AND STORAGE OF HIGH-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE, SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL, AND LOW-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE › Part Part B— - Interim Storage Program › § 10156
The Secretary can make contracts from after January 7, 1983 until January 1, 1990 to store spent nuclear fuel from civilian sites, but only up to the storage capacity allowed by section 10155(a). Under those contracts, the Federal Government will take ownership at the reactor of amounts the nuclear regulator says cannot stay onsite, move the fuel to a federally run interim storage facility away from the reactor, and keep it there until further processing, storage, or disposal. The Secretary must set nondiscriminatory fees to pay for these services. Within 180 days after January 7, 1983 the Secretary must send Congress a report that sets annual payment charges to start on or before January 1, 1984; those charges must be published, take effect at least 30 days after publication, and stay in effect for 12 months. Fees must cover each person’s share of storage costs (including buying, building, operating, and maintaining facilities). The Secretary must write rules for the terms of storage. Departments of the U.S. Government must pay the same fees into the Interim Storage Fund as others would pay. The Interim Storage Fund is a separate account in the U.S. Treasury. It holds receipts from the contracts and related sources, any Congressional appropriations, and certain unspent balances from January 7, 1983. Money from the Fund can pay for site work, licensing, building, operating, decommissioning, transport, program administration, and impact assistance. Starting the first fiscal year after January 7, 1983, the Secretary must make annual impact payments to States or local governments affected by a storage site to help with social and economic impacts. Those payments cannot exceed either 10% of certain costs or $15 per kilogram of spent fuel, whichever is less. Payments must be fairly allocated, used only for planning, public services, and compensation for lost taxable property, and come only from the fees. The Treasury holds the Fund, reports yearly to Congress, accepts investments of excess funds, and can handle borrowing and repayment rules set in the law. A “unit of local government” means a county, parish, township, municipality, certain Alaska boroughs existing on January 7, 1983, or other below‑state units the Secretary decides.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 10156
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73