Title 42The Public Health and WelfareRelease 119-73

§10366 Climate change and water intragovernmental panel

Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 109B— - SECURE WATER › § 10366

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Create and run a federal panel to study how climate change affects the amount and quality of fresh water in the United States and to make a plan to improve observations, data, and models so water managers and ecosystem experts can make better decisions. The panel includes eight top federal officials: the Secretary; the Director; the Administrator; the Agriculture Secretary (through the Under Secretary for Natural Resources and Environment); the Commissioner; the Army Secretary (through the Chief of Engineers); the EPA Administrator; and the Energy Secretary. The panel must work with State water agencies, an advisory committee, drinking water utilities, research groups, and other public and private organizations to decide what to measure (like streamflow, groundwater, soil moisture, evaporation, snowpack, precipitation, flood risk, and glacier mass), find data gaps, set rules for sharing data, consider a data portal for nationally important watersheds and aquifers, build models that link groundwater and surface water, and use those models to help manage water and protect ecosystems. The Secretary must report the panel’s review and plan to Congress within 2 years after March 30, 2009 (by March 30, 2011). The Secretary may fund demonstration or research projects by grant, contract, or agreement, with the federal share of any project limited to $1,000,000, and recipients must report results. Authorized funding: $2,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2009–2011 for the panel’s review and plan, and $10,000,000 for 2009–2013 for the research and demonstration work.

Full Legal Text

Title 42, §10366

The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The Secretary and the Administrator shall establish and lead a climate change and water intragovernmental panel—
(1)to review the current scientific understanding of each impact of global climate change on the quantity and quality of freshwater resources of the United States; and
(2)to develop any strategy that the panel determines to be necessary to improve observational capabilities, expand data acquisition, or take other actions—
(A)to increase the reliability and accuracy of modeling and prediction systems to benefit water managers at the Federal, State, and local levels; and
(B)to increase the understanding of the impacts of climate change on aquatic ecosystems.
(b)The panel shall be comprised of—
(1)the Secretary;
(2)the Director;
(3)the Administrator;
(4)the Secretary of Agriculture (acting through the Under Secretary for Natural Resources and Environment);
(5)the Commissioner;
(6)the Secretary of the Army, acting through the Chief of Engineers;
(7)the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency; and
(8)the Secretary of Energy.
(c)In conducting the review and developing the strategy under subsection (a), the panel shall consult with State water resource agencies, the Advisory Committee, drinking water utilities, water research organizations, and relevant water user, environmental, and other nongovernmental organizations—
(1)to assess the extent to which the conduct of measures of streamflow, groundwater levels, soil moisture, evapotranspiration rates, evaporation rates, snowpack levels, precipitation amounts, flood risk, and glacier mass is necessary to improve the understanding of the Federal Government and the States with respect to each impact of global climate change on water resources;
(2)to identify data gaps in current water monitoring networks that must be addressed to improve the capability of the Federal Government and the States to measure, analyze, and predict changes to the quality and quantity of water resources, including flood risks, that are directly or indirectly affected by global climate change;
(3)to establish data management and communication protocols and standards to increase the quality and efficiency by which each Federal agency acquires and reports relevant data;
(4)to consider options for the establishment of a data portal to enhance access to water resource data—
(A)relating to each nationally significant freshwater watershed and aquifer located in the United States; and
(B)that is collected by each Federal agency and any other public or private entity for each nationally significant freshwater watershed and aquifer located in the United States;
(5)to facilitate the development of hydrologic and other models to integrate data that reflects groundwater and surface water interactions; and
(6)to apply the hydrologic and other models developed under paragraph (5) to water resource management problems identified by the panel, including the need to maintain or improve ecological resiliency at watershed and aquifer system scales.
(d)Not later than 2 years after March 30, 2009, the Secretary shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report that describes the review conducted, and the strategy developed, by the panel under subsection (a).
(e)(1)The Secretary, in consultation with the panel and the Advisory Committee, may provide grants to, or enter into any contract, cooperative agreement, interagency agreement, or other transaction with, an appropriate entity to carry out any demonstration, research, or methodology development project that the Secretary determines to be necessary to assist in the implementation of the strategy developed by the panel under subsection (a)(2).
(2)(A)The Federal share of the cost of any demonstration, research, or methodology development project that is the subject of any grant, contract, cooperative agreement, interagency agreement, or other transaction entered into between the Secretary and an appropriate entity under paragraph (1) shall not exceed $1,000,000.
(B)An appropriate entity that receives funds from a grant, contract, cooperative agreement, interagency agreement, or other transaction entered into between the Secretary and the appropriate entity under paragraph (1) shall submit to the Secretary a report describing the results of the demonstration, research, or methodology development project conducted by the appropriate entity.
(f)(1)There is authorized to be appropriated to carry out subsections (a) through (d) $2,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2009 through 2011, to remain available until expended.
(2)There is authorized to be appropriated to carry out subsection (e) $10,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2009 through 2013, to remain available until expended.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

42 U.S.C. § 10366

Title 42The Public Health and Welfare

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73