Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 134— - ENERGY POLICY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - RENEWABLE ENERGY › § 13317
The Secretary must pay money to owners or operators of certain renewable power plants for the electricity they generate and sell, but only if Congress provides the money and the owner files an application that proves they qualify. Payments are 1.5 cents for each kilowatt-hour produced, and that amount is increased for inflation each year after 1993 using the same adjustment method in a related tax rule (with 1993 as the base year). If there is not enough money in a fiscal year, 60% of funds go to plants using solar, wind, marine energy, geothermal, or closed-loop (dedicated energy crop) biomass, and 40% go to other projects, unless the Secretary explains the change to Congress. A qualifying plant must be owned by a not-for-profit electric cooperative, a certain public utility, a State, territory, possession, the District of Columbia or a local government, an Indian tribal government, or a Native Corporation. It must sell electricity in or that affects interstate commerce and use solar, wind, biomass (not municipal solid waste), landfill gas, livestock methane, marine energy, or geothermal power. Geothermal does not include dry-steam reservoirs that have no mobile liquid, at least 95 percent steam, and total produced fluid enthalpy of 1200 Btu/lb or more. Payments are only for plants first used before October 1, 2016. Each plant can get payments for 10 fiscal years starting when it first becomes eligible or when federal and state approvals to start construction are in place. No payments may be made after September 30, 2026, and Congress authorized whatever money is needed for fiscal years 2006 through 2026, available until spent.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 13317
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73