Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 149— - NATIONAL ENERGY POLICY AND PROGRAMS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IX— - RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT › Part Part C— - Renewable Energy › § 16238
The Secretary of Energy must set up and run a program to research, develop, test, and help bring solar energy technologies to market. The program must aim to make solar power cheaper, safer, more reliable, easier to site and install, easier to manufacture and recycle, and better at working with the electric grid and other energy systems. It must work on new materials and devices, system design and performance, siting and environmental effects, manufacturing improvements, forecasts and models, and ways to remove market and information barriers. The Secretary can give competitive grants and awards, run demonstrations, provide technical help and small-business support, hold prize competitions, run education and workforce programs, and do studies. The Secretary must set targets within 180 days after December 27, 2020 for near-term (up to 2 years), mid-term (up to 7 years), and long-term (up to 15 years) goals. The program must fund projects that are spread across different places, help distressed or polluted communities, can be copied in many climates, include plans for U.S. manufacturing or exports, partner with Tribal and underserved groups, and grow underrepresented worker participation. The Secretary must hold a national call for demonstration project applications at least once every two years. The law also funds projects to improve solar manufacturing and to increase reuse and recycling of solar parts, with special attention to recovering critical materials and protecting sensitive business information. The Secretary must create a physical property database of solar materials by September 1, 2022, and must send Congress a public report on program strategy, progress, and a 10-year manufacturing plan by September 1, 2022 and every 6 years after that. An independent review of certain manufacturing grants must happen within 3 years after December 27, 2020 and then every 4 years. The law authorizes $300,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2021 through 2025. Key defined terms include: critical material (as defined in another law); economically distressed area (as defined elsewhere); eligible entity (examples: colleges, minority-serving and other higher education institutions, National Laboratories, federal and state research agencies, Tribal energy groups, Indian Tribes, Native Hawaiian community groups, nonprofit research groups, industry, other entities the Secretary allows, or consortia of these); Indian Tribe; institution of higher education; mine land (land under certain mining laws); minority-serving institution; National Laboratory; Native Hawaiian community-based organization; photovoltaic device (a device, its cells, and its electrical parts that turn light into electricity); program (the program created here); Secretary (the Secretary of Energy); solar energy (heat or electricity from the Sun, or energy from a recent solar-driven chemical reaction); territory or freely associated state; Tribal energy development organization; and Tribal organization.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 16238
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73