Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 149— - NATIONAL ENERGY POLICY AND PROGRAMS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IX— - RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT › Part Part F— - Fossil Energy › § 16293
The Secretary must set up a program to research, test, and help bring large-scale carbon storage to market. Large-scale carbon sequestration means projects that can inject and store carbon dioxide underground and aim to store at least 50 million metric tons of carbon dioxide. The program will make maps and tools to find underground storage, build monitoring and modeling tools to predict and track stored carbon, study leak risks and how to respond, check how CO2 reacts with rocks and fluids (including earthquake risk), test safety and the fate of injected CO2, study costs and business plans, share information with EPA, States, local and Tribal governments, and plan how much and where storage is needed. The work will look at many underground settings, including operating and depleted oil and gas fields, residual oil zones, unconventional reservoirs, unmineable coal seams, saline rock formations (including basalt), engineered geothermal brine reservoirs, and places with CO2 mineralization. The Secretary must fund demonstration projects to collect real data on cost and commercial feasibility. These projects must include long-term injection and monitoring, mitigation, and verification. The National Energy Technology Laboratory will share project information. The Secretary may give more funds to certain regional partnerships that had earlier projects before December 27, 2020. Not later than 1 year after December 27, 2020, the Secretary must report to the Senate and House committees on progress, remaining challenges, and a roadmap through 2025. The Secretary may move successful demonstrations into commercial storage complexes to find sites that can take large volumes and prove commercial and technical viability. A separate commercialization program will fund project development and CO2 transport work from feasibility to construction. Applications may be accepted at any development stage, with priority for projects that offer big storage capacity or take CO2 from multiple capture sites. Preference will go to industry–academic–government teams. Construction workers must be paid prevailing local wages. Cost-sharing rules apply. Up to $2,500,000,000 is authorized for fiscal years 2022 through 2026.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 16293
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73