Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 152— - ENERGY INDEPENDENCE AND SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - ACCELERATED RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT › Part Part D— - Energy Storage for Transportation and Electric Power › § 17232
Creates a federal program called the Energy Storage System Research, Development, and Deployment Program. It must be set up no later than 180 days after December 27, 2020. It defines three key terms: "energy storage system" — any system that takes in energy, stores it, and sends it out later (including mechanical, chemical, thermal, electrolysis, or gaseous types); "program" — the new Energy Storage System Research, Development, and Deployment Program; and "Secretary" — the Secretary of Energy. The program will fund research, development, testing, and demonstrations for many kinds of storage: short and long durations (including daily 6+ hour, weekly/monthly 10–100 hour, and seasonal storage), distributed and building-grid systems, vehicle-grid uses, recycling and reuse of batteries and critical materials, advanced controls, pumped hydro innovations, modeling tools, manufacturing advances, and standards and validation work with National Laboratories. The Secretary must create testing methods, run test beds and field trials, update program goals at least yearly, and write a 10-year strategic plan within 180 days after December 27, 2020 (submit that plan to specified Congressional committees and review it each year). The program must protect consumer and business privacy using the FTC Fair Information Practice Principles and OMB Circular A–130. By September 30, 2023, the Secretary must make agreements for three demonstration projects, including at least one long-duration (weekly/monthly or seasonal) project and one showing second-life electric vehicle batteries used together to serve the grid. The Department will run a competitive grant program for eligible entities (states, tribes, tribal organizations, colleges, utilities, and private storage companies) to fund pilot demos that meet regional and technical priorities and that leverage non-Federal funds. The Secretary must report on program performance at least every 3 years and may not take an ownership stake in project systems unless all project participants agree. The Secretary must also create a long-duration Demonstration Initiative within 180 days and set up a Joint Program with the Secretary of Defense (MOU within 200 days) to test long-duration technologies using DOE and DOD testbeds. The Secretary must, by September 30, 2023, offer financial help for design and studies for pumped storage projects that meet strict eligibility rules (including at least 1,000 MW capacity, serving more than one organized market, ability to store Tribal renewables, and a FERC preliminary permit), with recipients matching funds. Authorized funding: $100,000,000 per year for FY2021–2025 for the research program; $71,000,000 per year for FY2021–2025 for demonstrations; $30,000,000 per year for FY2021–2025 for the long-duration initiative; and $2,000,000 per year for FY2022–2026 for pumped storage assistance. The Secretary must coordinate across DOE offices, other agencies, and partners to avoid duplication and boost U.S. manufacturing.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 17232
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73