Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 23— - DEVELOPMENT AND CONTROL OF ATOMIC ENERGY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IX— - ATOMIC ENERGY LICENSES › § 2135
Keeps people with nuclear licenses subject to old antitrust laws passed July 2, 1890; August 27, 1894; October 15, 1914; and September 26, 1914. If a court finds a license holder broke those laws in how they ran their licensed activity, the Commission can suspend, cancel, or take other action against the license. The Commission must tell the Attorney General right away if it learns of any use of special nuclear material or atomic energy that might break those antitrust laws or hurt fair competition. The Commission must send the Attorney General copies of certain license applications and written requests about building or running nuclear production or use facilities. The Attorney General must give written advice within a reasonable time but no more than 180 days after getting the materials. People who tried to join earlier construction-permit proceedings can ask for an antitrust review of the operating license within 25 days after the Commission’s Federal Register notice or by December 19, 1970, whichever is later. The Commission must publish the Attorney General’s advice. If the Attorney General sees possible antitrust problems and asks for a hearing, he or she may join the hearing. The Commission must consider that advice and any evidence, decide if the license would conflict with the antitrust laws, and then may grant, deny, change, cancel, or add conditions to a license while also weighing public needs like power supply. The Commission and Attorney General can exempt types of licenses that won’t significantly affect antitrust issues. These rules do not apply to license applications filed on or after August 8, 2005.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 2135
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73