Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 23— - DEVELOPMENT AND CONTROL OF ATOMIC ENERGY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XIII— - GENERAL AUTHORITY OF COMMISSION › § 2210h
Requires the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to create rules to control, track, and secure certain radioactive sources. The Code of Conduct means the IAEA document dated September 8, 2003. A “radiation source” means Category 1 or Category 2 sources from that Code and other materials the Commission decides are covered (not including spent nuclear fuel or special nuclear materials). Within 180 days after August 8, 2005, the Commission must ban exports of those sources unless it finds the foreign recipient can legally receive and safely manage them, has the right technical and regulatory systems, and both countries exchange notifications before shipment. The Commission must also require, for imports and sales/transfers in the United States, that recipients are legally authorized and shipments follow applicable Federal or State law. Within 1 year after August 8, 2005, the Commission must set up a mandatory national tracking system (coordinated with the Secretary of Transportation). The system must ID each source by a unique number, require reporting within 7 days when possession changes, require reporting within 24 hours if control or accountability is lost, and let reports be made through a secure Internet link. Violations can bring civil penalties up to $1,000,000. Within 60 days after August 8, 2005, the Commission must hire the National Academy of Sciences to study industrial, research, and commercial uses of these sources and report to Congress within 2 years, including options to replace or lower the risk of current uses. The law also creates a task force led by the Commission Chair and made up of top officials (or designees) from DHS, Defense, Energy, Transportation, Justice, State, Intelligence, CIA, FEMA, FBI, and EPA. The task force must review security against terrorist threats, consult states and the public, and report to the President and Congress within 1 year and at least every 4 years after, with recommendations on which sources to secure, recovery and disposal systems, tracking and export controls, possible alternative technologies, and stronger security measures (such as audits, fines, background checks, information sharing, facility protection, and shipment screening). The Commission must act on the task force’s recommendations within 60 days after Congress and the President receive the report and make sure Agreement States do the same.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 2210h
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73