Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 77— - ENERGY CONSERVATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY › Part Part B— - State Energy Conservation Plans › § 6322
Requires the Secretary of Energy to write rules and ask each State’s governor to study and plan how the State can save energy. Within 60 days after December 22, 1975, the Secretary must give rules for a feasibility report and ask governors to send that report within 3 months after the rules take effect. The feasibility report must check whether the State can set a goal to cut total energy use by at least 5 percent in 1980 compared with projected 1980 use, and must propose a plan to reach that goal. Within 6 months after December 22, 1975, the Secretary must give rules for full State plans and ask governors to send a plan within 5 months after those rules take effect. Those plans must show scheduled progress toward the State goal and list each type of action, its estimated cost, and estimated energy savings. All plans that want federal help must include several required actions (short list: public building lighting rules, programs to promote carpooling and public transit without using these funds to pay fares, state procurement efficiency rules, thermal and insulation standards for new or renovated buildings, a traffic rule allowing right-on-red and certain left-on-red turns after stopping, coordination with other programs, and support for transmission and distribution planning like route studies, permitting, design, outreach, and help to local governments and Tribes). Plans may also include many optional programs such as limits on public building hours, cuts to decorative lighting, transportation decarbonization by 2050 and vehicle electrification, education, financing (loans, grants, rebates), audits, energy planning, housing efficiency programs, training, retrofit rules, renewable project studies, demand-response, and other conservation methods. A governor may submit a standby plan to cut energy use during a severe supply interruption; that plan can get federal help even if it does not meet the required or optional lists. The law also creates an Energy Technology Commercialization Services Program to help small and start-up businesses (small means a firm that meets the SBA size rules; start-up means 5 years old or less). Each State program must help with manufacturing and technical problems, link engineers and manufacturers, help with proposal writing and contract research, keep a database of experts (including college faculty, retired experts, and national lab staff), offer services to eligible small firms, and charge fees that are affordable based on cost, need, and ability to pay. Finally, the Secretary must ask governors at least once every 3 years to review and update their plans and consider regional cooperation.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 6322
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73