Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 84— - DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VI— - ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS › Part Part C— - General Administrative Provisions › § 7256
The Secretary of Energy may make contracts, leases, cooperative agreements, and other deals with government agencies, private groups, or people, and may pay money (all at once, in parts, in advance, or by reimbursement) to carry out the Secretary’s duties. None of these deals or payments can be used unless Congress has provided the money in advance in appropriation Acts. The Secretary may lease DOE-owned real property and related personal property at a DOE facility that is being closed or changed, if the property is not needed and is under DOE control. Leases generally may not run longer than 10 years, but the Secretary can include an option to renew beyond 10 years if it helps national security or the public interest. Rent can be less than market value, and services like maintenance or security can count as payment. Before leasing, the Secretary must talk with the EPA (for sites on the National Priorities List) or the appropriate State official (for other sites) about environmental safety and must get their agreement or wait 60 days for a reply. With money provided by Congress, the Secretary may keep rent money to cover lease administration, upkeep, or cleanup, and must keep it in a separate Treasury fund and report yearly to Congress. The Secretary may also use special transaction authority similar to 10 U.S.C. 2371 for research, development, and demonstration projects (changing the words “basic” to “research,” “applied” to “development,” and “advanced research” to “demonstration projects”), must use competitive, merit-based selection when practical, may protect certain contractor information from public release for up to 5 years or up to 30 years for some technologies (including nuclear), must issue guidelines not later than 90 days after August 8, 2005, and may not use the special authority until those guidelines are final. The Comptroller General must report to Congress within 1 year after the final guidelines about how the authority was used and whether more safeguards are needed. Only a Presidentially appointed, Senate‑confirmed officer may be delegated this authority. The authority ends on September 30, 2030.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 7256
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73