Title 10Armed ForcesRelease 119-73not60

§4881 Defense Industrial Reserve

Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— General Military Law › Part V— ACQUISITION › Subpart I— Defense Industrial Base › Chapter 385— OTHER TECHNOLOGY BASE POLICIES AND PROGRAMS › Subchapter IV— DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL RESERVE AND INDUSTRIAL MOBILIZATION › § 4881

Last updated Apr 3, 2026|Official source

Summary

Congress wants the United States to keep a small, ready reserve of government-owned factories, machine tools, and other equipment so the military can get what it needs quickly in an emergency. The goal is to keep only the minimum number and kinds needed, remove extras quickly, and rely on private industry as much as possible. The Secretary of Defense must pick which plants and equipment belong in the reserve, decide which excess items to get rid of, and set rules for moving, storing, protecting, repairing, maintaining, leasing, and securing them. The Secretary can transfer property to other government agencies with their consent, lease items to others, dispose of items no longer needed, and give equipment to nonprofit schools without payment if the school’s plan serves the public interest. If a military department takes reserve equipment, it must repay the reserve funds for all storage, repair, maintenance, and overhead costs. The Secretary must make rules and fee schedules for those repayments. Defense Industrial Reserve: a general stock of machine tools and government-owned plants held for defense use, including plants kept for production or those set aside for sale or disposal. Plant equipment package: a set of active and idle machine tools approved to make specific defense items at a set output in an emergency.

Full Legal Text

Title 10, §4881

Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)It is the intent of Congress—
(1)to provide a comprehensive and continuous program for the future safety and for the defense of the United States by providing adequate measures whereby an essential nucleus of Government-owned industrial plants and an industrial reserve of machine tools and other industrial manufacturing equipment may be assured for immediate use to supply the needs of the armed forces in time of national emergency or in anticipation thereof;
(2)that such Government-owned plants and such reserve shall not exceed in number or kind the minimum requirements for immediate use in time of national emergency, and that any such items which shall become excess to such requirements shall be disposed of as expeditiously as possible;
(3)that to the maximum extent practicable, reliance will be placed upon private industry for support of defense production; and
(4)that machine tools and other industrial manufacturing equipment may be held in plant equipment packages or in a general reserve to maintain a high state of readiness for production of critical items of defense materiel, to provide production capacity not available in private industry for defense materiel, or to assist private industry in time of national disaster.
(b)(1)To execute the policy set forth in subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall—
(A)determine which industrial plants and installations (including machine tools and other industrial manufacturing equipment) should become a part of the Defense Industrial Reserve;
(B)designate what excess industrial property shall be disposed of;
(C)establish general policies and provide for the transportation, handling, care, storage, protection, maintenance, repair, rebuilding, utilization, recording, leasing and security of such property;
(D)direct the transfer without reimbursement of such property to other Government agencies with the consent of such agencies;
(E)direct the leasing of any of such property to designated lessees;
(F)authorize the disposition in accordance with existing law of any of such property when in the opinion of the Secretary such property is no longer needed by the Department of Defense; and
(G)notwithstanding chapter 5 of title 40 and any other provision of law, authorize the transfer to a nonprofit educational institution or training school, on a nonreimbursable basis, of any such property already in the possession of such institution or school whenever the program proposed by such institution or school for the use of such property is in the public interest.
(2)(A)The Secretary of a military department to which equipment or other property is transferred from the Defense Industrial Reserve shall reimburse appropriations available for the purposes of the Defense Industrial Reserve for the full cost (including direct and indirect costs) of—
(i)storage of such property;
(ii)repair and maintenance of such property; and
(iii)overhead allocated to such property.
(B)The Secretary of Defense shall prescribe regulations establishing general policies and fee schedules for reimbursements under subparagraph (A).
(c)In this section:
(1)The term “Defense Industrial Reserve” means—
(A)a general reserve of industrial manufacturing equipment, including machine tools, selected by the Secretary of Defense for retention for national defense or for other emergency use;
(B)those industrial plants and installations held by and under the control of the Department of Defense in active or inactive status, including Government-owned/Government-operated plants and installations and Government-owned/contractor-operated plants and installations which are retained for use in their entirety, or in part, for production of military weapons systems, munitions, components, or supplies; and
(C)those industrial plants and installations under the control of the Secretary which are not required for the immediate need of any department or agency of the Government and which should be sold, leased, or otherwise disposed of.
(2)The term “plant equipment package” means a complement of active and idle machine tools and other industrial manufacturing equipment held by and under the control of the Department of Defense and approved by the Secretary for retention to produce particular defense materiel or defense supporting items at a specific level of output in the event of emergency.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Codification The text of section 451 of Title 50, War and National Defense, which was transferred to this section, designated subsec. (a), and amended by Pub. L. 102–484, § 4235(a)(2), was based on acts
July 2, 1948, ch. 811, § 2, 62 Stat. 1225; Nov. 16, 1973, Pub. L. 93–155, title VIII, § 809, 87 Stat. 617. The text of section 453 of Title 50 which was transferred to this section, designated subsec. (b), and amended by Pub. L. 102–484, § 4235(a)(3), was based on acts
July 2, 1948, ch. 811, § 4, 62 Stat. 1226; Nov. 16, 1973, Pub. L. 93–155, title VIII, § 809, 87 Stat. 617; Nov. 14, 1986, Pub. L. 99–661, div. A, title XIII, § 1359(a), 100 Stat. 3999. For

Effective Date

of 1986 amendment, see section 1359(b) of Pub. L. 99–661. The text of section 452 of Title 50 which was transferred to this section, designated subsec. (c), and amended by Pub. L. 102–484, § 4235(b), was based on acts July 2, 1948, ch. 811, § 3, 62 Stat. 1225; Nov. 16, 1973, Pub. L. 93–155, title VIII, § 809, 87 Stat. 617.

Amendments

2021—Pub. L. 116–283 renumbered section 2535 of this title as this section. 2002—Subsec. (b)(1)(G). Pub. L. 107–217 substituted “chapter 5 of title 40” for “title II of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 (40 U.S.C. 481 et seq.)”. 2001—Subsec. (a). Pub. L. 107–107, § 1048(a)(23)(A)(i), substituted “intent of Congress—” for “intent of Congress” in introductory provisions. Subsec. (a)(1). Pub. L. 107–107, § 1048(a)(23)(A)(ii), (iii), substituted “armed forces” for “Armed Forces” and realigned margins. Subsec. (a)(2) to (4). Pub. L. 107–107, § 1048(a)(23)(A)(ii), realigned margins. Subsec. (b)(1). Pub. L. 107–107, § 1048(a)(23)(B)(i), substituted “in subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall—” for “in this section, the Secretary is authorized and directed to—” in introductory provisions. Subsec. (b)(1)(A). Pub. L. 107–107, § 1048(a)(23)(B)(ii), substituted “Defense Industrial Reserve” for “defense industrial reserve”. Subsec. (c). Pub. L. 107–107, § 1048(a)(23)(C), redesignated par. (2) as (1), substituted “means—” for “means” in introductory provisions, realigned margins of subpars. (A) to (C) of par. (1) and inserted “and” after semicolon in subpar. (B), redesignated par. (3) as (2), and struck out former par. (1) which read as follows: “The term ‘Secretary’ means Secretary of Defense.” 1994—Subsec. (b)(1)(G). Pub. L. 103–337 amended subpar. (G) generally. Prior to amendment, subpar. (G) read as follows: “authorize and regulate the lending of any such property to any nonprofit educational institution or training school whenever (i) the program proposed by such institution or school for the use of such property will contribute materially to national defense, and (ii) such institution or school shall by agreement make such provision as the Secretary shall deem satisfactory for the proper maintenance and care of such property and for its return, without expense to the Government, upon request of the Secretary.” 1993—Subsec. (b)(2)(B). Pub. L. 103–35 substituted “subparagraph (A)” for “paragraph (1)”. 1992—Pub. L. 102–484, § 4235(a), added section number and catchline. Subsec. (a). Pub. L. 102–484, § 4235(a)(2), transferred the text of section 451 of Title 50, War and National Defense, to this section, designated it subsec. (a), inserted heading, and substituted “It” for “In enacting this chapter it” in introductory provisions. See Codification note above. Subsec. (b). Pub. L. 102–484, § 4235(a)(3), transferred the text of section 453 of Title 50, War and National Defense, to the end of this section and designated it subsec. (b), inserted heading, redesignated former subsec. (a) of section 453 as par. (1), substituted “in this section” for “in this chapter” in introductory provisions, redesignated former pars. (1) to (7) as subpars. (A) to (G), respectively, in subpar. (G) redesignated former subpars. (A) and (B) as cls. (i) and (ii), respectively, redesignated former subsec. (b) of section 453 as par. (2), and in par. (2) redesignated former par. (1) as subpar. (A), former subpars. (A) to (C) as cls. (i) to (iii), and former par. (2) as subpar. (B). See Codification note above. Subsec. (c). Pub. L. 102–484, § 4235(b), transferred the text of section 452 of Title 50, War and National Defense, to the end of this section, designated it subsec. (c), inserted heading, and substituted “In this section:” for “As used in this chapter—” in introductory provisions. See Codification note above.

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Effective Date

of 2021 AmendmentAmendment by Pub. L. 116–283 effective Jan. 1, 2022, with additional provisions for delayed implementation and applicability of existing law, see section 1801(d) of Pub. L. 116–283, set out as a note preceding section 3001 of this title. Treatment of Property Loaned Before
December 31, 1993 to Educational Institutions or Training Schools Pub. L. 103–337, div. A, title III, § 379(b), Oct. 5, 1994, 108 Stat. 2737, provided that: “Except for property determined by the Secretary of Defense to be needed by the Department of Defense, property loaned before
December 31, 1993, to an educational institution or training school under section 2535(b) of title 10, United States Code [now 10 U.S.C. 4881(b)], or section 4(a)(7) of the Defense Industrial Reserve Act (as in effect before
October 23, 1992 [former section 453(a)(7) of Title 50, War and National Defense, see Codification and 1992 Amendment notes above]) shall be regarded as surplus property. Upon certification by the Secretary to the Administrator of General Services that the property is being used by the borrowing educational institution or training school for a purpose consistent with that for which the property was loaned, the Administrator may authorize the conveyance of all right, title, and interest of the United States in such property to the borrower if the borrower agrees to accept the property. The Administrator may require any additional terms and conditions in connection with a conveyance so authorized that the Administrator considers appropriate to protect the interests of the United States.”

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

10 U.S.C. § 4881

Title 10Armed Forces

Last Updated

Apr 3, 2026

Release point: 119-73not60