Title 15 › Chapter 16C— ENERGY SUPPLY AND ENVIRONMENTAL COORDINATION › § 796
The Federal Energy Administrator must collect and publish reliable energy data so Congress, the States, and the public can make good decisions. The Administrator can require companies that produce, process, refine, ship by pipeline, or distribute energy (not at retail) to file reports at least every ninety calendar days. He can issue subpoenas, make people answer written questions under oath, administer oaths, and send authorized staff to enter business sites at reasonable times to inspect, sample, and copy records. If someone refuses a subpoena or order, the Attorney General can ask a federal court to force compliance and punish contempt. Within thirty days after June 22, 1974, the Administrator must create a reasonable measure of domestic reserves, production, imports, and inventories. For each calendar quarter starting with the first full quarter after June 22, 1974, he must publish reports covering imports (by origin and arrival point), domestic reserves and production, refinery operations (crude run, allocated crude, capacity use, and outputs), and inventories of petroleum products and LPG by national, regional, and State levels with supply and shortfall details. Producers of crude oil and natural gas must keep and report records under required accounting practices. Trade secrets are kept confidential but may be shared with certain agencies or Congress when needed. Information released to the public follows the Freedom of Information Act. Defined terms: “energy information” — data about fuel reserves, production, distribution, consumption, costs, and related matters; “person” — any individual or business entity; “United States” — the States, DC, Puerto Rico, and U.S. territories.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
15 U.S.C. § 796
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60