Title 16 › Chapter 12— FEDERAL REGULATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF POWER › Subchapter I— REGULATION OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF WATER POWER AND RESOURCES › § 803
All licenses under this part must use a project design that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (the Commission) believes best fits a broad plan for improving waterways for interstate or foreign commerce, power production, fish and wildlife (including spawning grounds and habitat), and other public needs like irrigation, flood control, water supply, and recreation. The Commission can require changes to plans before approval. When it reviews an application, the Commission must ask federal and state agencies and affected Indian tribes for recommendations, and it must consider existing federal or state waterway plans and the applicant’s electricity-efficiency program if the applicant is a state, municipality, or a major power company. Major changes to a dam or project not in the approved plans need the Commission’s prior OK if the project is over 2,000 horsepower, except in true emergencies (but emergency work can be changed later as the Commission directs). License holders must keep the works in good repair, operate them without harming navigation, make needed replacements, and set up depreciation reserves. The licensee is responsible for any damage to others’ property from their project; the United States is not liable. After the first 20 years, licensees must set up amortization reserves from surplus earnings above a specified reasonable rate of return; the license will state the rate and reserve share. Licensees must pay reasonable annual charges set by the Commission to cover administration costs and use of government property. If a license uses a U.S. dam, the Commission’s charge for that use may not exceed 1 mill per kilowatt-hour for the first 40 gigawatt-hours a year, 1.5 mills for 40–80 GWh, and 2 mills for any energy over 80 GWh. Those limits apply to licenses issued after October 16, 1986, and to some earlier licenses that did not fix a charge. The Commission will review these limits every 5 years and report to Congress. If a licensee benefits from another party’s reservoir or headwater work, the Commission will make the licensee pay a fair share of annual costs and may direct payments into a special fund. The Commission may waive many requirements for small projects or partial projects, but the 50-year license term stays and charges on Indian reservation lands still apply. Agreements to limit electricity output, fix prices, or otherwise restrain trade are banned. The Commission must include license conditions to prevent or reduce conduct that would break antitrust law; if it cannot, the Commission must refuse the license or take other steps. Every license must include conditions to protect, reduce harm to, and improve fish and wildlife based on recommendations from the National Marine Fisheries Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and state agencies. If the Commission disagrees with those recommendations, it must try to resolve the differences and must publish findings explaining why it did not adopt an agency’s recommendation and how its chosen conditions still meet protection requirements.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 803
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60