Title 42 › Chapter 149— NATIONAL ENERGY POLICY AND PROGRAMS › Subchapter IX— RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT › Part G— Science › § 16317
The Secretary must set up a research, development, and demonstration program in microbial and plant systems biology, protein science, computational biology, and environmental science. The program must give competitive, merit-reviewed grants to individual researchers and teams. The Secretary must talk with other Federal agencies that do genetic and protein research. The program’s main goals are to use genomes, microbes, and plants to: help make fuels (including hydrogen) in ways that cut greenhouse gas emissions; turn carbon dioxide into organic carbon; clean soils and water— including Department sites—contaminated with heavy metals and radioactive material; develop cellulosic and other feedstocks that use less land and resources while protecting air, water, and soil; and work on other Department missions the Secretary identifies. Within 1 year after August 8, 2005, the Secretary must send Congress a research plan for how the program will meet these goals. The National Academy of Sciences must review that plan and the Secretary must send Congress the review and the Secretary’s response within 18 months after the plan is sent. Funds may be used to build or run special equipment and facilities, including user facilities at National Laboratories. The program must not do biomedical research, and it may not fund research on human cells or human subjects or work designed for direct use with human cells or subjects. The Director must support up to 6 bioenergy research centers to do basic plant and microbial systems research, imaging, and genomics and to speed development of advanced biofuels, bioenergy, and bioproducts from diverse regional feedstocks and move results to industry. Centers may work on domestication of plants and microbes, sustainability, feedstock development (including lignocellulosic, algal, gaseous wastes, and direct air capture), better biomass breakdown and separation, and improved conversion processes using microbes, enzymes, and combined biological–chemical approaches. Centers must form industry partnerships. Centers are chosen competitively for up to 5 years, subject to appropriations, and may be renewed under merit review with specified limits; a center in existence on August 9, 2022, may continue for up to 5 years from its establishment. The Secretary must coordinate with the Bioenergy Technologies Office on sustainability, capacity, resilience, security, reliability, affordability, and effects on ecosystems and communities. For each fiscal year 2023 through 2027, $30,000,000 per center is authorized. Defined terms include advanced biofuel, bioenergy, biomass, and bioproduct as given in other statutes.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 16317
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60