Title 42 › Chapter 149— NATIONAL ENERGY POLICY AND PROGRAMS › Subchapter X— DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY MANAGEMENT › § 16396
The Secretary may run cash-prize programs to reward big breakthroughs in research, development, demonstration, or commercial use that help the Department’s work. Those programs can be open competitions announced to the public. The Secretary must create department-wide rules, share best practices, simplify contracting, and train staff for these prize contests. There is a special effort called Freedom Prizes, done with the Freedom Prize Foundation, to encourage technologies that reduce U.S. reliance on imported oil. Congress has authorized $10,000,000 for the general prize program and $5,000,000 for the Freedom Prizes. The law also requires a specific hydrogen prize program. The Secretary must widely advertise competitions, publish full contest details in the Federal Register, and hire a private nonprofit to run the contests. That nonprofit will help advertise, raise private funds, help set judging criteria and prize amounts (with final approval by the Secretary), pick judges, and protect trade secrets. Prizes may use federal and private money. The Secretary cannot announce a prize until the money is secured. Authority to start new hydrogen contests ended September 30, 2018. Prize types include four technical categories (hydrogen production, storage, distribution, and use) with biennial awards up to $1,000,000 each; vehicle or product prototype prizes up to $4,000,000 every two years; and one transformational prize of at least $10,000,000 with matching payments and not more than $10,000,000 in federal funds (the nonprofit should try to raise $40,000,000 for the match). Eligibility rules require U.S. businesses or U.S. citizens/permanent residents and bar federal employees. The government does not automatically get prize winners’ patents but may seek licenses. Participants may need waivers and insurance. The Secretary must report to Congress within 60 days after the first award and then yearly, and an annual public report must list contests, prize totals including private contributions, how winners were chosen, and how the prizes helped the Department. Authorized funding for the hydrogen prizes for fiscal years 2008–2017 is $20,000,000 for the four technical-category awards, $20,000,000 for prototype awards, and $10,000,000 for the transformational award, plus $2,000,000 each for FY2008 and FY2009 for administration. Funds remain available until spent and may be moved after 10 fiscal years. The prize programs do not replace normal federal research and development.
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42 U.S.C. § 16396
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60