Title 42 › Chapter 152— ENERGY INDEPENDENCE AND SECURITY › Subchapter V— ACCELERATED RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT › Part D— Energy Storage for Transportation and Electric Power › § 17232
The Secretary of Energy must set up the Energy Storage System Research, Development, and Deployment Program within 180 days after December 27, 2020. Energy storage system = any tech that saves energy and releases it later. Program = the new DOE program. Secretary = the Secretary of Energy. The program must fund research, development, testing, and demonstrations for many kinds of storage: large and distributed systems, transportation and vehicle-grid ideas, recycling and reuse, better controls, pumped hydro improvements, models and use cases, and advanced manufacturing. It must target different discharge lengths from subhourly up to seasonal (daily systems must run at least 6 hours; weekly/monthly systems must run 10–100 hours). The Department must work with National Laboratories to make standard tests, run test beds and field trials, update goals at least once a year, make a 10-year plan and submit that plan to Congress within 180 days after December 27, 2020, and protect privacy using Fair Information Practice Principles and OMB Circular A–130. The program must use and coordinate DOE offices such as the Office of Electricity, the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, and the Office of Science. By September 30, 2023, the Secretary must enter agreements for three demonstration projects, including at least one long-duration project and one showing second-life uses of electric vehicle batteries. A competitive grant program will fund demonstrations by eligible entities (state energy offices, Tribes, Tribal organizations, colleges, utilities, and private storage companies). Project choices must aim for regional diversity, rural and high-cost areas, and leverage non-Federal matching funds. Demonstrations may pursue objectives like improving grid security, reliability, peak shaving, renewable integration, microgrids, EV fast charging, and other listed goals. The Secretary must report every three years on program performance. The Department must also create a long-duration demonstration Initiative and a Joint Program with the Department of Defense (MOU within 200 days after December 27, 2020) to test technologies using DOE and DOD test beds. By September 30, 2023, the Secretary may give financial help for designing pumped storage projects that are at least 1,000 megawatts, serve more than one organized electricity market, store renewables on Tribal land, and hold a FERC preliminary permit; recipients must match the funds. Authorized funding: $100,000,000 per year for FY2021–2025 for the R&D program, $71,000,000 per year for FY2021–2025 for demonstrations, $30,000,000 per year for FY2021–2025 for the long-duration Initiative, and $2,000,000 for each of FY2022–2026 for pumped storage assistance. The Federal Government will not take ownership of project storage systems unless all project participants agree.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 17232
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60