Title 42 › Chapter 23— DEVELOPMENT AND CONTROL OF ATOMIC ENERGY › Subchapter V— SPECIAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL › § 2074
The Commission may give or sell special nuclear material to other countries or groups when there is a cooperation agreement approved under the law. It must charge at least its published domestic rates, except it can give small amounts free for peaceful research or medical treatment up to $10,000 in value per calendar year for one nation or $50,000 for a group of nations. The Commission may only send material to the International Atomic Energy Agency or to groups of nations in amounts and for times that Congress allows, except it is already allowed to send 5,000 kilograms of contained uranium-235, 500 grams of uranium-233, and 3 kilograms of plutonium plus matching amounts given by other members to June 1, 1960. The Commission can also propose other amounts or time limits, but it must send those proposals to Congress and the Energy Committees, wait 60 days while Congress is in session, and the Energy Committees must report their views within the first 30 days. Congress can stop a proposed action by passing a concurrent resolution within the 60 days. The Commission may agree to buy back unused material or uranium left after irradiation at a price no higher than its sale price at delivery. It may buy material made abroad from U.S.-leased or -sold material only when a guaranteed purchase price exists for the same kind of domestic material, and it will pay that established price. The Commission may send plutonium that is 80 percent or more plutonium-238 and other specially exempted materials outside the United States, but it must not send such plutonium if it would harm the nation’s defense and security, and it can require reports on how distributed material is used. It can let others distribute material under the same conditions (except for charges). Without an export license, distribution is limited to small amounts (no more than 500 grams per year of U-233, U-235, or plutonium to any recipient) when the material is in lab samples, medical devices, instruments, or is needed in an emergency where time is critical. Any commitments of U.S. funds under later related arrangements must follow the rules in section 2160.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 2074
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60