FEDERAL · 42 U.S.C. · Chapter SUBCHAPTER IX—RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

Carbon capture technology program

42 U.S.C. § 16292
Title42The Public Health and Welfare
ChapterSUBCHAPTER IX—RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
PartF

This text of 42 U.S.C. § 16292 (Carbon capture technology program) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
42 U.S.C. § 16292.

Text

(a)Definitions In this section: The term "large-scale pilot project" means a pilot project that—
(A)represents the scale of technology development beyond laboratory development and bench scale testing, but not yet advanced to the point of being tested under real operational conditions at commercial scale;
(B)represents the scale of technology necessary to gain the operational data needed to understand the technical and performance risks of the technology before the application of that technology at commercial scale or in commercial-scale demonstration; and
(C)is large enough—
(i)to validate scaling factors; and
(ii)to demonstrate the interaction between major components so that control philosophies for a new process can be developed and enable the technology to advance from large-sca

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Related

§ 16352
42 U.S.C. § 16352

Source Credit

History

(Pub. L. 109–58, title IX, §962, as added Pub. L. 116–260, div. Z, title IV, §4002(a), Dec. 27, 2020, 134 Stat. 2528; amended Pub. L. 117–58, div. D, title III, §40303, Nov. 15, 2021, 135 Stat. 988.)

Editorial Notes

Editorial Notes

Prior Provisions
A prior section 16292, Pub. L. 109–58, title IX, §962, Aug. 8, 2005, 119 Stat. 890, related to coal and related technologies program, prior to repeal by Pub. L. 116–260, div. Z, title IV, §4002(a), Dec. 27, 2020, 134 Stat. 2528.

Amendments
2021—Subsec. (b)(2)(D). Pub. L. 117–58, §40303(1)(B), substituted "program for carbon capture technologies; and" for "program."
Subsec. (b)(2)(E). Pub. L. 117–58, §40303(1)(A), (C), added subpar. (E).
Subsec. (d)(1)(E). Pub. L. 117–58, §40303(2), added subpar. (E).

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Wage Rate Requirements
For provisions relating to rates of wages to be paid to laborers and mechanics on projects for construction, alteration, or repair work funded under div. D or an amendment by div. D of Pub. L. 117–58, including authority of Secretary of Labor, see section 18851 of this title.

Findings
Pub. L. 117–58, div. D, title III, §40301, Nov. 15, 2021, 135 Stat. 986, provided that: "Congress finds that—
"(1) the industrial sector is integral to the economy of the United States—
"(A) providing millions of jobs and essential products; and
"(B) demonstrating global leadership in manufacturing and innovation;
"(2) carbon capture and storage technologies are necessary for reducing hard-to-abate emissions from the industrial sector, which emits nearly 25 percent of carbon dioxide emissions in the United States;
"(3) carbon removal and storage technologies, including direct air capture, must be deployed at large-scale in the coming decades to remove carbon dioxide directly from the atmosphere;
"(4) large-scale deployment of carbon capture, removal, utilization, transport, and storage—
"(A) is critical for achieving mid-century climate goals; and
"(B) will drive regional economic development, technological innovation, and high-wage employment;
"(5) carbon capture, removal, and utilization technologies require a backbone system of shared carbon dioxide transport and storage infrastructure to enable large-scale deployment, realize economies of scale, and create an interconnected carbon management market;
"(6) carbon dioxide transport infrastructure and permanent geological storage are proven and safe technologies with existing Federal and State regulatory frameworks;
"(7) carbon dioxide transport and storage infrastructure share similar barriers to deployment previously faced by other types of critical national infrastructure, such as high capital costs and chicken-and-egg challenges, that require Federal and State support, in combination with private investment, to be overcome; and
"(8) each State should take into consideration, with respect to new carbon dioxide transportation infrastructure—
"(A) qualifying the infrastructure as pollution control devices under applicable laws (including regulations) of the State; and
"(B) establishing a waiver of ad valorem and property taxes for the infrastructure for a period of not less than 10 years."

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Bluebook (online)
42 U.S.C. § 16292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/usc/42/16292.