(A)
Types of activities
In carrying out the program, the Secretary shall carry out research, development, demonstration, and commercialization activities, including—
(i)
awarding grants and awards, on a competitive, merit-reviewed basis;
(ii)
performing precompetitive research and development;
(iii)
establishing or maintaining demonstration facilities and projects, including through stewardship of existing facilities such as the National Wind Test Center;
(iv)
providing technical assistance;
(v)
entering into contracts and cooperative agreements;
(vi)
providing small business vouchers;
(vii)
establishing prize competitions;
(viii)
conducting education and outreach activities;
(ix)
conducting professional development activities; and
(x)
conducting analyses, studies, and reports.
(B)
Subject areas
The Secretary shall carry out research, development, demonstration, and commercialization activities in the following subject areas:
(i)
Wind power plant siting, performance, operations, and security.
(ii)
New materials and designs relating to all hardware, software, and components of wind energy technologies, including technologies and strategies that reduce the use of energy, water, critical materials, and other commodities that are determined to be vulnerable to disruption.
(iii)
Advanced wind energy manufacturing and installation technologies and practices, including materials, processes, such as onsite or near site manufacturing, and design.
(iv)
Offshore wind-specific projects and plants, including—
(I)
fixed and floating substructure systems, materials, and components;
(II)
the operation of offshore facilities, such as—
(aa)
an offshore research facility to conduct research for oceanic, biological, geological, and atmospheric resource characterization relevant to offshore wind energy development in coordination with the ocean and atmospheric science communities; and
(bb)
an offshore support structure testing facility to conduct development, demonstration, and commercialization of large-scale and full-scale offshore wind energy support structure components and systems;
(III)
the monitoring and analysis of site and environmental considerations unique to offshore sites, including freshwater environments.
(v)
Integration of wind energy technologies with—
(I)
the electric grid, including transmission, distribution, microgrids, and distributed energy systems; and
(II)
other energy technologies, including—
(aa)
other generation sources;
(bb)
demand response technologies; and
(cc)
energy storage technologies.
(vi)
Methods to improve the lifetime, maintenance, decommissioning, recycling, reuse, and sustainability of wind energy components and systems, including technologies and strategies to reduce the use of energy, water, critical materials, and other valuable or harmful inputs.
(vii)
Wind power forecasting and atmospheric measurement systems, including for turbines and plant systems of varying height.
(viii)
Integrated wind energy systems, grid-connected and off-grid, that incorporate diverse—
(I)
generation sources;
(II)
loads; and
(III)
storage technologies.
(ix)
Reducing market barriers, including non-hardware and information-based barriers, to the adoption of wind energy technologies, such as impacts on, or challenges relating to—
(I)
distributed wind technologies, including the development of best practices, models, and voluntary streamlined processes for local siting and permitting of distributed wind energy systems to reduce costs;
(II)
airspace;
(III)
military operations;
(IV)
radar;
(V)
local communities, with special consideration given to economically distressed areas, previously disturbed lands such as landfills and former mines, and other areas disproportionately impacted by environmental pollution;
(VI)
wildlife and wildlife habitats; and
(VII)
any other appropriate matter, as determined by the Secretary.
(x)
Technologies or strategies to avoid, minimize, and offset the potential impacts of wind energy facilities on bird species, bat species, marine wildlife, and other sensitive species and habitats.
(xi)
Advanced physics-based and data analysis computational tools, in coordination with the high-performance computing programs of the Department, to more efficiently design, site, permit, manufacture, install, operate, decommission, and recycle wind energy systems.
(xii)
Technologies for distributed wind, including micro, small, and medium turbines and the components of those turbines and their microgrid applications.
(xiii)
Transformational technologies for harnessing wind energy.
(xiv)
Other research areas that advance the purposes of the program, as determined by the Secretary.
(C)
Prioritization
In carrying out activities under the program, the Secretary shall, to the maximum extent practicable, give special consideration to—
(i)
projects that—
(I)
are located in a geographically diverse range of eligible entities;
(II)
support the development or demonstration of projects—
(aa)
in economically distressed areas and areas disproportionately impacted by pollution; and
(bb)
that provide the greatest potential to reduce energy costs, as well as promote accessibility and community implementation of demonstrated technologies;
(III)
can be replicated in a variety of regions and climates;
(IV)
include business commercialization plans that have the potential for—
(aa)
domestic manufacturing and production of wind energy technologies; or
(bb)
exports of wind energy technologies; and
(V)
are carried out in collaboration with Tribal energy development organizations, Indian Tribes, Tribal organizations, Native Hawaiian community-based organizations, minority-serving institutions, or territories or freely associated States; and
(ii)
with regards to professional development, activities that expand the number of individuals from underrepresented groups pursuing and attaining skills relevant to wind energy.