§ 7403.
Research, investigation, training, and other activities
(a)
Research and development program for prevention and control of air pollution
The Administrator shall establish a national research and development program for the prevention and control of air pollution and as part of such program shall—
(1)
conduct, and promote the coordination and acceleration of, research, investigations, experiments, demonstrations, surveys, and studies relating to the causes, effects (including health and welfare effects), extent, prevention, and control of air pollution;
(2)
encourage, cooperate with, and render technical services and provide financial assistance to air pollution control agencies and other appropriate public or private agencies, institutions, and organizations, and individuals in the conduct of such activities;
(3)
conduct investigations and research and make surveys concerning any specific problem of air pollution in cooperation with any air pollution control agency with a view to recommending a solution of such problem, if he is requested to do so by such agency or if, in his judgment, such problem may affect any community or communities in a State other than that in which the source of the matter causing or contributing to the pollution is located;
(4)
establish technical advisory committees composed of recognized experts in various aspects of air pollution to assist in the examination and evaluation of research progress and proposals and to avoid duplication of research; and
(5)
conduct and promote coordination and acceleration of training for individuals relating to the causes, effects, extent, prevention, and control of air pollution.
(b)
Authorized activities of Administrator in establishing research and development program
In carrying out the provisions of the preceding subsection the Administrator is authorized to—
(1)
collect and make available, through publications and other appropriate means, the results of and other information, including appropriate recommendations by him in connection therewith, pertaining to such research and other activities;
(2)
cooperate with other Federal departments and agencies, with air pollution control agencies, with other public and private agencies, institutions, and organizations, and with any industries involved, in the preparation and conduct of such research and other activities;
(3)
make grants to air pollution control agencies, to other public or nonprofit private agencies, institutions, and organizations, and to individuals, for purposes stated in subsection (a)(1) of this section;
(4)
contract with public or private agencies, institutions, and organizations, and with individuals, without regard to section 3324(a) and (b) of title 31 and
section 6101 of title 41;
(5)
establish and maintain research fellowships, in the Environmental Protection Agency and at public or nonprofit private educational institutions or research organizations;
(6)
collect and disseminate, in cooperation with other Federal departments and agencies, and with other public or private agencies, institutions, and organizations having related responsibilities, basic data on chemical, physical, and biological effects of varying air quality and other information pertaining to air pollution and the prevention and control thereof;
(7)
develop effective and practical processes, methods, and prototype devices for the prevention or control of air pollution; and
(8)
construct facilities, provide equipment, and employ staff as necessary to carry out this chapter.
In carrying out the provisions of subsection (a), the Administrator shall provide training for, and make training grants to, personnel of air pollution control agencies and other persons with suitable qualifications and make grants to such agencies, to other public or nonprofit private agencies, institutions, and organizations for the purposes stated in subsection (a)(5). Reasonable fees may be charged for such training provided to persons other than personnel of air pollution control agencies but such training shall be provided to such personnel of air pollution control agencies without charge.
(c)
Air pollutant monitoring, analysis, modeling, and inventory research
In carrying out subsection (a), the Administrator shall conduct a program of research, testing, and development of methods for sampling, measurement, monitoring, analysis, and modeling of air pollutants. Such program shall include the following elements:
(1)
Consideration of individual, as well as complex mixtures of, air pollutants and their chemical transformations in the atmosphere.
(2)
Establishment of a national network to monitor, collect, and compile data with quantification of certainty in the status and trends of air emissions, deposition, air quality, surface water quality, forest condition, and visibility impairment, and to ensure the comparability of air quality data collected in different States and obtained from different nations.
(3)
Development of improved methods and technologies for sampling, measurement, monitoring, analysis, and modeling to increase understanding of the sources of ozone precursors, ozone formation, ozone transport, regional influences on urban ozone, regional ozone trends, and interactions of ozone with other pollutants. Emphasis shall be placed on those techniques which—
(A)
improve the ability to inventory emissions of volatile organic compounds and nitrogen oxides that contribute to urban air pollution, including anthropogenic and natural sources;
(B)
improve the understanding of the mechanism through which anthropogenic and biogenic volatile organic compounds react to form ozone and other oxidants; and
(C)
improve the ability to identify and evaluate region-specific prevention and control options for ozone pollution.
(4)
Submission of periodic reports to the Congress, not less than once every 5 years, which evaluate and assess the effectiveness of air pollution control regulations and programs using monitoring and modeling data obtained pursuant to this subsection.
(d)
Environmental health effects research
(1)
The Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, shall conduct a research program on the short-term and long-term effects of air pollutants, including wood smoke, on human health. In conducting such research program the Administrator—
(A)
shall conduct studies, including epidemiological, clinical, and laboratory and field studies, as necessary to identify and evaluate exposure to and effects of air pollutants on human health;
(B)
may utilize, on a reimbursable basis, the facilities of existing Federal scientific laboratories and research centers; and
(C)
shall consult with other Federal agencies to ensure that similar research being conducted in other agencies is coordinated to avoid duplication.
(2)
In conducting the research program under this subsection, the Administrator shall develop methods and techniques necessary to identify and assess the risks to human health from both routine and accidental exposures to individual air pollutants and combinations thereof. Such research program shall include the following elements:
(A)
The creation of an Interagency Task Force to coordinate such program. The Task Force shall include representatives of the National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, the National Toxicology Program, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the National Science Foundation, the Surgeon General, and the Department of Energy. This Interagency Task Force shall be chaired by a representative of the Environmental Protection Agency and shall convene its first meeting within 60 days after November 15, 1990.
(B)
An evaluation, within 12 months after
November 15, 1990, of each of the hazardous air pollutants listed under
section 7412(b) of this title, to decide, on the basis of available information, their relative priority for preparation of environmental health assessments pursuant to subparagraph (C). The evaluation shall be based on reasonably anticipated toxicity to humans and exposure factors such as frequency of occurrence as an air pollutant and volume of emissions in populated areas. Such evaluation shall be reviewed by the Interagency Task Force established pursuant to subparagraph (A).
(C)
Preparation of environmental health assessments for each of the hazardous air pollutants referred to in subparagraph (B), beginning 6 months after the first meeting of the Interagency Task Force and to be completed within 96 months thereafter. No fewer than 24 assessments shall be completed and published annually. The assessments shall be prepared in accordance with guidelines developed by the Administrator in consultation with the Interagency Task Force and the Science Advisory Board of the Environmental Protection Agency. Each such assessment shall include—
(i)
an examination, summary, and evaluation of available toxicological and epidemiological information for the pollutant to ascertain the levels of human exposure which pose a significant threat to human health and the associated acute, subacute, and chronic adverse health effects;
(ii)
a determination of gaps in available information related to human health effects and exposure levels; and
(iii)
where appropriate, an identification of additional activities, including toxicological and inhalation testing, needed to identify the types or levels of exposure which may present significant risk of adverse health effects in humans.
(e)
Ecosystem research
In carrying out subsection (a), the Administrator, in cooperation, where appropriate, with the Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere, the Director of the Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Secretary of Agriculture, shall conduct a research program to improve understanding of the short-term and long-term causes, effects, and trends of ecosystems damage from air pollutants on ecosystems. Such program shall include the following elements:
(1)
Identification of regionally representative and critical ecosystems for research.
(2)
Evaluation of risks to ecosystems exposed to air pollutants, including characterization of the causes and effects of chronic and episodic exposures to air pollutants and determination of the reversibility of those effects.
(3)
Development of improved atmospheric dispersion models and monitoring systems and networks for evaluating and quantifying exposure to and effects of multiple environmental stresses associated with air pollution.
(4)
Evaluation of the effects of air pollution on water quality, including assessments of the short-term and long-term ecological effects of acid deposition and other atmospherically derived pollutants on surface water (including wetlands and estuaries) and groundwater.
(5)
Evaluation of the effects of air pollution on forests, materials, crops, biological diversity, soils, and other terrestrial and aquatic systems exposed to air pollutants.
(6)
Estimation of the associated economic costs of ecological damage which have occurred as a result of exposure to air pollutants.
Consistent with the purpose of this program, the Administrator may use the estuarine research reserves established pursuant to
section 1461 of title 16 to carry out this research.
(f)
Liquefied Gaseous Fuels Spill Test Facility
(1)
The Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary of Energy and the Federal Coordinating Council for Science, Engineering, and Technology, shall oversee an experimental and analytical research effort, with the experimental research to be carried out at the Liquefied Gaseous Fuels Spill Test Facility. In consultation with the Secretary of Energy, the Administrator shall develop a list of chemicals and a schedule for field testing at the Facility. Analysis of a minimum of 10 chemicals per year shall be carried out, with the selection of a minimum of 2 chemicals for field testing each year. Highest priority shall be given to those chemicals that would present the greatest potential risk to human health as a result of an accidental release—
(A)
from a fixed site; or
(B)
related to the transport of such chemicals.
(2)
The purpose of such research shall be to—
(A)
develop improved predictive models for atmospheric dispersion which at a minimum—
(i)
describe dense gas releases in complex terrain including man-made structures or obstacles with variable winds;
(ii)
improve understanding of the effects of turbulence on dispersion patterns; and
(iii)
consider realistic behavior of aerosols by including physicochemical reactions with water vapor, ground deposition, and removal by water spray;
(B)
evaluate existing and future atmospheric dispersion models by—
(i)
the development of a rigorous, standardized methodology for dense gas models; and
(ii)
the application of such methodology to current dense gas dispersion models using data generated from field experiments; and
(C)
evaluate the effectiveness of hazard mitigation and emergency response technology for fixed site and transportation related accidental releases of toxic chemicals.
Models pertaining to accidental release shall be evaluated and improved periodically for their utility in planning and implementing evacuation procedures and other mitigative strategies designed to minimize human exposure to hazardous air pollutants released accidentally.
(3)
The Secretary of Energy shall make available to interested persons (including other Federal agencies and businesses) the use of the Liquefied Gaseous Fuels Spill Test Facility to conduct research and other activities in connection with the activities described in this subsection.
(g)
Pollution prevention and emissions control
(2)
Participation requirement
(3)
Program inclusions
The program under this subsection shall include the following elements:
(A)
Improvements in nonregulatory strategies and technologies for preventing or reducing multiple air pollutants, including sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides, heavy metals, PM–10 (particulate matter), carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide, from stationary sources, including fossil fuel power plants. Such strategies and technologies shall include improvements in the relative cost effectiveness and long-range implications of various air pollutant reduction and nonregulatory control strategies such as energy conservation, including end-use efficiency, and fuel-switching to cleaner fuels. Such strategies and technologies shall be considered for existing and new facilities.
(B)
Improvements in nonregulatory strategies and technologies for reducing air emissions from area sources.
(C)
Improvements in nonregulatory strategies and technologies for preventing, detecting, and correcting accidental releases of hazardous air pollutants.
(D)
Improvements in nonregulatory strategies and technologies that dispose of tires in ways that avoid adverse air quality impacts.
(5)
Coordination and avoidance of duplication
(6)
Certain carbon dioxide activities
(A)
In general
In carrying out paragraph (3)(A) with respect to carbon dioxide, the Administrator—
(i)
is authorized to carry out the activities described in subparagraph (B); and
(ii)
shall carry out the activities described in subparagraph (C).
(B)
Direct air capture research
(i)
Definitions
In this subparagraph:
(I)
Board
(II)
Dilute
(III)
Direct air capture
(aa)
In general
(bb)
Exclusion
The term “direct air capture” does not include any facility, technology, or system that captures carbon dioxide—
(AA)
that is deliberately released from a naturally occurring subsurface spring; or
(BB)
using natural photosynthesis.
(IV)
Intellectual property
The term “intellectual property” means—
(aa)
an invention that is patentable under title 35; and
(bb)
any patent on an invention described in item (aa).
(ii)
Technology prizes
(I)
In general
(II)
Duties
In carrying out this clause, the Administrator shall—
(aa)
subject to subclause (III), develop specific requirements for—
(AA)
the competition process; and
(BB)
the demonstration of performance of approved projects;
(bb)
offer financial awards for a project designed—
(AA)
to the maximum extent practicable, to capture more than 10,000 tons of carbon dioxide per year;
(BB)
to operate in a manner that would be commercially viable in the foreseeable future (as determined by the Board); and
(CC)
to improve the technologies or information systems that enable monitoring and verification methods for direct air capture projects; and
(cc)
to the maximum extent practicable, make financial awards to geographically diverse projects, including at least—
(AA)
1 project in a coastal State; and
(BB)
1 project in a rural State.
(III)
Public participation
In carrying out subclause (II)(aa), the Administrator shall—
(aa)
provide notice of and, for a period of not less than 60 days, an opportunity for public comment on, any draft or proposed version of the requirements described in subclause (II)(aa); and
(bb)
take into account public comments received in developing the final version of those requirements.
(iii)
Direct Air Capture Technology Advisory Board
(I)
Establishment
(II)
Composition
The Board, on the establishment of the Board, shall be composed of 9 members appointed by the Administrator, who shall provide expertise in—
(aa)
climate science;
(bb)
physics;
(cc)
chemistry;
(dd)
biology;
(ee)
engineering;
(ff)
economics;
(gg)
business management; and
(hh)
such other disciplines as the Administrator determines to be necessary to achieve the purposes of this subparagraph.
(III)
Term; vacancies
(aa)
Term
(bb)
Vacancies
A vacancy on the Board—
(AA)
shall not affect the powers of the Board; and
(BB)
shall be filled in the same manner as the original appointment was made.
(IV)
Initial meeting
(V)
Meetings
(VI)
Quorum
(VII)
Chairperson and Vice Chairperson
(VIII)
Compensation
(IX)
Duties
The Board shall—
(aa)
advise the Administrator on carrying out the duties of the Administrator under this subparagraph; and
(bb)
provide other assistance and advice as requested by the Administrator.
(iv)
Intellectual property
(I)
In general
(II)
Reservation of license
The United States—
(aa)
may reserve a nonexclusive, nontransferable, irrevocable, paid-up license, to have practiced for or on behalf of the United States, in connection with any intellectual property described in subclause (I); but
(bb)
shall not, in the exercise of a license reserved under item (aa), publicly disclose proprietary information relating to the license.
(III)
Transfer of title
(v)
Authorization of appropriations
(vi)
Termination of authority
(C)
Deep saline formation report
(i)
Definition of deep saline formation
(I)
In general
(II)
Clarification
(ii)
Report
In consultation with the Secretary of Energy, and, as appropriate, with the head of any other relevant Federal agency and relevant stakeholders, not later than 1 year after December 27, 2020, the Administrator shall prepare, submit to Congress, and make publicly available a report that includes—
(I)
a comprehensive identification of potential risks and benefits to project developers associated with increased storage of carbon dioxide captured from stationary sources in deep saline formations, using existing research;
(II)
recommendations for managing the potential risks identified under subclause (I), including potential risks unique to public land; and
(III)
recommendations for Federal legislation or other policy changes to mitigate any potential risks identified under subclause (I).
(D)
GAO report
Not later than 5 years after December 27, 2020, the Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to Congress a report that—
(i)
identifies all Federal grant programs in which a purpose of a grant under the program is to perform research on carbon capture and utilization technologies, including direct air capture technologies; and
(ii)
examines the extent to which the Federal grant programs identified pursuant to clause (i) overlap or are duplicative.
(h)
NIEHS studies
(1)
The Director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences may conduct a program of basic research to identify, characterize, and quantify risks to human health from air pollutants. Such research shall be conducted primarily through a combination of university and medical school-based grants, as well as through intramural studies and contracts.
(2)
The Director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences shall conduct a program for the education and training of physicians in environmental health.
(3)
The Director shall assure that such programs shall not conflict with research undertaken by the Administrator.
(4)
There are authorized to be appropriated to the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences such sums as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of this subsection.
(i)
Coordination of research
The Administrator shall develop and implement a plan for identifying areas in which activities authorized under this section can be carried out in conjunction with other Federal ecological and air pollution research efforts. The plan, which shall be submitted to Congress within 6 months after November 15, 1990, shall include—
(1)
an assessment of ambient monitoring stations and networks to determine cost effective ways to expand monitoring capabilities in both urban and rural environments;
(2)
a consideration of the extent of the feasibility and scientific value of conducting the research program under subsection (e) to include consideration of the effects of atmospheric processes and air pollution effects; and
(3)
a methodology for evaluating and ranking pollution prevention technologies, such as those developed under subsection (g), in terms of their ability to reduce cost effectively the emissions of air pollutants and other airborne chemicals of concern.
Not later than 2 years after November 15, 1990, and every 4 years thereafter, the Administrator shall report to Congress on the progress made in implementing the plan developed under this subsection, and shall include in such report any revisions of the plan.
(j)
Continuation of national acid precipitation assessment program
(1)
The acid precipitation research program set forth in the Acid Precipitation Act of 1980 [
42 U.S.C. 8901 et seq.] shall be continued with modifications pursuant to this subsection.
(2)
The Acid Precipitation Task Force shall consist of the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, the Secretary of Energy, the Secretary of the Interior, the Secretary of Agriculture, the Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and such additional members as the President may select. The President shall appoint a chairman for the Task Force from among its members within 30 days after November 15, 1990.
(3)
The responsibilities of the Task Force shall include the following:
(A)
Review of the status of research activities conducted to date under the comprehensive research plan developed pursuant to the Acid Precipitation Act of 1980 [
42 U.S.C. 8901 et seq.], and development of a revised plan that identifies significant research gaps and establishes a coordinated program to address current and future research priorities. A draft of the revised plan shall be submitted by the Task Force to Congress within 6 months after
November 15, 1990. The plan shall be available for public comment during the 60 day period after its submission, and a final plan shall be submitted by the President to the Congress within 45 days after the close of the comment period.
(B)
Coordination with participating Federal agencies, augmenting the agencies’ research and monitoring efforts and sponsoring additional research in the scientific community as necessary to ensure the availability and quality of data and methodologies needed to evaluate the status and effectiveness of the acid deposition control program. Such research and monitoring efforts shall include, but not be limited to—
(i)
continuous monitoring of emissions of precursors of acid deposition;
(ii)
maintenance, upgrading, and application of models, such as the Regional Acid Deposition Model, that describe the interactions of emissions with the atmosphere, and models that describe the response of ecosystems to acid deposition; and
(iii)
analysis of the costs, benefits, and effectiveness of the acid deposition control program.
(C)
Publication and maintenance of a National Acid Lakes Registry that tracks the condition and change over time of a statistically representative sample of lakes in regions that are known to be sensitive to surface water acidification.
(D)
Submission every two years of a unified budget recommendation to the President for activities of the Federal Government in connection with the research program described in this subsection.
(E)
(i)
actual and projected emissions and acid deposition trends;
(ii)
average ambient concentrations of acid deposition percursors
2
So in original. Probably should be “precursors”.
and their transformation products;
(iii)
the status of ecosystems (including forests and surface waters), materials, and visibility affected by acid deposition;
(iv)
the causes and effects of such deposition, including changes in surface water quality and forest and soil conditions;
(v)
the occurrence and effects of episodic acidification, particularly with respect to high elevation watersheds; and
(vi)
the confidence level associated with each conclusion to aid policymakers in use of the information.
(F)
Beginning in 1996, and every 4 years thereafter, the report under subparagraph (E) shall include—
(i)
the reduction in deposition rates that must be achieved in order to prevent adverse ecological effects; and
(ii)
the costs and benefits of the acid deposition control program created by subchapter IV–A of this chapter.
(k)
Air pollution conferences
([July 14, 1955, ch. 360], title I, § 103, formerly § 3, as added [Pub. L. 88–206, § 1], Dec. 17, 1963, [77 Stat. 394]; renumbered § 103 and amended [Pub. L. 89–272, title I], §§ 101(3), 103, Oct. 20, 1965, [79 Stat. 992], 996; [Pub. L. 90–148, § 2], Nov. 21, 1967, [81 Stat. 486]; [Pub. L. 91–604], §§ 2(a), 4(2), 15(a)(2), (c)(2), Dec. 31, 1970, [84 Stat. 1676], 1689, 1710, 1713; [Pub. L. 95–95, title I, § 101(a)], (b), Aug. 7, 1977, [91 Stat. 686], 687; [Pub. L. 101–549, title IX, § 901(a)]–(c), Nov. 15, 1990, [104 Stat. 2700–2703]; [Pub. L. 116–260, div. S, § 102(b)], Dec. 27, 2020, [134 Stat. 2243].)