Energy and Water Development:
FY2015 Appropriations

Mark Holt, Coordinator
Specialist in Energy Policy
July 1, 2014
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R43567


Energy and Water Development: FY2015 Appropriations

Summary
The Energy and Water Development appropriations bill provides funding for civil works projects
of the Army Corps of Engineers (Corps), for the Department of the Interior’s Bureau of
Reclamation (Reclamation), the Department of Energy (DOE), and several independent agencies.
President Obama’s FY2015 budget request for Energy and Water Development was released in
March 2014. The request totaled $33.68 billion, compared to a total of $33.6 billion appropriated
for FY2014. The House Appropriations Committee approved the Energy and Water Development
Appropriations Bill for FY2015 on June 20, 2014 (H.R. 4923, H.Rept. 113-486), with a total
spending level of $34.01 billion, $326.9 million above the request. The Senate Appropriations
Committee’s Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development approved its version of the bill on
June 17, 2014, with a total of $34.2 billion.
FY2014 Energy and Water Development appropriations were included as Division D of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 (P.L. 113-76), which the President signed on January 17,
2014. Its consideration, like all the other appropriations bills for FY2014, had been complicated
by the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA, P.L. 112-25), which established discretionary spending
limits for FY2012-FY2021. The budget impasse was eased with the passage in December 2013 of
H.J.Res. 59 (P.L. 113-67), which contained the Bipartisan Budget Act (BBA), establishing less
stringent spending caps for FY2014 and FY2015 than the BCA.
In addition to funding levels, issues specific to Energy and Water Development programs include:
• the distribution of appropriations for Corps (Title I) and Reclamation (Title II)
projects that have historically received congressional appropriations above
Administration requests;
• alternatives to the proposed national nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain,
NV, which the Administration has abandoned (Title III: Nuclear Waste Disposal);
• proposed FY2015 spending levels for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
(EERE) programs (Title III) that were more than 20% higher in the
Administration’s request than the amount appropriated for FY2014;
• DOE funding for a joint effort with the Departments of the Navy and Agriculture
for commercial-scale biorefineries that produce military-specification fuels;
• cost, schedule, and management concerns for the international ITER project,
which seeks to design and build an experimental fusion reactor (Title III,
Science);
• long-standing controversy over facilities for processing uranium and plutonium
components for nuclear weapons (Title III, Nuclear Weapons Stockpile
Stewardship); and
• the Administration’s proposal to suspend construction of the MOX Fuel
Fabrication Facility (MFFF), which is intended to convert surplus nuclear
weapons plutonium into civilian nuclear reactor fuel.

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Energy and Water Development: FY2015 Appropriations

Contents
Most Recent Developments ............................................................................................................. 1
Status ................................................................................................................................................ 1
Overview .......................................................................................................................................... 1
The Budget Control Act and Energy and Water Development Appropriations for
FY2015............................................................................................................................. 2
The Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative ............................................................... 2
Title I: Army Corps of Engineers ..................................................................................................... 4
Earmarks and the Corps of Engineers ....................................................................................... 4
Key Policy Issues—Corps of Engineers .................................................................................... 6
Project Backlog and New Starts .......................................................................................... 6
Navigation Trust Funds ....................................................................................................... 6
Ecosystem Restoration Projects .......................................................................................... 8
Continuing Authorities Program ......................................................................................... 9
Title II: Department of the Interior .................................................................................................. 9
Bureau of Reclamation and Central Utah Project...................................................................... 9
Central Utah Project ................................................................................................................ 11
Bureau of Reclamation ............................................................................................................ 11
Drought in California ........................................................................................................ 12
San Joaquin River Restoration Fund ................................................................................. 12
WaterSMART Program ..................................................................................................... 13
Title III: Department of Energy ..................................................................................................... 14
Key Policy Issues—Department of Energy ............................................................................. 15
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) .......................................................... 15
Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability (EDER) Program ......................................... 25
Nuclear Energy .................................................................................................................. 25
Fossil Energy Research and Development ........................................................................ 29
Strategic Petroleum Reserve ............................................................................................. 31
Science .............................................................................................................................. 32
Nuclear Waste Disposal ..................................................................................................... 38
Loan Guarantees and Direct Loans ................................................................................... 40
Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Stewardship .......................................................................... 43
Nonproliferation and National Security Programs ............................................................ 51
Cleanup of Former Nuclear Weapons Production Sites and Civilian Nuclear
Energy Research Sites .................................................................................................... 54
Power Marketing Administrations .................................................................................... 61
Title IV: Independent Agencies...................................................................................................... 62
Key Policy Issues—Independent Agencies ............................................................................. 63
Nuclear Regulatory Commission ...................................................................................... 63

Tables
Table 1. Status of Energy and Water Development Appropriations, FY2015.................................. 1
Table 2. Energy and Water Development Appropriations, FY2008 to FY2015 .............................. 3
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Table 3. Energy and Water Development Appropriations Summary ............................................... 3
Table 4. Energy and Water Development Appropriations Title I: Army Corps of Engineers .......... 5
Table 5. Energy and Water Development Appropriations Title II: Central Utah Project
Completion Account ................................................................................................................... 10
Table 6. Energy and Water Development Appropriations Title II: Bureau of Reclamation........... 10
Table 7. Reclamation WaterSMART Program ............................................................................... 13
Table 8. Energy and Water Development Appropriations Title III: Department of Energy ........... 14
Table 9. Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Programs ...................................................... 16
Table 10. Fossil Energy Research and Development ..................................................................... 30
Table 11. Science ........................................................................................................................... 33
Table 12. Funding for Weapons Activities, FY2013-FY2015 ....................................................... 44
Table 13. Weapons Activities: FY2015 Request and FY2016-FY2019 Plan ................................ 45
Table 14. DOE Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Programs ........................................................ 51
Table 15. Appropriations for the Office of Environmental Management ...................................... 59
Table 16. Energy and Water Development Appropriations Title IV: Independent Agencies ......... 63

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 65
Key Policy Staff ............................................................................................................................. 65

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Energy and Water Development: FY2015 Appropriations

Most Recent Developments
President Obama’s FY2015 budget request for Energy and Water Development was released in
March 2014. The request totaled $33.7 billion, compared to a total of $33.6 billion appropriated
for FY2014.
The House Appropriations Committee approved the Energy and Water Development
Appropriations Bill for FY2015 on June 20, 2014 (H.R. 4923, H.Rept. 113-486), with a total
spending level of $34.01 billion, $326.9 million above the request.
The Senate Appropriations Committee’s Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development
approved its version of the FY2015 bill on June 17, 2014, with a total of $34.2 billion. A draft bill
and committee report have not been released, but a subcommittee news release said the bill would
increase funding for the Army Corps of Engineers to $5.13 billion and for the Department of the
Interior’s Bureau of Reclamation to $1.23 billion. Funding for the Department of Energy would
total $28.36 billion, $64 million below the President’s request.1 Full committee markup scheduled
for June 19, 2014, was postponed because of Administration objections to a planned amendment
to block proposed Environmental Protection Agency carbon dioxide regulations, according to
media reports.2
Status
Table 1 indicates the status of the FY2015 funding legislation. Blank cells will be filled as the bill
progresses.
Table 1. Status of Energy and Water Development Appropriations, FY2015
Subcommittee
Markup
Final Approval
House
House
Senate
Senate
Conf.
Public
House Senate Report
Passage
Report
Passage
Report
House Senate Law
6/10/14 6/17/14 6/20/14







Overview
The Energy and Water Development bill includes funding for civil works projects of the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers (Corps), the Department of the Interior’s Central Utah Project (CUP)
and Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation), the Department of Energy (DOE), and a number of

1 Senate Committee on Appropriations, “FY15 Energy & Water Subcommittee Markup Bill Summary,” news release,
June 17, 2014, http://www.appropriations.senate.gov/news/fy15-energy-water-subcommittee-markup-bill-summary.
2 Hallerman, Tamar, “Grim Outlook for Spending Bills after Senate Suspends ‘Minibus’ Debate,” CQ Roll Call, June
19, 2014, http://www.cq.com/doc/news-4499341?0&srcpage=news&srcsec=cqn.
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independent agencies, including the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and the Appalachian
Regional Commission (ARC).
The Budget Control Act and Energy and Water Development Appropriations
for FY2015

FY2015 discretionary appropriations will be considered in the context of the Budget Control Act
of 2011 (BCA, P.L. 112-25), which established discretionary spending limits for FY2012-
FY2021, enforced by an automatic spending reduction process of sequestration. In December
2013 Congress passed H.J.Res. 59 (P.L. 113-67), which contained the Bipartisan Budget Act
(BBA), establishing less stringent spending caps for FY2014 and FY2015 than the BCA. For
details, see CRS Report R43411, The Budget Control Act of 2011: Legislative Changes to the Law
and Their Budgetary Effects
, by Mindy R. Levit.
The Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative
The Obama Administration added to its FY2015 budget a new government‐wide proposal
referred to as the Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative. It is a $56 billion fund that would
be divided equally between defense and nondefense expenditures. The cost of the initiative would
be offset largely with targeted spending cuts and closed tax loopholes. The FY2015 House
Appropriations Committee report does not mention the Administration initiative.
According to the Administration, this initiative, if passed, would provide an additional $1.6
billion for the Department of Energy, including:
• $355 million for “strengthening national resilience to climate change,” including
grants to states and increased weatherization programs, as well as distributed
energy generation;
• $200 million for the proposed “Race to the Top” grants to states to implement
energy savings;
• $484 million for other energy initiatives; and
• $600 million for nuclear weapons programs, including the Readiness in Technical
Base and Facilities and Site Stewardship, and nuclear nonproliferation research
and development (R&D).3
Funding proposed through the Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative is not included in the
FY2015 funding levels in the tables that follow.
Table 2 includes budget totals for energy and water development appropriations enacted for
FY2008 to FY2014 and requested for FY2015.

3 http://www.slideshare.net/energy/fy-2015-budget-rollout-secretary-moniz-presentation-to-press-and-stakeholders.
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Table 2. Energy and Water Development Appropriations,
FY2008 to FY2015
(budget authority in billions of current dollars)
FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 FY2011 FY2012 FY2013 FY2014 FY2015a
30.9 40.5b 33.4 31.7 34.4c 36.0d 33.6 33.7
Source: Compiled by CRS.
Note: Figures represent current dollars, exclude permanent budget authorities, and reflect rescissions.
a. Requested budget authority.
b. Includes $7.5 billion for Advanced Technology Vehicle Manufacturing Loan Program.
c. Includes $1.7 billion in emergency funding for the Corps of Engineers.
d. Includes $5.4 billion in emergency funding for the Corps of Engineers.

Table 3 lists totals for each of the bill’s four titles.
Table 3. Energy and Water Development Appropriations Summary
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
House
Title
Approp.
Approp.
Request
Comm.
Senate
Conf.
Title I: Corps of Engineers
10,068.2a 5,467.5 4,533.0
5,492.5


Title II: CUP & Reclamation
1,014.0
1,113.1
1,043.5
1,013.6


Title III: Department of Energy
25,160.7 27,274.0 28,426.4
27,305.8


Title IV: Independent Agencies
252.2
266.9
250.1
312.4


Scorekeeping Adjustmentsb -525.5
-565.5
-543.0
-114.3


E&W Total
35,962.8a
33,556.0 33,710.0
34,010.0


Source: FY2015 budget request, H.Rept. 113-486,
a. Includes $5,350 billion in supplemental funding for the Corps of Engineers under the Disaster Relief
Appropriations Act, 2013 (P.L. 113-2).
b. “Budget scorekeeping” refers to official determinations of spending amounts for congressional budget
enforcement purposes. These scorekeeping adjustments include offsetting revenues from various sources.
Tables 4 through 16 provide budget details for Title I (Corps of Engineers), Title II (Department
of the Interior), Title III (Department of Energy), and Title IV (independent agencies) for
FY2013-FY2014, and proposed funding for FY2015. Accompanying these tables is a discussion
of the key issues involved in the major programs in the four titles.
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Title I: Army Corps of Engineers4
The Energy and Water Development bill provides funding for the civil program of the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers (Corps), an agency in the Department of Defense with both military and
civilian responsibilities. Under its civil works program, the Corps plans, builds, operates, and
maintains a wide range of water resources facilities. The Corps attracts congressional attention
because its projects can have significant local and regional economic benefits and environmental
effects, in addition to their water resource development purposes. Corps appropriations are
generally authorized in water resources development acts. Most recently, Congress enacted a new
water resources development act in June of 2014, the Water Resources Reform and Development
Act of 2014 (P.L. 113-121). This bill authorized new Corps projects and studies and altered
numerous Corps policies and procedures.5
In most years, the President’s budget request for the Corps is below the agency’s enacted
appropriation. For FY2014, in P.L. 113-76, Congress provided $5.468 billion for the agency’s
annual civil works appropriations. The President’s FY2015 budget request for the Corps was
$4.561 billion, not accounting for proposed rescission of prior year funds. The House
Appropriations Committee recommended $5.492 billion for the Corps.
For more on the evolution of Corps civil works funding in recent years, see CRS In Focus
IF00012, Army Corps Civil Works Funding: A Primer (In Focus), by Charles V. Stern and Nicole
T. Carter. Additionally, in recent years riverine and coastal flooding resulted in the agency
receiving supplemental funds. For more on the recent history of Corps civil works supplemental
appropriations, see CRS Report R42841, Army Corps Supplemental Appropriations: Recent
History, Trends, and Policy Issues
, by Charles V. Stern and Nicole T. Carter.
Earmarks and the Corps of Engineers
Corps funding is part of the debate over congressionally directed spending, or “earmarks.” Unlike
highways and municipal water infrastructure programs, federal funds for the Corps are not
distributed to states or projects based on a formula or delivered via competitive grants. Generally
about 85% of the appropriations for Corps civil works activities are directed to specific projects.
In addition to specific projects identified for funding in the President’s budget, for decades
Congress annually identified during the discretionary appropriations process many additional
Corps projects to receive funding.6 In the 112th Congress, site-specific project line items added by
Congress (i.e., earmarks) became subject to House and Senate earmark moratorium policies. As a
result, Congress generally has not added funding at the project level since FY2010. In lieu of the
traditional project-based increases, Congress has included “additional funding” for select
categories of Corps projects (e.g., “ongoing navigation work”), and provided direction and
limitations on the use of these funds.7 Congress continued this practice in FY2014, providing

4 This section was prepared by Charles V. Stern and Nicole T. Carter.
5 For more information, see CRS Report R43298, H.R. 3080 and S. 601: Comparison of Select Provisions and
Conference Developments
, by Nicole T. Carter et al.
6 While congressional earmarks make up a relatively small percentage of most agency budgets, a significant number of
Corps projects historically received additional funding from Congress for construction or operational expenditures.
7 Congress provided additional funding and guidance for several broad categories of projects in the FY2015 Omnibus
(continued...)
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$777 million in “additional funding” for select categories of Corps projects in the investigations,
construction, O&M, and MR&T accounts. In its recommendation for FY2015, the House
Appropriations Committee again recommended additional funding for ongoing projects to be
designated by the Corps, including $38 million in additional investigations, $542 million in
additional construction, $34 million for additional MR&T projects, and $304 million for
additional O&M projects.
Table 4. Energy and Water Development Appropriations
Title I: Army Corps of Engineers
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program
Approp. Supplem.
Approp.
Request
House Senate
Conf.
Investigations and
Planning 118.5
50.0
125.0
80.0
115.0


Construction
1,586.6 3,461.0 1,656.0 1,125.0
1,704.5


Mississippi River &
Tributaries (MR&T)
238.0
0.0
307.0
245.0
260.0


Operation and
Maintenance (O&M) 2,286.0 821.0 2,861.0 2,600.0
2,905.0


Regulatory 182.9
0.0
200.0
200.0
200.0


General Expenses
175.3
0.0
182.0
178.0
178.0


FUSRAPa
99.9 0.0
103.5
100.0
100.0
Flood Control &
Coastal Emergencies
(FC&CE) 25.6
1,008.0
28.0
28.0
28.0


Office of the Asst.
Secretary of the Army
4.6
10.0
5.0
5.0
2.0




Total Title I
4,718.3
5,350.0b 5,467.5 4,533.0c 5,492.5
Source: FY2013 Work Plan, P.L. 113-76, FY2015 budget request.
a. Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program.
b. $5.35 billion in supplemental funding related to the consequences of Hurricane Sandy was provided under
the Disaster Relief Appropriations Act, 2013 (P.L. 113-2).
c. Includes $28 million rescission.

(...continued)
explanatory statement. The FY2014 statement instructed the Corps to make additional project level allocations in a
“work plan” and report back to Congress. Some of the categories to be funded in the work plan were designated by
Congress as only being available for projects which were not included in the Administration’s budget request. Recent
Work Plan allocations through FY2014 are available at http://www.usace.army.mil/Missions/CivilWorks/Budget.aspx.
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Key Policy Issues—Corps of Engineers
Project Backlog and New Starts
The large number of authorized Corps studies and projects that have not received appropriations
to date, or that are authorized and have received funding but are incomplete, is often referred to as
the “backlog” of authorized projects. Estimates of the construction backlog range from $20
billion to more than $80 billion, depending on which projects are included (e.g., those that meet
Administration budget criteria, those that have received funding in recent appropriations, those
that have never received appropriations). The backlog raises policy questions, such as which
activities to fund among authorized activities.8
Recent budget requests by the Administration have included few new studies and construction
starts, and enacted appropriations for FY2011, FY2012, and FY2013 barred any funding for new
projects (defined as projects or studies that have not received appropriations previously). For
FY2014, P.L. 113-76 allowed up to nine new study starts and four new construction starts. For
FY2015, the Administration requested funding for one new construction start and 10 new
studies.9 In its report, the House Appropriations Committee recommended that no new starts be
funded.
Navigation Trust Funds
In addition to regular appropriations, two congressionally authorized trust funds are administered
by the Corps and require annual appropriations. The Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund and the
Inland Waterway Trust Fund support cost shared investments in federal navigation infrastructure
and have both received attention in recent years. While the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund has a
surplus balance, the Inland Waterway Trust Fund currently faces a shortfall and a curtailment of
activities. Both trust funds are subject to appropriations. Authorization issues associated with
these trust funds are often addressed through Water Resources Development Acts, or similar
legislation.10 Both trust funds are discussed below.
Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund
In 1986, Congress enacted the Harbor Maintenance Tax (HMT) to recover operation and
maintenance (O&M) costs at U.S. coastal and Great Lakes harbors from maritime shippers. O&M
is mostly the dredging of harbor channels to their authorized depths and widths. The tax is levied
on importers and domestic shippers using coastal or Great Lakes ports. The tax revenues are
deposited into the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund (HMTF), from which Congress appropriates
funds for most harbor dredging.

8 For more information, see CRS Report R41243, Army Corps of Engineers: Water Resource Authorizations,
Appropriations, and Activities
, by Nicole T. Carter and Charles V. Stern.
9 The Administration’s FY2014 proposed new starts were Hamilton City, CA (Ecosystem Restoration); Lower
Colorado River Basin, TX (Flood Risk Management); Louisiana Coastal Area, LA (Ecosystem Restoration); Columbia
River, OR and WA (Navigation).
10 For more on congressional consideration of Corps trust fund authorization as part of broad Corps authorization
legislation, see CRS Report R43298, H.R. 3080 and S. 601: Comparison of Select Provisions and Conference
Developments
, by Nicole T. Carter et al.
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In 1990, Congress increased the HMT rate from 4 cents per $100 of cargo value to 12.5 cents per
$100 of cargo value in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (P.L. 101-508). In recent years,
HMTF annual expenditures have remained relatively flat while HMT collections have increased
due to rising import volume.11 Consequently, a large surplus in the HMTF has developed. The
maritime industry seeks to enact a “spending guarantee” to spend down the surplus in the HMT.
Some harbor channels are not being maintained at their authorized depth and width, which may in
some cases require ships with the deepest drafts to “light load” or wait for high tide. Harbors
primarily used by fishing vessels or recreational craft have also complained of insufficient
maintenance dredging. Since spending from the HMTF requires an appropriation from Congress,
spending more from the HMTF could reduce available funding for other Energy and Water
Development activities under congressional budget caps.
The Administration’s FY2015 budget requested $915 million from the HMTF, leaving an
estimated-end-of-year balance of more than $9.5 billion. The House Committee report states that
its recommendation for these activities is more than $1.1 billion, or $185 million more than the
Administration’s request. For more information on harbor maintenance funding, see CRS Report
R41042, Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund Expenditures, by John Frittelli.
Inland Waterways Trust Fund
Since the 1980s, expenditures for construction and major rehabilitation projects on inland
waterways have been cost-shared on a 50/50 basis between the federal government and users
through the Inland Waterways Trust Fund (IWTF).12 IWTF monies derive from a fuel tax on
commercial vessels on designated waterways, plus investment interest on the balance.13 Since
FY2007, there has been a looming shortfall in the IWTF. In recent years Congress has taken
measures to ensure temporary solvency of the IWTF, either by appropriating federal funds
beyond the aforementioned 50% federal requirement (FY2009 and FY2010), by limiting IWTF
expenditures to the amount available under current year fuel tax revenues (FY2011-FY2013), or
by altering the IWTF cost-share requirements for individual projects (FY2014). The IWTF is
expected to have a balance of approximately $42 million at the end of FY2014.
In the past multiple Administrations have proposed fees (e.g., lock user fees, congestion fees) that
would have increased IWTF revenues. These fees have been opposed by users and rejected by
Congress. In 2011, users endorsed a plan of their own that would increase the current fuel tax by
$0.06-$0.08 per gallon and alter the cost-share arrangement for some IWTF projects to increase
the portion paid for by the federal government. In the current Congress, H.R. 1149 and S. 407
would authorize this proposal and raise the fuel tax by $0.06 and $0.09, respectively.
Recent estimates by the Corps indicate that one project, Olmsted Locks and Dam on the Ohio
River, is expected to use up the majority of IWTF revenues without significant changes to the
cost-sharing requirements for that project.14 At the same time, other navigation construction and

11 The exception was 2009, when collections declined along with import volume.
12 For more information on inland waterways, see CRS Report R41430, Inland Waterways: Recent Proposals and
Issues for Congress
, by Charles V. Stern.
13 Pursuant to the Water Resources Development Act of 1986 (P.L. 99-662), the fuel tax has been fixed at $0.20 per
gallon since 1992.
14 Currently the Olmsted Project accounts for almost all IWTF appropriations. The project was originally authorized at
a cost of $775 million (plus inflationary increases) but recently required an increase to its authorization ceiling in
(continued...)
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major rehabilitation work is expected to stall. Without a new source of revenue or some other
change directed by Congress, the overall number of inland waterway construction projects is
expected to remain limited. Changes to IWTF policies have historically been under the
jurisdiction of the authorizing committees, but in recent years appropriators have expressed
frustration with the lack of action on this issue.
For FY2015, the Administration once again requested appropriations for IWTF projects that are
less than expected fuel tax revenues.15 The FY2015 Administration budget requested
approximately $85 million in inland waterway spending from the IWTF, with an equal amount to
be drawn from the General Fund of the Treasury. The Administration also assumed an additional
$80 million in new revenues from an unspecified user fee, presumably separate from the current
fuel tax. The majority of FY2015 requested IWTF funds ($80 million of the $85 million
requested from the IWTF) was for the Olmsted Project. This approach of limited funding devoted
mostly to the Olmsted Project was similar to the Administration’s requests for FY2011-FY2014.
Since the FY2015 budget request was released, the Water Resources Reform and Development
Act (WRRDA, P.L. 113-121) was enacted. The bill included some changes for inland waterways,
including a reduction in the cost share required for the Olmsted Project from 50% to 15%, and an
increase in the ceiling on rehabilitation projects which can be funded from the General Fund,
from $8 million to $20 million. With these changes enacted, the House Appropriations Committee
recommended more funding from the IWTF for projects other than Olmsted. The committee
recommended $169 million for construction work on the Olmsted Project (15% from the IWTF)
and $112 million for work on other projects (50% cost-shared with the IWTF), for a total of $281
million on all inland waterways construction. Funding for operations and maintenance on inland
waterways was provided for separately under the O&M account. For more information on inland
waterways, see CRS Report R41430, Inland Waterways: Recent Proposals and Issues for
Congress
, by Charles V. Stern.
Ecosystem Restoration Projects
The Corps portion of the Energy and Water bill typically includes funding for ecosystem
restoration projects, such as restoration of the Everglades in South Florida.16 Previously, some in
Congress had criticized the fact that while the Corps had requested reductions for some
“traditional” water project activities in recent budgets, funding requests for Corps environmental
activities, which include ecosystem restoration projects, had largely remained steady. For
FY2014, the Administration requested $449 million (approximately 9% of the total FY2014
Corps request, spread among several accounts) for ecosystem restoration projects. For FY2015,
however, the Administration requested $336 million, representing 7% of the total request. No

(...continued)
accordance with Section 902(b) of the Water Resources Development Act of 1986 (33 U.S.C. §2280). The FY2014
Continuing Appropriations Act, P.L. 113-46, increased the project’s authorization from $775 million to $2.92 billion.
15 Assuming annual fuel tax revenues of approximately $95 million, spending on inland waterways construction for
FY2015 would be approximately $190 million for each year (or approximately $60 million less than the average
funding provided from FY1992-FY2010).
16 Along with the Department of the Interior, the Corps typically receives funding for the Comprehensive Everglades
Restoration Program, or CERP. For more information regarding Everglades restoration funding, see CRS Report
R42007, Everglades Restoration: Federal Funding and Implementation Progress, by Charles V. Stern.
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breakdown for these projects was available in the House Appropriations Committee
recommendation.
Continuing Authorities Program
Projects funded under the Corps’ Continuing Authorities Program (CAPs) are typically smaller
projects that can be carried out without obtaining a project-specific study or construction
authorization or project-specific appropriations.17 CAPs are referred to by the section number in
the bill where the CAP was first authorized. The Administration’s FY2015 budget requested a
total of $10 million for four CAPs, or a significant decrease from the total of $53 million
provided for eight CAPs in FY2014 in the explanatory statement accompanying P.L. 113-76. The
House Appropriations Committee recommended $56.8 million for eight CAP sections, or $46.8
million more than the Administration’s request.
Title II: Department of the Interior18
Bureau of Reclamation and Central Utah Project
Title II of the Energy and Water Development bill includes funding for two sets of activities
within the Department of the Interior: it funds the Bureau of Reclamation and the Central Utah
Project Completion Act (CUPCA). For FY2014, P.L. 113-76 provided $1.104 billion for Title II.
For the purposes of Energy & Water appropriations, the FY2015 request for the Bureau of
Reclamation and CUPCA was $1.043 billion. In its budget request, the Administration typically
includes an “offset” for the Central Valley Project (CVP) Restoration Fund. Counting this offset
of $56.9 million in its FY2015 request, “net” discretionary authority requested by the
Administration for these accounts was $986 million.19 As in previous years, additional funding is
expected to be available for FY2015 via “permanent and other” funds, but these funds are not
included in net discretionary totals and therefore not reflected below.

17 Information on each CAP is provided in CRS Report R41243, Army Corps of Engineers: Water Resource
Authorizations, Appropriations, and Activities
, by Nicole T. Carter and Charles V. Stern.
18 This section was prepared by Charles V. Stern and Nicole T. Carter.
19 Counting of this offset is consistent with prior year budgets.
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Table 5. Energy and Water Development Appropriations
Title II: Central Utah Project Completion Account
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program
Approp. Approp.
Requesta House Senate
Conf.
Central Utah Water
19.8 7.7 [6.3] 7.5


Conservancy District
Mitigation and Conservation
1.2 1.0 [1.0] 1.0


Commission Activities
Expenses of the Secretary of
— — — 1.3

the Interior
Total, Central Utah
21.0 8.7 [7.3] 9.9


Project
Source: FY2015 budget request.
Notes: Amounts shown in brackets are for comparison purposes only.
a. The FY2015 budget proposed to transfer the Central Utah Project Completion Account to the Bureau of
Reclamation. See Table 6 below for Administration recommendations for this account.
Table 6. Energy and Water Development Appropriations
Title II: Bureau of Reclamation
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program
Approp. Approp.a
Requesta House Senate Conf.
Water and Related
Resources
848.2 954.1 760.7 856.4


Policy and Administration
56.9
60.0
59.5
53.8


CVP Restoration Fund
(CVPRF)
50.4 53.3 57.0 57.0

Calif. Bay-Delta (CALFED)
37.6
37.0
37.0
37.0


San Joaquin Restoration
Fundb
[15.53] [26.0] 32.0
-


Indian Water Rights
Settlementb
[47.2] [78.7] 90.0
-


Central Utah Project
Completiona
[21.0] [8.7] 7.3 [9.9]


Gross Current
Reclamation Authority

993.0 1,104.4 1,043.5 1,004.2


Total, Title II Current
Authority (CUP and

1,014.0 1,113.1 1,043.5 1,003.7


Reclamation)
Source: FY2015 budget request.
Notes: Totals may not add due to rounding. Amounts shown in brackets are for comparison purposes only.
a. As in recent previous requests, the Administration proposed to transfer the Central Utah Project
Completion Account to the Bureau of Reclamation and establish it as a Reclamation account.
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b. As in previous requests, the Administration’s request includes funding for these items, which have in the
past been funded within the Water and Related Resources Account, as new accounts.
Central Utah Project
The Administration requested $7.3 million for CUPCA in FY2015, or $1.4 million less than the
FY2014 enacted amount. In FY2015 the Administration once again proposed to make
Reclamation responsible for oversight and implementation of CUPCA and transition this account
to Reclamation’s purview. (These responsibilities are currently in a separate office in DOI.)
Similar to previous years’ requests, the House Appropriations Committee recommended
maintaining CUPCA as a separate account and recommended $9.9 million for the project.
Bureau of Reclamation
Most of the large dams and water diversion structures in the West were built by, or with the
assistance of, the Bureau of Reclamation. Whereas the Army Corps of Engineers built hundreds
of flood control and navigation projects, Reclamation’s mission was to develop water supplies,
primarily for irrigation to reclaim arid lands in the West. Today, Reclamation manages hundreds
of dams and diversion projects, including more than 300 storage reservoirs in 17 western states.
These projects provide water to approximately 10 million acres of farmland and a population of
31 million. Reclamation is the largest wholesale supplier of water in the 17 western states and the
second-largest hydroelectric power producer in the nation. Reclamation facilities also provide
substantial flood control, recreation, and fish and wildlife benefits. Operations of Reclamation
facilities are often controversial, particularly for their effect on fish and wildlife species and
conflicts among competing water users.
As with the Corps of Engineers, the Reclamation budget is made up largely of individual project
funding lines and relatively few “programs.” Also similar to the Corps, previously these
Reclamation projects have often been subject to earmark disclosure rules. The current
moratorium on earmarks restricts congressional steering of money directly toward specific
Reclamation projects, as it had done in the past.
Reclamation’s single largest account, Water and Related Resources, encompasses the agency’s
traditional programs and projects, including construction, operations and maintenance, dam
safety, and ecosystem restoration, among others. The Administration requested $760.7 million for
the Water and Related Resources account for FY2015. The House Appropriations Committee
recommended $856.3 million for Water and Related Resources. However, accounting for the
transfer of approximately $112 million by the Administration from the Water and Related
Resources account to newly created accounts for Indian water rights settlements and San Joaquin
restoration, the FY2015 request for Water and Related Resources was approximately $15 million
more than the FY2015 House Appropriations Committee recommendation.20

20 The Administration has previously requested that two accounts be created independently of the Water and Related
Resources account: Indian Water Rights Settlements and San Joaquin River Restoration Settlement. In FY2015, the
House provided the funding for Indian Water Rights Settlements within Water and Related Resources, but provided no
funding in any account for San Joaquin River Restoration Settlement implementation. See below section, “San Joaquin
River Restoration Fund.”
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Drought in California
Drought conditions in California have received attention in recent appropriations bills and could
receive further attention in FY2015. The enacted appropriations bill for FY2014 (P.L. 113-76)
included multiple provisions related to Reclamation drought response and related authorities. For
example, it extended through FY2017 authority for Reclamation to provide loans under the
Reclamation States Emergency Drought Relief Act (43 U.S.C. 2214(c)) for projects that would
mitigate losses associated with drought conditions. It also expanded the Secretary of the Interior’s
authority to participate in nonfederal groundwater banking in California and waived certain
reporting provisions for transfer of irrigation water among selected federal water contractors,
while also directing Reclamation and the Fish and Wildlife Service to expedite “programmatic
environmental compliance” to facilitate CVP water transfers. P.L. 113-76 also extended the
authorization of the Calfed Bay-Delta Authorization Act (P.L. 108-351) through 2015 (continuing
certain provisions of the law that were set to expire at the end of FY2014).
FY2015 appropriations could include further efforts to address drought and could include
provisions similar to those enacted for FY2014 or in other legislation that has been introduced in
the 113th Congress. For example, S. 2198 proposes to expand Reclamation’s authority under the
Reclamation States Emergency Drought Relief Act (i.e., authorities other than the loan authority
that was extended in FY2014 enacted appropriations) and increase the total authorization of
appropriations under that act from $90 million to $190 million.
Reclamation’s FY2015 request proposed funding for individual projects and programs that may
also receive added attention due to the drought. For instance, Reclamation proposed $1.5 million
in new funding within its WaterSMART program for a Drought Response Program (see
“WaterSMART Program,” below) that could be of interest due to the drought’s ongoing effects.
Some legislation, such as S. 2198, has also proposed increasing the scope and potential recipients
of Reclamation funds, including assistance provided under the WaterSMART Program, to
incorporate drought-related concerns.21
San Joaquin River Restoration Fund
The San Joaquin River Restoration Fund was authorized by the enactment of Title X of the
Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009 (P.L. 111-11), the San Joaquin River Restoration
Settlement Act. The Fund is to be used to implement fisheries restoration and water management
provisions of a stipulated settlement agreement for the Natural Resources Defense Council et al.
v. Rodgers
lawsuit.22 The Fund is supported through the combination of a reallocation of Central
Valley Project Restoration Fund receipts from the Friant Division water users and accelerated
payment of Friant water users’ capital repayment obligations, as well as other federal and non-
federal sources. The Settlement Act provided $88 million from the Restoration Fund to be
available without further appropriation. Reclamation reports that in FY2015, the balance of the

21 For more information on these proposals, see CRS Report R43469, Analysis of S. 2198: Emergency Drought Relief
Act of 2014
, by Betsy A. Cody and Pervaze A. Sheikh.
22 Construction of Friant Dam in the 1940s and subsequent diversion of San Joaquin River water to off-stream
agricultural uses blocked salmon migration and dewatered stretches of the San Joaquin, resulting in elimination of
spring-run Chinook into the upper reaches of the river. One goal of the settlement is to bring back the salmon run;
another is to reduce or avoid adverse water supply impacts to Friant Division long-term contractors. For more
information on the settlement agreement and the San Joaquin River Restoration Fund, see CRS Report R40125, Title X
of H.R. 146: San Joaquin River Restoration
, by Betsy A. Cody and Pervaze A. Sheikh.
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aforementioned mandatory appropriations is expected to be spent, and without further
congressional action, additional receipts will not be available until October 2019.
In lieu of additional mandatory funding for restoration until 2019, Reclamation is requesting
discretionary funding of $32 million for San Joaquin restoration activities as a separate account in
FY2015. Previously, following a similar proposal by the Administration in its FY2014 budget, the
explanatory statement accompanying P.L. 113-76 agreed to the Administration’s FY2014 request
of $26 million in discretionary funds for San Joaquin restoration, but provided this funding within
the Central Valley Project appropriation for the Friant Division, in the Water and Related
Resources Account. In its recommendation for FY2015, the House Appropriations Committee
provided no funding for implementation of the San Joaquin River Restoration Settlement.
WaterSMART Program
In recent years Reclamation has combined funding for “bureau-wide” programs promoting water
conservation into a single program—the WaterSMART (Sustain and Manage America’s
Resources for Tomorrow) Program. The program is part of the Department of the Interior’s focus
on water conservation, re-use, and planning. The FY2015 WaterSMART numbers are shown
below in Table 7. The FY2015 request for all WaterSMART programs was $52 million. The
House Appropriations Committee recommended approximately $51 million for these programs.
The WaterSMART Program request included two new components in FY2015: Drought
Response and Resilient Infrastructure. Both programs would attempt to respond to the effects of
climate change. The Resilient Infrastructure Program would attempt to identify and expand
opportunities and use information to adapt Reclamation facility operations to account for climate
change and reduce the potential effects of wildfire on Reclamation facilities. The Drought
Response Program would fund new “comprehensive” planning actions, as well as implementation
actions under existing authorities to address water shortages.
Table 7. Reclamation WaterSMART Program
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program Name
Approp.
Approp.
Request House Senate Conf.
WaterSMART
Grants
22.6 19.0 19.0 18.6


Basin
Studies
6.0 4.7 3.9 3.8


Title XVI Projects
20.0
21.5
21.5
21.0


Drought Response


1.5
1.5


Resilient Infrastructure


1.5
1.5


Cooperative Watershed
0.25 0.25 0.25 0.3
Management Program


Water Conservation
6.2 3.4 4.5 4.4
Field Services


Total 52.0 48.9 52.1 51.0


Source: FY2013 Bureau of Reclamation Operating Plan, Bureau of Reclamation FY2015 Congressional
Justifications, H.Rept. 113-135, S.Rept. 113-47, and explanatory statement accompanying P.L. 113-76.
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Energy and Water Development: FY2015 Appropriations


Title III: Department of Energy
The Energy and Water Development bill has funded all DOE’s programs since FY2005. Major
DOE activities funded by the Energy and Water bill include research and development on
renewable energy and energy efficiency, nuclear power, fossil energy R&D, the Strategic
Petroleum Reserve, energy statistics, general science, environmental cleanup, and nuclear
weapons programs.
The FY2013 continuing resolution, P.L. 113-6, funded DOE programs at $25.1 billion, including
the sequestration requirements of the Budget Control Act. The FY2014 bill, P.L. 113-76,
appropriated $27.3 billion for DOE. The Administration’s request for FY2015 was $28.4 billion.
The House Appropriations Committee approved $27.3 billion.
Table 8. Energy and Water Development Appropriations
Title III: Department of Energy
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program
Approp.
Approp.
Request
House
Senate
Conf.
ENERGY PROGRAMS






Energy Efficiency and Renewable
1,691.8 1,901.7 2,316.7 1,789.0


Energy
Electricity Delivery and Energy
129.2 147.3 180.0 160.0


Reliability
Nuclear Energy
708.4
889.2
863.4
899.0


Fossil Energy R&D
498.7
562.1
475.5
593.0


Naval Petrol. and Oil Shale Reserves
14.1
20.0
20.0
20.0


Elk Hills School Lands Fund
0.0
0.0
15.6
15.6


Strategic Petroleum Reserve
182.6
189.4
205.0
205.0


Northeast Home Heating Oil
3.6 8.0 1.6 7.6
Reserve
Energy Information Administration
99.5
117.0
122.5
120


Non-Defense Environmental
223.5 231.8 226.2 241.2


Cleanup
Uranium D&D Fund
448.2
598.8
531.0
586.0


Science
4,681.2
5,071.0
5,111.2
5,071.0


Energy Transformation Acceleration
250.6 280.0 325.0 280.0


Fund (ARPA-E)
Nuclear Waste Disposal
0.0
0.0
0.0
150.0


Departmental Admin. (net)
119.2
126.4
129.1
136.0


Office of Inspector General
39.8
42.1
39.9
42.1


Office of Indian Energy
0.0
0.0
16.0
0.0


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FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program
Approp.
Approp.
Request House
Senate
Conf.
Adv. Tech. Vehicles Manuf. Loan
5.7
6.0
4.0
4.0


Sec. 1705 Loan Guarantee
0.0
20.0
17.0
17.0


Rescission (Clean Coal Technology)
0.0
0.0
-6.6
-6.6


TOTAL, ENERGY PROGRAMS
9,096.2
10,210.8
10,592.9
10,323.8


DEFENSE ACTIVITIES






National Nuclear Security






Administration (NNSA)
Weapons Activities
6,966.9
7,781.0
8,314.9
8,204.2


Nuclear Nonproliferation
2,237.4
1,954.0
1,555.2
1,555.2


Naval Reactors
994.1
1,095.0
1,377.1
1,215.3


Office of Administrator
377.5
377.0
410.8
386.9


Total, NNSA
10,575.8
11,207.0
11,658.0
11,361.6


Defense Environmental Cleanup
4,627.1
5,000.0
5,327.5
4,801.3


Other Defense Activities
760.0
755.0
753.0
754.0


Defense Nuclear Waste Disposal
-0.7
0.0
0.0
0.0


TOTAL, DEFENSE
15,962.1 16,962.0 17,738.5 16,916.9


ACTIVITIES
POWER MARKETING






ADMINISTRATION (PMAs)
Southeastern 0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0


Southwestern 11.2
11.9
11.4
11.4


Western 90.9
95.9
93.4
93.4


Falcon & Amistad O&M
0.2
0.4
0.2
.2


TOTAL, PMAs
102.0
108.2
105.0
105.0


Total, Title III
25,160.7 27,281.0 28,436.4 27,305.8


Source: FY2015 budget request.
Key Policy Issues—Department of Energy
DOE administers a wide variety of programs with different functions and missions. In the
following pages, some of the most important programs are described and major issues are
identified, in approximately the order in which they appear in Table 8.
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE)23
President Obama has declared energy efficiency and renewable energy to be a high priority,
stressing their importance to jobs, economic growth, and U.S. manufacturing competitiveness.

23 This section was prepared by Fred Sissine.
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For example, the 2013 Economic Report of the President notes that “President Obama has set a
goal of once again doubling generation from wind, solar, and geothermal sources by 2020.” But
Congress so far has not supported his efforts to boost spending for these programs. His proposed
FY2011 budget for EERE of $2.4 billion was reduced to $1.8 billion, the FY2012 request for $3.2
billion was cut to $1.8 billion, the FY2013 request for $2.3 billion was cut to $1.7 billion, and the
FY2014 request for $2.8 billion was cut to $1.9 billion.
For FY2015, DOE requests $2.32 billion for the EERE programs. Compared with the FY2014
appropriation, the FY2015 request would increase EERE funding by about $416 million, or
nearly 22%.
DOE requests an additional $180 million for the Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy
Reliability (OE) programs (described in the next section). Table 9 gives the programmatic
breakdown for EERE and OE.
Table 9. Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Programs
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program
Approp.
Approp.
Request House Senate Conf.
Hydrogen/Fuel Cel Technologies
95.8
93.0
93.0
100.0


Biomass and Biorefinery Systems
185.2
232.4
253.2
180.0


Solar
Energy
269.1 257.2 282.3 178.0


Wind
Energy
86.1 88.2 115.0 107.0


Geothermal
Technology
35.0 45.8 61.5 46.0


Water
Power
(Hydro/Ocean)

54.7 58.6 62.5 38.5


Subtotal, Renewable and
Hydrogen

725.9 775.2 867.5 649.5


Vehicle
Technologies
303.2 289.9 359.0 277.5


Building
Technologies
204.6 178.0 211.7 165.0


Advanced
Manufacturing
114.3 180.6 305.1 206.0


Federal
Energy
Management
28.3 28.3 36.2 20.0


Subtotal, Efficiency R&D
650.3 676.7 912.0 668.5


Facilities
and
Infrastructure
24.9 46.0 56.0 56.0


Program
Direction
160.5 162.0 160.0 150.0


Strategic
Programs
23.6 23.6 21.8 12.0


R&D Subtotal
1,585.1 1,683.5 2,017.3 1,536.0


Tribal Energy Program
9.4
7.0
0.0a 0.0


Clean Energy Economic
0.0 0.0 14.0 0.0


Development Projects
Subtotal, Demonstration
9.4 7.0 14.0 0.0


and Deployment
Weatherization
Grants
131.7 174.0 227.6 203.0


State
Energy
Grants
47.1 50.0 63.1 50.0


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FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program
Approp.
Approp.
Request House Senate Conf.
Use of Prior Year Balances
-81.6
-2.4
-5.2
0.0


Rescission —


0.0


Total EERE Appropriation
1,691.8 1,901.7 2,316.7 1,789.0


Electricity Delivery and
129.2 147.2 180.0 160.0


Energy Reliability (OE)
Source: FY2015 budget request.
a. DOE requests that this funding line be moved from EERE to the Office of Tribal Energy.
EERE-wide Cross-Cutting Initiatives
The FY2015 request continues an emphasis on five broad initiatives that cut across multiple
EERE programs:
(1) Grid Integration Initiative. Under this initiative, launched in 2012, EERE’s vehicles, solar, and
buildings programs would work in coordination with DOE’s Grid Tech Team24 to address electric
grid integration barriers and opportunities associated with variable, distributed renewable energy
generators, electric vehicle charging, and building efficiency and controls. Thus, EERE would
coordinate with DOE’s Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability (EDER).
(2) EV Everywhere Grand Challenge. This DOE-wide initiative aims to make technology
breakthroughs that would enable the United States, by 2022, to become the first country in the
world to invent and produce plug-in electric vehicles that are as affordable and convenient as
gasoline-powered vehicles.
(3) SunShot Grand Challenge. This DOE-wide initiative seeks to achieve directly cost-
competitive solar power by 2020.
(4) Clean Energy Manufacturing Initiative. This relatively new EERE initiative aims to
dramatically improve U.S. competitiveness in the manufacture of clean energy products (such as
solar modules, LED lights, batteries, and wind blades) and to increase energy productivity as a
means to strengthen U.S. competitiveness across multiple manufacturing industries.
(5) Wide Bandgap Semiconductors for Clean Energy Initiative. Wide bandgap semiconductor
technology was initially developed for military and solid-state lighting uses. DOE contends it is a
key next-generation platform for semiconductor devices with the potential for developing high-
power-conversion electronics that are much more compact, more energy efficient, and able to
operate at much higher temperatures and voltages than existing commercial technology. DOE
contends that this “revolutionary” technology could be a platform for the next generation of
electric vehicle drivetrains, solar inverters, high-efficiency motors, solid-state transformers for the
grid, and many other critical, clean energy applications.

24 DOE created the Grid Tech Team to develop a stronger and more extensive network of effective public-private
partnerships needed to ease the transition to a more modern grid. DOE, EDER, DOE Grid Tech Team,
http://energy.gov/oe/services/doe-grid-tech-team.
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House Appropriations Committee Recommendation
Expressing concern about controlling budget expenses—and citing a need to focus EERE
programs on efforts to curb gasoline and electricity prices—the committee recommends cutting
overall EERE funding relative to the FY2014 level by $112.7 million ($527.7 million below the
request). The committee report stresses a priority on “research that only the government is likely
to do” and “has commercialization possibilities only in the distant future.” The committee
identified several “major oversight initiatives,” including seven for EERE and four under OE.
The committee cites a concern about the “proliferation of centers,” including Energy Innovation
Hubs and Clean Energy Manufacturing Institutes (CEMIs). The committee report notes that many
centers have been funded repeatedly and “lack a concrete goal after which they would be
terminated.” The committee reiterates FY2014 direction to DOE to provide a comprehensive list
of all centers and details on program and technical goals. Further, the report calls for ongoing
review and frequent updates—as well as greater transparency, evaluation, and prioritization.
As an overarching focus, the committee encourages DOE to assess the feasibility of
ultraconductive copper as a crosscutting technology area, including funding for prototype
development and manufacturing scale-up. Ultraconductive copper is a composite material that
includes less than 1% of carbon nanotubes suspended in more than 99% of copper. It has an
electrical conductivity, at room temperature, up to double that of pure copper. The European
Commission, the main administrative agency of the European Union (EU), launched an
“ultrawire” R&D initiative late in 2013.25
The committee report contains several management and program directives for FY2015. One
directive specifies that no funding is to be provided for the Grid Integration Initiative under
Vehicles, Solar, and Buildings programs.26 The committee also adopted an amendment suggesting
that regulations which specify how to calculate the social cost of carbon “should not” be made
final until after incorporating public comment and findings from a Government Accountability
Office (GAO) report. Other selected directives are noted below, in the context of specific program
areas.
Also, the committee seeks a rescission of $18.1 million from the FY2014 appropriation for
EERE.27
Hydrogen/Fuel Cell Program
This program aims to reduce petroleum use, greenhouse gas emissions, and criteria air pollutants,
while contributing to a more diverse and efficient energy infrastructure. The program supports
applied research, development, and demonstration (RD&D) of hydrogen and fuel cell
technologies, as well as efforts to overcome economic and institutional barriers to commercial
deployment. The fuel cell program targets a cost below $40 per kilowatt (kw) and a durability of
5,000 hours (equivalent to 150,000 miles) by 2020. For hydrogen produced from renewable
resources, the target is to bring the cost (dispensed and untaxed) below $4.00 per gasoline gallon-

25 Ultra Conductive Copper-Carbon Nanotube Wire, http://ultrawire.eu/.
26 See report pages 96, 97, and 101.
27 See report page 209.
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equivalent (gge) by 2020. DOE requests $93 million—virtually the same as the FY2014
appropriation. In addition to R&D, the funding would address barriers to commercialization by
supporting early market fuel cell demonstrations and by developing equipment codes and
standards. The House Committee bill proposes a $7 million (8%) cut below the FY2014 level.
Bioenergy (Biomass and Biorefinery) Program
This program aims to foster a domestic bioenergy industry that produces renewable biofuels,
bioproducts, and biopower. The goals are to curb oil dependence, reduce greenhouse gas
emissions, and stimulate economic and job development—especially in the farms and forests of
rural areas. While biofuels and industrial bioproducts (plastics, solvents, alcohols) may soon be
price-competitive, swings in oil prices pose an ongoing challenge to achieving cost-
competitiveness. The program strategy addresses a feedstock collection barrier by focusing on
converting raw biomass to solid pellets or to “green crude” bio-oil that is easy to transport at large
scale.
Recent goals expand the program scope to include the development of biofuels that would
contribute to production targets of the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS). These “drop-in” liquid
fuels are largely compatible with existing infrastructure that deliver, blend, and dispense fuels.
Examples include biomass-based hydrocarbon fuels (renewable gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel),
hydrocarbons from algae, and biobutanol. The program aims to help the non-food “drop-in”
biofuels reach a wholesale finished-fuel cost under $3 per gge by 2017 and $3/gge for algal
biomass productivity by 2020.
DOE requests $253 million in FY2015 for Bioenergy (Biomass and Biorefinery) programs, a $21
million increase over the FY2014 appropriation. The largest requested subprogram increase
would support a joint effort with the Departments of the Navy and Agriculture for commercial-
scale biorefineries that produce military-specification fuels. The increase would be partially offset
by a $16 million cut for feedstocks, due to greater reliance on feedstock activities at the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. The House Committee bill proposes a $52 million cut (23%) below
FY2014.
Also, the House Committee report specifies that no funding is provided for the joint “drop-in
biofuels” initiative with the Navy and the Department of Agriculture to develop commercial
biodiesel and jet biofuels production capacity for defense purposes.28
Solar Energy
For the Solar Program, DOE requests $282 million, an increase of $25 million over the FY2014
appropriation. The funding would support the SunShot Initiative goal to achieve a cost of solar
power of 6 cents/kwh to make solar power cost-competitive without subsidies by 2020. This
includes solar photovoltaic R&D; activities that enable a 50% reduction in non-hardware “soft
costs”; and development and demonstration of innovative solar energy manufacturing
technologies to increase U.S. competitiveness, in support of DOE’s Clean Energy Manufacturing
Initiative. FY2015 funding would also support development of advanced thermal storage and

28 See report page 96.
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supercritical carbon dioxide power cycles so that concentrated solar power could achieve
baseload grid parity. The House Committee bill proposes a $79 million (31%) cut below FY2014.
Wind Energy
There are three key goals for the Wind Program. First, for land-based windfarms, there is a goal
for the energy cost of utility-scale turbines to reach 5.7 cents/kilowatt-hour (kwh) by 2020 and
4.2 cents/kwh by 2030. Second, for offshore settings, the goal is to cut energy cost from 21
cents/kwh in 2010 to 17 cents/kwh (unsubsidized) by 2020. Third, there is an overall goal to
increase installed windfarm capacity from 60 billion watts (gigawatts, gw) in 2012 to 125 gw by
2020 and 300 gw by 2030.
DOE requests a $27 million increase over the FY2014 appropriation, to $115 million. The main
share of that increase—$22 million for Technology Validation and Market Transformation—is
focused on support for three advanced offshore wind demonstration projects planned for
operation by 2017. The remaining increase would support an Atmosphere to Electrons initiative,
to optimize wind farms with improved performance and lower the cost of wind energy. FY2015
funding would also enable pursuit of new designs, materials, and manufacturing processes for
longer blades to capture greater wind resource and to address transportation barriers, in support of
DOE’s Clean Energy Manufacturing Initiative and of achieving full market cost competition for
wind energy. The House Committee bill proposes a $19 million (21%) cut below FY2014.
Geothermal Technologies
This program aims to lower the risk of resource exploration and cut power production costs to 6
cents/kwh for hydrothermal power by 2020 and for newly developed technologies by 2030. DOE
requests $62 million, an increase of $16 million over the FY2014 appropriation. The funding
would continue site characterization of the Frontier Observatory for Research in Geothermal
Energy (FORGE). FORGE is a dedicated site that enables testing of novel technologies and
techniques, with a central focus on optimization and validation of enhanced geothermal systems.
FY2015 funding would also accelerate “play fairway” analyses that provide assessments of
exploration risk and the probability of finding new resources on a regional scale, resulting in
maps and studies that reduce the industry’s drilling and development risks. The House Committee
bill proposes nearly the same amount as FY2014, but $15 million less than the request.
Water Power
Water power technologies employ marine and hydrokinetic (wave, tidal, current, and ocean
thermal) resources—and conventional hydropower resources—to generate electricity.
Hydropower technology is well established, but the fledgling industry for marine and
hydrokinetic (MHK) power facilities is still looking to develop a clear technology theme. For the
Water Power Program, DOE requests $63 million, an increase of $4 million over the FY2014
appropriation. The funding would support the launch of HydroNEXT, a new EERE initiative that
focuses on conducting R&D that would allow for increased hydropower opportunities at non-
powered dams, water conveyance systems, and new stream reach development. It would also
support development of new low cost modular hydropower systems that minimize civil works
and environmental impacts. Further, FY2015 funding would support marine and hydrokinetic
activities to develop and validate open-source design tools and support testing of wave and tidal
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energy systems, to enable industry to develop robust next generation systems. The House
Committee bill proposes a $20 million (34%) cut below FY2014.
Vehicle Technologies
This program is driven by the 10-year EV-Everywhere Challenge (launched in 2012), which aims
to achieve parity for plug-in electric vehicle (EV) affordability and convenience by 2022. The EV
Challenge focuses on advanced battery technology, power electronics, and advanced charging
technology—with the goal of assuring U.S. leadership in the global market for next generation
electric vehicle technology. A key supporting technology goal is to cut 2008 battery production
cost 70% by 2015 (and 88% by 2022). Further, the program seeks to achieve (1) a cut of 1.8
million barrels per day (16%) in the national oil use trend by 2020, (2) a fuel economy of 62
miles per gallon (mpg) for cars by 2025, and (3) a 50% increase in heavy duty truck fuel
economy by 2015. Also, the program participates in the Grid Integration Initiative.
To help achieve those goals and support the EV Everywhere initiative, DOE requests $359
million, an increase of $69 million—the second-largest program increase for FY2015. There are
four main parts to the $69 million increase. First, funding for batteries and electric drives would
increase by $27 million, focused on reducing weight and costs, developing motors and magnets
without rare earths, and improving wide bandgap semiconductors for power electronics. Second,
funding for outreach and deployment would rise by $19 million to initiate Alternative Fuel
Vehicle Community Partner projects. Third, funding for materials technology would increase by
$16 million, emphasizing carbon fiber and other composites, lightweight materials compatible
with manufacturing infrastructure, and high temperature materials for valves and turbochargers.
Fourth, funding for fuels and lubricants would rise by $11 million, mainly to expand work on
drop-in biofuel compatibility with components and infrastructure—to replace conventional
gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel. The House Committee bill proposes a $12 million (4%) cut below
FY2014.
Building Technologies
This program develops energy efficiency measures to curb building-related energy costs, with a
goal of reducing energy use 50% by 2030. The program strategy is designed with three linked
paths: improve building components (envelope/windows, HVAC, lighting, and sensors/controls),
strengthen market pull (through cooperation with private industry), and raise energy efficiency
levels for new equipment (via standards) and new buildings (via model codes).
DOE requests $212 million for FY2015, an increase of $34 million over the FY2014
appropriation. The funding emphasizes emerging technologies, to accelerate the development of
lighting, heating and cooling, and other energy efficiency solutions for the nation’s buildings that
offer savings of 50% or more; and supports the equipment and appliance standards programs to
establish minimum energy efficiency requirements pursuant to federal statutes. FY2015 funding
also assists home builders achieve high efficiency levels, improve access for homeowners to
home improvement services, and improve the information, tools, and resources available to the
commercial sector with a goal of achieving 20% energy savings by 2020.
There are two main parts to the $34 million increase. First, funding for emerging technologies
would increase by $23 million, focused on R&D on sensors, controls, and grid integration, and on
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new air conditioning technologies. Second, a $13 million increase would aim to accelerate
equipment efficiency standards and building codes.
The House Committee bill proposes a $13 million (7%) cut below FY2014. Also, two
amendments adopted in Committee markup would affect DOE energy efficiency standards
programs operated under the Buildings office.29 One amendment directs DOE to work with
stakeholders to allow for the continued manufacture and use of grid-enabled water heaters.30 That
technology would otherwise be non-compliant with DOE energy efficiency standards for
residential water heaters that are scheduled to take effect in April 2015. The other amendment
(new Section 315) prohibits DOE from using funds from the bill to “finalize, implement, or
enforce” a rulemaking that would establish energy efficiency standards for ceiling fans.31
Advanced Manufacturing
Domestic manufacturers face increasing challenges in the global marketplace. The Advanced
Manufacturing Office (AMO) was designed to focus on national interests—especially concerns
about jobs, critical materials, and international competitiveness. The general goal for AMO
programs is to reduce the energy use of manufactured goods across targeted product life-cycles
by 50% over 10 years. More specific objectives include (1) 50% energy savings through
advanced materials and industrial processes, (2) help leading companies cut energy intensity by
25% over 10 years, and (3) facilitate installation of 40 gigawatts (gw, million kilowatts) of
combined heat and power equipment by 2020.32
To meet these goals and objectives, DOE requests $305 million, a net increase of $125 million
over the FY2014 appropriation—the largest EERE program increase requested for FY2015. Most
of the requested increase—about $109 million—would be directed to the subprogram on
Advanced Manufacturing R&D Facilities. Also, a $9 million increase would be provided for
Advanced Manufacturing R&D Projects, mainly for the Advanced Incubator.
The proposed $109 million increase for Advanced R&D Facilities includes up to $70 million to
create at least one new Clean Energy Manufacturing Institute (CEMI) and provide support for
two existing institutes. The new institute would address any one of several topics: nanomaterials
for energy, next generation electric machines, bio-manufacturing, smart manufacturing, or other
topics. The two existing institutes are the Next Generation Power Electronics Manufacturing
Innovation Institute (MII, North Carolina) and the Advanced Composites MII (announced in
March 2014).
The CEMIs form part of a larger proposed interagency network aimed at bringing together
universities, industry, and the government to jointly invest in solving industry-relevant problems.

29 The list of adopted amendments is at http://appropriations.house.gov/uploadedfiles/hmkp-113-ap00-20140618-
sd005.pdf.
30 This provision appears on page 101 of the report. A related provision appeared as a proposed amendment to the
Shaheen-Portman bill, S. 2262. For more information, see CRS Report R43524, S. 2262, Shaheen-Portman Bill 2014:
Energy Savings and Industrial Competitiveness Act
, by Fred Sissine.
31 More background on the DOE rulemaking process for ceiling fans is at http://www1.eere.energy.gov/buildings/
appliance_standards/rulemaking.aspx/ruleid/65.
32 DOE, EERE-Advanced Manufacturing Office, FY14 Budget At-a-Glance, http://www1.eere.energy.gov/office_eere/
pdfs/budget/manufacturing_ataglance_2014.pdf.
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This activity aims to improve U.S. manufacturing competitiveness, in support of DOE’s Clean
Energy Manufacturing Initiative and the President’s initiative for a multi-agency National
Network for Manufacturing Innovation (NNMI). All three institutes are consistent with the
President’s NNMI.33 The institutes focus on technologies applicable to multiple industries and
markets. A key goal is for each institute to become financially sustainable within five to seven
years after it is established.
CEMI is a relatively new EERE cross-cutting activity that would be anchored by AMO and
would incorporate activities under many of EERE’s other programs.34 The main goal is to
improve U.S. competitiveness in the manufacturing of clean energy products, such as solar
photovoltaic modules, LEDs, batteries, and wind turbine blades. The CEMI institutes would
provide small- and medium-sized enterprises affordable access to cutting-edge physical and
virtual manufacturing capabilities (e.g., 3-D printing equipment) and facilitate technology use in
the U.S. manufacturing sector to bolster its global competitiveness. DOE plans to invest $70
million-$120 million into each CEMI institute, to be used over a five- to seven-year period. For
each institute, DOE plans to provide up-front funding to the greatest extent possible.
Another R&D facility, the Critical Materials Hub (led by Ames National Laboratory), was created
in FY2012 to focus on technologies that enable manufacturers to make better use of critical
materials (e.g., rare earth elements) and to eliminate the need for materials that are vulnerable to
supply disruptions. Many rare earth elements are essential to technologies of the clean energy
industry.35 Examples include wind turbines, solar photovoltaic panels, electric vehicles, and
energy-efficient lighting. DOE requests $25 million—level funding—to extend the Hub’s
operation for a fourth year.
Also, DOE requests $10 million of further support for the Manufacturing Demonstration Facility
at Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
The House Committee bill proposes a $25 million (14%) cut below FY2014.
Federal Energy Management Program (FEMP)
FEMP provides expertise, training, and other services to help federal agencies achieve
congressionally mandated energy efficiency and renewable energy goals. DOE requests $36
million, about $8 million more than the FY2014 appropriation. The increase would support
expanded marketing and outreach and the development and implementation of tools to streamline
energy savings performance contracts (ESPCs), expanding the General Services Administration’s
(GSA’s) schedule for equipment replacements, and devising a new protocol for measurement and
verification of ESPCs. The House Committee bill proposes an $8 million (29%) cut below
FY2014.

33 For the NNMI, there are currently four institutes in place and five additional institutes scheduled to be established in
2014, and there is a goal to establish a total of 45 institutes over 10 years.
34 Going forward, DOE expects to establish CEMIs as an alternative to the concept of “manufacturing demonstration
facilities” (MDFs), which it implemented in FY2012 with the establishment of the Critical Materials Hub (discussed in
the next paragraph). DOE’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory is the home for AMO’s first MDF focused on additive
manufacturing and low-cost carbon fiber. For more on MDFs, see http://www1.eere.energy.gov/manufacturing/rd/m/
mdf.html.
35 The Hub also supports materials needs for defense and other strategic industries.
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Program Direction
This administrative program funds federal employees, contract support, and operational costs.
DOE requests $185 million, about a $20 million increase over the FY2013 DOE-estimated level
(The House Committee bill combined EERE with EDER management—there is no separate
FY2013 estimate for EERE.) The increase would cover an EERE reorganization that would
consolidate information technology and establish an active project management (APM) system to
oversee competitive grants and cooperative agreements. The House Committee bill proposes a
$12 million (7%) cut below FY2014.
Strategic Programs
The Office of Strategic Programs (formerly Program Support) is a crosscutting EERE office
focused on accelerating development, commercialization, and adoption of energy efficiency and
renewable energy technologies. Strategic EERE planning and partnerships support the transition
of EERE technologies to market, communications and engagement with energy stakeholders,
development of international markets for U.S. clean energy companies, and policy analysis for
decision making and management of the EERE portfolio. For this program, DOE seeks a slight
decrease of about $2 million relative to the FY2014 appropriation. The House Committee bill
proposes a $12 million (49%) cut from FY2014.
Weatherization Grant Program
This program addresses regulatory, financial, and planning barriers faced by state and local
governments. The goal is to foster technologies, practices, and policies that support state and
local governments in providing home energy services to low-income families that help them
reduce energy costs and save money. DOE has noted that many states have expended leftover
Recovery Act funds and now need new funds to avoid cutting core programs and services.36 DOE
requests a $54 million increase over the FY2014 appropriation, solely to increase the number of
households served in the FY2015 cycle. The House Committee bill proposes a $29 million cut
(17%) below FY2014.
State Energy Grant Program
This program supports both administrative and program activities at many state energy offices.
DOE requests an increase of $13 million over the FY2014 appropriation. The proposed increase
would help support a new, $10 million program of Clean Energy and Economic Development
Partnerships to assist regional shale gas growth zones in creating “sustainable” economic
development roadmaps. Rapid local growth associated with shale gas development challenges
infrastructure and services. Thus, the proposed program would focus on economic diversification
and the long term, to reduce the potential for a boom-bust cycle. Also, $4 million in state grant
funding would be used to establish a new Local Technical Assistance Program, which would

36 Also, in FY2014, collection and analysis of data from ARRA projects would enable updated estimates of program
energy savings, cost savings, leveraged funds, and other impacts. For more details about the program see CRS Report
R42147, DOE Weatherization Program: A Review of Funding, Performance, and Cost-Effectiveness Studies, by Fred
Sissine.
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support scale-up and adoption of energy efficiency and clean energy technologies. The House
Committee bill proposes the same amount as FY2014, but $13 million less than the request.
Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability (EDER) Program37
This office drives electric grid modernization and resiliency through R&D, demonstration,
partnerships, facilitation, modeling and analytics, and emergency preparedness and response. It is
the federal government’s lead entity for energy sector-specific responses to energy security
emergencies—whether caused by physical infrastructure problems or by cyber-security issues.
DOE requests an increase of $33 million over the FY2014 appropriation, which includes a $15
million increase for the Infrastructure Security subprogram and a $10 million increase for the
Smart Grid R&D subprogram.
The Infrastructure Security and Energy Restoration subprogram helps secure U.S. energy
infrastructure against all types of hazards, respond to and reduce the impact of disruptive events,
and assist in quickly restoring energy when events occur. The requested increase would support
the development of advanced mitigation solutions for hardening infrastructure against all hazards,
including geomagnetic disturbances, physical threats, and devastating weather events.
The Smart Grid program aims to modernize the electricity distribution system, which includes
improved reliability, operational efficiency, resiliency, and disaster recovery. The requested
increase would expand R&D on microgrids—localized power grids that can disconnect from the
traditional grid to operate autonomously. Microgrids can help mitigate grid disturbances and
strengthen grid resilience. The increase would also support an evolution towards higher
performance smart grids, or “Smart Grid 2.0.” The House Committee bill proposes a $13 million
(9%) increase above FY2014, but $20 million less than the request.
Nuclear Energy38
The Obama Administration’s FY2015 funding request for nuclear energy research and
development totals $863.4 million. Including advanced reactors, fuel cycle technology,
infrastructure support, and safeguards and security, the total nuclear energy request is $25.0
million (2.9%) below the FY2014 funding level. DOE’s FY2015 nuclear R&D budget
justification describes the following major goals for the program:
• Improve the safety, reliability, and economics of nuclear power plants;
• Implement a “consent based” strategy for developing nuclear waste storage and
disposal facilities;
• Develop improved waste management and fuel cycle technologies; and
• Understand and minimize the risks of nuclear proliferation and terrorism.
DOE’s Office of Nuclear Energy would lead a major initiative announced in the FY2015 budget
request to commercialize the Brayton cycle for commercial power plants. Called Supercritical
Transformational Electric Power Generation (STEP), the initiative is proposed to be a joint effort

37 This section was prepared by Fred Sissine.
38 This section was prepared by Mark Holt.
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by DOE’s nuclear energy, fossil energy, and renewable energy programs. The Brayton cycle uses
supercritical gas to drive electric generators rather than the steam cycle that dominates the
industry today. DOE’s budget justification predicted that Brayton-cycle power plants could reach
efficiencies of up to 50%, compared with 33% for steam-cycle plants. The STEP program is to
reach a 50-50 cost sharing agreement with the private sector in FY2015 to develop a 10 megawatt
(electric) Brayton cycle pilot plant. Funding for the STEP initiative, provided within the nuclear
energy budget, would total $27.5 million in FY2015.
The House Appropriations Committee recommended $899.0 million for nuclear energy, $35.6
million above the Administration request and $9.8 million above the FY2014 level. The
committee agreed with the Administration’s $27.5 million request for the STEP initiative and
authorized DOE to “modify” the 50% cost-sharing goal for qualifying pilot plants.
Reactor Concepts
The Reactor Concepts program area includes research on advanced reactors (often referred to as
Generation IV reactors), including advanced small modular reactors, and research to enhance the
“sustainability” of existing commercial light water reactors. The total FY2015 funding request for
this program is $100.5 million, a reduction of $12.3 million from FY2014. Much of this program
had previously focused on the Next Generation Nuclear Plant (NGNP), a high-temperature gas-
cooled reactor demonstration project authorized by the Energy Policy Act of 2005. The reactor
was intended to produce high-temperature heat that could be used to generate electricity, help
separate hydrogen from water, or be used in other industrial processes. Under EPACT05, the
Secretary of Energy was to decide by the end of FY2011 whether to proceed toward construction
of a demonstration plant. Then-Secretary of Energy Steven Chu informed Congress on October
17, 2011, that DOE would not proceed with a demonstration plant design “at this time” but would
continue research on the technology. Potential obstacles facing NGNP include low prices for
natural gas, the major competing fuel, and private-sector unwillingness to pay half the project’s
costs.39 Congress accepted the Administration’s proposal for FY2014 to shift remaining NGNP
research activities to the Advanced Reactor Concepts subprogram.
DOE proposes to combine the Small Modular Reactor (SMR) R&D and Advanced Reactor
Concepts subprograms into the Advanced Reactor Technologies subprogram in FY2015. Funding
for the combined subprogram would be $70.2 million, a reduction of $12.6 million from the
combined subprograms in FY2014. Reactor concepts being developed by the Advanced Reactor
Technology subprogram are generally classified as “Generation IV” reactors, as opposed to the
existing fleet of commercial light water reactors, which are generally classified as generations II
and III. Nuclear technology development under this program focuses on “fast reactors,” using
high-energy neutrons, fluoride salt-cooled high-temperature reactors, and high temperature gas-
cooled reactors. International research collaboration in this area would continue under the
Generation IV International Forum (GIF).
The House Appropriations Committee recommended $138.0 million for Reactor Concepts, $37.5
million more than the request and $25.0 million above FY2014. The committee agreed with the
proposal to consolidate Advanced SMR research with Advanced Reactor Concepts. The House

39 Section 988(c) of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-58) requires a 50% industry cost share for DOE
demonstration and commercial application activities, although the Energy Secretary may reduce that share “as
necessary and appropriate, taking into consideration any technological risk relating to the activity.”
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panel voted to boost funding for the Advanced Reactor Concepts subprogram to $101.0 million,
adding funding for high temperature gas reactor research.
DOE’s FY2015 request for the Light Water Reactor Sustainability subprogram is $30.3 million,
$350,000 above the FY2014 appropriation. The House panel recommended $35.0 million. The
program conducts research on extending the life of existing commercial light water reactors
beyond 60 years, the maximum operating period currently licensed by the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission. The program, which is cost-shared with the nuclear industry, studies the aging of
reactor materials and analyzes safety margins of aging plants. This subprogram is also conducting
research to understand the Fukushima disaster and to develop prevention and mitigation
measures, according to the DOE justification.
Small Modular Reactor Licensing Support
Rising cost estimates for large conventional nuclear reactors—widely projected to be $6 billion or
more—have contributed to growing interest in proposals for small modular reactors (SMRs).
Ranging from about 40 to 300 megawatts of electrical capacity, such reactors would be only a
fraction of the size of current commercial reactors, which typically exceed 1,000 megawatts.
Several modular reactors would be installed together to make up a power block with a single
control room, under most concepts. Current SMR proposals would use a variety of technologies,
including high-temperature gas technology and the light water (LWR) technology used by today’s
commercial reactors.
DOE requested $97.0 million for FY2015 to provide technical support for licensing small
modular reactors, $13 million below the FY2014 funding level. Under the program, DOE is to
pay up to half the costs associated with NRC design certification and licensing of selected SMRs,
as well as for economic studies and other analyses that would support SMR deployment in
general. The program has focused on LWR designs because they are believed most likely to be
deployed in the near term, according to DOE. The FY2015 budget justification says the SMR
licensing and technical support program will continue through FY2017 and cost DOE a total of
$452 million. The program is similar to DOE’s support for larger commercial reactor designs
under the Nuclear Power 2010 Program, which ended in FY2010.
A consortium led by Babcock & Wilcox (B&W) was announced by DOE in November 2012 as
the first award recipient under the program. DOE and the B&W consortium signed a cooperative
agreement in April 2013 to implement the award, allowing for federal payments of around $226
million over five years to design and license a commercial demonstration of B&W’s 180
megawatt mPower SMR. The mPower demonstration plant would potentially be constructed at
the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Clinch River site near Oak Ridge, TN, by 2022, according to the
DOE justification. However, B&W announced April 14, 2014, that it would reduce its spending
on the project to $15 million per year and delay the mPower’s design certification application to
NRC indefinitely, citing a lack of investors and customer contracts for the design.40
DOE selected a second SMR to receive assistance under the program in December 2013. The
NuScale Power SMR has a generating capacity of only 45 megawatts. Under the company’s

40 Babcock & Wilcox Company, “B&W Announces Restructuring of Small Modular Reactor Program,” news release,
April 14, 2014, http://www.babcock.com/news-room/Pages/BW-Announces-Restructuring-of-Small-Modular-Reactor-
Program.aspx.
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current concept, up to 12 reactors would be housed in a single pool of water, which would
provide emergency cooling. The NuScale SMR is intended to be ready for commercial operation
by around 2025, according to DOE.41 The DOE budget justification contends that reduced
funding for the SMR program will be sufficient for both the B&W and NuScale projects in
FY2015.
Because of the uncertainty about the B&W SMR project, the House Appropriations Committee
cut the SMR program to $54.5 million, with all of the remaining funding directed to the NuScale
project. However, the committee said that it “will consider additional funding according to
developments.”
Small modular reactors would go against the overall trend in nuclear power technology toward
ever-larger reactors intended to spread construction costs over a greater output of electricity.
Proponents of small reactors contend that they would be economically viable despite their far
lower electrical output because modules could be assembled in factories and shipped to plant
sites, with minimal on-site fabrication, and because their smaller size would allow for simpler and
more effective safety systems. In addition, although modular plants might have similar or higher
costs per kilowatt-hour than conventional large reactors, their ability to be constructed in smaller
increments could reduce electric utilities’ financial commitment and risk.
Fuel Cycle Research and Development
The Fuel Cycle Research and Development Program conducts “long-term, science-based”
research on a wide variety of technologies for improving the management of spent nuclear fuel,
according to the DOE budget justification. In general, the program is investigating ways to
separate radioactive constituents of spent fuel for re-use or to be bonded into stable waste forms.
The total FY2015 funding request for this program is $189.1 million, $2.9 million above the
FY2014 appropriation.
The Administration is seeking a nearly one-third increase for the Used Nuclear Fuel R&D
subprogram, from $60.0 million in FY2014 to $79.0 million in FY2015. This subprogram focuses
on establishing a new spent fuel management system, consistent with the Administration’s moves
to terminate the previously authorized waste repository program at Yucca Mountain, NV. DOE
released its Strategy for the Management and Disposal of Used Nuclear Fuel and High-Level
Radioactive Waste in January 2013 that calls for a “consent-based siting process” for nuclear
storage and disposal facilities. The Used Fuel subprogram would also conduct waste
transportation analyses and research on potential waste repositories, including salt caverns and
deep boreholes, according to the DOE justification. DOE is also proposing that Congress provide
mandatory appropriations for the spent fuel management program beginning in FY2018 to
supplement discretionary appropriations. (See the “Nuclear Waste Disposal” section for more
details.)
Other major research areas in the Fuel Cycle R&D Program include the development of accident-
tolerant fuels for existing commercial reactors, evaluation of fuel cycle options, development of
improved technologies to prevent diversion of nuclear materials for weapons, and technology to
increase nuclear fuel resources, such as uranium extraction from seawater.

41 DOE Office of Nuclear Energy, “Small Modular Nuclear Reactors,” http://www.energy.gov/ne/nuclear-reactor-
technologies/small-modular-nuclear-reactors.
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The House Appropriations Committee recommended $182.0 million for Fuel Cycle R&D, $7.1
million below the request and $4.5 million below FY2014. The committee provided $60.1 million
for accident-tolerant fuels research, $55.0 million for Used Nuclear Fuel Disposition, and $55.0
million for used-fuel disposition R&D, such as long-term dry cask storage.
Fossil Energy Research and Development42
For FY2015, the Obama Administration requested $475.5 million for the Fossil Energy Research
and Development program with the provision that it remain available until expended and that
$114.2 million remain available until September 30, 2016, for program direction. The request
represents a 15% decrease from the FY2014 appropriation of $562.1 million.
Since FY2012 the Fossil Energy Research and Development (FE R&D) program has emphasized
coal, with a focus on carbon capture and storage (CCS) technologies. The CCS program intends
to demonstrate advanced clean coal technologies on a commercial-project scale, and build and
operate near-zero atmospheric emissions power plants that capture and store carbon dioxide
(CO2). The main activities are listed as bullets showing the decrease of the proposed amount for
FY2015 compared to the FY2014 appropriation.
• A Carbon Capture sub-program focuses on separating CO2 in both pre-
combustion and post-combustion systems (-$15 million).
• The Carbon Storage sub-program focuses on long-term geologic storage of CO2,
including small- and large-scale CO2 injection tests. The Regional Sequestration
Partnerships would be renamed Storage Infrastructure. No funding is requested
for beneficial use/reuse of CO2 (-$28.7 million).
• An Advanced Energy Systems sub-program focuses on improving availability
and efficiency of fossil energy systems integrated with CO2 capture. The
Advanced Energy Systems sub-program focuses on gasification, oxy-
combustion, advanced turbines, and other energy systems (-$48.5 million).
• The Cross-Cutting Research activity serves as a bridge between basic and applied
research by fostering development and deployment of innovative systems (-$6.6
million).
• National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) Coal R&D supports in-house
research activities. The FY2015 request does not continue support for extracting
rare-earth elements from coal and coal byproduct streams (-$15 million).
New in the FY2015 request is a $25 million CCS natural gas demonstration project that would
fund work to capture and store more than 75% of the carbon emissions from a natural gas power
system.
Other FE R&D activities in the budget proposal outside of the coal program are shown below as
bullets.
• Natural Gas Technologies will focus on environmentally prudent development,
emissions reduction, and gas hydrates (+$14.4 million).

42 This section was prepared by Peter Folger.
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• Unconventional Fossil Energy Technologies from Petroleum activities would not
be funded in FY2015 (-$15.0 million).
• Program Direction provides funding for DOE headquarters, field offices, and
contractor support (-$5.8 million).
In the House Appropriations Committee reported bill and accompanying report, Fossil Energy
R&D would receive $593 million, $117.5 million above the Administration request, and $30.9
million above the FY2014 enacted amount. (See Table 10.) The committee report stated that the
Administration request underemphasized two areas critical to the nation’s energy future: the
efficient use of existing fossil fuel energy resources and the use of untapped domestic resources.
The committee report noted that DOE improperly requested $25 million for natural gas carbon
capture and sequestration within the coal program, and provided no funding for that item under
coal. However, the committee added a new program under coal: the Supercritical
Transformational Electric Power (STEP) Generation Program, and recommended $15 million for
FY2015. STEP would be a joint initiative with the Office of Nuclear Energy and the Solar Energy
Program within the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. The STEP program is
intended to promote the development of large-scale supercritical carbon dioxide power
conversion; instead of water and steam, CO2 would be used to transform heat energy in turbine
systems.
The committee report also recommended no funding for the joint research effort with the U.S.
Geological Survey and the EPA on hydraulic fracturing technologies. The committee noted that it
had not received a finalized interagency research plan and directed DOE to submit the plan as
previously directed in the FY2014 Consolidated Appropriations Act. The committee allocated $13
million for Unconventional Fossil Energy Technologies, $2 million less than the FY2014 enacted
amount; however, the Administration did not request any funding for this item for FY2015.
Table 10 shows proposed funding and changes compared to FY2014 and FY2013 for other FE
R&D activities.
Table 10. Fossil Energy Research and Development
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015

Approp.
Approp.
Request
House Senate Conf.
Coal






Natural Gas CCS
0.0
0.0
25.0
0.0


Carbon
Capture 63.7 92.0 77.0 90.0

Carbon Storage
106.7
108.9
80.1
100.0


Advanced Energy Systems
92.4
99.5
51.0
107.0


Cross Cutting Research
45.6
41.9
35.3
50.0


NETL Coal R&D
33.3
50.0
34.0
50.0


STEP (Supercritical CO2)

15.0

Coal
Subtotal
341.9 392.3 302.4 412.0









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FY2013
FY2014
FY2015

Approp.
Approp.
Request House Senate Conf.
Natural Gas Technologies
13.9
20.6
35.0
22.6


Unconventional Fossil
4.6 15.0 0.0 13.0

Energy
Program
Direction
114.2 120.0 114.2 120.0


Plant and Capital
16.0 16.0 15.3 16.8

Equipment
FE Environmental
7.5 5.9 7.9 7.9

Restoration
Special Recruitment
0.7 0.7 0.7 0.7

Program
Subtotal
498.7 570.5 475.5 181.0


Use of Prior Year
0.0 -8.5 0.0 0.0

Balance
Total
498.7 562.1 475.5 593.0


Source:.H.Rept. 113-486.
Notes: Coal was formerly Carbon Capture and Sequestration Demonstration. Totals may not sum exactly due
to rounding.
Strategic Petroleum Reserve43
The Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), authorized by the Energy Policy and Conservation Act
(P.L. 94-163) in 1975, consists of caverns formed out of naturally occurring salt domes in
Louisiana and Texas. The SPR provides strategic and economic security against foreign and
domestic disruptions in U.S. oil supplies via an emergency stockpile of crude oil. The program
fulfills U.S. obligations under the International Energy Program, which avails the United States of
International Energy Agency (IEA) assistance through its coordinated energy emergency response
plans, and provides a deterrent against energy supply disruptions.
By early 2010, the SPR’s maximum capacity reached 727 million barrels.44 The federal
government has not purchased oil for the SPR since 1994. Beginning in 2000, additions to the
SPR were made with royalty-in-kind (RIK) oil acquired by the Department of Energy in lieu of
cash royalties paid on production from federal offshore leases. In September 2009, the Secretary
of the Interior announced a transitional phasing out of the RIK Program.
In the summer of 2011, the President ordered an SPR sale in coordination with an International
Energy Administration sale under treaty obligation because of Libya’s curtailment. The U.S. sale
of 30.6 million barrels reduced the SPR inventory to 695.9 million barrels. In April 2014, DOE
conducted a 5 million barrel test sale of heavy crude oil. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz was
quoted by Reuters as saying that $495 million from the test sale would be used to build
emergency gasoline stocks and that half the oil involved in the sale had been delivered by mid-

43 This section was prepared by Anthony Andrews.
44 For details on the SPR see CRS Report R41687, The Strategic Petroleum Reserve and Refined Product Reserves:
Authorization and Drawdown Policy
, by Anthony Andrews and Robert Pirog.
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May.45 The House Committee report noted that DOE in May 2014 had announced the
establishment of the first regional gasoline reserve, to be stored at various locations in the
Northeast, with receipts from the SPR test sale. The committee found that the gasoline reserve
“may have merit and deserves further consideration” but criticized “the timing of these
announcements, the use of receipts from the test sale rather than appropriated funds, and the lack
of prior consultation with the Congress.”
The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 (P.L. 113-67) rescinded all available funds in the SPR
Petroleum Account and permanently repealed the federal government’s authority to accept oil
through royalty-in-kind.
The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2014 (P.L. 113-76) prohibited the waiver of the
navigation and vessel-inspection requirements under the Jones Act (46 U.S.C. 501(b)) for
transporting crude oil distributed from the SPR until the Secretary of Homeland Security takes
adequate measures to ensure the use of U.S. flag vessels.
For FY2015, the Administration requested $205 million to operate the SPR, an 8.3% increase
over the FY2014 appropriation of $189.4 million.
The House Committee recommended $205,000,000 to operate the SPR, $15,600,000 above
FY2014 and the same as the budget request. The funding increase above FY2014 is primarily for
the major maintenance program to address aging infrastructure and the deferred maintenance
backlog.
Science46
The DOE Office of Science conducts basic research in six program areas: advanced scientific
computing research, basic energy sciences, biological and environmental research, fusion energy
sciences, high-energy physics, and nuclear physics. Through these programs, DOE was the third-
largest federal funder of basic research and the largest federal funder of research in the physical
sciences, as well as the mathematical and computer sciences, in FY2012.47 Table 11 includes
FY2013 current plan and FY2014 enacted funding, as well as the FY2015 request and House
Committee on Appropriations-reported (H.Rept. 113-486) levels.

45 Cho, Meeyoung, and Sohee Kim, “U.S. to Buy Gasoline End-July or Early Aug to Build Reserve—Moniz,” Reuters,
May 13, 2014, http://www.cnbc.com/id/101667100.
46 This section was prepared by Heather Gonzalez.
47 Based on preliminary FY2012 data from Tables 29 and 22 of National Science Foundation, National Center for
Science and Engineering Statistics, Federal Funds for Research and Development: Fiscal Years 2010-12, NSF 13-326
(July 2013).
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Table 11. Science
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
House
Program
Current
Enacted
Request
Report Senate Conf.
Advanced Scientific Computing Research
405.0 478.6 541.0 541.0

(ASCR)
Basic Energy Sciences (BES)
1,551.3
1,712.8
1,806.5
1,702.0


Biological and Environmental Research
560.7 610.2 628.0 540.0

(BER)
Fusion Energy Sciences (FES)
377.8
505.7
416.0
540.0


High Energy Physics (HEP)
727.5
797.5
744.0
775.0


Nuclear Physics (NP)
507.2
569.9
593.6
600.0


Workforce Development for Teachers
17.5 26.5 19.5 n/s
and Scientists (WDTS)
Science Laboratories Infrastructure (SLI)
105.7
97.8
79.2
n/s


Safeguards and Security (S&S)
77.5
87.0
94.0
n/s


Program Direction (PD)
174.9
185.0
189.4
180.0


SBIR/STTR (Office of Science)a
116.1 n/a n/a n/a
SBIR/STTR (DOE-wide transfer)a

60.1 n/a n/a n/a
Total 4,681.2
5,066.4b 5,111.2 5,071.0


Source: Data in the “FY2013 Current,” “FY2014 Enacted,” and “FY2015 Request” columns are from the
FY2015 DOE budget request. Data in the column titled “House Report” are from H.Rept. 113-486 and H.R.
4923 (Energy and Water Development Appropriations Bill, 2015) as reported by the House Committee on
Appropriations.
a. For more information about the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology
Transfer (STTR) programs, see CRS Report 96-402, Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program, by
Wendy H. Schacht. Details for FY2014 and FY2015 are not yet available.
b. This amount includes the original FY2014 appropriation of $5.701 billion, minus $4,628,000 for the Office of
Science portion of a reduction for contractor foreign travel.
The Obama Administration seeks $5.111 billion for the Office of Science in FY2015. This
amount is 1% ($45 million) more than the FY2014 enacted funding level of $5.066 billion.
Although the total Science allocation would stay relatively constant between FY2014 and the
FY2015 request, the Administration seeks to change the distribution of funding within the
account. Compared to FY2014, in FY2015 the percentage of total Science funding for ASCR and
BES would increase, while the percentage of funding for FES and HEP would decrease. (The
percentage of funding for BER and NP would stay about the same.)
The House Committee on Appropriations recommends the original FY2014 appropriation for the
Office of Science in FY2015 ($5.071 billion, see Table 11, footnote b). This amount is $40
million (1%) less than the request. Compared to FY2014 enacted, the House report would
increase funding for ASCR, FES, and NP, and would decrease funding for BES, BER, and HEP.
Section 309 of H.R. 4823 (Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations
Act, 2015) would rescind $5.3 million in unobligated balances from prior year Science
appropriations.
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Since FY2006, overall increases in the Office of Science budget have been partially driven by the
“doubling path” policy. Under this policy, Congress and successive Administrations sought to
double the combined funding for the Office of Science, the National Science Foundation, and the
National Institute of Standards and Technology’s core laboratory and construction accounts
(collectively “the targeted accounts”).48 However, actual funding for the targeted accounts has not
typically reached authorized levels. The most recent authorization of appropriations for the Office
of Science ended in FY2013. It is unclear whether policy makers will renew the doubling path
policy in FY2015.
Advanced Scientific Computing Research
The Administration seeks (and the House report recommends) $541 million—or $63 million
(13%) more than the FY2014 enacted funding level of $478 million—for ASCR in FY2015.
Most of the Administration’s requested increase is for exascale computing activities. According to
the ASCR budget request, “Capable exascale computing, with a hundred to thousand fold
improvement in true application performance over today’s systems, is the next frontier of
development in High Performance Computing (HPC), extending capability significantly beyond
today’s petascale computers to address the next generation of scientific, engineering, and large-
data problems.”49 Given its perceived importance to national security and economic
competitiveness, exascale computing is a DOE priority. DOE leadership asserts that the
department is on a path to have a capable machine by the early 2020s.50
The House Committee on Appropriations recommends the requested level for Exascale
Computing ($91 million) in FY2015. In addition, the House report specifically recommends the
requested levels for the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility ($80 million), Oak Ridge
Leadership Computing Facility ($104 million), and National Energy Research Scientific
Computing Center at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory ($69 million). The House report
generally recommends the requested levels for all other ASCR activities.
Basic Energy Sciences
The FY2015 request for BES, the largest Office of Science program, is $1.807 billion. This
amount is $95 million (6%) more than the FY2014 enacted funding level of $1.712 billion. The
House report recommends $1.702 billion for BES in FY2015—$10 million (1%) less than the
FY2014 enacted funding level and $105 million (6%) less than the request.
Most of the requested BES increase would fund scientific user facilities ($34 million) or
construction ($37 million). For facilities, DOE plans to cease National Synchrotron Light Source
(NSLS) operations—and transition the NSLS-II from a construction project to operations—in
FY2015. Construction increases would provide $63 million for research and development

48 For further analysis of the doubling effort, see CRS Report R41951, An Analysis of Efforts to Double Federal
Funding for Physical Sciences and Engineering Research
, by John F. Sargent Jr.
49 FY2015 DOE budget request, volume 4 (Science), p. 17.
50 Testimony of Acting Director of the Office of Science Dr. Patricia Dehmer, in U.S. Congress, House Committee on
Appropriations, Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development, Budget Hearing—Department of Energy, Science,
hearings, 113th Cong., 2nd sess., March 25, 2014, at http://appropriations.house.gov/calendararchive/eventsingle.aspx?
EventID=373120.
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activities, long-lead procurements, and prototyping for the Linac Coherent Light Source-II
(LCLS-II). The Administration also seeks $24 million for the (new) Computational Materials
Science activity in FY2015.
The House Committee on Appropriations recommends $1.574 million for BES research in
FY2015. This amount is below both the request ($1.668 million) and the FY2014 enacted funding
level ($1.610 million). The House report recommends $128 million for BES construction in
FY2015, which is below the $139 million request for the LCLS-II. (The LCLS-II is the only
project with a request for BES construction funding in FY2015.) The House report further
recommends $105 million for NSLS-II operations, $100 million for Energy Frontier Research
Centers (EFRCs), $10 million for the Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research
(EPSCoR), and $8 million for Computational Materials Sciences; as well as $24 million for the
Batteries and Energy Storage Innovation Hub and no funding for the Fuels from Sunlight
Innovation Hub.51
Biological and Environmental Research
The Administration seeks $628 million for Biological and Environmental Research (BER) in
FY2015, an increase of $18 million (3%) above the FY2014 enacted funding level of $610
million. The House report recommends $540 million in FY2015, which is $70 million (11%) less
than the FY2014 enacted level and $88 million (14%) less than the request.
Within BER, the Administration seeks to reduce funding for Biological Systems Science by $12
million. Ten million dollars of this amount would come from a 66% decrease in funding for
Radiological Sciences. The request indicates that the reduction in funding for Radiological
Sciences represents a shift in focus from nuclear medicine research to bioenergy and
environmental research within the Biological Systems Science portfolio.52 The Administration’s
request for the other major BER activity, Climate and Environmental Sciences, would increase
funding by $30 million in FY2015. Most of this increase would provide for a new activity,
Climate Model Development and Validation ($29 million), which seeks to improve existing
models’ representation of extreme events, as well as their quantification of uncertainty.53
The House Committee on Appropriations would provide $75 million for the three Bioenergy
Research Centers (same as the request and FY2014 enacted) and recommends no funding for the
proposed Climate Model Development and Validation activity.
Fusion Energy Sciences
The FY2015 request for FES is $416 million, or $89 million (18%) less than the FY2014 enacted
funding level of $505 million. The House report recommends $540 million for FES in FY2015,
which is $35 million (7%) more than the FY2014 enacted funding level and $124 million (30%)
more than the request.

51 According to the House report, the Fuels from Sunlight Innovation Hub received its final year of funding within a
five-year term in FY2014. (H.Rept. 113-486, p. 119.)
52 U.S. Department of Energy, FY2015 Congressional Budget Request, Science and Advanced Research Projects
Agency-Energy
, vol. 4, March 2014, p. 103.
53 U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science Acting Director Dr. Patricia Dehmer, “FY2015 Budget Request to
Congress for DOE’s Office of Science,” PowerPoint presentation, March 4, 2014.
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Among other things, FES provides funding for the U.S. contribution to the ITER project. ITER is
an international effort to design and build an experimental fusion reactor, which is currently under
construction in France.54 According to DOE, ITER “aims to generate fusion power 30 times the
levels produced to date and to exceed the external power applied … by at least a factor of ten.”55
However, many U.S. analysts have expressed concern about ITER’s cost, schedule, and
management.56 Some policy makers and U.S. fusion researchers have also expressed concern
about the impact of ITER’s funding on the availability of DOE resources for the domestic fusion
program. The FY2015 request for the U.S. contribution to ITER is $150.0 million, or $49.5
million less than the FY2014 current plan funding level of $199.5 million. In addition to the ITER
project, the FY2015 FES budget request notes DOE’s intention to shutter MIT’s Alcator C-Mod
facility in late FY201657 and seeks a 61% ($11 million) reduction in funding for High Energy
Density Laboratory Plasmas science.
The House Committee on Appropriations recommends specific funding levels for a number of
FES activities, including $315 million for domestic fusion research (total, above both the FY2015
request and FY2014 enacted level), as well as $22 million for research and facilities operations at
the Alcator C-Mod. The committee recommends $225 million for the U.S. contribution to
ITER—$200 million for in-kind hardware contributions and $25 million for cash contributions.
Both the House-passed bill (H.R. 4923) and House report specify that U.S. cash contributions to
the international ITER project are contingent upon the ITER governing council’s implementation
of recommendations from a 2013 management assessment report.58
High Energy Physics
The Administration seeks $744 million—or $53 million (7%) less than the FY2014 enacted
funding level of $797 million—for HEP in FY2015. The House report recommends $775 million,

54 According to the ITER agreement, the U.S. contribution to ITER is 9.09% of construction costs. However, more than
80% of U.S. ITER project funding is spent at universities and businesses within the United States. (For example, the
United States is designing, engineering, and procuring ITER’s cooling water system as part of the U.S. contribution.)
Other contributors include China, India, Japan, South Korea, the Russian Federation, and the European Union. In
exchange for its contribution, the United States gains 100% access to ITER’s research output. More information about
the U.S. ITER program is available at https://www.usiter.org/index.shtml.
55 U.S. Department of Energy, FY2015 Congressional Budget Request, Science and Advanced Research Projects
Agency-Energy
, vol. 4, March 2014, p. 137, http://energy.gov/sites/prod/files/2014/04/f14/Volume_4.pdf.
56 In 2008, the cost for the U.S. share of ITER was estimated to be between $1.45 billion and $2.2 billion. Schedule
delays, design and scope changes, and other factors have placed upward pressure on ITER costs. According to the
FY2015 DOE budget request, the “present U.S. assessment of the project is that it cannot, under current conditions,
meet the most recent schedule” (DOE, FY2015 budget request, volume 4, p. 137) and that the “best estimate” of the
current total cost range is between $4.0 and $6.5 billion (Ibid., p. 146). A June 2014 Government Accountability Office
review of DOE’s cost and schedule estimates for the U.S. ITER project concluded, among other things, that the
unreliability of the overall international project schedule limited DOE’s ability to produce a reliable cost and schedule
estimate for the U.S. project. (See U.S. Government Accountability Office, Fusion Energy: Actions Needed to Finalize
Cost and Schedule Estimates for U.S. Contributions to an International Experimental Reactor
(GAO-14-499), June
2014, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-14-499.) DOE determined that it would seek to support an annual funding
level of no more than $225 million per year for ITER beginning in FY2014.
57 The Obama Administration sought to eliminate funding for the Alcator C-Mod facility in FY2014. However,
Congressional appropriators included funding for the facility in the joint explanatory statement that accompanied the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 (P.L. 113-76). See “Joint Explanatory Statement,” Congressional Record,
January 15, 2014, pp. H881-H893.
58 Excerpts of this report were published in the online New Yorker. See Raffi Khatchadourian, “How to Fix ITER,” The
New Yorker
, February 28, 2014, http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/comment/2014/02/how-to-fix-iter.html.
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or $22 million (3%) below the FY2014 enacted level and $31 million (4%) more than the FY2015
request.
The HEP request seeks overall reductions in Energy Frontier Experimental Physics, Intensity
Frontier Experimental Physics, Theoretical and Computational Physics, Advanced Technology
R&D, and Construction; as well as overall increases in Cosmic Frontier Experimental Physics
and Accelerator Stewardship. The FY2015 HEP request does not include funding for the Long
Baseline Neutrino Experiment (LBNE), which received funding for design activities in FY2014.
The request indicates that HEP intends to further develop LBNE program plans in FY2015.59
The House Committee on Appropriations recommends $738 million (or $19 million more than
the request) for HEP research in FY2015. The House report recommends increases over requested
levels for Energy Frontier Experimental Physics, Intensity Frontier Experimental Physics, Cosmic
Frontier Experimental Physics, Theoretical and Computational Physics, and Advanced
Technology R&D. The House report also provides $22 million for LBNE R&D, as well as
engineering and design activities. However, the House report recommends no funding for long-
lead procurements of construction activities associated with the LBNE project.
Nuclear Physics
The FY2015 request for NP is $594 million, $24 million (4%) more than the FY2014 enacted
funding level of $569 million. The House report recommends $600 million for NP in FY2015.
The largest change in the FY2015 NP request is a $35 million increase in construction funding for
the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams at Michigan State University (FRIB). This increase would be
partially offset by a $9 million reduction in funding for the 12GeV CEBAF (Continuous Electron
Beam Accelerator Facility) Upgrade project, which is reaching completion. Funding increases for
the FRIB would support the continuation of planned construction activities and final technical
design.
Among other things, the House Committee on Appropriations recommends the requested level for
FRIB.
ARPA-E60
The Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy (ARPA-E) was authorized by the America
COMPETES Act (P.L. 110-69) to support transformational energy technology research projects.
DOE budget documents describe ARPA-E’s mission as overcoming long-term, high-risk
technological barriers to the development of energy technologies. The FY2015 request for ARPA-

59 The LBNE was initially conceptualized as an experiment that would beam certain particles (underground) from
Fermilab in Batavia, IL, to the Sanford Lab in Lead, SD. The project was determined to be too expensive as initially
proposed. Scientists are considering whether to modify the experiment to an above-ground option that may make it less
expensive (but perhaps less scientifically useful) or seek international partners to assist with the cost of the
underground option. See Pallab Ghosh, “UK Backs Huge Neutrino Plan,” BBC News, February 14, 2104, at
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-26017957; and Adam Hurlburt, “Feds Support Underground Neutrino
Experiment,” Black Hills Pioneer, January 23, 2014, at http://www.bhpioneer.com/local_news/article_bdc8b8c8-8452-
11e3-84f7-0019bb2963f4.html.
60 This section was prepared by Heather Gonzalez.
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E is $325 million, an increase of $45 million above the FY2014 enacted funding level of $280
million.61 As in FY2013 and FY2014, the FY2015 ARPA-E request includes two research thrust
areas: Transportation Systems ($148 million requested) and Stationary Power Systems ($148
million requested). The House Committee on Appropriations recommends the FY2014 enacted
funding level for ARPA-E in FY2015.
Nuclear Waste Disposal62
Existing funding for DOE’s civilian nuclear waste disposal activities is included under the Office
of Nuclear Energy’s Fuel Cycle Research and Development Program, in the Used Nuclear Fuel
Disposition subprogram. As noted in the Nuclear Energy section of this report, the Administration
requested $79 million for the Used Nuclear Fuel Disposition subprogram for FY2015, an increase
of $19 million from FY2014.
Through the Used Nuclear Fuel subprogram, DOE’s Office of Nuclear Energy is carrying out
activities formerly conducted by the Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management
(OCRWM), which was established by the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982 (NWPA, 42 U.S.C.
10101 et seq.) to dispose of highly radioactive waste from nuclear power plants and defense
facilities. OCRWM had been developing a permanent nuclear waste repository at Yucca
Mountain, NV, as specified by an NWPA amendment in 1987. Funding for OCWRM ended after
FY2010, so the office has been closed and activities at the Yucca Mountain site halted. No
funding was requested for FY2015.
The Obama Administration “has determined that developing the Yucca Mountain repository is not
a workable option and the Nation needs a different solution for nuclear waste disposal,”
according to the DOE FY2011 budget justification. To develop alternative waste management
strategies, the Administration established the Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear
Future, which issued its final report to the Secretary of Energy on January 26, 2012.63 The Blue
Ribbon Commission recommended that future efforts to develop nuclear waste facilities follow a
“consent based” approach and be carried out by a new organization, rather than DOE. The
commission said the new nuclear waste entity should have “assured access” to the Nuclear Waste
Fund, which holds fees collected from nuclear power plant operators to pay for waste disposal.
Under NWPA, those funds cannot be spent without congressional appropriations.
DOE released its Strategy for the Management and Disposal of Used Nuclear Fuel and High-
Level Radioactive Waste
in January 2013 in response to the Blue Ribbon Commission report. The
strategy calls for a pilot interim storage facility for spent fuel from closed nuclear reactors to open
by 2021 and a larger storage facility, possibly at the same site, to open by 2025. A site for a
permanent underground waste repository would be selected by 2026, and the repository would
open by 2048. Storage and disposal sites would be selected by a new waste management
organization through a consent-based process, as recommended by the Blue Ribbon
Commission.64

61 FY2013 current plan funding levels reflect the effects of sequestration and applicable rescissions.
62 This section was prepared by Mark Holt.
63 Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear Future, Report to the Secretary of Energy, January 2012,
http://brc.gov/sites/default/files/documents/brc_finalreport_jan2012.pdf.
64 DOE, Strategy for the Management and Disposal of Used Nuclear Fuel and High-Level Radioactive Waste, January
(continued...)
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Under the category of Nuclear Waste Disposal, the House Appropriations Committee
recommended $150.0 million for DOE to restart its supporting activities for the Yucca Mountain
licensing process at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). As it has in previous years, the
committee noted that Yucca Mountain is by law the only candidate site for a national repository
for highly radioactive waste. The panel rejected Administrative attempts to “unilaterally” develop
and implement a new nuclear waste policy.
Much of the Administration’s nearly one-third funding boost for Used Nuclear Fuel Disposition
in FY2015, under the Nuclear Energy category, would go for R&D on long-term storage of high-
burnup fuels—nuclear fuel rods that have been irradiated much longer than was typical in the
past. The higher funding request would also pay for deep borehole demonstration tests, as well as
continuing evaluations of crystalline rock, clay/shale, and salt as potential repository media,
according to the DOE budget justification.
The FY2015 budget request includes a proposal to change the nuclear waste funding system
along the lines proposed by the Blue Ribbon Commission. Discretionary funding (annual
appropriations by Congress) would continue to pay for “regular and recurring” expenses of the
nuclear waste program. In the past, discretionary appropriations for the program have come from
both the Nuclear Waste Fund, to pay for disposal of commercial reactor waste, and from the
General Fund, to pay for defense waste disposal. The FY2015 request for the Used Nuclear Fuel
subprogram proposes $30 million to develop preliminary processes for storage, transportation,
disposal, and consent-based siting—of which $24 million would come from the Nuclear Waste
Fund.
Beginning in FY2018, under the Administration proposal, the discretionary appropriations for
spent nuclear fuel management would be supplemented by mandatory appropriations, first from
incoming nuclear waste fee revenues and eventually from past fees and interest that have
accumulated in the Waste Fund. If Congress enacted such mandatory appropriations, the specified
funding would be automatically provided to the waste program without the need for annual
congressional approval. A similar proposal in FY2014 was not approved by Congress.
DOE’s proposal to pay for nuclear waste activities with annual waste fee collections has been
jeopardized by a ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit that
DOE must stop collecting the fees. NWPA requires the Secretary of Energy to adjust the fees as
necessary to cover the waste program’s anticipated costs, but the Court ruled that DOE’s current
waste plans are too vague to allow a reasonable estimate to be calculated.65
DOE had filed a license application with NRC for the proposed Yucca Mountain repository in
June 2008 but filed a motion to withdraw the application on March 3, 2010. An NRC licensing
panel rejected DOE’s withdrawal motion June 29, 2010, on the grounds that NWPA requires full
consideration of the license application by NRC. The full NRC Commission deadlocked on the

(...continued)
2013, http://energy.gov/sites/prod/files/
Strategy%20for%20the%20Management%20and%20Disposal%20of%20Used%20Nuclear%20Fuel%20and%20High
%20Level%20Radioactive%20Waste.pdf.
65 U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, National Association of Regulatory Utility
Commissioners v. U.S. Department of Energy
, No. 11-1066, decided November 19, 2013,
http://www.cadc.uscourts.gov/internet/opinions.nsf/2708C01ECFE3109F85257C280053406E/$file/11-1066-
1466796.pdf.
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issue September 9, 2011, leaving the licensing panel’s decision in place and prohibiting DOE
from withdrawing the Yucca Mountain application. However, the commission ordered at the same
time that the licensing process be halted because of “budgetary limitations.”66 No funding was
provided in FY2012 through FY2014 or requested for FY2015 to continue Yucca Mountain
licensing activities. However, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled
on August 13, 2013, that NRC must continue work on the Yucca Mountain license application as
long as funding is available. The Court determined that NRC has at least $11.1 million in
previously appropriated funds for that purpose.67
NWPA required DOE to begin taking waste from nuclear plant sites by January 31, 1998. Nuclear
utilities, upset over DOE’s failure to meet that deadline, have won two federal court decisions
upholding the department’s obligation to meet the deadline and to compensate utilities for any
resulting damages. Utilities have also won several cases in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims.
DOE estimates that liability payments would eventually exceed $20 billion if DOE were to begin
removing waste from reactor sites by 2020, the previous target for opening Yucca Mountain.68
(For more information, see CRS Report R42513, U.S. Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage, by James D.
Werner; CRS Report RL33461, Civilian Nuclear Waste Disposal, by Mark Holt; and CRS Report
R40996, Contract Liability Arising from the Nuclear Waste Policy Act (NWPA) of 1982, by Todd
Garvey.)
Loan Guarantees and Direct Loans69
DOE’s Loan Programs Office provides loan guarantees for projects that deploy specified energy
technologies, as authorized by Title XVII of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPACT05, P.L. 109-
58), and direct loans for advanced vehicle manufacturing technologies. No funding for additional
loans and loan guarantees was requested for FY2015. However, $42 million was requested for
loan guarantee program administrative expenses, the same as the FY2014 level. The FY2015
funding request would be offset by $25 million in fees, for a net appropriation of $17 million. An
additional $6 million, with $2 million in offsets, was requested for vehicle manufacturing loan
program administrative expenses. The House Appropriations Committee approved the requested
amounts.
Two major loan guarantee programs are currently administered by the DOE Loan Programs
Office:
Section 1703 innovative clean energy technology loan guarantees. Loan
guarantees are provided for “new or significantly improved technologies,” as
compared to existing commercial technologies, that “avoid, reduce, or sequester”
air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions. Eligible technology categories

66 Nuclear Regulatory Commission, “In the Matter of U.S. Department of Energy (High-Level Waste Repository),”
CLI-11-07, September 9, 2011, http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/commission/orders/2011/2011-
07cli.pdf.
67 U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, In re: Aiken County et al., No. 11-1271, writ of
mandamus, August 13, 2013, http://www.cadc.uscourts.gov/internet/opinions.nsf/
BAE0CF34F762EBD985257BC6004DEB18/$file/11-1271-1451347.pdf.
68 Ibid., p. 80.
69 This section was prepared by Mark Holt. For more details on loan guarantees, see CRS Report R42152, Loan
Guarantees for Clean Energy Technologies: Goals, Concerns, and Policy Options
, by Phillip Brown.
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include renewable energy, advanced fossil energy, advanced nuclear energy,
energy efficiency, and pollution control.
Section 1705 renewable energy, electric transmission, and advanced biofuels
loan guarantees. Established by Section 406 of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act (ARRA, P.L. P.L. 111-5), the Section 1705 program was
designed as a temporary economic stimulus measure available through the end of
FY2011. Unlike the Section 1703 program, which is limited to innovative
technologies, loan guarantees were provided to already-commercialized
renewable energy and electric transmission technologies.
Title XVII allows DOE to provide loan guarantees for up to 80% of construction costs for eligible
energy projects. Under such loan guarantee agreements, the federal government would repay all
covered loans if the borrower defaulted. This would reduce the risk to lenders and allow them to
provide financing at below-market interest rates. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz signed
agreements on February 20, 2014, for the first Section 1703 loan guarantees, totaling $6.5 billion
for two nuclear reactors in Georgia.70 (For more about the Georgia loan guarantees, see CRS
Insights, DOE Section 1703 Vogtle Nuclear Project Loan Guarantees: How Can Credit Subsidy
Fees Be Zero?,
http://www.crs.gov/pages/Insights.aspx?PRODCODE=IN10054.) Under Section
1705, final loan guarantees have been issued for 24 projects, totaling about $14.4 billion.71
DOE’s first loan guarantee under Section 1705 was issued in September 2009 to Solyndra Inc., a
manufacturer of photovoltaic equipment. Solyndra’s bankruptcy announcement on August 31,
2011, prompted strong congressional criticism of the Administration’s management of the loan
guarantee program.72 Solyndra’s DOE loan guarantee totaled $535 million, and the company’s
bankruptcy placed most or all of that amount at risk. (For details, see CRS Report R42058,
Market Dynamics That May Have Contributed to Solyndra’s Bankruptcy, by Phillip Brown.)
Subsidy Costs
Title XVII requires the estimated future government costs resulting from defaults on guaranteed
loans to be covered up-front by appropriations or by payments from project sponsors (borrowers).
These “subsidy costs” are calculated as the present value of the average possible future net costs
to the government for each loan guarantee, on a case-by-case basis. If those calculations are
accurate, the subsidy cost payments for all the guaranteed projects together should cover the
future costs of the program. However, the Congressional Budget Office has predicted that the up-
front subsidy cost payments will prove too low by at least 1% and is scoring bills accordingly.73

70 Mirshak, Meg, “Energy Secretary Moniz Visits Vogtle to Finalize Loan Guarantee,” Augusta Chronicle, February
21, 2014, http://chronicle.augusta.com/news/metro/2014-02-20/energy-secretary-moniz-visits-vogtle-finalize-loan-
guarantee.
71 U.S. Department of Energy Loan Programs Office, “The Financing Force Behind America’s Clean Energy
Economy,” https://lpo.energy.gov/. For a critique of the loan guarantee process, see U.S. Government Accountability
Office, DOE Loan Guarantees: Further Actions Are Needed to Improve Tracking and Review of Applications, GAO-
12-157, March 2012, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-12-157.
72 Opening Statement of the Honorable Cliff Stearns, Chairman, Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.
“Solyndra and the DOE Loan Guarantee Program,” September 14, 2011,
http://republicans.energycommerce.house.gov/Media/file/Hearings/Oversight/091411/Stearns.pdf.
73 Congressional Budget Office, S. 1321, Energy Savings Act of 2007, CBO Cost Estimate, Washington, DC, June 11,
2007, pp. 7-9, http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/82xx/doc8206/s1321.pdf; and CBO, Fair-Value Accounting for Federal
Credit Programs, Issue Brief, March 2012, http://www.cbo.gov/publication/43027.
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As a result, appropriations bills that provide loan guarantee authorizations include an adjustment
totaling 1% of the loan guarantee ceiling.
Subsidy costs for Section 1703 loan guarantees must usually be paid by project sponsors, because
no appropriations for that program were provided before FY2011 (as described below). ARRA, in
contrast, appropriated $6 billion to cover the subsidy costs of Section 1705 loan guarantees, so
subsidy cost payments were not required from project sponsors under that program. However, $2
billion of the Section 1705 subsidy cost appropriation was subsequently transferred to the “cash
for clunkers” automobile trade-in program by P.L. 111-47, and another $1.5 billion was rescinded
to help pay for the Education Jobs and Medicaid Assistance Act (P.L. 111-226), leaving $2.5
billion. Of the $2.5 billion available for subsidy costs, $1.9 billion was obligated by the program’s
deadline at the end of FY2011.74
Authorized Loan Guarantee Amounts
Under the Federal Credit Reform Act (FCRA), federal loan guarantees cannot be provided
without an authorized level in an appropriations act or an appropriation for the subsidy costs.
Pursuant to FCRA, the FY2007 continuing resolution (P.L. 110-5) established an initial cap of $4
billion on loan guarantees under the Section 1703 program, without allocating that amount among
the various eligible technologies. Additional loan guarantee authority was subsequently provided
for specific technologies and then further modified as described below.
Unobligated appropriations for subsidy cost payments under the Section 1705 loan guarantee
program were no longer available after FY2011, as noted above. However, the FY2011
Continuing Appropriations Act provided $170 million, with no expiration, to pay subsidy costs
for renewable energy and efficiency projects under the Section 1703 program. The act also
provided authority for up to $1.183 billion in loan guarantees for those renewable energy and
efficiency projects, in addition to the $32.8 billion in Section 1703 authority remaining from
earlier appropriations acts for all technologies. The additional loan guarantee authority and
subsidy cost appropriation provided by the FY2011 Continuing Appropriations Act is available to
projects that applied under the expiring Section 1705 before February 24, 2011.
Following is a summary of the various elements of the current DOE loan guarantee program, as
modified by the FY2011 Continuing Appropriations Act (CR):
• $8.3 billion ceiling in CR on non-nuclear technologies under Section 1703,
reduced from ceilings set in FY2009.
• $2 billion for unspecified projects from FY2007 under Section 1703, not affected
by CR.
• $18.5 billion ceiling for nuclear power plants ($6.5 billion finalized; $1.8 billion
conditionally committed).
• $4 billion allocated for loan guarantees for uranium enrichment plants ($2 billion
conditionally committed).

74 DOE Weekly Financial and Activity Report, September 30, 2011, http://www.recovery.gov/transparency/agency/
reporting/agency_reporting2.aspx?agency_code=89&dt=09/30/2011.
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• $1.183 billion ceiling for renewable energy and energy efficiency projects under
Section 1703, in addition to other ceiling amounts, which can include pending
applications under Section 1705.
• An appropriation of $170 million for subsidy costs for renewable energy and
energy efficiency loan guarantees under Section 1703. If the subsidy costs
averaged 10% of the loan guarantees, this funding could support loan guarantees
totaling $1.7 billion.
• $2.5 billion for Section 1705 subsidy costs appropriated by ARRA. As noted
above, about $1.9 billion of this funding was used to pay the subsidy costs for
$14 billion in loan guarantees with final commitments under Section 1705, for
which the deadline was September 30, 2011.75 Therefore, the remainder is not
currently available to the program.
Advanced Technology Vehicle Manufacturing Loans
DOE also administers the Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing (ATVM) Loan Program
established by the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (P.L. 110-140).76 The FY2009
Continuing Resolution appropriated $7.5 billion to allow DOE to issue up to $25 billion in direct
loans. The program was designed to provide loans to eligible automobile manufacturers and parts
suppliers for making investments in their plant capacity to produce vehicles with improved fuel
economy. Along with the EPACT loan guarantee programs, the ATVM Loan Program is
administered by the DOE Loan Programs Office. DOE reports that five ATVM loans have been
issued, totaling $8.4 billion. Two of those projects, totaling $579 million, are no longer active.77
Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Stewardship78
Congress established the Stockpile Stewardship Program in the FY1994 National Defense
Authorization Act (P.L. 103-160). The goal of the program, as amended by the FY2010 National
Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 111-84, §3111), is to ensure “that the nuclear weapons stockpile
is safe, secure, and reliable without the use of underground nuclear weapons testing.” The
program is operated by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), a semiautonomous
agency within DOE that Congress established in the FY2000 National Defense Authorization Act
(P.L. 106-65, Title XXXII).
Stockpile stewardship consists of all activities in NNSA’s Weapons Activities account, as
described below. Table 12 presents Weapons Activities funding. NNSA manages two programs
outside of that account: Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation, discussed later in this report, and
Naval Reactors.

75 DOE Loan Programs Office, “Our Projects,” http://lpo.energy.gov/our-projects.
76 For more details, see CRS Report R42064, The Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing (ATVM) Loan
Program: Status and Issues
, by Bill Canis and Brent D. Yacobucci.
77 U.S. Department of Energy Loan Programs Office, “The Financing Force Behind America’s Clean Energy
Economy,” https://lpo.energy.gov/?page_id=45.
78 This section was prepared by Jonathan Medalia.
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Most stewardship activities take place at the nuclear weapons complex (the “complex”), which
consists of three laboratories (Los Alamos National Laboratory, NM; Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory, CA; and Sandia National Laboratories, NM and CA); four production sites
(Kansas City Plant, MO; Pantex Plant, TX; Savannah River Site, SC; and Y-12 National Security
Complex, TN); and the Nevada National Security Site (formerly Nevada Test Site). NNSA
manages and sets policy for the complex; contractors to NNSA operate the eight sites.
Table 12. Funding for Weapons Activities, FY2013-FY2015
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
House
Program
Enacted
Enacted
Request
Approps. Senate Conf.
DSW
1,946.6 2,442.0 2,746.6 2,697.0


Campaigns
1,556.7 1,658.3 1,841.3 1,727.0


RTBFa
1,972.6 2,067.4 2,055.5 2,046.0


Site
Stewardship 72.8 87.3 82.4 79.5


Otherb
1,422.1 1,525.9 1,588.9 1,654.7


Total
6,970.8 7,781.0 8,314.9 8,204.2


Source: FY2015 NNSA Congressional Budget Request, FY2015 House Appropriations Committee report on
Energy and Water Development Appropriations.
Notes: Details may not add to totals due to rounding. DSW: Directed Stockpile Work; RTBF: Readiness in
Technical Base and Facilities.
a. For FY2014, NNSA proposed to eliminate RTBF and split its functions between Nuclear Programs (a new
program) and Site Stewardship. P.L. 113-76 retained RTBF and Site Stewardship. Also for FY2014, NNSA
proposed to shift Nuclear Counterterrorism Incident Response and National Security Applications from
Weapons Activities to Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation. P.L. 113-76 retained Nuclear Counterterrorism
Incident Response in Weapons Activities and made no mention of National Security Applications. P.L. 113-
76 also moved Domestic Uranium Enrichment Research, Development, and Demonstration into Weapons
Activities from Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation, a separate account. See text for details.
b. For FY2013, “other” includes Secure Transportation Asset, Nuclear Counterterrorism Incident Response,
NNSA CIO Activities, Defense Nuclear Security, Legacy Contractor Pensions, and National Security
Applications. For FY2014, in P.L. 113-76, “other” includes Secure Transportation Asset, Nuclear
Counterterrorism Incident Response, Defense Nuclear Security, Information Technology and Cyber
Security, Legacy Contractor Pensions, Domestic Uranium Enrichment Research, Development, and
Demonstration, and a rescission. For FY2015 request, “other” includes Secure Transportation Asset,
Nuclear Counterterrorism Incident Response, Counterterrorism and Counterproliferation Programs,
Defense Nuclear Security, Information Technology and Cyber Security, and Legacy Contractor Pensions.
For FY2015 for House Appropriations Committee bil , “other” includes Secure Transportation Asset,
Nuclear Counterterrorism Incident Response, Defense Nuclear Security, Information Technology and
Cyber Security, Legacy Contractor Pensions, and Domestic Uranium Enrichment.

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Table 13. Weapons Activities: FY2015 Request and FY2016-FY2019 Plan
($ millions, except bottom row: $ billions)
FY2015
FY2016
FY2017
FY2018
FY2019
DSW 2,746.6
2,833.5
2,969.5
3,325.7
3,408.8
Campaigns 1,841.3
1,966.9
1,905,3
1,913.6
1,977.7
RTBF 2,055.5
2,458.9
2,770.4
2,645.4
2,764.4
Site Stewardship
82.4
84.4
84.5
84.5
85.2
Othera 1,588.9
1,563.7
1,531.8
1,507.5
1,466.1
Total 8,314.9
8,907.2
9,261.4
9,476.6
9,702.3
Nov. 2010 “1251
8.7 8.9
8.9-9.0
9.2-9.3
9.4-9.6
report” projection
Source: FY2015 NNSA Congressional Budget Request for rows through Total; bottom row, U.S. White House.
“November 2010 Update to the National Defense Authorization Act of FY2010 Section 1251 Report: New
START Treaty Framework and Nuclear Force Structure Plans,” p. 9, http://www.lasg.org/CMRR/
Sect1251_update_17Nov2010.pdf.
Notes: Details may not add to totals due to rounding. DSW, Directed Stockpile Work; RTBF, Readiness in
Technical Base and Facilities.
a. “Other” includes Secure Transportation Asset, Nuclear Counterterrorism Incident Response,
Counterterrorism and Counterproliferation Programs, Defense Nuclear Security, Information Technology
and Cyber Security, and Legacy Contractor Pensions.
Nuclear Weapons Complex Reconfiguration
The nuclear weapons complex currently consists of eight sites, but had many more personnel and
sites during the Cold War. Despite the post-Cold War reductions, many in Congress have for years
wanted the complex to change further, in various ways: fewer personnel, greater efficiency,
smaller footprint at each site, increased security, and the like. After numerous exchanges between
DOE and the appropriating and authorizing committees, such issues still remain.
According to a White House document of May 2010, the President provided Congress with a
classified report (the “1251 report”) required by the FY2010 National Defense Authorization Act,
Section 1251, “on the comprehensive plan to: (1) maintain delivery platforms [that is, bombers,
missiles, and submarines that deliver nuclear weapons]; (2) sustain a safe, secure, and reliable
U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile; and (3) modernize the nuclear weapons complex.”79 According
to that document, “the Administration intends to invest $80 billion in the next decade to sustain
and modernize the nuclear weapons complex.” The Administration submitted a revised Section
1251 report in November 2010, projecting weapons stockpile and infrastructure costs for
FY2011-FY2020 at between $85.4 billion and $86.2 billion. The requests for FY2013-FY2015
were below the 1251 report figures; in contrast, the projections for FY2016-FY2019 are at or
above the figures in the 1251 report, as Table 13 shows.

79 U.S. White House. “The New START Treaty—Maintaining a Strong Nuclear Deterrent,” fact sheet, May 13, 2010,
http://www.america.gov/st/texttrans-english/2010/May/20100514114003xjsnommis0.6300318.html.
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Directed Stockpile Work (DSW)
This program involves work directly on nuclear weapons in the stockpile, such as monitoring
their condition; maintaining them through repairs, refurbishment, life extension, and
modifications; conducting R&D in support of specific warheads; and dismantlement. The
FY2014 appropriation for DSW was $2,442.0 million. For FY2015, the request was $2,746.6
million and the House Appropriations Committee recommended $2,697.0 million. Specific items
under DSW include the following:
Life Extension Programs (LEPs). These programs aim to extend the life of existing warheads
through design, certification, manufacture, and replacement of components. An LEP for the W76
warhead for the Trident II submarine-launched ballistic missile is ongoing, as is an LEP for the
B61 mod 12. (A “mod” is a modification or version of a bomb or warhead type.)
For FY2015, NNSA requested the following for LEPs:
• $643.0 million for the B61-12 LEP, with the first production unit slipping to
FY2020.
• $259.2 million for the W76 LEP.
• $165.4 million for the W88 Alt 370.
• $9.4 million for an LEP for a cruise missile warhead. FY2015 is the first year for
which NNSA requested funds for this warhead under the LEP heading. The LEP
would seek to use common components from other LEPs and to improve
warhead safety and security. The LEP will consider variations of two warheads,
the W80 (currently deployed on air-launched cruise missiles) and the W84
(formerly deployed on ground-launched cruise missiles).
• No funds for IW-1 or the W78 LEP. NNSA “does not propose further funding for
the W78 LEP.” In addition, NNSA has deferred IW-1, and projects the first
production unit as FY2030.
The House Appropriations Committee recommended fully funding the B61-12 LEP, the W76
LEP, and the W88 Alt 370 requests. It provided no funds, as requested, for the W78 LEP. It added
$7.6 million above the request “for a new life extension study for the cruise missile warhead.”
Since the high cost of the B61-12 LEP “will continue to exert significant pressure on the NNSA’s
budget,” the committee bill “contains an updated provision that permanently establishes a
requirement to conduct a comprehensive analysis of alternatives as part of all future life extension
programs.”
Stockpile Systems. This program involves routine maintenance, replacement of limited-life
components, surveillance, assessment, and the like for all weapon types in the stockpile. The
FY2013 appropriation was $518.8 million. For 2014, the W78/W88 study and the Alt 370
advanced sufficiently to move to Life Extension Programs. As a result, Stockpile Systems funding
requested declined to $454.5 million for FY2014; that amount was appropriated. The FY2015
request was $531.1 million. The House Appropriations Committee recommended the requested
amount.
Weapons Dismantlement and Disposition (WDD). The number of warheads has fallen sharply
since the end of the Cold War, and continues to decline. WDD involves interim storage of
warheads to be dismantled; dismantlement; and disposition (i.e., storing or eliminating warhead
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components and materials). The FY2013 appropriation was $40.7 million. For FY2014, the
request was $49.3 million and the appropriation was $54.3 million. The FY2015 request was
$30.0 million. The House Appropriations Committee recommended the FY2014 amount, which
was $24.3 million above the FY2015 request, noting that NNSA continues to cut funding for
dismantlement despite clear requirements for it.
Stockpile Services. This category includes Production Support; R&D Support; R&D
Certification and Safety; Management, Technology, and Production; and Plutonium Infrastructure
Sustainment. NNSA states, “Stockpile Services provides the foundation for the production
capability and capacity within the nuclear security enterprise. All enduring systems, LEPs, and
dismantlements rely on Stockpile Services to provide the base development, production and
logistics capability needed to meet program requirements. In addition, Stockpile Services funds
research, development, and production activities that support two or more weapons-types, and
work that is not identified or allocated to a specific weapon-type.” The FY2013 appropriation was
$844.3 million. For FY2014, the request was $910.2 million and the appropriation was $940.3
million. The FY2015 request was $1,108.5 million; much of the increase was for R&D for
certification and safety of warheads (+$50.3 million), and for preparations to increase tritium
production (+$60.1 million).
The House Appropriations Committee recommended $1,027.0 million. The largest reduction,
$47.0 million, was for R&D for certification and safety. The committee stated, “It is essential that
the NNSA establish dedicated funding to conduct Significant Finding Investigations and respond
to stockpile issues, rather than continuing to fund technology maturation and exploratory
development activities within Stockpile Services in an effort to distribute funding for these
activities across multiple control points.” (A Significant Finding Investigation is a formal
investigation into a potential problem with a nuclear weapon.)
Campaigns
These are “multi-year, multi-functional efforts” that “provide specialized scientific knowledge
and technical support to the directed stockpile work on the nuclear weapons stockpile.” Many
campaigns have significance for policy decisions. For example, the Science Campaign’s goals
include improving the ability to assess warhead performance without nuclear testing, improving
readiness to conduct nuclear tests should the need arise, and maintaining the scientific
infrastructure of the nuclear weapons laboratories. Campaigns also fund some large experimental
facilities, such as the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The
FY2014 and FY2015 requests included five campaigns:
Science Campaign. The FY2013 appropriation was $321.2 million. For FY2014, the request was
$397.9 million, and P.L. 113-76 provided $369.7 million. The FY2015 request was $456.4
million. NNSA states that the increase provides capabilities to provide certain LEP options,
provides improved diagnostic capabilities for certain nuclear experiments, and enables
technologies to improve surety (safety, security, use control, use denial, etc.) for future LEPs. The
House Appropriations Committee recommended $395.1 million. It increased funds for a “robust
experimental effort … to better understand the properties of plutonium” in support of possible pit
reuse, and recommended no funds for certain radiography capabilities, requiring NNSA to
“provide a clear and direct linkage to stockpile needs if additional radiography capabilities are
needed.”
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Engineering Campaign. This campaign “funds activities that assess and improve fielded nuclear
and non-nuclear engineering components without further underground testing.” For FY2013,
$127.7 million was appropriated. For FY2014, the request was $149.9 million and the
appropriation provided the requested amount. The FY2015 request was $136.0 million. Some of
these reductions reflect delays in portions of the nuclear weapons program. The House
Appropriations Committee recommended the requested amount.
Inertial Confinement Fusion Ignition and High Yield Campaign. This campaign is developing
tools to create extremely high temperatures and pressures in the laboratory—approaching those of
a nuclear explosion—to support weapons-related research and attract scientific talent to the
Stockpile Stewardship Program. The centerpiece of this campaign is the National Ignition Facility
(NIF), the world’s largest laser. While NIF was controversial in Congress for many years,
controversy waned as the program progressed. NIF was dedicated in May 2009.80 For FY2013,
the appropriation for this campaign was $446.7 million. For FY2014, the request was $401.0
million and the appropriation was $514.0 million. The FY2015 request was $512.9 million; the
House Appropriations Committee recommended a reduction of $0.9 million.
Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) Campaign. This campaign develops
computation-based models of nuclear weapons that integrate data from other campaigns, past test
data, laboratory experiments, etc., to create what NNSA calls “the computational surrogate for
nuclear testing to determine weapon behavior.” ASC also supports nonproliferation, emergency
response, and nuclear forensics. Some analysts doubt that simulation can be relied upon to
provide the confidence needed to certify the safety, security, and reliability of warheads, and
advocate a return to testing. For FY2013, the appropriation was $545.8 million. For FY2014, the
request was $564.3 million and the appropriation was $569.3 million. The FY2015 request was
$610.1 million. Much of the increase results from “beginning the transition of integrated codes to
work efficiently on emerging high-performance computers,” developing codes, and maintaining
computer resources and facilities. The House Appropriations Committee recommended a
reduction of $20.1 million below the requested amount.
Readiness Campaign. This campaign “operates the capability for producing tritium to maintain
the national inventory needed for the nuclear weapons stockpile.” The FY2013 appropriation was
$115.3 million. The FY2014 request increased to $197.8 million. The FY2014 appropriation
provided no funds for one subprogram of the campaign, moved a tritium subprogram to Stockpile
Services, and provided $55.4 million for a third subprogram, Nonnuclear Readiness. The FY2015
request was $125.9 million, all of which was for the latter subprogram, which “develops
capabilities to manufacture components used for Directed Stockpile Work.” The House
Appropriations Committee recommended no funds for this campaign. Instead, it recommended
establishing an Advanced Manufacturing Campaign “to develop, demonstrate, and utilize
advanced technologies that are needed to enhance the NNSA’s secure manufacturing capabilities
and ensure timely support for the production of nuclear weapons and other critical national
security components,” and recommended $93.9 million for this campaign.

80 Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, “Dedication of World’s Largest Laser Marks the Dawn of a New Era,”
press release, May 29, 2009, https://publicaffairs.llnl.gov/news/news_releases/2009/NR-09-05-05.html.
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Readiness in Technical Base and Facilities (RTBF)
This program funds infrastructure and operations at nuclear weapons complex sites. For FY2013,
the appropriation was $1,972.6 million. For FY2014, NNSA proposed transferring its programs to
other programs for which the total request was $2,450.5 million. The appropriation retained
RTBF and provided $2,067.4 million for it. For FY2015, the request was $2,055.5 million and the
House Appropriations Committee recommended $2,046.0 million.
RTBF has several subprograms. The largest is Operations of Facilities (FY2014 appropriation,
$984.5 million; FY2015 request, $896.0 million; House Appropriations Committee
recommendation, same as request). The second largest is Construction (FY2014 appropriation,
$422.1 million; FY2015 request, $402.8 million; House Appropriations Committee
recommendation, $437.6 million). The House Appropriations Committee recommended $35.7
million for the Chemistry and Metallurgy Research Replacement Project at Los Alamos National
Laboratory; these funds were not included in the request. While the Administration “deferred” a
major facility in this project “for at least five years” in its FY2013 budget request, the committee
for FY2015 wanted smaller projects that are consistent with the need to provide certain analytical
capabilities in a building other than the Chemistry and Metallurgy Research (CMR) building
funded under “construction” instead of “operations” in order to provide greater transparency.
(Most of CMR came online in 1952; NNSA wants to exit it by approximately 2019.)
The Construction subprogram has included controversial programs. As background, a modern
nuclear weapon has two stages. Detonation of the “primary” provides the energy to detonate the
“secondary,” which provides most of the weapon’s yield. The core of the primary is the “pit,”
which uses plutonium; the secondary uses uranium and other materials. NNSA has encountered
problems in building facilities to manufacture both components. The Rocky Flats Plant
manufactured pits on an industrial scale, sometimes up to 2,000 per year, during the Cold War. It
ceased production in 1989; since then, NNSA has manufactured at most 11 pits in a year, and
several larger-scale facilities have been rejected or deferred, in substantial part because of cost
growth. Instead, NNSA is transferring some work to support pit fabrication to existing buildings.
Secondaries are made in the Building 9212 Complex at the Y-12 National Security Complex,
which was built during and shortly after World War II; one report called it “decrepit.” NNSA
planned to replace it with the Uranium Processing Facility (UPF). However, recent projections of
UPF cost exceeded $6.5 billion, the top of the preliminary cost range, so the FY2015 request
stated that NNSA is exploring alternatives intended to “deliver Building 9212 capabilities for not
more than $6.5 billion and no later than 2025.” The House Appropriations Committee
recommended providing $335.0 million, as requested, for UPF, but stated, “No funding shall be
available for site preparation or facility construction until the NNSA achieves 90 percent design
completion for the entire project.”
Other Programs
Weapons Activities includes several smaller programs, including:
Secure Transportation Asset provides for safe and secure transport of nuclear weapons,
components, and materials. It includes special vehicles for this purpose, communications and
other supporting infrastructure, and threat response. For FY2013, the appropriation was $201.5
million. The FY2014 request was $219.2 million; the appropriation was $210.0 million. The
FY2015 request was $233.8 million. The House Appropriations Committee recommended $219.0
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million, with the reduction “due to excessive prior-year balances in program direction” and
NNSA not providing sufficiently detailed acquisition plans for certain vehicles.
The Nuclear Counterterrorism Incident Response Program “responds to and mitigates nuclear
and radiological incidents worldwide and has a lead role in defending the Nation from the threat
of nuclear terrorism.” For FY2014, NNSA proposed transferring this program to Defense Nuclear
Nonproliferation “to align all NNSA funding for reducing global nuclear dangers in one
appropriation.” Congress rejected this approach; P.L. 113-76 provided $228.2 million and
retained the program in Weapons Activities. For FY2015, NNSA requested $173.4 million. The
House Appropriations Committee recommended $202.9 million. Among other things, the
committee recommended providing $25.0 million for certain emergency response-related R&D
that had been traditionally funded in Weapons Activities; the Administration requested no funds
in the Nuclear Counterterrorism Incident Response Program for this R&D.
The Counterterrorism and Counterproliferation Program “sustain[s] and exercise[s] the U.S.
Government’s ability to understand nuclear terrorism and to counter nuclear device proliferation.”
It conducts “national and international outreach to strengthen nuclear counterterrorism
capabilities” and is “a key nexus to coordinate and integrate other nuclear technical
counterterrorism efforts existing within the Federal government.” FY2015 is the first year for
which NNSA has requested funding, $76.9 million, for this program in Weapons Activities. The
House Appropriations Committee recommended no funding for this program under Weapons
Activities, maintaining that it and similar programs should be located in Defense Nuclear
Nonproliferation, another NNSA component, instead of Weapons Activities.
Site Stewardship: This program seeks to “bring focus on environmental compliance, nuclear
materials disposition and developing the needed skills and talent for NNSA’s enduring technical
workforce at the laboratories and production plants.” The FY2014 appropriation for this program
was $87.3 million; the FY2015 request is $82.4 million. The House Appropriations Committee
recommended $79.5 million.
Defense Nuclear Security provides operations, maintenance, and construction funds for
protective forces, physical security systems, personnel security, and the like. It “provides
protection from a full spectrum of threats, especially terrorism, for NNSA personnel, facilities,
nuclear weapons, and information.” Prior to FY2014, this program was a component of
Safeguards and Security. In the FY2014 request, NNSA abolished Safeguards and Security and
made Defense Nuclear Security a standalone program. The FY2014 appropriation was $679.0
million. The FY2015 request was $618.1 million; the House Appropriations Committee
recommended $650.1 million, $32.0 million above the request, on grounds that NNSA had
underfunded this program. “The Committee expects the NNSA to request a more appropriate
level of funding in future years to ensure protection of special nuclear materials at the NNSA
sites.”
Information Technology and Cybersecurity elements include cyber security, enterprise secure
computing, and Federal Unclassified Information Technology. The latter will provide
“commodity computing infrastructure” to support a “shift from a traditional, costly desktop
support model to a cloud-provisioned virtualized desktop-based solution.” The FY2014
appropriation was $145.1 million. The FY2015 request was $179.6 million; the House
Appropriations Committee recommended fully funding this request.
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Legacy Contractor Pensions: For many decades, the University of California (UC) operated Los
Alamos and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories. Laboratory employees, as UC
employees, could participate in the UC pension plan. When the operation of the two labs was
privatized, the contracts between DOE and the new laboratory operators included provisions that
mirrored the pension that lab staff who were UC employees when the labs were privatized would
have received had the labs remained with UC. These pensions were larger than those provided to
employees hired after privatization. To make up the difference, NNSA paid into the pension plan
for the UC employees. For Weapons Activities, the FY2014 appropriation for this payment was
$279.6 million. (NNSA requested an additional amount for this purpose under Defense Nuclear
Nonproliferation.) The FY2015 request was $307.1 million; the House Appropriations Committee
recommended fully funding this request. Note that projected requests decline subsequently, with
the projected request falling to $87.4 million in FY2019.
Domestic Uranium Enrichment: No funds were requested for this program for FY2015; the
House Appropriations Committee recommended $96.0 million. “The NNSA has concluded its
project to demonstrate the technical viability of centrifuges with the United States Enrichment
Corporation. Funding for Domestic Uranium Enrichment is provided to maintain those
centrifuges in warm standby while the Department conducts further analysis of its tritium and
enriched uranium requirements.” The committee directed the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary
of Energy, NNSA, and the Nuclear Weapons Council to study this topic.
Nonproliferation and National Security Programs81
DOE’s nonproliferation and national security programs provide technical capabilities to support
U.S. efforts to prevent, detect, and counter the spread of nuclear weapons worldwide. These
nonproliferation and national security programs are administered by the National Nuclear
Security Administration (NNSA).
Table 14. DOE Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Programs
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program
Approp.
Approp.
Request House Senate Conf.
Defense Nuclear
$420.5 $398.8 $360.8 $452.7


Nonproliferation Research
and Development (formerly
Nonproliferation and
Verification R&D)
Nonproliferation and
143.1 128.7 141.4 144.2


International Security
International Materials
527.9 419.6 305.5 233.4


Protection and Control
(IMPC)
Fissile Materials Disposition
663.8
526.1
311.1
430.0


Global Threat Reduction
462.9 442.1 333.5 342.9


Initiative

81 This section was prepared by Mary Beth Nikitin.
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FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program
Approp.
Approp.
Request House Senate Conf.
Legacy Contractor Pensions
51.4
93.7
102.9
102.9


Rescissions and Use of Prior
-32.2 -55.0 0.0 -151


Year Funds
Total
2,237.4 1,954.0 1,555.2 1,555.2


Source: FY2015 budget request; H.Rept. 113-486.
Notes: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Negative numbers denote appropriations offsets.

Funding for these programs in FY2013 was $2,237.4 million after the March 1, 2013, sequester.
The appropriation for FY2014 was $1,954.0 million. For FY2015 the Administration requested
$1,555.2 million. The request included reductions in virtually all nonproliferation programs, in
particular the Fissile Materials Disposition program (see below).
The Nonproliferation and Verification R&D program was funded at $398.8 million for FY2014.
The request for FY2015 was $360.8 million. The Administration proposed renaming the program
Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation R&D. The House Appropriations Committee increased the
amount for this program and directed DOE to form a lead office responsible for coordinating
development of a national nuclear forensics capability.
Nonproliferation and International Security programs include international safeguards, export
controls, and treaties and agreements. The FY2015 request for these programs was $141.4
million, compared with $128.7 million appropriated for FY2014. The House Committee
increased funding for this program for the purpose of accelerating technical review of export
licenses for dual-use commodities.
International Materials Protection and Control (IMPC), which works with partner countries to
secure nuclear warheads and weapons-usable material, was funded at $527.9 million in FY2013
and $419.6 million in FY2014; the FY2015 request was $305.5 million. The decrease, according
to DOE’s FY2015 budget justification document, reflects a shift “to a sustainability phase with
the Russian Federation” in which “security costs are increasingly transitioned to the Russian
side.” DOE programs that enhance security at Russian warhead storage facilities have ended, in
part because of the conclusion of the work and in part because of the lapse in cooperation with
Russia’s Ministry of Defense, even before the spring 2014 events in Ukraine.
The IMPC request also included a reduction in the Second Line of Defense program, mostly
border and port detection programs, from $272.0 million in FY2013 and $190.0 million in
FY2014, to a requested $117.7 million for FY2015. According to DOE, the decline in funding
between FY2014 and FY2015 is due to both a one-time funding increase in FY2014 to support a
key detection program and adjustments that were made in FY2015 due to the need to fund higher
NNSA priorities following a strategic review of the program. The House Appropriations
Committee did not include funding for any IMPC activities in Russia, resulting in an
appropriation that is $72.1 million lower than the request.
The goal of the Fissile Materials Disposition (FMD) program is disposal of U.S. surplus weapons
plutonium by converting it into fuel for commercial power reactors, and a similar program in
Russia. The U.S. side of the program originally included construction of three projects at
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Savannah River, SC: a facility to fabricate “mixed-oxide” (MOX) reactor fuel, a pit disassembly
and conversion facility (PDCF), and a waste solidification facility. However, controversy
developed over whether the pit disassembly project was necessary. The FY2012 request for the
Fissile Materials Disposition program was $892.2 million, including $172 million for the PDCF,
but the final bill appropriated $685.4 million for the program, and included no funding for the
PDCF project, because, the conference report stated, “NNSA has not completed a study of
alternatives or a conceptual design report with a cost and schedule estimate.”
The FY2013 request for FMD programs was $921.3 million. No funding was sought for the
PDCF; NNSA said it would use existing facilities for pit disassembly. The waste solidification
facility was completed and no further funding was requested. The major cause of the increase was
the planned cold start-up of the MOX facility. However, no funding increase for the MOX project
was included in the FY2013 continuing resolution, and the start-up was delayed. The actual
FY2013 MOX appropriation was $401.0 million; the total FMD appropriation was $631.6
million. In the meantime the estimated total cost for the facility was increased from $4.8 billion to
$7.7 billion, in part to expand its capability to carry out the functions of the cancelled PDCF
plant.
In its FY2014 budget request, NNSA decided to slow down completion of the MOX plant, and
begin a process of “evaluating alternatives for a new and affordable plutonium disposition
strategy.” It asked for a total of $502.6 million for FMD programs, including $320 million for the
MOX plant. The House bill would have appropriated the requested amount, but the House
Appropriations Committee report said no additional funding would be provided to study
alternatives to the MOX plant, since NNSA had not submitted any alternatives that had not been
“exhaustively studied” or would likely cost less. The Senate Appropriations Committee rejected
the pause in MOX construction, funding the facility at $430.6 million and total FMD programs at
$669.2 million. The final appropriations bill, P.L. 113-76, provided $343.5 million for MOX
construction, and a total of $526.1 million for the whole FMD program.
The FY2015 budget request continued the Administration’s policy of maintaining the MOX
project in cold stand-by “while we further analyze options to complete the plutonium disposition
mission more efficiently.” The request for the total FMD program was $311.1 million. (For more
details, see CRS Report R43125, Mixed-Oxide Fuel Fabrication Plant and Plutonium
Disposition: Management and Policy Issues
, by Mark Holt and Mary Beth D. Nikitin.) The
House Appropriations Committee provided $430 million for this program, $118.9 million above
the budget request, directing the continuation of work on the construction of the MOX facility
and prohibiting any use of funds to place the project in cold standby.
The Global Threat Reduction Initiative is aimed at converting research reactors around the world
from using highly enriched uranium, removing and disposing of excess nuclear materials, and
protecting nuclear materials from theft or sabotage. The FY2014 appropriation for this program
was $442.1 million. The FY2015 request was $333.5 million. The Administration has explained
the program decrease by saying that the program is accomplishing its goals, and therefore there is
less material to be removed. The House Appropriations Committee recommended funding at $9.4
million above the request. The committee report also eliminates funds for conversion costs of the
HEU-fueled reactor at the Kurchatov Institute in Russia, “which has ties to the Russian military.”
The House Appropriations Committee report said that no new cooperative nonproliferation
programs with the Russian Federation could be funded, and directed DOE to report to Congress
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on whether ongoing and new nuclear security programs with Russia are addressing U.S. national
security goals.
Cleanup of Former Nuclear Weapons Production Sites and Civilian Nuclear
Energy Research Sites82

The development and production of nuclear weapons for national defense purposes for over half a
century since the beginning of the Manhattan Project resulted in a legacy of wastes and
contamination that continues to present substantial challenges today. In 1989, DOE established
the Office of Environmental Management primarily to consolidate its responsibilities for the
cleanup of former nuclear weapons production sites that had been administered under multiple
offices.83 These cleanup efforts are broad in scope and include the disposal of large quantities of
radioactive and other hazardous wastes generated over decades; management and disposal of
surplus nuclear materials; remediation of extensive contamination in soil and groundwater;
decontamination and decommissioning of excess buildings and facilities; and safeguarding,
securing, and maintaining facilities while cleanup is underway.84 The Office of Environmental
Management also is responsible for the cleanup of DOE sites that were involved in civilian
nuclear energy research, which also generated wastes and contamination. These research sites add
a non-defense component to the office’s mission, albeit smaller in terms of the scope of their
cleanup and associated funding.85
Efforts to clean up the environmental legacy of nuclear weapons production and nuclear energy
research represent the single largest environmental liability of the United States, exceeding the
cleanup liability of Department of Defense facilities. The need for annual appropriations of
several billion dollars for ongoing cleanup efforts at nuclear weapons production sites and nuclear
energy research sites has generated continuing interest within Congress about the long-term
financial liability of the United States to address potential risks at these sites. How to ensure the
protection of public safety, human health, and the environment in the most expedient and cost-
effective manner has been a perennial issue in the appropriations debate.
DOE has identified in excess of 100 “geographic” sites in over 30 states that historically were
involved in the production of nuclear weapons and nuclear energy research for civilian
purposes.86 The geographic scope of these sites is substantial, collectively encompassing a land
area of approximately 2 million acres. Cleanup remedies are in place and operational at the
majority of these sites. The responsibility for the long-term stewardship of these sites has been

82 This section was prepared by David Bearden.
83 In 1989, DOE created the Office of Environmental Restoration and Waste Management, which later was renamed the
Office of Environmental Management.
84 The term “cleanup” often is used in reference to the remediation of risks at a site. Cleanup may be accomplished
through various means to prevent potentially harmful levels of exposure to wastes and contamination. Cleanup may not
necessarily entail the removal of all hazards from a site, but in some instances may involve the permanent containment
of wastes or contamination to address exposure risks. If residual wastes or contamination remain on-site after cleanup is
complete, long-stewardship may continue to monitor residual wastes or contamination and ensure that cleanup
measures continue to operate effectively over the long term.
85 For additional information on the history, mission, and scope of the Office of Environmental Management, see
DOE’s website: http://energy.gov/em/office-environmental-management.
86 For an interactive map and listing of each site, see DOE’s Office of Environmental Management website:
http://energy.gov/em/cleanup-sites. There are links to separate maps for active and completed sites.
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transferred to the Office of Legacy Management and other offices within DOE for the operation
and maintenance of cleanup remedies and monitoring.87 See the “Office of Legacy Management”
section of this report. Some of the smaller sites for which DOE initially was responsible were
transferred to the Army Corps of Engineers in 1997 under the Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial
Action Program (FUSRAP). The cleanup of these sites is funded within the civil works budget of
the Corps.88 (See Table 4.) Once the Corps completes the cleanup of a FUSRAP site, it is
transferred back to DOE for long-term stewardship under the Office of Legacy Management.
Much work remains to be done at the sites that are still administered by the Office of
Environmental Management. DOE expects cleanup to continue for several years or even decades
at some of these sites, necessitating billions of dollars to fulfill the cleanup liability of the United
States. By the end of FY2014, the Office of Environmental Management expects to have
completed the cleanup of 91 sites in 30 states and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and to
continue the cleanup of 16 sites in 11 states.89
The Hanford site in the state of Washington has the lengthiest estimated time frame, with cleanup
scheduled for completion in 2070.90 DOE estimates that the costs to complete the cleanup of
Hanford and the other remaining sites could range between $180.9 billion and $219.0 billion from
FY2014 into the future, exceeding the past costs already incurred across the entire site
inventory.91 A substantial proportion of these funding needs and time frames is due to challenges
in managing, treating, and disposing of millions of gallons of high-level radioactive wastes stored
in hundreds of tanks at the Hanford site, the Savannah River Site in South Carolina, and the Idaho
National Laboratory.
Over time, DOE periodically has revised its estimates as project baselines and assumptions
change. These estimates have varied widely over the years by many billions of dollars. DOE
typically estimates a range of costs, rather than a single dollar amount, to reflect uncertainties in
the cleanup process. For example, final decisions have yet to be made at some sites to determine
the actions that will be necessary to remediate contamination. Methods to dispose of vast
quantities of wastes, and the scheduling of these actions, also could affect cleanup costs and time
frames. The costs of long-term stewardship after the completion of cleanup also are excluded
from the above cost estimates. Long-term stewardship entails an even greater degree of

87 The Office of Legacy Management administers the long-stewardship of DOE sites that do not have a continuing
mission once cleanup remedies are in place. Sites that have a continuing mission are transferred to the DOE offices that
administer those missions, which are responsible for their long-term stewardship.
88 Enacted October 13, 1997, the Energy and Water Development Appropriations Act for FY1998 (P.L. 105-62)
directed DOE to transfer the cleanup of 21 FUSRAP sites to the Army Corps of Engineers. DOE has remained
responsible for determining the eligibility of additional sites, and Congress has designated certain sites in legislation.
89 Department of Energy, Office of Chief Financial Officer, FY2015 Congressional Budget Request, March 2014,
Volume 5, Environmental Management, p. 5. See page 84 for a list of the 16 sites where cleanup is planned to continue
in FY2015. One of these 16 sites, the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in New Mexico, is not a cleanup site itself, but is a
permanent, geologic repository for “transuranic” wastes that are removed from other DOE sites for disposal.
90 Ibid., p 84.
91 Ibid., p. 83. DOE reports that the Office of Environmental Management has incurred $109.4 billion in past costs from
FY1997 through FY2013. Including these past costs, the estimated total “life-cycle” costs of cleanup range from
$290.3 billion to $328.4 billion. DOE has used FY1997 as the baseline, or starting point, for the time frame of these
life-cycle estimates. Historically, DOE also has reported $35 billion in past costs incurred since the establishment of the
Office of Environmental Management in 1989 through FY1996, yielding a total of $144.4 billion in past costs incurred
from 1989 to FY2013. Comprehensive information on past costs incurred prior to the establishment of the Office of
Environmental Management in 1989 is not readily available.
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uncertainty, considering the lengthy time frames of maintenance and monitoring once cleanup
remedies are in place and operational, especially at sites where the cleanup method may entail the
permanent containment of radioactive wastes.
FY2015 appropriations for the Office of Environmental Management and Office of Legacy
Management are discussed separately below.
Office of Environmental Management
Three appropriations accounts fund the Office of Environmental Management. The Defense
Environmental Cleanup account is the largest in terms of funding, and it finances the cleanup of
former nuclear weapons production sites. The Non-Defense Environmental Cleanup account
funds the cleanup of federal nuclear energy research sites. Title XI of the Energy Policy Act of
1992 (P.L. 102-486) established the Uranium Enrichment Decontamination and
Decommissioning (D&D) Fund to pay for the cleanup of three federal facilities that were used to
enrich uranium for national defense and civilian purposes and to reimburse uranium and thorium
licensees for their costs of cleaning up sites that supported these facilities.92 These three facilities
are located near Paducah, KY; Piketon, OH (Portsmouth plant); and Oak Ridge, TN. As reported
by the House Committee on Appropriations, H.R. 4923 would appropriate a total of $5.63 billion
for these three accounts combined to fund the Office of Environmental Management in FY2015,
an increase of $6.7 million above the President’s request of $5.62 billion and $202.2 million less
than the FY2014 enacted appropriations of $5.83 billion.
The overall adequacy of funding for the Office of Environmental Management to attain cleanup
milestones across the site inventory has been a recurring issue in the annual appropriations
debate. Cleanup milestones are enforceable measures incorporated into compliance agreements
negotiated among DOE, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the states. These
milestones establish time frames for the completion of specific actions to satisfy applicable
requirements at individual sites.93 In its FY2015 budget justification, DOE noted its anticipation
that the President’s request would provide sufficient funds to meet enforceable cleanup
milestones due in FY2015. However, DOE acknowledged that meeting these milestones may
involve negotiations of compliance requirements with federal and state regulators.94
The committee report on H.R. 4923 expressed overall concern about the ability of DOE to meet
cleanup commitments due to the committee’s anticipation “that funding available for
environmental cleanup will continue to be highly constrained for the next several years.”95 The
committee also highlighted the potential effects of the recent closure of the Waste Isolation Pilot
Plant (WIPP) on DOE’s ability to meet cleanup commitments at other DOE sites where
transuranic wastes are awaiting disposal.96

92 42 U.S.C. §2297g.
93 Compliance agreements for individual sites are available on DOE’s Office of Environmental Management website:
http://energy.gov/em/compliance-agreements.
94 DOE, Office of Chief Financial Officer, FY2015 Congressional Budget Request, March 2014, Volume 5,
Environmental Management, p. 6.
95 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Energy and Water Development Appropriations Bill, 2015,
Report to Accompany H.R. 4923, 113th Cong., 2nd sess., June 20, 2014, H.Rept. 113-486, pp. 148-149.
96 Ibid.
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WIPP is the centralized geologic repository located in the state of New Mexico that serves as the
site for the permanent disposal of defense-related transuranic wastes generated at other DOE
sites.97 Incidents in February 2014 at WIPP involving a fire resulting from a truck hauling
accident inside the repository and a separate radiological release have resulted in the temporary
closure of the facility and suspension in the receipt of new shipments of transuranic wastes.98
DOE has been investigating the nature of the incidents and developing a recovery plan to resume
the operation of WIPP.99
As reported, Section 310 of H.R. 4923 would authorize DOE to transfer up to $120 million from
the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) to the Office of Environmental
Management for WIPP.100 In its report on H.R. 4923, the committee noted that these funds would
be intended for recovery efforts to re-open WIPP to receive waste shipments.101 The funds
available for this transfer would be supplemental to the appropriations of $5.63 billion to the
Office of Environmental Management proposed in H.R. 4923, noted above.
As reported. H.R. 4923 does not include the President’s request of $463 million within the
Defense Environmental Cleanup account to resume the federal payment to the Uranium
Enrichment D&D Fund. Whether to reauthorize the federal payment to the Uranium Enrichment
D&D Fund also has been a recurring issue. Congress ceased the federal payment in FY2012. This
payment historically has been treated as an offset to the funding for the Office of Environmental
Management because the payment does not become available to DOE until Congress
subsequently appropriates it out of the Uranium Enrichment D&D Fund.
As for FY2014, the President also proposed to resume assessments on nuclear utilities in FY2015
to generate additional revenues for the Uranium Enrichment D&D Fund, subject to the enactment
of reauthorizing legislation.102 DOE estimated in 2010 that the balance of Uranium Enrichment
D&D fund would be exhausted by FY2020 without additional revenues, leaving a shortfall of
$11.8 billion to complete the cleanup of federal uranium enrichment facilities over the long
term.103 If the Uranium Enrichment D&D Fund were fully expended, DOE still would be
responsible for the cleanup costs under existing law, subject to appropriations by Congress.104
As reported, H.R. 4923 does not include provisions to reauthorize the nuclear utility assessments.
The authority to collect the assessments expired in October 2007. As authorized in the Energy
Policy Act of 1992, both federal payments and nuclear utility assessments originally financed the

97 DOE generally characterizes transuranic wastes as clothing, tools, rags, residues (e.g., waste sludge), debris, soil, and
other items contaminated with plutonium and certain other radionuclides.
98 Information on these incidents is available on the DOE website: http://www.wipp.energy.gov/wipprecovery/
accident_desc.html.
99 Information on these investigations and the development of a recovery plan is available on the DOE website:
http://www.wipp.energy.gov/wipprecovery/path_forward.html.
100 From funds in excess of current requirements for NNSA contractor pension plan payments, Section 310 would
authorize transfers of up to $90 million from the NNSA Weapons Activities account, and up to $30 million from the
NNSA Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation account, to the Defense Environmental Cleanup account of the Office of
Environmental Management to “support decontamination and other requirements” at WIPP.
101 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Energy and Water Development Appropriations Bill, 2015,
Report to Accompany H.R. 4923, 113th Cong., 2nd sess., June 20, 2014, H.Rept. 113-486, p. 129, and pp. 148-149.
102 Office of Management and Budget, FY2015 Budget of the U.S. Government, Analytical Perspectives, p. 178.
103 DOE, Uranium Enrichment Decontamination and Decommissioning Report to Congress, December 2010, p. 42.
104 42 U.S.C. §2297g-2(c).
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Uranium Enrichment D&D Fund. This sharing of liability was based on the premise that the
federal government and the nuclear utilities benefited from services provided by federal uranium
enrichment facilities and that both therefore should share the costs of the cleanup of these
facilities. Nuclear utilities have asserted that they fulfilled their original obligations under the
Energy Policy Act of 1992. However, the Obama Administration has observed that additional
revenues eventually would be needed based on the remaining balance of the Uranium Enrichment
D&D Fund compared to more recent estimates of cleanup costs.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) estimates that $3.0 billion would be available for
appropriation from the Uranium Enrichment D&D Fund at the beginning of FY2015, consisting
of unexpended past utility assessments and federal payments and interest accrued on the
unexpended balance.105 As reported, H.R. 4923 would appropriate $586 million from the fund in
FY2015, a $55 million increase above the President’s request of $531 million, and $13 million
less than the FY2014 enacted appropriations of $599 million. Of the $55 million increase above
the request, $20 million would be allocated to Oak Ridge to advance cleanup, and $15 million to
Portsmouth to compensate for reduced uranium barter proceeds. The other $20 million would be
allocated to uranium/thorium licensee cleanup reimbursement payments. In its report on H.R.
4923, the committee noted that the President had not requested funding for these reimbursement
payments although DOE has reported approved but unpaid claim balances. The committee
directed DOE to request sufficient funding in the future to pay approved claims.106
Table 15 presents FY2015 appropriations for each of the three appropriations accounts that fund
the DOE Office of Environmental Management, as reported by the House Committee on
Appropriations in H.R. 4923 compared to the President’s request and the enacted appropriations
for FY2014 and FY2013 (post-sequestration). The table provides a breakout of these amounts by
major site and program activity. The table also presents the net total funding level for the Office
of Environmental Management for the three accounts combined, accounting for offsets including
the federal payment to the Uranium Enrichment D&D Fund that the President has proposed to
resume in FY2015.
As in past fiscal years, the Hanford site in the state of Washington, the Idaho National Laboratory,
and the Savannah River Site in South Carolina constitute the largest portions of the FY2015
appropriations proposed for the Office of Environmental Management. The scope and complexity
of wastes and contamination at these sites are among the greatest cleanup challenges among the
inventory of the remaining sites where cleanup is not complete.

105 Office of Management and Budget, FY2015 Budget of the U.S. Government, Appendix, p. 408.
106 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Energy and Water Development Appropriations Bill, 2015,
Report to Accompany H.R. 4923, 113th Cong., 2nd sess., June 20, 2014, H.Rept. 113-486, p. 117.
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Table 15. Appropriations for the Office of Environmental Management
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Account/Site or Program Activity
Approp.
Approp.
Request House Senate Conf.
Defense Environmental Cleanup


Closure Sites Administration
4.9
4.7
4.9
4.9

Hanford 1,974.5
2,151.2
2,083.1
2,085.1

- Richland Operations
877.1
941.0
848.1


- Office of River Protection
1,097.4
1,210.2
1,235.0


Idaho National Laboratory
355.8
387.0
367.2
380.2

NNSA Sites and Nevada Off-sites
279.2
314.7
293.6
249.0

Oak Ridge Reservation
183.5
215.0
206.9
212.8

Savannah River Site
1,094.7
1,134.2
1,150.1
1,104.9

Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
197.8
216.2
216.0
236.0

Program Direction
295.8
300.0
280.8
280.8

Program Support
18.2
18.0
15.0
17.0

Safeguards and Security
231.8
241.0
234.0
234.0

Technology Development
9.8
18.0
13.0
10.0

Federal Payment to Uranium Enrichment D&D Fund
0.0
0.0
463.0
0.0

Use of Prior Year Balances
-19.0
0.0
0.0
-13.4

Defense Environmental Cleanup Subtotal
4,627.1
5,000.0
5,327.5
4,801.3

Non-Defense Environmental Cleanup


Fast Flux Test Reactor
2.6
2.5
2.6
2.6

Gaseous Diffusion Plants
95.3
96.2
104.4
104.4

Smal Sites
66.0
71.2
60.2
65.2

West Val ey Demonstration Project
59.6
64.0
59.0
59.0

Construction Security Upgrades



10.0

Use of Prior Year Balances
0.0
-2.2
0.0
0.0

Non-Defense Environmental Cleanup
223.5
231.8
226.2
241.2
Subtotal
Uranium Enrichment D&D Fund



Gaseous Diffusion Plants
448.2
598.8
505.1
540.1

- Oak Ridge
200.4
196.0
137.9
157.9

- Paducah
92.5
265.2
207.2
207.2

- Portsmouth
155.3
137.6
160.0
175.0

Pension, Community, and Regulatory Support


25.9
25.9

Title X Uranium/Thorium Reimbursements
0.0
0.0
0.0
20.0

Uranium Enrichment D&D Fund Subtotal 448.2
598.8
531.0
586.0

Offset for Federal Payment to Uranium Enrichment
D&D Fund
0.0
0.0
-463.0
0.0


Office of Environmental Management Total
5,298.7
5,830.6
5,621.7
5,628.4

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Source: The FY2015 amounts for the House and the President’s request, and the FY2014 enacted amounts, are
as presented by the House Committee on Appropriations in its report on H.R. 4923 (H.Rept. 113-486, pp. 163-
164 and pp. 180-183). FY2013 enacted appropriations reflect the application of sequestration and other
rescissions, as reported by DOE. Numbers may not add due to rounding.
Notes:
Amounts presented above in Table 15 of this report for the Defense Environmental Cleanup account in FY2013
and the Non-Defense Environmental Cleanup account in FY2014 differ from the amounts presented in Table 8
of this report because of differences in DOE’s presentation of the use of prior-year balances in these fiscal years.
When accounting for offsets of these prior-year balances, the amounts presented in both tables are comparable.
In the Defense Environmental Cleanup account, the House Committee on Appropriations consolidated the
funding for both the Richland Operations Office and the Office of River Protection into one line-item for the
Hanford site in its report on H.R. 4923. Although the Committee presented a breakout of this funding for
specific projects, it did not present a consolidated amount for each office separately as in past years.
Pension, Community, and Regulatory Support is broken out in the Uranium Enrichment D&D Fund in DOE’s
FY2015 budget justification, as a separate line-item. This activity received funding within the account total
enacted for FY2013 and FY2014, but was not broken out for those fiscal years.
Office of Legacy Management
Once cleanup remedies are in place under the Office of Environmental Management, DOE’s
Office of Legacy Management administers the long-term stewardship of sites that do not have a
continuing mission and at which residual contamination or wastes may remain. The Office of
Legacy Management also is responsible for the long-term stewardship of sites that had been
transferred from DOE to the Army Corps of Engineers under the FUSRAP program in 1997.
Once the Corps completes the cleanup of a site under this program, it is responsible for the initial
two years of operation and maintenance, after which time the site is transferred back to DOE’s
Office of Legacy Management for long-term stewardship.107
The Office of Legacy Management also manages the payment of pensions and retirement benefits
of former contractor personnel who worked at DOE sites that do not have a continuing mission,108
among other supporting activities.109 The federal role in the management of these former
contractor pensions and benefits stems from the long-term nature of the projects and the
associated length of employment for the personnel who performed the work for DOE. These
pensions and benefits are earned and accrued by contractor employees while in active
employment at DOE sites and are payable after their employment ends.110
The Office of Legacy Management has been funded entirely within DOE’s Other Defense
Activities account since FY2009.111 As reported, H.R. 4923 would appropriate $172 million for

107 Memorandum of Understanding Between the U.S. Department of Energy and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Regarding Program Administration and Execution of the Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program
(FUSRAP), March 1999.
108 Similar to long-term stewardship responsibilities, the payment of pensions and post-retirement benefits of workers at
sites with a continuing DOE mission is assigned to the program office within DOE that is responsible for administering
that mission, rather than the Office of Legacy Management.
109 For more information on the history, mission, and scope of the activities of the Office of Legacy Management, see
DOE’s website: http://energy.gov/lm/office-legacy-management.
110 For more information on DOE’s management of former contractor pensions and benefits, see the Office of Legacy
Management Post-Closure Benefits Program website: http://www.lm.doe.gov/default.aspx?id=172.
111 Prior to FY2009, Congress appropriated funding for the relatively small number of non-defense sites administered
by the Office of Legacy Management within a stand-alone account. The majority of the sites administered by this office
(continued...)
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the Office of Legacy Management within this account for FY2015, the same amount that the
President requested and $5 million less than the FY2014 enacted appropriations of $177
million.112 DOE had attributed the requested reduction mostly to more recent savings in pension
and benefits costs. DOE also has established a performance target of lowering site long-term
stewardship costs by at least 2% annually through cost-efficiencies while continuing to comply
with all applicable regulatory requirements.113 However, funding needs for the Office of Legacy
Management may increase over time as cleanup is completed at additional sites that are
transferred from the Office of Environmental Management and the FUSRAP program for long-
term stewardship. The Office of Legacy Management will be responsible for the long-term
stewardship of 96 sites in FY2015.114 DOE projects that the number of these sites will increase to
a total of 129 by FY2020.115
Estimating the long-term funding needs for the Office of Legacy Management is inherently
challenging because of the lengthy time horizons that are involved. For example, actions may be
necessary for many decades to operate and maintain cleanup remedies and monitor contaminant
levels to ensure the effectiveness of the remedies over time. At sites where the cleanup entails the
permanent containment of radioactive wastes, long-term stewardship may continue indefinitely
because of the time needed for radioactive elements to decay to acceptable levels. Enforcement of
land use restrictions or other institutional controls also may be necessary in perpetuity at sites that
are not cleaned up for unrestricted use, in order to prevent potentially harmful exposures. These
and other factors make it difficult to reliably estimate the financial liability of the United States
for long-term stewardship of sites contaminated from the historic production of nuclear weapons
and civilian nuclear energy research in the 20th century.116
Power Marketing Administrations117
DOE’s four Power Marketing Administrations (PMAs)—Bonneville Power Administration
(BPA), Southeastern Power Administration (SEPA), Southwestern Power Administration
(SWPA), and Western Area Power Administration (WAPA)—were established to sell the power
generated by the dams operated by the Bureau of Reclamation and the Army Corps of
Engineers.118 In many cases, conservation and management of water resources—including

(...continued)
were involved in the U.S. nuclear weapons program, but some of the sites were contaminated by civilian nuclear
energy research activities.
112 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Energy and Water Development Appropriations Bill, 2015,
Report to Accompany H.R. 4923, 113th Cong., 2nd sess., June 20, 2014, H.Rept. 113-486, p. 184.
113 DOE, Office of Chief Financial Officer, FY2015 Congressional Budget Request, March 2014, Volume 2, Other
Defense Activities, p. 77.
114 Ibid.
115 DOE, Office of Legacy Management, 2011-2020 Strategic Plan, DOE/LM-0512, January 2011, p. 5, available on
DOE’s website: http://energy.gov/lm/downloads/2011-2020-strategic-plan.
116 DOE annually estimates the financial liabilities of long-term stewardship as a portion of other environmental
liabilities of the department, but does not report a separate estimate just for long-term stewardship alone. Furthermore,
DOE estimates these liabilities only for the first 75 years and acknowledges that costs are likely to be incurred beyond
this time frame that “cannot reasonably be estimated.” See Department of Energy, Fiscal Year 2013 Agency Financial
Report
, December 2013, “Environmental Cleanup and Disposal Liabilities,” pp. 64-66, available on DOE’s website:
http://www.energy.gov/sites/prod/files/2013/12/f6/2013parAFR.pdf.
117 This section was prepared by Charles V. Stern.
118 Net funding for the Western Area Power Administration includes the Colorado River Basins Power Marketing
(continued...)
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irrigation, flood control, recreation, or other objectives—were the primary purpose of federal
projects. (For more information, see CRS Report RS22564, Power Marketing Administrations:
Background and Current Issues
, by Richard J. Campbell.)
Priority for PMA power is extended to “preference customers,” which include municipal utilities,
cooperatives, and other “public” bodies. The PMAs sell power to these entities “at the lowest
possible rates” consistent with what they describe as “sound business practice.” The PMAs are
responsible for covering their expenses and for repaying debt and the federal investment in the
generating facilities.
The Obama Administration’s FY2015 request for the PMAs was $82 million. This is slightly less
than the FY2014 enacted level of $85 million.119 The FY2015 budget request continues a change
enacted in FY2010 that reclassified receipts from the PMAs from mandatory to discretionary.
This change offsets many of the expenses of WAPA, SWPA, and SEPA that were previously paid
for with discretionary appropriations. As a result of the change, two PMAs require discretionary
funding in addition to their receipts: SWPA requests $11.4 million and WAPA requests $93.4
million. Receipts for SEPA are expected to offset all operating costs in FY2015. In addition,
$228,000 is requested for Falcon and Amistad operations and maintenance, and collections of $23
million from Colorado River basins score as an additional offset toward the net discretionary
appropriation for WAPA. In its recommendation, the House Appropriations Committee agreed
with the Administration’s requested levels for all of the PMAs.
BPA is a self-funded agency under authority granted by P.L. 93-454 (16 U.S.C. §838), the Federal
Columbia River Transmission System Act of 1974, and receives no appropriations. However, it
funds some of its activities from permanent borrowing authority with the Treasury, which was
increased in FY2003 from $3.75 billion to $4.45 billion (a $700 million increase). The American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA, P.L. 111-5) further increased the amount of borrowing
that BPA conducts under the Transmission System Act by $3.25 billion to the current authority for
$7.7 billion in bonds outstanding to the Treasury.
ARRA also provided WAPA borrowing authority for the purpose of planning, financing, or
building new or upgraded electric power transmission lines to facilitate the delivery of renewable
energy resources constructed by or expected to be constructed after the date of enactment. The
authority to borrow from the U.S. Treasury had not previously been available to WAPA. It is now
available on a permanent, indefinite basis, with the amount of borrowing outstanding not to
exceed $3.25 billion.
Title IV: Independent Agencies
Independent agencies that receive funding from the Energy and Water Development bill include
the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC), and
the Denali Commission.

(...continued)
Fund.
119 This total includes an offset to WAPA of -$23 million from the Colorado River Basins Power Marketing Fund.
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Table 16. Energy and Water Development Appropriations
Title IV: Independent Agencies
($ millions)
FY2013
FY2014
FY2015
Program
Approp.
Approp.
Request House
Senate
Conf.
Appalachian Regional Commission
$64.9
$80.3
$68.2
80.3


Nuclear Regulatory Commission
987.3 1,055.9 1,059.5 1,064.5


(Revenues)
-860.8 -930.7 -935.2 -890.3


Net NRC (including Inspector General)
126.5
125.2
124.2
174.3


Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board
26.8
28.0
30.2
29.2


Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board
3.2
3.2
3.4
3.4


Denali Commission
10.0
10.0
7.4
10.0


Delta Regional Authority
11.0
12.0
12.3
12.0


Northern Border Regional Commission
1.5
5.0
3.0
3.0


Southern Crescent Regional Commission
0.3
0.3
0
.3


Fed. Coord. Alaska Gas Projects
1.0
1.0
0
0


Total
245.4 265.1 248.7 312.4


Source: FY2015 budget request.
Notes: Figures may not add due to rounding.
Key Policy Issues—Independent Agencies
Nuclear Regulatory Commission120
For FY2015 the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is requesting $1.0595 billion ($124.2
million net, including the inspector general’s office). The total funding request is $3.6 million
above the FY2014 level but would constitute a net reduction of $1.0 million because of higher
offsetting fees. Major activities conducted by NRC include safety regulation and licensing of
commercial nuclear reactors and oversight of nuclear materials users.121
The House Appropriations Committee recommended a total funding increase of $5 million for
NRC. However, a smaller revenue offset results in a higher net appropriation of $174.3 million
(including the inspector general’s office).
The NRC budget request includes $237.9 million for new reactor activities, $16.5 million above
the FY2014 level. Until 2007, no new commercial reactor construction applications had been
submitted to NRC since the 1970s. However, volatile fossil fuel prices, the possibility of controls
on carbon emissions, and incentives provided by the Energy Policy Act of 2005 prompted electric
utilities and other generating companies to apply for licenses for 30 new reactors. Several of those

120 This section was prepared by Mark Holt.
121 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, FY 2015 Congressional Budget Justification, NUREG-1100, Vol. 30, March
2014, http://pbadupws.nrc.gov/docs/ML1406/ML14064A167.pdf.
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applications were subsequently withdrawn or suspended, though, as falling natural gas prices
reduced the competitiveness of nuclear power. NRC issued combined construction and operating
licenses for four new reactors at two sites in Georgia and South Carolina in early 2012. Nine
license applications for new reactors are still under active NRC review, according to the FY2015
justification.
NRC’s proposed FY2015 budget includes no funds for licensing DOE’s previously planned Yucca
Mountain nuclear waste repository. Because the Obama Administration wants to cancel the Yucca
Mountain project and filed a motion to withdraw the license application on March 3, 2010, the
NRC’s FY2011 appropriation was used to close out its licensing activities. As discussed in the
“Nuclear Waste Disposal” section of this report, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit ordered NRC on August 13, 2013, to continue reviewing the Yucca Mountain
license application, using $11.1 million in leftover funding. The House Committee provided
$55.0 million for NRC to continue adjudicating the Yucca Mountain license application.
For regulation of operating reactors, NRC’s FY2015 budget request includes $577.3 million,
$12.8 million below the FY2014 level. Those activities include reactor safety inspections, license
renewals and modifications, collection and analysis of reactor performance data, and oversight of
security exercises. The Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan increased congressional and public
concern about the safety of U.S. nuclear power plants. NRC established a task force 10 days after
the accident to review NRC’s regulatory system. NRC issued the first regulatory orders resulting
from that review on March 12, 2012, and is currently working on additional regulations.122
Regulation and oversight activities related to cyber security have also been increasing, according
to the budget justification.
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 permanently extended a requirement that 90% of NRC’s budget
be offset by fees on licensees. Not subject to the offset are expenditures from the Nuclear Waste
Fund to pay for waste repository licensing, spending on general homeland security, and DOE
defense waste oversight. The offsets in the FY2015 budget request would result in a net
appropriation of $124.2 million.



122 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, “Actions in Response to the Japan Nuclear Accident,” http://www.nrc.gov/
japan/japan-info.html. For a timeline of NRC actions, see http://www.nrc.gov/reactors/operating/ops-experience/japan/
japan-timeline.html.
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Author Contact Information
Special thanks are due to Carl Behrens, retired CRS Specialist in Energy Policy, longtime
former coordinator of this report.

Mark Holt, Coordinator
Heather B. Gonzalez
Specialist in Energy Policy
Specialist in Science and Technology Policy
mholt@crs.loc.gov, 7-1704
hgonzalez@crs.loc.gov, 7-1895
Anthony Andrews
Jonathan E. Medalia
Specialist in Energy Policy
Specialist in Nuclear Weapons Policy
aandrews@crs.loc.gov, 7-6843
jmedalia@crs.loc.gov, 7-7632
David M. Bearden
Mary Beth D. Nikitin
Specialist in Environmental Policy
Specialist in Nonproliferation
dbearden@crs.loc.gov, 7-2390
mnikitin@crs.loc.gov, 7-7745
Nicole T. Carter
Fred Sissine
Specialist in Natural Resources Policy
Specialist in Energy Policy
ncarter@crs.loc.gov, 7-0854
fsissine@crs.loc.gov, 7-7039
Peter Folger
Charles V. Stern
Specialist in Energy and Natural Resources Policy
Specialist in Natural Resources Policy
pfolger@crs.loc.gov, 7-1517
cstern@crs.loc.gov, 7-7786

Key Policy Staff
Area of Expertise
Name
Phone
Email
General Mark
Holt
7-1704
mholt@crs.loc.gov
Corps of Engineers
Charles V. Stern
7-7786
cstern@crs.loc.gov
Nicole Carter
7-0854
ncarter@crs.loc.gov
Bureau of Reclamation
Charles V. Stern
7-7786
cstern@crs.loc.gov
Betsy Cody
7-7229
bcody@crs.loc.gov
Solar and Renewable Energy
Fred Sissine
7-7039
fsissine@crs.loc.gov
Nuclear Energy
Mark Holt
7-1704
mholt@crs.loc.gov
Science Programs
Heather B. Gonzalez
7-1895
hgonzalez@crs.loc.gov
Nuclear Weapons Stewardship
Jonathan Medalia
7-7632
jmedalia@crs.loc.gov
Nonproliferation
Mary Beth Nikitin
7-7745
mnikitin@crs.loc.gov
DOE Environmental Management
David Bearden
7-2390
dbearden@crs.loc.gov
Power Marketing Administrations
Charles V. Stern
7-7786
cstern@crs.loc.gov
Bonneville Power Administration
Charles V. Stern
7-7786
cstern@crs.loc.gov
Fossil Energy Research
Peter Folger
7-1517
pfolger@crs.loc.gov
Strategic Petroleum Reserve
Anthony Andrews
7-6843
aandrews@crs.loc.gov
Energy Conservation
Fred Sissine
7-7039
fsissine@crs.loc.gov

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