S. 1111 · 118th Congress · Senate

ADVANCE Act of 2023

Active· By Senator Carper from Committee on Environment and Public Works filed written report. Report No. 118-182.
Introduced
Mar 30, 23
Passed Senate
Pending
Passed House
Pending
Sent to President
Pending
Signed into Law
Pending

Executive Summary

Accelerating Deployment of Versatile, Advanced Nuclear for Clean Energy Act of 2023 or the ADVANCE Act of 2023

This bill sets forth provisions to develop and deploy advanced nuclear fuel for the United States and certain allied countries, restrict the possession or ownership of enriched uranium from Russia or China, clean up hazardous land, and establish related requirements.

Specifically, the bill provides incentives for developing and deploying new nuclear technologies, such as reduced licensing fees and prize awards for deploying such technologies. It also extends through 2045 the indemnification policy under the Price-Anderson Act that limits liability related to the nuclear industry.

It also requires the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to (1) develop a process that enables timely licensing of nuclear production facilities or utilization facilities at brownfield sites, and (2) establish an initiative to enhance preparedness and coordination with respect to the qualification and licensing of advanced nuclear fuel. NRC may hire specialized staff without regard to civil service laws to address its critical licensing or regulatory oversight needs.

The NRC must also coordinate certain international nuclear activities and may establish an International Nuclear Reactor Export and Innovation Branch within the Office of International Programs. The bill allows certain foreign entities to receive licenses under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 for nuclear utilization facilities as specified by the bill.

The bill also allows the Environmental Protection Agency to conduct activities to assist in cleaning up certain abandoned mining sites on tribal lands that are hazardous.

Previous Versions

00Mar 30, 2023

Accelerating Deployment of Versatile, Advanced Nuclear for Clean Energy Act of 2023 or the ADVANCE Act of 2023

This bill sets forth provisions to develop and deploy advanced nuclear fuel for the United States and certain allied countries, restrict the possession or ownership of enriched uranium from Russia or China, clean up hazardous land, and establish related requirements.

Specifically, the bill provides incentives for developing and deploying new nuclear technologies, such as reduced licensing fees and prize awards for deploying such technologies. It also extends through 2045 the indemnification policy under the Price-Anderson Act that limits liability related to the nuclear industry.

It also requires the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to (1) develop a process that enables timely licensing of nuclear production facilities or utilization facilities at brownfield sites, and (2) establish an initiative to enhance preparedness and coordination with respect to the qualification and licensing of advanced nuclear fuel. NRC may hire specialized staff without regard to civil service laws to address its critical licensing or regulatory oversight needs.

The NRC must also coordinate certain international nuclear activities and may establish an International Nuclear Reactor Export and Innovation Branch within the Office of International Programs. The bill allows certain foreign entities to receive licenses under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 for nuclear utilization facilities as specified by the bill.

The bill also allows the Environmental Protection Agency to conduct activities to assist in cleaning up certain abandoned mining sites on tribal lands that are hazardous.

Action Timeline

9
  1. JUN 17, 2024Committee

    By Senator Carper from Committee on Environment and Public Works filed written report. Report No. 118-182.

    118Yea
    182Nay
    0NV
  2. JUN 17, 2024Floor

    By Senator Carper from Committee on Environment and Public Works filed written report. Report No. 118-182.

    118Yea
    182Nay
    0NV
  3. JUL 10, 2023Committee

    Committee on Environment and Public Works

    Reported by Senator Carper with an amendment in the nature of a substitute. Without written report.

  4. JUL 10, 2023Committee

    Committee on Environment and Public Works

    Reported by Senator Carper with an amendment in the nature of a substitute. Without written report.

  5. JUL 10, 2023Calendars

    Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 118.

  6. MAY 31, 2023Committee

    Committee on Environment and Public Works

    Committee consideration held. Business Meeting printed. S. Hrg. 118-348.

    118Yea
    348Nay
    0NV
  7. MAY 31, 2023Committee

    Committee on Environment and Public Works

    Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.

  8. MAR 30, 2023IntroReferral

    Introduced in Senate

  9. MAR 30, 2023IntroReferral

    Read twice and referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works.

Committees

5

Environment and Public Works Committee

ssev00

Referred: Jun 17, 2024

Active

Environment and Public Works Committee

ssev00

Referred: Jul 10, 2023

Active

Environment and Public Works Committee

ssev00

Referred: May 31, 2023

Active

Environment and Public Works Committee

ssev00

Referred: May 31, 2023

Active

Environment and Public Works Committee

ssev00

Referred: Mar 30, 2023

Active