Collapse to view only § 2938. Relation to other authorities

§ 2931. Findings and purpose
(a) Findings
The Congress makes the following findings:
(1) Industrial, agricultural, and other human activities, coupled with an expanding world population, are contributing to processes of global change that may significantly alter the Earth habitat within a few human generations.
(2) Such human-induced changes, in conjunction with natural fluctuations, may lead to significant global warming and thus alter world climate patterns and increase global sea levels. Over the next century, these consequences could adversely affect world agricultural and marine production, coastal habitability, biological diversity, human health, and global economic and social well-being.
(3) The release of chlorofluorocarbons and other stratospheric ozone-depleting substances is rapidly reducing the ability of the atmosphere to screen out harmful ultraviolet radiation, which could adversely affect human health and ecological systems.
(4) Development of effective policies to abate, mitigate, and cope with global change will rely on greatly improved scientific understanding of global environmental processes and on our ability to distinguish human-induced from natural global change.
(5) New developments in interdisciplinary Earth sciences, global observing systems, and computing technology make possible significant advances in the scientific understanding and prediction of these global changes and their effects.
(6) Although significant Federal global change research efforts are underway, an effective Federal research program will require efficient interagency coordination, and coordination with the research activities of State, private, and international entities.
(b) Purpose
(Pub. L. 101–606, title I, § 101, Nov. 16, 1990, 104 Stat. 3096.)
§ 2932. Committee on Earth and Environmental Sciences
(a) Establishment
(b) MembershipThe Committee shall consist of at least one representative from—
(1) the National Science Foundation;
(2) the National Aeronautics and Space Administration;
(3) the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration of the Department of Commerce;
(4) the Environmental Protection Agency;
(5) the Department of Energy;
(6) the Department of State;
(7) the Department of Defense;
(8) the Department of the Interior;
(9) the Department of Agriculture;
(10) the Department of Transportation;
(11) the Office of Management and Budget;
(12) the Office of Science and Technology Policy;
(13) the Council on Environmental Quality;
(14) the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of the National Institutes of Health; and
(15) such other agencies and departments of the United States as the President or the Chairman of the Council considers appropriate.
Such representatives shall be high ranking officials of their agency or department, wherever possible the head of the portion of that agency or department that is most revelant 1
1 So in original. Probably should be “relevant”.
to the purpose of the subchapter described in section 2931(b) of this title.
(c) Chairperson
(d) Support personnel
(e) Functions relative to global changeThe Council, through the Committee, shall be responsible for planning and coordinating the Program. In carrying out this responsibility, the Committee shall—
(1) serve as the forum for developing the Plan and for overseeing its implementation;
(2) improve cooperation among Federal agencies and departments with respect to global change research activities;
(3) provide budgetary advice as specified in section 2935 of this title;
(4) work with academic, State, industry, and other groups conducting global change research, to provide for periodic public and peer review of the Program;
(5) cooperate with the Secretary of State in—
(A) providing representation at international meetings and conferences on global change research in which the United States participates; and
(B) coordinating the Federal activities of the United States with programs of other nations and with international global change research activities such as the International Geosphere-Biosphere Program;
(6) consult with actual and potential users of the results of the Program to ensure that such results are useful in developing national and international policy responses to global change; and
(7) report at least annually to the President and the Congress, through the Chairman of the Council, on Federal global change research priorities, policies, and programs.
(Pub. L. 101–606, title I, § 102, Nov. 16, 1990, 104 Stat. 3097.)
§ 2933. United States Global Change Research Program

The President shall establish an interagency United States Global Change Research Program to improve understanding of global change. The Program shall be implemented by the Plan developed under section 2934 of this title.

(Pub. L. 101–606, title I, § 103, Nov. 16, 1990, 104 Stat. 3098.)
§ 2934. National Global Change Research Plan
(a) In general
(b) Contents of PlanThe Plan shall—
(1) establish, for the 10-year period beginning in the year the Plan is submitted, the goals and priorities for Federal global change research which most effectively advance scientific understanding of global change and provide usable information on which to base policy decisions relating to global change;
(2) describe specific activities, including research activities, data collection and data analysis requirements, predictive modeling, participation in international research efforts, and information management, required to achieve such goals and priorities;
(3) identify and address, as appropriate, relevant programs and activities of the Federal agencies and departments represented on the Committee that contribute to the Program;
(4) set forth the role of each Federal agency and department in implementing the Plan;
(5) consider and utilize, as appropriate, reports and studies conducted by Federal agencies and departments, the National Research Council, or other entities;
(6) make recommendations for the coordination of the global change research activities of the United States with such activities of other nations and international organizations, including—
(A) a description of the extent and nature of necessary international cooperation;
(B) the development by the Committee, in consultation when appropriate with the National Space Council, of proposals for cooperation on major capital projects;
(C) bilateral and multilateral proposals for improving worldwide access to scientific data and information; and
(D) methods for improving participation in international global change research by developing nations; and
(7) estimate, to the extent practicable, Federal funding for global change research activities to be conducted under the Plan.
(c) Research elementsThe Plan shall provide for, but not be limited to, the following research elements:
(1) Global measurements, establishing worldwide observations necessary to understand the physical, chemical, and biological processes responsible for changes in the Earth system on all relevant spatial and time scales.
(2) Documentation of global change, including the development of mechanisms for recording changes that will actually occur in the Earth system over the coming decades.
(3) Studies of earlier changes in the Earth system, using evidence from the geological and fossil record.
(4) Predictions, using quantitative models of the Earth system to identify and simulate global environmental processes and trends, and the regional implications of such processes and trends.
(5) Focused research initiatives to understand the nature of and interaction among physical, chemical, biological, and social processes related to global change.
(d) Information managementThe Plan shall provide recommendations for collaboration within the Federal Government and among nations to—
(1) establish, develop, and maintain information bases, including necessary management systems which will promote consistent, efficient, and compatible transfer and use of data;
(2) create globally accessible formats for data collected by various international sources; and
(3) combine and interpret data from various sources to produce information readily usable by policymakers attempting to formulate effective strategies for preventing, mitigating, and adapting to the effects of global change.
(e) National Research Council evaluationThe Chairman of the Council shall enter into an agreement with the National Research Council under which the National Research Council shall—
(1) evaluate the scientific span of the Plan; and
(2) provide information and advice obtained from United States and international sources, and recommended priorities for future global change research.
(f) Public participation
(Pub. L. 101–606, title I, § 104, Nov. 16, 1990, 104 Stat. 3099.)
§ 2935. Budget coordination
(a) Committee guidance
(b) Submission of reports with agency appropriations requests
(1) Working in conjunction with the Committee, each Federal agency or department involved in global change research shall include with its annual request for appropriations submitted to the President under section 1108 of title 31 a report which—
(A) identifies each element of the proposed global change research activities of the agency or department;
(B) specifies whether each element (i) contributes directly to the Program or (ii) contributes indirectly but in important ways to the Program; and
(C) states the portion of its request for appropriations allocated to each element of the Program.
(2) Each agency or department that submits a report under paragraph (1) shall submit such report simultaneously to the Committee.
(c) Consideration in President’s budget
(1) The President shall, in a timely fashion, provide the Committee with an opportunity to review and comment on the budget estimate of each agency and department involved in global change research in the context of the Plan.
(2) The President shall identify in each annual budget submitted to the Congress under section 1105 of title 31 those items in each agency’s or department’s annual budget which are elements of the Program.
(Pub. L. 101–606, title I, § 105, Nov. 16, 1990, 104 Stat. 3100.)
§ 2936. Scientific assessment
On a periodic basis (not less frequently than every 4 years), the Council, through the Committee, shall prepare and submit to the President and the Congress an assessment which—
(1) integrates, evaluates, and interprets the findings of the Program and discusses the scientific uncertainties associated with such findings;
(2) analyzes the effects of global change on the natural environment, agriculture, energy production and use, land and water resources, transportation, human health and welfare, human social systems, and biological diversity; and
(3) analyzes current trends in global change, both human-inducted 1
1 So in original. Probably should be “human-induced”.
and natural, and projects major trends for the subsequent 25 to 100 years.
(Pub. L. 101–606, title I, § 106, Nov. 16, 1990, 104 Stat. 3101.)
§ 2937. Omitted
§ 2938. Relation to other authorities
(a) National Climate Program research activities
(b) Availability of research findings
The President, the Chairman of the Council, and the heads of the agencies and departments represented on the Committee, shall ensure that the research findings of the Committee, and of Federal agencies and departments, are available to—
(1) the Environmental Protection Agency for use in the formulation of a coordinated national policy on global climate change pursuant to section 1103 of the Global Climate Protection Act of 1987 (15 U.S.C. 2901 note); and
(2) all Federal agencies and departments for use in the formulation of coordinated national policies for responding to human-induced and natural processes of global change pursuant to other statutory responsibilities and obligations.
(c) Effect on Federal response actions
(Pub. L. 101–606, title I, § 108, Nov. 16, 1990, 104 Stat. 3101.)