Requires the President to develop a national strategy for using microreactors in natural disaster response. Involves consultation with multiple federal agencies and includes assessments, goals, and recommendations for deploying microreactors efficiently and safely, emphasizing technological integration and partnerships.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives that uses mandatory language requiring the President to develop and submit a national strategy. The document contains clear legal obligations with specified timelines and reporting requirements to Congress.
This document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains. It primarily addresses nuclear microreactor deployment for disaster response, with only one explicit mention of AI in Section 3(c)(15) regarding predictive tools. The document does not substantively address AI-specific risks, harms, or governance challenges described in the MIT taxonomy.
This document primarily governs Public Administration (disaster response and emergency management) and National Security (military involvement in disaster response). It also has significant coverage of Trade, Transportation and Utilities (energy provision and electrical grid integration) and minimal mention of Information sector (AI and predictive tools).
The document has minimal coverage of AI lifecycle stages. It mentions AI only once in Section 3(c)(15) regarding the use of 'artificial intelligence and predictive meteorological tools' for disaster preparation. This represents minimal coverage of the Plan and Design stage, as it addresses planning for AI tool utilization but provides no detail on development, deployment, or monitoring of AI systems.
The document makes only one brief reference to 'artificial intelligence' in the context of predictive meteorological tools. It does not define AI, discuss AI models or systems, or address any specific AI technical categories such as frontier AI, general purpose AI, foundation models, or compute thresholds.
Mr. Donalds, Mr. Fleischmann, Mr. Feenstra, Mr. Obernolte, Ms. Mace (Members of the U.S. House of Representatives); Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure; Committee on Energy and Commerce; Committee on Armed Services
The bill was introduced by Representative Donalds and co-sponsors in the House of Representatives and referred to multiple committees for consideration.
U.S. Congress; Committee on Energy and Commerce; Committee on Armed Services; Committee on Oversight and Accountability; Committee on Science, Space, and Technology (House); Committee on Energy and Natural Resources; Committee on Armed Services; Committee on Environment and Public Works; Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation (Senate)
Congress enforces compliance through its oversight function by requiring the President to submit the strategy to specified congressional committees for review.
U.S. Congress through the appropriate congressional committees listed in the enforcement section
Congress monitors implementation through biennial reporting requirements where the President must submit comprehensive updates on the national strategy.
The President of the United States; Federal Emergency Management Agency; Department of Energy; National Guard Bureau; Army Corps of Engineers; Department of Defense; Nuclear Regulatory Commission
The legislation requires the President to develop a national strategy in consultation with multiple federal agencies. These government entities are the primary targets who must comply with the strategy development and implementation requirements.
1 subdomain (1 Minimal)