Union Calendar No. 215
116th CONGRESS 1st Session |
[Report No. 116–270]
To provide for a coordinated Federal research initiative to ensure continued United States leadership in engineering biology.
September 18, 2019
Ms. Johnson of Texas (for herself, Mr. Sensenbrenner, Ms. Lofgren, and Mr. Lucas) introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology
November 5, 2019
Additional sponsors: Ms. Hill of California, Mr. Foster, Mr. Fitzpatrick, Miss González-Colón of Puerto Rico, Mr. Beyer, Ms. Kendra S. Horn of Oklahoma, and Mr. Casten of Illinois
November 5, 2019
Reported with an amendment, committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union, and ordered to be printed
[Strike out all after the enacting clause and insert the part printed in italic]
[For text of introduced bill, see copy of bill as introduced on September 18, 2019]
To provide for a coordinated Federal research initiative to ensure continued United States leadership in engineering biology.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
This Act may be cited as the “Engineering Biology Research and Development Act of 2019”.
The Congress makes the following findings:
(1) Cellular and molecular processes may be used, mimicked, or redesigned to develop new products, processes, and systems that improve societal well-being, strengthen national security, and contribute to the economy.
(2) Engineering biology relies on a workforce with a diverse and unique set of skills combining the biological, physical, chemical, and information sciences and engineering.
(3) Long-term research and development is necessary to create breakthroughs in engineering biology. Such research and development requires government investment as many of the benefits are too distant or uncertain for industry to support alone.
(4) Research is necessary to inform evidence-based governance of engineering biology and to support the growth of the engineering biology industry.
(5) The Federal Government can play an important role by facilitating the development of tools and technologies to further advance engineering biology, including user facilities, by facilitating public-private partnerships, by supporting risk research, and by facilitating the commercial application in the United States of research funded by the Federal Government.
(5) The United States led the development of the science and engineering techniques that created the field of engineering biology, but due to increasing international competition, the United States is at risk of losing its competitive advantage if does not invest the necessary resources and have a national strategy.
In this Act:
(1) BIOMANUFACTURING.—The term “biomanufacturing” means the utilization of biological systems to develop new and advance existing products, tools, and processes at commercial scale.
(2) ENGINEERING BIOLOGY.—The term “engineering biology” means the application of engineering design principles and practices to biological systems, including molecular and cellular systems, to advance fundamental understanding of complex natural systems and to enable novel or optimize functions and capabilities.
SEC. 4. National engineering biology research and development initiative.
(a) In general.—The President, acting through the Office of Science and Technology Policy, shall implement a National Engineering Biology Research and Development Initiative to advance societal well-being, national security, sustainability, and economic productivity and competitiveness through—
(1) advancing areas of research at the intersection of the biological, physical, chemical, and information sciences and engineering to accelerate scientific understanding and technological innovation in engineering biology;
(2) advancing areas of biomanufacturing research to optimize, standardize, scale, and deliver new products and solutions;
(3) supporting social and behavioral sciences and economics research that advances the field of engineering biology and contributes to the development and public understanding of new products, processes, and technologies;
(5) supporting the development of novel tools and technologies to accelerate scientific understanding and technological innovation in engineering biology;
(6) expanding the number of researchers, educators, and students with engineering biology training, including from traditionally underserved populations;
(b) Initiative activities.—The activities of the Initiative shall include—
(1) sustained support for engineering biology research and development through—
(A) grants to individual investigators and teams of investigators, including interdisciplinary teams;
(2) sustained support for databases and related tools, including—
(A) support for curated genomics, epigenomics, and all other relevant omics databases, including plant and microbial databases, that are available to researchers to carry out engineering biology research;
(B) development of standards for such databases, including for curation, interoperability, and protection of privacy and security; and
(3) sustained support for the development, optimization, and validation of novel tools and technologies to enable the dynamic study of molecular processes in situ, including through grants to investigators at institutions of higher education and other nonprofit research institutions, and through the Small Business Innovation Research Program and the Small Business Technology Transfer Program, as described in section 9 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 638);
(4) education and training of undergraduate and graduate students in engineering biology, in biomanufacturing, in bioprocess engineering, and in areas of computational science applied to engineering biology;
(5) activities to develop robust mechanisms for tracking and quantifying the outputs and economic benefits of engineering biology; and
(c) Expanding participation.—The Initiative shall include, to the maximum extent practicable, outreach to primarily undergraduate and minority-serving institutions about Initiative opportunities, and shall encourage the development of research collaborations between research-intensive universities and primarily undergraduate and minority-serving institutions.
(d) Ethical, legal, environmental, safety, security, and societal issues.—Initiative activities shall take into account ethical, legal, environmental, safety, security, and other appropriate societal issues by—
(1) supporting research, including in the social sciences, and other activities addressing ethical, legal, environmental, and other appropriate societal issues related to engineering biology, including integrating research on such topics with the research and development in engineering biology, and ensuring that the results of such research are widely disseminated, including through interdisciplinary engineering biology research centers described in subsection (b)(1);
(2) supporting research and other activities related to the safety and security implications of engineering biology, including outreach to increase awareness among federally-funded researchers at institutions of higher education about potential safety and security implications of engineering biology research, as appropriate;
(3) ensuring that input from Federal and non-Federal experts on the ethical, legal, environmental, security, and other appropriate societal issues related to engineering biology is integrated into the Initiative; and
(4) ensuring, through the agencies and departments that participate in the Initiative, that public input and outreach are integrated into the Initiative by the convening of regular and ongoing public discussions through mechanisms such as workshops, consensus conferences, and educational events, as appropriate.
SEC. 5. Initiative coordination.
(a) Interagency committee.—The President, acting through the Office of Science and Technology Policy, shall designate an interagency committee to coordinate engineering biology, which shall be co-chaired by the Office of Science and Technology Policy, and include representatives from the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Agriculture, the National Institutes of Health, the Bureau of Economic Analysis, and any other agency that the President considers appropriate (in this section referred to as the “interagency committee”). The Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy shall select an additional co-chairperson from among the members of the Interagency Committee. The Interagency Committee shall oversee the planning, management, and coordination of the Initiative. The Interagency Committee shall—
(1) provide for interagency coordination of Federal engineering biology research, development, and other activities undertaken pursuant to the Initiative;
(3) develop, not later than 12 months after the date of enactment of this Act, and update every 3 years, a strategic plan that—
(A) guides the activities of the Initiative for purposes of meeting the goals and priorities established under (and updated pursuant to) paragraph (2); and
(B) describes—
(i) the Initiative’s support for long-term funding for interdisciplinary engineering biology research and development;
(iii) the Initiative’s support for research and other activities on ethical, legal, environmental, safety, security, and other appropriate societal issues related to engineering biology;
(4) develop a national genomic sequencing strategy to ensure engineering biology research fully leverages plant, animal, and microbe biodiversity to enhance long-term innovation and competitiveness in engineering biology in the United States;
(5) propose an annually coordinated interagency budget for the Initiative that is intended to ensure—
(6) develop a plan to utilize Federal programs, such as the Small Business Innovation Research Program and the Small Business Technology Transfer Program as described in section 9 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 638), in support of the activities described in section 4(b)(3); and
(b) Annual report.—Beginning with fiscal year 2020, not later than 90 days after submission of the President’s annual budget request and each fiscal year thereafter, the interagency committee shall prepare and submit to the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate a report that includes—
(1) a summarized agency budget in support of the Initiative for the fiscal year to which such budget request applies, and for the then current fiscal year, including a breakout of spending for each agency participating in the Program and for the development and acquisition of any research facilities and instrumentation; and
(2) an assessment of how Federal agencies are implementing the plan described in subsection (a)(3), and a description of the amount and number of awards made under the Small Business Innovation Research Program and the Small Business Technology Transfer Program (as described in section 9 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 638)) in support of the Initiative.
(c) Initiative staffing.—The President shall ensure adequate staffing for the Initiative, including full-time staff within the Office of Science and Technology Policy, who shall—
(1) provide technical and administrative support to the interagency committee and the advisory committee established under section 6;
(2) serve as the point of contact on Federal engineering biology activities for government organizations, academia, industry, professional societies, State governments, interested citizen groups, and others to exchange technical and programmatic information;
(3) oversee interagency coordination of the Initiative, including by encouraging and supporting joint agency solicitation and selection of applications for funding of activities under the Initiative;
(a) In general.—The President, acting through the Office of Science and Technology Policy, shall designate or establish an advisory committee on engineering biology research and development (in this section referred to as the “advisory committee”) to be composed of not fewer than 12 members, including representatives of research and academic institutions, industry, and nongovernmental entities, who are qualified to provide advice on the Initiative.
(b) Assessment.—The advisory committee shall assess—
(1) the current state of United States competitiveness in engineering biology, including the scope and scale of United States investments in engineering biology research and development in the international context;
(2) current market barriers to commercialization of engineering biology products, processes, and tools in the United States;
(c) Reports.—Beginning not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of this Act, and not less frequently than once every 3 years thereafter, the advisory committee shall submit to the President, the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology of the House of Representatives, and the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate, a report on—
SEC. 7. External review of ethical, legal, environmental, and societal issues.
(a) In general.—Not later than 6 months after the date of enactment of this Act, the Director of the National Science Foundation shall enter into an agreement with the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to conduct a review, and make recommendations with respect to, the ethical, legal, environmental, and other appropriate societal issues related to engineering biology research and development. The review shall include—
(b) Report to Congress.—The agreement entered into under subsection (a) shall require the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to, not later than 2 years after the date of the enactment of this Act—
(a) National Science Foundation.—As part of the Initiative, the National Science Foundation shall—
(1) support basic research in engineering biology through individual grants and through interdisciplinary research centers;
(3) provide support for research instrumentation for engineering biology disciplines, including support for research, development, optimization and validation of novel technologies to enable the dynamic study of molecular processes in situ;
(b) Department of Commerce.—As part of the Initiative, the Director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology shall—
(1) establish a bioscience research program to advance the development of standard reference materials and measurements and to create new data tools, techniques, and processes necessary to advance engineering biology and biomanufacturing;
(c) Department of Energy.—As part of the Initiative, the Secretary of Energy shall—
(1) conduct and support research, development, demonstration, and commercial application activities in engineering biology, including in the areas of synthetic biology, advanced biofuel development, biobased materials, and environmental remediation;
(d) National Aeronautics and Space Administration.—As part of the Initiative, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration shall—
(1) conduct and support basic and applied research in engineering biology, including in synthetic biology, and related to Earth and space sciences, aeronautics, space technology, and space exploration and experimentation, consistent with the priorities established in the National Academies’ decadal surveys; and
Union Calendar No. 215 | |||||
| |||||
[Report No. 116–270] | |||||
A BILL | |||||
To provide for a coordinated Federal research initiative to ensure continued United States
leadership in engineering biology. | |||||
November 5, 2019 | |||||
Reported with an amendment, committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the
Union, and ordered to be printed |