From Eva Lipiec comes this CRS Report (updated 18 October 2023): 'National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) FY2024 Budget Request and Appropriations'.
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The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is an agency in the Department of Commerce whose mission is to understand and predict changes in weather, climate, oceans, and coasts; to share that information; and to conserve and manage coastal and marine ecosystems and resources. NOAA’s work is divided among six line offices: National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service (NESDIS); National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS); National Ocean Service (NOS); National Weather Service (NWS); Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR); and Office of Marine and Aviation Operations (OMAO). NOAA’s Mission Support provides planning, leadership, finances, information technology, educational programming, and other support across the line offices.
Congress provides NOAA with annual mandatory and discretionary appropriations. Mandatory appropriations, which generally comprise a small percentage of total NOAA funding, are disbursed to various accounts that support programs in NOS, NMFS, and OMAO. NOAA’s discretionary appropriations typically are included in the annual Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies appropriations acts. Discretionary appropriations support two broad accounts—Operations, Research, and Facilities (ORF) and Procurement, Acquisition, and Construction (PAC)—as well as a few smaller accounts. This product focuses on NOAA’s FY2024 discretionary funding for ORF and PAC. The product also notes potential topics of interest for Congress from NOAA’s FY2024 budget request, including NOAA’s satellite operations, science and data for economic development, and climate-related products and services.
Agency Funding
NOAA requested over $7.1 billion in discretionary direct obligations for ORF and PAC for FY2024, including almost $6.8 billion in appropriations (Figure 1 and Table 1). NOAA requested a total of $7.3 billion in direct obligations for all accounts. Direct obligations include annual appropriations, transfers, and recoveries from prior year obligations. For FY2023, Congress provided $6.5 billion in annual ORF and PAC direct obligations and an additional $150.8 million in supplemental funding through P.L. 117-328, for a total of $6.7 billion (Table 1). According to NOAA, the supplemental amounts are considered “base or discretionary funding designated as emergency.” Supplemental appropriations are described in the right column. For FY2024, a draft House Appropriations Committee bill would provide a total of $5.8 billion in direct obligations; S. 2321, reported by the Senate Appropriations Committee, would provide $6.9 billion in direct obligations.
Supplemental Appropriations Available in FY2024
Congress also has made supplemental appropriations available to NOAA for ORF and PAC, including
$52.2 million for expenses related to hurricanes and wildfires in 2020 and 2021, through FY2024 (P.L. 117- 43);
$1.2 billion for restoration, observation, modeling, forecasting activities, and other purposes, through FY2024 (Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act; P.L. 117-58);
$3.3 billion for conservation, restoration, protection, construction, reviews, research and forecasting, computing, aircraft acquisition, and other purposes, through FY2026 (Inflation Reduction Act of 2022; P.L. 117-169); and
$527.5 million for expenses related to hurricanes, typhoons, flooding, and wildfires in 2022; fishing gear and techniques; aircraft acquisition; and other uses, through FY2024 or until expended (P.L. 117-328, of which $150.8 million is included in Table 1 amounts).
Issues for Congress
NOAA’s FY2024 requested budget proposed changes to multiple activities, the largest portion of which was increased funding for activities under the agency-identified themes of satellites, science and data for economic development activities, and climate products and services. The agency also proposed reducing or eliminating funding for several activities across all of the line offices.Satellites
NOAA requested nearly $2.1 billion in FY2024 (Table 1), $357.4 million above the FY2024 base level, to support NESDIS, which manages several portfolios of environmental satellites. S. 2321 would provide $1.9 billion to NESDIS for FY2024 (Table 1). NOAA’s request includes increases for the Polar Weather Satellites (PWS) and Geostationary Extended Observations (GeoXO) programs. PWS includes the Joint Polar Satellite System and Polar Follow-On missions, which provide global meteorological observations for short- and midterm forecasts and weather warnings. GeoXO is the next generation of space-based environmental monitoring satellites. NOAA requested $342.4 million ($183.5 million enacted in FY2023) for PWS and $417.4 million ($285.0 million enacted in FY2023) for GeoXO programs. S.Rept. 118-62 accompanying S. 2321 would provide the requested amount for PWS and did not state an amount for GeoXO.Science and Data for Economic Development
NOAA requested $81.4 million above the FY2024 base level across NMFS, NOS, NWS, OAR, and MS for activities that “foster environmental stewardship and optimize advances in science and technology to create value-added, data-driven sustainable economic development, with a particular focus on the New Blue Economy.” NOAA requested $88.0 million ($70.0 million enacted in FY2023) for the Office of Space Commerce (OSC) and $223.2 million ($203.9 million enacted in FY2023) to minimize the effects of offshore wind energy activities on NMFS scientific surveys, the two largest increases under this theme. S.Rept. 118-62 would maintain the FY2023 amounts for OSC and NMFS in FY2024.Climate Products and Services
NOAA requested $78.2 million above the FY2024 base level across all of the line offices to continue implementing Executive Order 14008, “Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad.” Under the theme, the agency requested $87.9 million for the National Marine Sanctuary System ($68.0 million enacted in FY2023) and $224.3 million ($204.0 million enacted in FY2023) for OMAO for additional at-sea data collection and mission requirements. S.Rept. 118-62 would maintain the FY2023 amounts for the sanctuaries and OMAO in FY2024.
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