S-783-113
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 152.
Sponsored by Ron Wyden (D-OR)
What it does
This bill would restructure how the federal government sells helium from the Federal Helium Reserve in Texas, moving from direct sales to a phased auction system over time. It would require fees for helium storage and pipeline services to cover the government's full costs, and direct proceeds into a dedicated Helium Production Fund. The bill would also wind down federal helium operations by 2023, fund research into helium recycling and separation technology, and include unrelated provisions extending payments to counties with federal land, funding abandoned mine cleanup, and supporting National Park infrastructure.
Who benefits
Federal agencies (NASA, DOD, national laboratories) that use helium and would receive priority pipeline access; U.S. taxpayers who would receive a share of auction proceeds applied to deficit reduction and debt retirement; private helium refiners and industrial buyers who gain open-market access to the Reserve; states and counties containing federal land that receive extended school and road funding; the National Park Service, which would receive infrastructure funding; and researchers and companies developing helium recycling and separation technologies.
Who is hurt
Helium buyers who currently purchase at below-market prices set under the old Helium Act and would face higher costs under a competitive auction system; small helium-dependent businesses (medical imaging facilities using MRI machines, semiconductor manufacturers, scientific laboratories) that could face higher and less predictable helium prices; private helium companies that may face new competition from open-market auction access; and advanced biofuel producers, whose authorized funding would be reduced by $5 million under the bill.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current system sells a finite, strategically critical resource at artificially low prices, shortchanging taxpayers and accelerating depletion of a non-renewable reserve. By moving to competitive auctions, the bill would let market prices signal scarcity, encouraging private industry to invest in helium recycling and alternative sources — reducing long-term dependence on a single federal reserve. Supporters also contend that the phased approach protects federal users like the military and national laboratories with priority access, preventing supply disruptions to national security and scientific programs. The bill's research mandates for recycling and separation technology would help extend the useful life of domestic helium supplies, and directing proceeds to deficit reduction represents responsible stewardship of a public asset.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that moving to competitive auctions would drive up helium prices for hospitals, universities, and manufacturers that depend on stable, affordable supplies — potentially disrupting MRI services, semiconductor production, and scientific research that cannot easily substitute other gases. Critics contend that the phased wind-down of the Federal Helium Reserve eliminates a strategic national asset that took decades to build, leaving the United States dependent on foreign sources for a resource critical to defense and advanced manufacturing. Opponents also argue that the bill's research funding is insufficient to develop recycling technology before the Reserve is liquidated, and that bundling unrelated provisions — mine reclamation, park infrastructure, county payments — obscures the true cost and scope of the legislation from the public and Congress.