IIB
114th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 874
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
May 20, 2015
Received; read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
AN ACT
To amend the Department of Energy High-End Computing Revitalization Act of 2004 to improve the high-end computing research and development program of the Department of Energy, and for other purposes.
Short title
This Act may be cited as the American Super Computing Leadership Act
.
Definitions
Section 2 of the Department of Energy High-End Computing Revitalization Act of 2004 (15 U.S.C. 5541) is amended by striking paragraphs (1) through (5) and inserting the following:
Co-design
The term co-design means the joint development of application algorithms, models, and codes with computer technology architectures and operating systems to maximize effective use of high-end computing systems.
Department
The term Department means the Department of Energy.
Exascale
The term exascale means computing system performance at or near 10 to the 18th power floating point operations per second.
High-end computing system
The term high-end computing system means a computing system with performance that substantially exceeds that of systems that are commonly available for advanced scientific and engineering applications.
Institution of higher education
The term institution of higher education has the meaning given the term in section 2 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (42 U.S.C. 15801).
Leadership system
The term leadership system
means a high-end computing system that is among the most advanced in the world in terms of performance in solving scientific and engineering problems.
National laboratory
The term National Laboratory means any one of the seventeen laboratories owned by the Department.
Secretary
The term Secretary means the Secretary of Energy.
Software technology
The term software technology includes optimal algorithms, programming environments, tools, languages, and operating systems for high-end computing systems.
.
Department of Energy high-end computing research and development program
Section 3 of the Department of Energy High-End Computing Revitalization Act of 2004 (15 U.S.C. 5542) is amended—
in subsection (a)—
in paragraph (1), by striking program
and inserting coordinated program across the Department
;
by striking and
at the end of paragraph (1);
by striking the period at the end of paragraph (2) and inserting ; and
; and
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
partner with universities, National Laboratories, and industry to ensure the broadest possible application of the technology developed in this program to other challenges in science, engineering, medicine, and industry.
;
in subsection (b)(2), by striking vector
and all that follows through architectures
and inserting computer technologies that show promise of substantial reductions in power requirements and substantial gains in parallelism of multicore processors, concurrency, memory and storage, bandwidth, and reliability
; and
by striking subsection (d) and inserting the following:
Exascale computing program
In general
The Secretary shall conduct a coordinated research program to develop exascale computing systems to advance the missions of the Department.
Execution
The Secretary shall, through competitive merit review, establish two or more National Laboratory-industry-university partnerships to conduct integrated research, development, and engineering of multiple exascale architectures, and—
conduct mission-related co-design activities in developing such exascale platforms;
develop those advancements in hardware and software technology required to fully realize the potential of an exascale production system in addressing Department target applications and solving scientific problems involving predictive modeling and simulation and large-scale data analytics and management; and
explore the use of exascale computing technologies to advance a broad range of science and engineering.
Administration
In carrying out this program, the Secretary shall—
provide, on a competitive, merit-reviewed basis, access for researchers in United States industry, institutions of higher education, National Laboratories, and other Federal agencies to these exascale systems, as appropriate; and
conduct outreach programs to increase the readiness for the use of such platforms by domestic industries, including manufacturers.
Reports
Integrated strategy and program management plan
The Secretary shall submit to Congress, not later than 90 days after the date of enactment of the American Super Computing Leadership Act, a report outlining an integrated strategy and program management plan, including target dates for prototypical and production exascale platforms, interim milestones to reaching these targets, functional requirements, roles and responsibilities of National Laboratories and industry, acquisition strategy, and estimated resources required, to achieve this exascale system capability. The report shall include the Secretary's plan for Departmental organization to manage and execute the Exascale Computing Program, including definition of the roles and responsibilities within the Department to ensure an integrated program across the Department. The report shall also include a plan for ensuring balance and prioritizing across ASCR subprograms in a flat or slow-growth budget environment.
Status reports
At the time of the budget submission of the Department for each fiscal year, the Secretary shall submit a report to Congress that describes the status of milestones and costs in achieving the objectives of the exascale computing program.
Exascale merit report
At least 18 months prior to the initiation of construction or installation of any exascale-class computing facility, the Secretary shall transmit a plan to the Congress detailing—
the proposed facility's cost projections and capabilities to significantly accelerate the development of new energy technologies;
technical risks and challenges that must be overcome to achieve successful completion and operation of the facility; and
an independent assessment of the scientific and technological advances expected from such a facility relative to those expected from a comparable investment in expanded research and applications at terascale-class and petascale-class computing facilities, including an evaluation of where investments should be made in the system software and algorithms to enable these advances.
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Passed the House of Representatives May 19, 2015.
Karen L. Haas,
Clerk