U.S. Department of Energy Seal Guidelines

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Guide Overview

This guide serves as a comprehensive reference for internal and external stakeholders regarding the proper usage, positioning, and placement of the Department of Energy’s (DOE) official seal. By following these guidelines, we aim to ensure consistency and accuracy in representing the DOE's visual identity across various communications and platforms. 

Official Agency Seal

The Department's official seal first appeared in the 1978 issue of the Federal Register. The eagle represents the care in planning and the purposefulness of efforts required to respond to the Nation's increasing demands for energy. The sun, atom, oil derrick, windmill, and dynamo serve as representative technologies whose enhanced development can help meet these demands. The rope represents the cohesiveness in the development of the technologies and their link to our future capabilities. The lightning bolt represents the power of the natural forces from which energy is derived and the Nation's challenge in harnessing the forces. 

The color scheme—dark green, dark blue, gold, black, and white—is derived from nature, symbolizing both the source of energy and the support of man's existence. The blue field represents air and water, green represents mineral resources and the earth itself, and gold represents the creation of energy in the release of natural forces. 

Seal Usage

The Secretary and his designees are authorized to affix replicas, reproductions, and embossing seals to appropriate documents, certifications, and other material for all purposes as authorized by this section.   

The DOE seal can be used in limited circumstances, detailed at the Government Printing Office’s Code of Federal Regulations. 

Unauthorized Usage

  • DO NOT alter, distort, or modify the DOE seal or official logo in any way. 
  • The DOE seal and official DOE logo should not be combined with other logos or graphics without prior authorization. 
  • Seek approval from the appropriate department personnel for any usage that deviates from the provided guidelines. 

Requesting permission to use DOE Seal

The Director, Office of Administration is the Secretary's designee for reviewing and approving usages of the DOE graphical identifier by entities external to the Department, or purposes other than standard official usages. The Department has a concurrence system to process requests for official DOE identifiers which gathers pertinent information about the association with the Department, the relationship with the requestor, the context the identifier would be used, and the content it would be associated with.  

Visit our the Office of Administration's official page to request permission to use DOE's official seal and/or logo >>