To support the national defense and economic security of the United States by supporting vessels, ports, and shipyards of the United States and the U.S. maritime workforce.
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES · April 30, 2025 · Sponsor: Mr. Kelly · Committee: Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation
Strategic sealift, made up of Government and commercial vessels and mariners, is a critical capability for executing the maritime defense strategy and the wartime and peacetime economy of the United States.
Ensuring a modern and ready capability will require significant investment, policy prioritization, and the innovation of the people of the United States.
The worldwide ocean economy is worth between $3,000,000,000,000 and $6,000,000,000,000, according to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Yet, vessels of the United States carry less than 2 percent of United States international commercial cargoes by weight.
The United States has fewer than 200 oceangoing vessels of the United States, of which only approximately 80 vessels participate in international commerce, compared with more than 5,500 Chinese documented vessels.
Bracketed by the Atlantic, Pacific, and Arctic oceans, the prosperity and security of the United States has always been tied to its position as a maritime Nation. Throughout human history, the strength of maritime nations has been directly tied to the strength of their maritime industry. The United States won two world wars on the back of a strong maritime industry.
Decades of apathy by the United States Government has harmed our strategically important maritime industry. Our weakened shipbuilding capacity, undersized maritime workforce, and shrinking fleet of shipping vessels means the United States relies on other nations to conduct international commerce and lacks the strategic sealift to support the United States military during wartime.
Today, there are just 20 shipbuilders in the United States capable of building oceangoing vessels—down from more than 80 at the end of the Second World War.
During World War II, the United States Merchant Marine powered the Allies to victory with more than 10,000 oceangoing vessels of the United States. Today there are just 80 vessels of the United States engaged in international trade.
The People’s Republic of China has made investments in the maritime industry a strategic priority over the past 20 years.
As of 2023, shipyards in the United States had fewer than 5 shipbuilding orders for oceangoing vessels, while shipyards in the People’s Republic of China had more than 1,700 orders, according to BRS Group. According to the Office of Naval Intelligence, the People’s Republic of China became the world’s top shipbuilding and shipping nation, boasting 230 times more shipbuilding capacity than the United States.
With just 12,000 United States merchant mariners operating oceangoing vessels, the United States may not have a sufficient number of mariners to fully power the strategic sealift vessels necessary in a future prolonged conflict.
The American Civil Society of Engineers assesses that the United States has a national maintenance backlog amounting to $125,000,000,000 for bridges, $163,000,000,000 for ports, and $6,800,000,000 for inland waterways.
It is the sense of Congress that the United States must—
create a more favorable domestic and global maritime environment for vessels of the United States engaged in international commerce, shipbuilding, ship repair, maritime logistics, the maritime workforce, and naval power, contributing to assured access to the world’s oceans free from coercion from strategic competitors and asymmetric adversaries;
increase domestic shipbuilding and ship repair capacity, with programs and policies that enable the growth of United States shipyards and the maritime industrial base, enhance military sealift capacity, expand the United States maritime workforce, and enhance national security;
revitalize the international fleet of vessels of the United States and foster a comparative advantage for the United States through targeted incentives and regulatory reforms to make the fleet competitive with international carriers and to gain a sustainable share of the global maritime market in order to bolster supply chains, strengthen economic security, and lower prices, while protecting the United States economy from economic coercion;
take all measures necessary to ensure that sufficient military, civil, and commercial resources will be available with assured access to meet defense deployment needs and essential economic activities for our Nation in times of crisis, war, or peace;
recognize that a vibrant commercial shipbuilding industry provides supply chain resiliencies and creates economies of scale that improve military, Coast Guard, and Government shipbuilding and support military operations through strategic sealift to defend the freedom of the seas;
nurture the comparative advantages of the United States to innovate to better compete in the global maritime marketplace, grow the maritime workforce, and create a favorable environment for investments to build modern maritime facilities and world-class academic institutions;
ensure better coordination between Federal agencies, including the Maritime Administration, the United States Coast Guard, the Department of Defense, the Federal Maritime Commission, and all other Federal agencies with a maritime nexus, to protect, regulate, and support the United States maritime industry, resolve disputes, and implement a whole-of-Government national maritime strategy;
recognize that, while a strong Navy is the surest guarantee of peace, building the Navy, sustaining the Navy, and supplying the Navy is founded on a robust commercial industrial base;
establish reliable long-term demand signals for, and investments in, oceangoing commercial vessels that are built in the United States, documented under the laws of the United States, and crewed by United States mariners;
evaluate past and present maritime efforts to take actions to revitalize the United States maritime industry;
strengthen the United States intercoastal and domestic trade fleet, which is the foundation upon which a revitalized United States-documented shipping and domestic shipbuilding industry will be built;
recognize the important role that the support craft, passenger, and fishing vessel fleet play in the United States maritime industry;
Chapter 504 of part A of subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
Amendments
by striking the chapter heading and inserting the following: ;
by redesignating section 50401 as section 50403; and
by inserting before section 50402, the following:
(a) Maritime Security Advisor
(1) In general
Not later than 60 days after the date of enactment of this section, the President shall appoint a Special Advisor to the President (to be known as the ) for coordinating national maritime affairs and policy, including developing, updating, and implementing the National Maritime Strategy as required under section 50114 of this title. Maritime Security Advisor
(2) Duties
The Maritime Security Advisor appointed under paragraph (1) shall serve as the Chair of the Maritime Security Board, shall be the principal advisor to the President on all issues related to the maritime industry, shipbuilding, and ship repair, and shall be responsible for developing, updating, and implementing the National Maritime Strategy under section 50114 of this title within and across the Federal Government.
(3) Office of the Maritime Security Advisor
(A) In General
There is established in the Executive Office of the President, an Office of the Maritime Security Advisor. The Maritime Security Advisor described in this subsection shall be the head of such Office.
(B) Employees; contracts
In carrying out the functions under this section, the Maritime Security Advisor is authorized to—
(i) appoint such officers and employees as the Maritime Security Advisor may deem necessary to perform the functions now or hereafter vested in the Maritime Security Advisor and to prescribe their duties; and
(ii) enter into contracts and other arrangements for studies, analyses, and other services with public agencies and with private persons, organizations, or institutions, and make such payments as the Maritime Security Advisor deems necessary to carry out the provisions of this section.
(b) Maritime Security Board
Not later than 90 days after the date of enactment of this section, the President shall establish a board, to be known as the (in this section referred to as the ). Maritime Security Board``
(1) Composition
(A) In general
The Board shall be comprised of the following individuals and representatives:
(i) The Maritime Security Advisor described in subsection (a).
in subsection (b), by striking Secretary of Transportationand inserting Maritime Security Advisor and Maritime Security Board; and
in subsection (c)—
in paragraph (1), by striking ;
by striking paragraph (3) and inserting the following:
(3) Representation
Members of the Committee shall be appointed as follows:
The Maritime Security Advisor shall appoint the following members of the Committee:
(i) At least one member to represent the Environmental Protection Agency.
(ii) At least one member to represent the Department of Commerce.
(iii) At least one member to represent the Corps of Engineers.
(iv) At least one member to represent the Coast Guard.
(v) At least one member to represent Customs and Border Protection.
(vi) At least one member to represent the Maritime Administration.
(vii) At least one member to represent the Department of Agriculture.
(viii) At least one member to represent the State Department.
(ix) At least one member to represent State and local governmental entities.
Additional members shall represent private sector entities that reflect a cross-section of maritime industries, including credentialed United States merchant mariners, port and water stakeholders, academia, and labor, of whom—
(i) 3 shall be appointed by the majority leader of the Senate;
(ii) 3 shall be appointed by the minority leader of the Senate;
(iii) 3 shall be appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives; and
(iv) 3 shall be appointed by the minority leader of the House of Representatives.
The Maritime Security Advisor may appoint additional members of the Committee, including additional representatives from the United States Merchant Marine Academy, State maritime academies, or other Federal agencies, as the Secretary considers appropriate.
in paragraph (4), by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and (B) as clauses (i) and (ii), respectively, and adjusting the margins accordingly;
by redesignating paragraph (4) as subparagraph (A) and adjusting the margins accordingly;
(4) Restrictions on members
by inserting after paragraph (3) the following:
(B) Restrictions on additional members
Members appointed under this paragraph that are not representing Federal agencies—
(i) shall remain on the Committee for a term of 3 years from the date that the member is appointed; and
(ii) may not serve more than 2 consecutive terms.
at the end of paragraph (4), as so designated, by inserting the following:
The Maritime Administrator may appoint, without regard to the provisions of sections 3309 through 3319 of title 5, United States Code, candidates to positions in the competitive service within the Maritime Administration for which—
public notice has been given;
the Administrator has determined that a critical hiring need exists; and
the Administrator has consulted with the Director of the Office of Personnel Management regarding—
(i) the positions for which the Administrator plans to recruit;
(ii) the quantity of candidates Administrator is seeking; and
(iii) the assessment and selection policies the Administrator plans to utilize.
(2) Definition of critical hiring need
In this subsection, the term critical hiring need means personnel necessary for the implementation of this Act and associated work.
(b) Coast Guard direct hire authority
(1) In general
The Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating may appoint, without regard to the provisions of sections 3309 through 3319 of title 5, United States Code, candidates to positions in the competitive service within offices under the Assistant Commandant for Prevention Policy of the Coast Guard, for which—
public notice has been given;
the Secretary has determined that a critical hiring need exists; and
the Secretary has consulted with the Director of the Office of Personnel Management regarding—
(i) the positions for which the Secretary plans to recruit;
(ii) the quantity of candidates Secretary is seeking; and
(iii) the assessment and selection policies the Secretary plans to utilize.
(2) Definition of critical hiring need
In this subsection, the term critical hiring need means personnel necessary for the implementation of this Act and associated work.
(c) Competitive service
In this section the term competitive service has the meaning given the term in section 2102 of title 5, United States Code.
(d) Authorization of appropriations for administrative expenses
There is authorized to be appropriated from the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of title 46, United States Code—
$30,000,000 to the Secretary of Transportation for administrative expenses of the Maritime Administration to administer subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035;
$30,000,000 to the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating for administrative expenses of the Coast Guard to administer subtitle II of title 46, United States Code, for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035; and
Not later than 60 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator and the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating shall each submit to the appropriate committees of Congress and the Maritime Security Board a separate implementation plan for carrying out this Act, and the amendments made by this Act.
(b) Elements
Each implementation plan required under subsection (a) shall include, for each action required of the Maritime Administrator and the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating (as applicable) in this Act, including the amendments made by this Act—
an identification of all administrative restructuring requirements;
an identification of each office or division within the Maritime Administration or Coast Guard principally responsible for each relevant section of this Act;
an identification of additional personnel needed to sufficiently implement this Act, a hiring plan, and a training plan;
an identification of any barrier (including any policy, law, or regulation) to implementation of any section of this Act, and recommendations to address those barriers;
a descriptive implementation timeline, taking into account the administrative needs of the Maritime Administration or the Coast Guard; and
any additional components determined appropriate by the Maritime Administrator or such Secretary to ensure the success of implementation of this Act.
(c) Briefing
Not later than 15 days after submitting each implementation plan required under subsection (a), the Maritime Administrator and the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating shall provide a briefing to the appropriate committees of Congress on the status of that implementation plan required under subsection (a).
(d) Biannual update
Not less frequently than biannually following the submission of the plans under subsection (a) and for 2 years thereafter, the Maritime Administrator and the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress separate reports containing any updates on the implementation of such plans.
(e) GAO review
The Comptroller General of the United States shall—
not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of this Act, and biennially thereafter for 10 years, conduct a review of the activities carried out in accordance with this Act, and the amendments made by this Act; and
submit to the appropriate committees of Congress the results of each review.
The Federal Maritime Commission shall annually submit a report to the Maritime Security Board and the appropriate committees of Congress evaluating the competitiveness of vessels of the United States in foreign commerce. The Maritime Security Board shall utilize the findings of such report to inform the National Maritime Strategy under section 50114 of title 46, United States Code, and other activities of the Board.
(b) Contents
The report shall include—
metrics concerning carriage of foreign commerce on vessels of the United States;
information about the price parity of carriage of foreign commerce on vessels of the United States versus foreign vessels (as defined in section 110 of title 46, United States Code) by market;
identification of markets of opportunity for the United States to compete in foreign commerce where rates are in relative parity to vessels of the United States;
markets in which United States interests paid above average rates for foreign commerce, including with foreign and domestic carriers; and
an assessment of the foreign vessel registries of peer competitor countries to determine—
the roles of the governments of peer competitor countries in their vessel registry processes, including policy practices that may provide a disadvantage to the United States;
the sizes of the fleets of foreign vessels registered with such countries, including how many of such foreign vessels are domestically built and how many are built in other countries; and
the price parity of vessels of the United States, as compared to foreign vessels registered with peer competitor countries that are operating in global markets identified as a priority by the Federal Maritime Commission.
Section 50301 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
by striking the section heading and inserting ;
in subsection (e)—
in paragraph (2), by redesignating subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C), as clauses (i), (ii), and (iii), respectively, and adjusting the margins accordingly;
by redesignating paragraphs (1), (2), and (3), as subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C), respectively, and adjusting the margins accordingly;
in subparagraph (A), as redesignated by subparagraph (B), by striking paragraph (2)and inserting subparagraph (B);
in subparagraph (B), as redesignated by subparagraph (B), in the matter preceding clause (i), by striking Paragraph (1)and inserting Subparagraph (A); and
in subparagraph (C), as redesignated by subparagraph (B), by striking Paragraph (1)and inserting Subparagraph (A);
in subsection (f), by redesignating paragraphs (1) through (4) as subparagraphs (A) through (D), respectively, and adjusting the margins accordingly;
by redesignating subsections (b) through (g) as paragraphs (2) through (7), respectively, and adjusting the margins accordingly;
in subsection (a), by striking and all that follows through and inserting the following:
(a) Vessel Operations Revolving Fund
(1) In General
There is a
In General
in paragraph (4), by striking subsection (a)and inserting paragraph (1); and
(b) Maritime Security Trust Fund
(1) In general
There is a for use in carrying out programs or activities associated with supporting the merchant marine of the United States and the maritime industrial base, as authorized under the . Maritime Security Trust Fund
(2) Transfer of amounts
The Fund shall be credited with amounts equivalent to the receipts from each of the following:
The taxes received in the Treasury under—
(i) section 60301 of this title (relating to regular tonnage taxes);
(ii) section 60302 of this title (relating to special tonnage taxes); and
(iii) section 60303 of this title (relating to light money).
The revenue collected from—
(i) duties imposed under section 466 of the Tariff Act of 1930 () (relating to equipment and repair of vessels); 19 U.S.C. 1466
(ii) duties, fees, or monetary penalties imposed by the United States Trade Representative under section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 () pursuant to the determination of the Trade Representative that the targeting of the maritime, logistics, and shipbuilding sectors for dominance by the People’s Republic of China is unreasonable and burdens or restricts United States commerce, notice of which was published in the Federal Register on January 23, 2025 (90 Fed. Reg. 8089); and 19 U.S.C. 2411
Section 60301 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in subsection (a), by striking ; and
in subsection (b), by striking .
(b) Foreign shipyard of concern
(1) Definition
The term foreign shipyard of concern means—
a shipyard owned by a firm owned or controlled by the government of a foreign country of concern or a foreign entity of concern, that has the capacity to produce both military and commercial vessels; and
a foreign shipyard designated under paragraph (2).
(2) Designation
(A) In General
Beginning after October 1, 2027, the Maritime Security Advisor, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board, shall designate certain foreign shipyards that pose a threat to the national security or economic security of the United States as foreign shipyards of concern, in accordance with this paragraph.
(B) Notice and comment
A proposed designation under subparagraph (A) shall be subject to notice and comment in the Federal Register.
(C) Annual revisions
The list of shipyards designated under this paragraph shall be revised, and new shipyards may be designated, not more frequently than once a year.
(c) Penalty rates; inflation
Section 60301 of title 46, United States Code, is further amended—
by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (e); and
by inserting after subsection (b) the following:
(c) Penalty rate
(1) In General
In accordance with paragraph (2), and in addition to the tax imposed on a vessel under subsection (b), a penalty tax with no annual limit is imposed on a vessel subject to the tax imposed under subsection (b), at a rate of—
$5 per ton for a vessel that—
(i) is owned or operated by a foreign entity of concern;
(ii) is a vessel registered under a registry of a foreign country of concern;
(iii) was a vessel registered under a registry of a foreign country of concern at any time during the 3 years preceding the date of the determination of the application of subsection (a) or (b); or
(iv) is owned or operated by an entity, with respect to which—
an amount equal to 50 percent or greater of the total number of vessels ordered at the time of the determination of the application of subsection (a) or (b) are vessels ordered from a shipyard of concern; or
an amount equal to 50 percent or greater of the total number of vessels that the entity expects to have delivered in the period of 24 months after the time of such determination are vessels expected to be delivered by a shipyard of concern;
Section 60304 of title 46, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
Presidential suspension of tonnage taxes and light money
(a) In general
Except as provided in subsection (b), if the President is satisfied that the government of a foreign country does not impose discriminating or countervailing duties to the disadvantage of the United States, the President may suspend the imposition of special tonnage taxes and light money under sections 60302 and 60303 of this title on vessels of that country.
(b) Exception
Subsection (a) shall not apply to any vessel that—
is owned or operated by a foreign entity of concern (as that term is defined in section 4 of the );
is a vessel registered under a registry of a foreign country of concern (as that term is defined in section 4 of the ); or
was a vessel registered under a registry of a foreign country of concern (as that term is defined in section 4 of the ) at any time during the 3 years preceding the date of the determination of the application of subsection (a).
It is necessary for the national defense and economic security of the United States that the United States have vessels of the United States capable of providing and supporting strategic sealift—
sufficient to meet surge defense deployment and essential economic activities for the United States in times of crisis or war;
sufficient to respond unilaterally to national security threats in geographic areas not covered by alliance commitments and ensure economic security resilience for United States trade; and
built, operated, and maintained during all times, primarily in the United States to protect and ensure national security resiliency and avoid foreign coercion of critical supply chains.
(b) Policy
It is the policy of the United States to encourage and aid the development and maintenance of vessels of the United States with strategic sealift capabilities satisfying the objectives described in subsection (a).
(c) Strategy required
(1) In general
The Maritime Security Board shall annually develop a strategy to leverage the financial assistance programs established under part C of this subtitle to expand the number of vessels of the United States needed to accomplish the objectives described under subsection (a).
(2) Strategy components
The strategy developed by the Maritime Security Board shall include—
annual goals for the number of vessels that will be brought into the fleet of vessels of the United States capable of providing strategic sealift utilizing the Maritime Security Fleet under chapter 531 of this title, the Cable Security Fleet under chapter 532 of this title, the Tanker Security Fleet under chapter 534 of this title, the Strategic Commercial Fleet under chapter 536 of this title, and the Shipbuilding Financial Incentives program, consistent with the most recent Mobility Capability Requirements Study produced by United States Transportation Command; and
an assessment of domestic shipbuilding capacity and a strategy to increase the capacity of the domestic shipbuilding industry utilizing the Shipbuilding Financial Incentives program.
(3) National maritime strategy
The strategy developed by the Maritime Security Board under paragraph (1) shall be consistent with the National Maritime Strategy developed under section 50114.
The term Administrator means the Maritime Administrator.
The term appropriate committees of Congress means—
The term coastwise trade means commerce or trade that is subject to the requirements of section 55102.
The term covered entity means—
The term Fleet means the Strategic Commercial Fleet established under section 53602.
The term foreign commerce means—
The terms and have the meanings given such terms in section 4 of the . foreign country of concern,foreign entity of concern
The term — qualified foreign built vessel
The term United States built vessel means a vessel that is constructed in the United States (and, if reconstructed, reconstructed in the United States).
The term United States citizen trust has the meaning given such term in section 53201.
Establishment of Strategic Commercial Fleet
(a) In general
The Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary of Defense, shall establish a fleet, to be known as the , of active, commercially viable, militarily useful, privately owned vessels to meet national defense and other security requirements and maintain a United States presence in international commercial shipping. Strategic Commercial Fleet
(b) Number of vessels
The Administrator shall seek to select eligible vessels described in subsection (d) for the Fleet through an annual competitive selection process in accordance with the annual target number for the Fleet recommended by the Maritime Security Board under section 50401(b)(2)(B)(i). Through such annual selection process, the Administrator shall—
select for inclusion in the Fleet not fewer than 10 vessels in the 12-month period that begins on the date that is 2 years after the date of enactment of this section;
increase the number of vessels selected for inclusion in the Fleet annually such that not later than 5 years after such date of enactment, not fewer than 20 vessels are selected for such inclusion annually; and
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Commander of the United States Transportation Command, in coordination with the Secretary of the Navy and the Maritime Administrator, shall devise a tabletop exercise to test the effective control of the Maritime Security Fleet under of title 46, United States Code, and the Tanker Security Fleet under chapter 534 of such title, in case of crisis or war. chapter 531
(b) Briefing
After completion of the tabletop exercise under subsection (a), the Commander shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a briefing on the results of such tabletop exercise.
(c) Annual testing
Beginning not later than 1 year after the briefing is submitted under subsection (b), the Commander shall—
carry out tabletop drills to test effective control of the Maritime Security Fleet under of title 46, United States Code, and the Tanker Security Fleet under chapter 534 of such title; and chapter 531
provide to the appropriate committees of Congress a briefing after each such drill on the results of such drill.
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Maritime Administrator, the Federal Communications Commission, and other relevant Federal agencies, shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress an assessment on the ability and preparedness of the USNS Zeus and the Cable Security Fleet under of title 46, United States Code, to repair transoceanic submarine fiber optic cables that may be damaged or cut by adversaries. chapter 532
(b) Contents
The assessment under subsection (a) shall include—
a description of preparedness to address a situation in which the cables of partner countries in both the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans are damaged or severed at or around the same time;
a determination as to how long it would take for the Cable Security Fleet, in coordination with partner countries, to repair such cables; and
the options available to provide connectivity in an emergency or crisis caused by, or related to, the damaging or severing of such cables.
Section 466 of the Tariff Act of 1930 () is amended— 19 U.S.C. 1466
In general
in subsection (a), in the first sentence, by striking and inserting ; and
(i) Temporary exception for repairs made in certain countries
(1) In general
During the period beginning on the date of enactment of the and ending on December 31, 2035, the duty imposed under subsection (a) shall, except as provided by paragraph (2), not apply to the cost of equipment, or any part of equipment, purchased for, or expenses of repair parts or materials to be used for, or repairs made in a foreign country on, a vessel engaged in foreign trade if the Maritime Administrator confirms that—
the vessel—
(i) is participating in—
the Maritime Security Fleet under of title 46, United States Code; chapter 531
the Cable Security Fleet under chapter 532 of such title;
the Tanker Security Fleet under chapter 534 of such title; or
the Strategic Commercial Fleet under chapter 536 of such title; or
(ii) has entered into an emergency preparedness agreement under section 53107 or 53407 of title 46, United States Code, or a contingency agreement under section 53207 of such title, or has otherwise entered into a voluntary agreement and plan of action with the Maritime Administrator as authorized under section 708(c) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (); and 50 U.S.C. 4558(c)
the owner or master of the vessel certifies to the Maritime Administrator in writing that a good faith effort was made to purchase equipment or carry out repairs in a shipyard in the United States.
(2) Inapplicability to foreign countries of concern
Duty-free treatment under paragraph (1) does not apply with respect to the cost of equipment, or any part of equipment, purchased for repairs made in a foreign country of concern (as defined in section 4 of the ) on a vessel engaged in foreign trade, or expenses of repair parts or materials to be used for such repairs, or other expenses of such repairs.
by adding at the end the following:
(b) Report required
Not less than 2 years after the date of enactment of this Act, and every 2 years thereafter through December 31, 2035, the Maritime Administrator shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report—
describing the number of vessels that paid the duties under section 466 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (), and the location where the repairs described in such section occurred; 19 U.S.C. 1466
(2)
identifying shipyards of the United States that have capacity to carry out vessel repairs; and
describing the extent to which vessels of the United States chose to conduct repairs in such shipyards during the period covered by the report;
only the Maritime Administrator, acting in the Administrator’s capacity as Director of the National Shipping Authority, has the authority to determine the non-availability of qualified capacity of vessels of the United States (referred to in this subsection as ) at fair and reasonable rates for commercial vessels of the United States to meet the requirements of section 55305 or 55314 of title 46, United States Code; qualified United States flag capacity
the requirements of section 55305 or 55314 of title 46, United States Code, may only be waived temporarily by the President, the Secretary of Defense, or the Secretary of Transportation during a declared emergency justifying such a temporary waiver, following a determination by the Maritime Administrator, acting in the Maritime Administrator's capacity as Director of the National Shipping Authority, of the non-availability of qualified United States flag capacity at fair and reasonable rates for commercial vessels of the United States pursuant to section 55305(d) of title 46, United States Code; and
nothing in title II of the Food for Peace Act () authorizes an agency to waive the requirements of section 55305 or 55314 of title 46, United States Code, without first obtaining— 7 U.S.C. 1721 et seq.
delegated authority from the President of the United States;
an emergency declaration justifying such a temporary waiver, pursuant to section 55305(d) of title 46, United States Code; and
a determination by the Maritime Administrator, acting in the Maritime Administrator’s capacity as Director of the National Shipping Authority, on the non-availability of qualified United States flag capacity at fair and reasonable rates for commercial vessels of the United States pursuant to section 55305(d) of title 46, United States Code.
(b) Applicable percentage
(1) In general
Section 55305(a) of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking and inserting .
(2) Effective date
The amendment made by paragraph (1) shall take effect on the date that is 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act.
(c) Waiver
(1) Waiver authority
(A) In general
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, when the President, the Secretary of Defense, or the Secretary of Transportation declares the existence of an emergency justifying a temporary waiver of this section or section 55314 of this title, the President, the Secretary of Defense, or the Secretary of Transportation, following a determination by the Maritime Administrator, acting in the Administrator’s capacity as Director, National Shipping Authority, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board, of the non-availability of qualified United States flag capacity at fair and reasonable rates for commercial vessels of the United States to meet the requirements of this section or section 55314 of this title, may waive compliance with such section to the extent, in the manner, and on the terms the Maritime Administrator, acting in such capacity, prescribes, and no other waivers of the requirements of this section or section 55314 of this title shall be authorized.
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator, notwithstanding any other provision of law, regulation, or administrative order, shall—
promulgate regulations under subchapter III of of title 5, United States Code, to fully implement and ensure compliance with sections 55305, 55314, 55315, and 55316 of title 46, United States Code; chapter 5
issue interagency guidance to other Federal departments and agencies on how to administer the programs that are subject to such sections in accordance with those sections, as applicable; and
publish such guidance in the Federal Register and on the website of the Maritime Administration.
(b) Consultation
The Administrator may consult with the Food Aid Consultative Group established by section 205 of the Food for Peace Act () in carrying out this section. 7 U.S.C. 1725
(c) Repeal of earlier regulatory deadline
Subsection (a) of section 3502 of the James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 ( note; ), is repealed. 46 U.S.C. 55305; Public Law 117–263
Section 55301 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in subsection (a)(2), by striking section 55305and inserting sections 55305, 55314, 55315, and 55316; and
(d) Notification of violation
The Maritime Administrator shall—
upon receiving any credible information, as determined by the Administrator, that a Federal department or agency that administers a program covered by a report required under subsection (a) was not in compliance with the requirements of section 55305, 55314, 55315, or 55316 of this title (as applicable), notify the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives not later than 14 days after receiving such information; and
upon receiving any credible information, as determined by the Administrator, that a Federal department or agency that administers a program covered by a report required under subsection (a) was not in compliance with the requirements of section 2631 of title 10, United States Code, notify the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation and the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and the Committee on Armed Services of the House of Representatives not later than 14 days after receiving such information.
Subchapter II of of title 46, United States Code, is amended by inserting after the following: chapter 553; section 55315
In general
(a) Financing of increased costs
The Secretary of Transportation shall finance any reasonable increased ocean freight costs, as assessed by the Maritime Administrator, incurred in any fiscal year by a covered agency that result from the application of section 55305 of this title, including the application of such section to the activities specified in section 55314(b) of this title.
(b) Reimbursement of increased costs
(1) In general
The Secretary of Transportation shall reimburse a covered agency for the amount by which, in any fiscal year—
the total cost of ocean freight and ocean freight differential for which obligations are incurred by the covered agency under section 55305 of this title, including pursuant to the application of such section to the activities specified in section 55314(b) of this title; exceeds
20 percent of the total value of the cargo, including agricultural products, transported under such section 55305, including pursuant to the application of such section to such activities, and the cost of the ocean freight and ocean freight differential, as assessed by the Maritime Administrator, on which obligations are incurred by the covered agency during that fiscal year.
(2) Agricultural products shipped from inventory
For purposes of this subsection, agricultural products shipped from the inventory of the Corporation shall be valued as provided in section 412(d) of the Food for Peace Act (). 7 U.S.C. 1736f(d)
(c) Interagency agreement
(1) In general
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of the , the Secretary of Transportation shall enter into an interagency agreement with the head of each agency entitled to a reimbursement under subsection (b)(1).
(2) Contents
Each interagency agreement shall include—
an explanation of the process the agency shall follow to receive a reimbursement from the Secretary of Transportation under this section;
a standard methodology for calculating the reimbursement an agency is entitled to under this section; and
deadlines—
(i) by which an agency shall submit a reimbursement request in order to receive reimbursement; and
(ii) by which the Secretary of Transportation shall approve a properly filed reimbursement request, which date shall not be more than 90 days after the date on which the reimbursement request is submitted.
(3) Congressional notification
The Secretary of Transportation shall notify the appropriate committees of Congress—
of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: Chapter 605
In general
(a) In general
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, not less than the covered percentage, as described in subsection (b), of covered goods by tonnage imported into the United States from a foreign port shall be imported on a vessel that is—
a vessel of the United States;
crewed by United States mariners; and
built in the United States.
(b) Percentage
A covered percentage under this section is the following:
One percent in the year that is 5 years after the date of enactment of this section.
Two percent in the year that is 6 years after the date of enactment of this section.
Three percent in the year that is 7 years after the date of enactment of this section.
Four percent in the year that is 8 years after the date of enactment of this section.
Five percent in the year that is 9 years after the date of enactment of this section.
Six percent in the year that is 10 years after the date of enactment of this section.
Seven percent in the year that is 11 years after the date of enactment of this section.
Eight percent in the year that is 12 years after the date of enactment of this section.
Nine percent in the year that is 13 years after the date of enactment of this section.
Ten percent in the year that is 14 years after the date of enactment of this section.
(c) Application
The requirement under subsection (a) shall be applied to any shipper importing goods into the United States that originates from a foreign port or place.
(d) Fine for failure To comply
(1) In general
On an annual basis, the Maritime Administrator shall issue a fine to any entity failing to comply with the requirements under this section.
(2) Amount
The amount of a fine under this section shall be in an amount set by the Maritime Administrator that is greater than the difference in cost between—
the cost of employing a vessel of the United States that is built in the United States and crewed by United States mariners; and
the cost of employing a foreign vessel that is registered under the laws of a country with an open registry and is built outside of the United States.
(3) Use of amounts
Any amount collected under this subsection shall be deposited in the Maritime Security Trust Fund.
(e) Rulemaking required
Not later than 4 years after the date of enactment of this section, the Maritime Administrator, in coordination with the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Chairman of the Federal Maritime Commission, shall promulgate a final rule that establishes a system that—
The Secretary of Transportation may allow a vessel of the United States to be given priority at any port in the United States, ahead of a waiting vessel of a foreign country of concern (as defined in section 4 of the ) or owned by a foreign entity of concern (as so defined).
(b) Exception
Notwithstanding subsection (a), if the Secretary of Transportation finds that it is in the national interest, the Secretary may eliminate the priority under this section at any port. The Secretary shall report to the appropriate committees of Congress, as defined in section 4 of the , by not later than 30 days after an action eliminating priority under this section.
(b) Clerical amendment
Priority for vessels of the United States
The table of chapters for subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, is amended by inserting after the item relating to chapter 553 the following:
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Maritime Security Advisor, in consultation with the Secretary of Transportation, the Secretary of Commerce, the Chairman of the Federal Maritime Commission, and the United States Trade Representative, shall—
conduct an assessment that identifies authorities available under current Federal law, as of the date of such identification, that may be utilized to incentivize the movement of commercial cargo on vessels of the United States in international commerce;
review methods for greater assurances of access, in crisis and conflict, to vessels of international allies and partners of the United States; and
makes recommendations to the President to utilize such authorities.
(b) Inclusions
The assessment required under subsection (a) shall include an evaluation of—
tax benefits for taxpayers who ship goods aboard vessels of the United States;
modifications to import and export duties for goods imported or exported aboard vessels of the United States;
privileges for vessels of the United States that enable vessels of the United States to provide improved service relative to other vessels in international commerce; and
any other authorities that would incentivize the movement of goods aboard vessels of the United States.
(c) Report to Congress
Upon carrying out the assessment required under subsection (a), the Maritime Security Advisor shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress—
a list of the recommendations made under subsection (a)(3); and
a list of additional actions that could be taken by Congress to further incentivize the movement of commercial cargo on vessels of the United States.
(d) Definition
In this section, the term vessel of the United States has the meaning given the term in section 116 of title 46, United States Code.
Section 55314 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
(a) Applicability
The requirements under section 55305 of this title shall apply with respect to the activities specified in subsection (b).
by inserting before subsection (b) the following:
in subsection (b)—
in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by striking Secretary of Agriculture or the Commodity Credit Corporationand inserting Federal Government;
in paragraph (1), by inserting after ;
in paragraph (4), by striking agricultural commodities or their productsand inserting agricultural products;
in paragraph (5), by striking agricultural commodities or their productsand inserting agricultural products;
in paragraph (6), by striking agricultural commodities or their productsand inserting agricultural products;
in paragraph (7), by striking agricultural commoditiesand inserting agricultural products;
by redesignating paragraphs (4), (5), (6), and (7) as paragraphs (6), (7), (8), and (9), respectively; and
carried out under the Food for Progress Act of 1985 (); 7 U.S.C. 1736o
carried out under the McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program under section 3107 of the Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 (); 7 U.S.C. 1736o–1
by inserting after paragraph (3) the following:
(c) Agricultural product defined
In this section, the term agricultural product means any food product, including an agricultural commodity (as such term is defined in section 402 of the Food for Peace Act ()), specialty crop (as such term is defined in section 3 of the Specialty Crops Competitiveness Act of 2004 ( note)), or processed food product, exported from the United States. 7 U.S.C. 1732; 7 U.S.C. 1621
Section 202(a) of the Food for Peace Act () is amended by striking Notwithstandingand inserting Subject to the requirements of sections 55305 and 55314 of title 46, United States Code, and notwithstanding. 7 U.S.C. 1722(a)
(b) Administrative provisions clarification
Section 407(b)(2)(A) of the Food for Peace Act () is amended by striking Notwithstandingand inserting Subject to the requirements of sections 55305 and 55314 of title 46, United States Code, and notwithstanding. 7 U.S.C. 1736a(b)(2)(A)
(c) Emergency food security program clarification
Section 491(c)(1) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 () is amended by inserting after . 22 U.S.C. 2292(c)(1)
(a) National policy on strategic energy asset export transportation
(1) Requirement for transportation of exports of natural gas on vessels documented under laws of the United States
Section 3 of the Natural Gas Act () is amended by adding at the end the following: 15 U.S.C. 717b
(g) Transportation of exports of natural gas on vessels documented under laws of the United States
(1) Condition for approval
Except as provided in paragraph (7), with respect to an application to export natural gas under subsection (a), the Commission shall include in the order issued for that application the condition that the person transport the natural gas on a vessel that meets the requirements described in paragraph (3).
(2) Purpose
The purpose of the requirement under paragraph (1) is to ensure that, of all natural gas exported by vessel in a calendar year, the following percentage is exported by a vessel that meets the requirements described in paragraph (3):
In each of the 7 calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 2 percent.
In each of the 8th and 9th calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 3 percent.
In each of the 10th and 11th calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 4 percent.
In each of the 12th and 13th calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 6 percent.
In each of the 14th and 15th calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 7 percent.
In each of the 16th and 17th calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 9 percent.
In each of the 18th and 19th calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 11 percent.
In each of the 20th and 21st calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 13 percent.
In the 22nd calendar year after the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted and each calendar year thereafter, not less than 15 percent.
(3) Requirements for vessels
A vessel meets the requirements described in this paragraph—
with respect to each of the 5 calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted—
(i) if—
the vessel is documented under the laws of the United States; and
with respect to any retrofit work necessary for the vessel to export natural gas—
such work is done in a shipyard in the United States; and
any component of the vessel listed in paragraph (4) that is installed during the course of such work is manufactured in the United States; or
of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: Chapter 553
(a) Establishment
The Maritime Administrator shall establish within the Maritime Administration an office to be known as the . The Maritime Administrator shall appoint the head of the Ship America Office (in this section referred to as the ). Ship America Associate Administrator
(b) Duties
The Ship America Associate Administrator shall have the following duties:
Providing assistance to private sector entities, Federal financial assistance recipients, Federal agencies, Federal contractors, and owners and operators of oceangoing vessels of the United States to facilitate the movement of commercial and government cargo on vessels of the United States in international commerce.
Maximizing compliance across Federal agencies with this chapter, section 2631 of title 10, and any other cargo preference law of the United States.
Providing training and assistance to Federal employees, in all Federal agencies responsible for shipping preference cargo, on the legal obligations under this chapter, section 2631 of title 10, United States Code, and any other cargo preference law of the United States.
Developing a ‘Ship America’ verification program to develop self-certification industry standards, in partnership with private sector entities, to allow private sector entities to verifiably demonstrate that a product was transported to the United States aboard a vessel of the United States.
Supporting the efforts of the executive branch to develop and sustain a fleet of vessels of the United States and maritime industrial base to meet the sealift needs of Federal agencies.
Where practicable, making accessible, and regularly updating, the publicly available contact information for oceangoing vessels of the United States for the purposes of moving international commerce.
Publishing, and regularly updating, centralized information on the commercial benefits available to private sector entities for moving commercial cargo on oceangoing vessels of the United States.
Preparing the reports under subsection (c).
(c) Reports required
Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this section, and biennially thereafter, the Maritime Administrator, acting through the Ship America Associate Administrator, shall report to the appropriate committees of Congress (as defined in section 4 of the ) and the Maritime Security Board on—
the opportunities and challenges faced by commercial entities to move cargo on oceangoing vessels of the United States; and
recommendations to increase international commerce moving on vessels of the United States.
of title 46, United States Code, is amended— Chapter 33
In general
by redesignating sections 3317 and 3318 as sections 3318 and 3319, respectively; and
by inserting after section 3316 the following:
(a) In general
Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of the , the Secretary, in consultation with the Maritime Administrator, shall establish alternate standards to allow self-propelled vessels providing oceangoing transportation that are not documented under chapter 121 of this title to receive a certificate of inspection if the vessel will become a documented vessel.
(b) Requirements
Under the program established under subsection (a), a self-propelled vessel used to provide oceangoing transportation that is not documented under chapter 121 of this title shall be eligible for a certificate of inspection if the Secretary determines that—
the owner of the vessel has agreed to apply to have the vessel documented under chapter 121 upon receiving the certificate;
at the time of the receipt of such certificate, the vessel is eligible for documentation under such chapter;
the vessel is classed by and designed in accordance with the rules of a classification society accepted by the Secretary;
the vessel complies with applicable international agreements and associated guidelines, as determined by the country in which the vessel was documented immediately before becoming documented under chapter 121, notwithstanding any other law including any regulation;
the vessel has been assessed for cybersecurity and surveillance risks; and
the country in which the vessel was documented immediately before becoming documented under chapter 121 has not been identified by the Secretary as inadequately enforcing international vessel regulations as to that vessel.
(c) Continued eligibility for certificate
This section does not apply to a vessel after any date on which the vessel fails to comply with the applicable international agreements and associated guidelines referred to in subsection (b)(4).
(d) Reliance on classification society
(1) In general
The Secretary may rely on a certification from the American Bureau of Shipping or, subject to paragraph (2), another classification society accepted by the Secretary to establish that a vessel is in compliance with the requirements of paragraphs (3), (4), and (6) of subsection (b) and of subsection (c).
(2) Foreign classification society
The Secretary may accept certification from a foreign classification society under paragraph (1) only—
to the extent that the government of the foreign country in which the society is headquartered provides access on a reciprocal basis to the American Bureau of Shipping; and
The term rulemaking committee means the committee established under subsection (b).
The term Secretary means the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating.
(b) Establishment of rulemaking committee
There is established, in the department in which the Coast Guard is operating, a rulemaking committee on commercial maritime regulations and standards to—
review, and develop findings and recommendations regarding, the covered regulations; and
provide to the Secretary a report on opportunities to review and update regulations governing vessel design and engineering, vessel and facility operation and environmental standards, and merchant mariner credentialing, in order to—
revitalize the merchant marine and the commercial maritime industry in the United States; and
better align, and limit redundancies between, the regulatory standards of the Coast Guard and the International Maritime Organization and international treaty requirements, while protecting United States mariners and the United States maritime industry from foreign regulations that undermine the maritime industrial competitiveness of the United States.
(c) Members
(1) Composition of rulemaking committee
The Secretary shall appoint the following as members of the rulemaking committee:
Composition of rulemaking committee
Each of the following Federal officers or employees, or their designees:
(i) The Maritime Security Advisor.
(ii) The Maritime Administrator.
(iii) The Commandant of the Coast Guard.
(iv) The Secretary of Commerce.
(v) The Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.
(vi) The Chair of the Federal Maritime Commission.
(vii) The chief United States delegate to the International Maritime Organization.
Representatives from recognized classification societies, including the American Bureau of Shipping.
Representatives of industry, including—
(i) owners and operators of vessels in domestic and foreign commerce of the United States;
(ii) shipbuilders; and
(iii) other representatives of industry the Secretary determines appropriate.
Individuals with a merchant mariner credential, as defined in section 2101 of title 46, United States Code.
Representatives of maritime labor organizations.
Experts in maritime safety and regulatory matters.
Other stakeholders the Secretary determines appropriate.
Section 30523 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
by striking subsection (a) and inserting the following:
(a) Limit of owner liability
(1) In general
Except as provided in section 30524 of this title, the liability of—
the owner of a vessel of the United States for any claim, debt, or liability described in subsection (b) shall not exceed the value of the vessel and pending freight; and
the owner of a foreign vessel for any claim, debt, or liability described in subsection (b) shall not exceed the amount that is 5 times the value of the vessel and pending freight.
(2) Multiple owners
If a vessel has more than one owner, the proportionate share of the liability under paragraph (1) of any one such owner shall not exceed that owner’s proportionate interest in the vessel and pending freight.
(c) Claims not subject to limitation
Subsection (a) does not apply to—
a claim for wages; or
with respect to the liability of an owner of a foreign vessel, a claim, debt, or liability arising from personal injury or wrongful death of a person who was not a crewmember or passenger of the foreign vessel at the time the injury (including fatal injury, if applicable) occurred.
by striking subsection (c) and inserting the following:
(b) Amendment to cessation of certain actions
Section 30529(c) of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking the matter in questionand inserting a matter subject to consideration for limitation under section 30523 or section 30524.
(c) Effective date
The amendments made by subsections (a) and (b) shall apply to any liability subject to section 30523(a) of title 46, United States Code, that arises on or after the date of enactment of this Act.
The Maritime Administrator shall establish a program that, in accordance with the requirements of this section, provides Federal financial assistance to covered entities to—
aid in the construction of a vessel that shall be documented under the laws of the United States; or
incentivize a qualified shipyard investment.
(b) Definitions
In this section:
The term appropriate committees of Congress means the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate and the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives.
The term covered entity means—
The term foreign commerce means—
The terms and have the meanings given such terms in section 4 of the . foreign country of concern,foreign entity of concern
The term qualified shipyard investment means an investment to construct, modernize, or expand—
(c) Procedure
(1) Application
A covered entity desiring financial assistance under this section shall submit an application to the Maritime Administrator.
(2) Requirements
In order for a covered entity to qualify for financial assistance under this section, the covered entity shall—
for financial assistance related to construction of a vessel of the United States as described in subsection (a)(1)—
(i) enter into an agreement with the Maritime Administrator establishing that the vessel that is constructed with Federal financial assistance shall be, for a period of not less than 10 years, documented under the laws of the United States; and
(ii) agree to carry out all construction in a shipyard of the United States as the result of competitive bidding, after due advertisement, with the right reserved by the Administrator to disapprove any or all bids;
for financial assistance related to qualified shipyard investments as described in subsection (a)(2), use the financial assistance award amounts to incentivize investments in—
(i) facilities or equipment related to shipbuilding or ship repair; or
(ii) maritime component suppliers and subcomponent suppliers with over 50 percent maritime use in each such investment; and
make commitments to worker and community investment, including through—
(i) programs to expand employment opportunity for economically disadvantaged individuals; and
(ii) securing commitments from regional educational and training entities and institutions of higher education to provide workforce training, including programming for training and job placement of economically disadvantaged individuals.
Not later than 30 days after the date of enactment of the , the Secretary shall establish a revolving loan fund to be administered by the National Surface Transportation and Innovation Finance Bureau established under section 116 of title 49. Any funds appropriated to carry out this chapter shall be deposited in the fund, along with any proceeds generated from the loan guarantee program under this chapter including any fees collected under section 53713 or 53714. The Secretary or Administrator shall make a guarantee of payments or commitment to guarantee payments under subsection (a) or for the Secretary to make direct loan obligations under subsection (b) out of the revolving loan fund.
(d) Authorization of appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated, out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title, $100,000,000 for fiscal year 2026 to be available until expended to the revolving loan fund established under subsection (c).
Section 53702 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
(b) Funding limits
Section 53704 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in subsection (a), by striking facilities.and inserting facilities, and not less than 50 percent of obligations guaranteed under this chapter shall be for projects that do not receive any payments or Federal financial assistance from financial assistance programs established under this part.; and
(5) Vessel of National Interest
The Administrator shall ensure that the system of risk categories under paragraph (2) takes into consideration whether a project subject to a guarantee under this chapter is a project to construct, reconstruct, or recondition a Vessel of National Interest.
in subsection (c), by adding at the end the following:
(c) Eligible purposes of obligations
Section 53706(a)(8) of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
by striking States.and inserting States that is required—; and
for the vessel to be a vessel of the United States;
for the vessel to be issued a coastwise endorsement under chapter 121;
to convert a civilian vessel of the United States to a more useful military configuration;
for any vessel under contract to the Federal Government; or
for any United States-built vessel participating in—
(i) the Maritime Security Program or the Emergency Preparedness Program under chapter 531;
(ii) the Cable Security Fleet under chapter 532;
(iii) the Tanker Security Fleet under chapter 534;
Section 53301(a) of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in paragraph (1), by striking a new vesseland inserting an eligible vessel;
in paragraph (2)—
by adding at the end the following:
(b) Authority for Construction Reserve Funds
Section 53302(a) of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking or acquisition of a new vesseland inserting repowering, or acquisition of an eligible vessel.
(c) Persons eligible To establish funds
Section 53303 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
by striking the matter preceding paragraph (1) and inserting the following: ;
in paragraph (1), by striking in the foreign or domestic commerce of the United Statesand inserting documented under the laws of the United States and operating in foreign commerce or domestic commerce of the United States;
in paragraph (2), by striking being operated in the foreign or domestic commerce of the United Statesand inserting documented under the laws of the United States and operating in foreign commerce or domestic commerce of the United States;
in paragraph (3), by striking in the foreign or domestic commerce of the United Statesand inserting documented under the laws of the United States and operating in foreign commerce or domestic commerce of the United States;
in paragraph (4)—
by striking being operated in the foreign or domestic commerce of the United Statesand inserting documented under the laws of the United States and operating in foreign commerce or domestic commerce of the United States; and
by striking after the semicolon;
in paragraph (5)—
by striking in the foreign or domestic commerce of the United Statesand inserting documented under the laws of the United States to operate in foreign commerce or domestic commerce of the United States; and
by striking the period at the end and inserting ; and
commits, as a part of the agreement with the Secretary under this chapter, to construct, reconstruct, recondition, repower, or acquire, and operate, an eligible vessel by not later than 5 years after the date on which the construction reserve fund is established.
by adding at the end the following:
(d) Vessel ownership
Section 53304 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking each place the term appears and inserting constructed, reconstructed, reconditioned, repowered, or acquired.
Chapter 535 of subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in section 53501—
by redesignating paragraphs (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), and (9), as paragraphs (3), (5), (7), (8), (9), (10), (11), and (12), respectively;
(2) Cargo handling equipment
The term cargo handling equipment means any vehicle or land-based equipment (excluding marine container chassis), and the associated marine terminal or port landside infrastructure, used at a marine terminal to lift or move cargo—
manufactured in the United States (including any territory or possession of the United States); or
manufactured outside of the United States, if such equipment is not produced in the United States in sufficient and reasonably available quantities or of a satisfactory quality as determined by the Secretary.
by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
(4) Foreign commerce
The term foreign commerce means—
commerce or trade between the United States, its territories or possessions, or the District of Columbia, and a foreign country; and
commerce or trade between foreign countries.
by inserting after paragraph (3), as redesignated by subparagraph (A), the following:
(6) Marine terminal
The term marine terminal means wharves, bulkheads, quays, piers, docks, and other berthing locations and adjacent storage or adjacent areas and structures associated with the primary movement of cargo or materials from vessel to shore, or from shore to vessel, including structures which are devoted to receiving, handling, holding, consolidating, loading, or delivery of waterborne shipments, including areas devoted to the maintenance of the terminal or equipment.
by inserting after paragraph (5), as redesignated by subparagraph (A), the following:
in paragraph (3)(A)(iii), as redesignated by subparagraph (A), by striking foreign or domestic trade of the United Statesand inserting foreign commerce or domestic trade of the United States; and
in paragraph (8)(A)(iii), as redesignated by subparagraph (A), by striking foreign or domestic trade of the United Statesand inserting foreign commerce or domestic trade of the United States;
in section 53503—
by striking subsection (a) and inserting the following:
(a) In General
(1) Citizen agreements
A citizen of the United States may make an agreement with the Secretary under this chapter to establish a capital construction fund for a vessel if that citizen—
of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: Chapter 501
In general
(a) Definition
In this section, means a vessel that is documented under the laws of the United States, not less than 6,000 deadweight tons, and operated in the domestic trade of the United States or foreign commerce, and may include— commercial vessel of the United States
a bulk carrier vessel;
a tanker vessel;
a roll-on/roll-off vessel;
a liquefied natural gas tanker vessel;
a container vessel;
a multi-purpose vessel;
a cable vessel (as defined in section 53201);
a heavy-lift vessel; or
any other type of vessel determined appropriate by the Administrator, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board.
(b) In general
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this section, and annually thereafter, the Maritime Administrator shall conduct a survey of owners, agents, or operators of commercial vessels of the United States to identify plans for the construction, maintenance, and modernization of commercial vessels of the United States.
(c) Purpose
The purpose of the survey conducted under this section is to inform the maritime industrial base of the future need for the construction of commercial vessels.
(d) Inclusions
In conducting the survey under this section, the Maritime Administrator shall collect the following information from owners, agents, or operators of commercial vessels of the United States who participate in the survey:
The number of commercial vessels of the United States the participant is looking to construct during the 10-year period beginning on the date on which the participant takes the survey.
The capabilities of the vessels described in paragraph (1) that the participant is seeking in constructing such vessels.
Estimated timelines for when the participant aims to place each such vessel into service.
The number of major repairs of commercial vessels of the United States and overhauls of such commercial vessels the participant is looking to carry out during the 10-year period described in paragraph (1).
The major components that a shipbuilder would need from industrial base suppliers to support the construction, overhaul, or repair of commercial vessels of the United States during such 10-year period.
Estimates for the capital expenditures the participant is planning to make for the construction, overhaul, or repair of commercial vessels of the United States during such 10-year period.
Any additional information the Maritime Administrator determines appropriate.
Section 41001(6) of the Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act () is amended— 42 U.S.C. 4370m(6)
in subparagraph (A)—
in the matter preceding clause (i), by inserting after ;
by redesignating clauses (iii) and (iv) as clauses (iv) and (v), respectively; and
(iii) is covered by a programmatic plan or environmental review developed for a project related to the maritime industry;
by inserting after clause (ii) the following:
(D) Maritime industry
For the purposes of subparagraph (A), the term for the maritime industry includes construction of— construction of infrastructure
(i) shipyards and ship repair facilities;
(ii) port terminals and other port facilities;
(iii) manufacturing facilities for equipment and technology instrumental to the facilitation of maritime trade and commerce, as defined by the Council; and
(iv) other industrial base facilities that support the Navy or the merchant marine of the United States.
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, and every 2 years thereafter, the Maritime Administrator, in consultation with the Commander of the United States Transportation Command and the Secretary of the Navy, and in accordance with paragraph (2), shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress and the Maritime Security Board a report—
outlining a plan for using the shipbuilding financial incentives program authorized under section 53801 of title 46, United States Code, as added by section 501, and the financial incentive programs under subpart C of subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, to supplement the size and readiness of the National Defense Reserve Fleet and to improve national shipbuilding and shipping infrastructure; and
describing ways in which an expanded and creative view of the make-up of vessels with Voluntary Intermodal Sealift Agreements or Voluntary Tanker Agreements and the shipbuilding financial incentives program authorized under such section can be used to ensure government access to other vessels that are critical to national security, such as icebreakers, oil and natural gas tankers, floating dry docks, salvage vessels, dredges, ocean tugs, offshore construction vessels, multi-use workboats, and commercial shipping vessels using small nuclear reactors.
(2) Additional consultation
In preparing the report under paragraph (1), the Maritime Administrator shall also consult with the Secretary of Commerce and the Secretary of Energy with respect to shipping vessels or mobile maritime power plants using small nuclear reactors.
(b) Report on de-Risking maritime sector
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, and every 2 years thereafter, the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Homeland Security, in coordination with the Secretaries of Treasury and State, the Maritime Administrator, the United States Trade Representative, and the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress and the Maritime Security Board a report outlining a comprehensive strategy for de-risking the United States maritime domain from the People’s Republic of China and other asymmetric or emerging maritime threats.
(c) Report on restricting flow of capital to CCP
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Transportation, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of Commerce, the Secretary of State, and the Secretary of the Treasury shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress and the Maritime Security Board a report on ways and means for restricting the flow of capital from the United States to Chinese Communist Party maritime industries, which shall include recommendations for promoting the flow of capital within and between the United States and treaty allies of the United States. The report shall also include a survey of banks, pension funds, and large financial institutions, with recommendations for ways the United States can incentivize domestic financial investments in the maritime industry.
Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Commerce shall jointly submit to Congress a report assessing methods to reduce the use of export controls and other restrictions under the Arms Export Control Act () and the International Traffic in Arms Regulations under subchapter M of chapter I of title 22, Code of Federal Regulations, and the Export Control Reform Act of 2018 () and the Export Administration Regulations under subchapter C of chapter VII of title 15, Code of Federal Regulations, or successor regulations, that limit the ability of foreign-owned marine industrial base companies to participate in the United States shipbuilding industry, specifically including shipbuilding for the Federal Government, while ensuring appropriate safeguards for United States-based firms and American workers. 22 U.S.C. 2751 et seq.; 50 U.S.C. 4801 et seq.
Assessment of the use of commercial best practices for Navy shipbuilding
(a) Assessment
(1) In general
The Secretary of the Navy, in coordination with the Secretary of Transportation and the Secretary of the Department in which the Coast Guard is operating, shall—
conduct an assessment of best practices used in the construction and repair of commercial, oceangoing maritime vessels; and
identify—
(i) opportunities for the Navy and Coast Guard to leverage those best practices to make ship construction and repair efforts of combatant and non-combatant vessels more efficient; and
(ii) advanced technologies that can be leveraged to improve the overall readiness and dominance of the United States maritime fleet (both commercial and military), to specifically include small modular reactors for ship power and propulsion.
(2) Elements
The assessment required by paragraph (1) shall include the following:
An evaluation of the best practices described in subparagraph (A) of such paragraph, including best practices used by commercial shipyards in foreign allied countries, consideration of commercial design standards, and the vessel construction manager model used to construct the National Security Multi Mission Vessel Program, that could improve the efficiency of shipbuilding and repair by the Navy and Coast Guard.
An identification of commercial-grade components and capabilities being used in state-of-the-art commercial, oceangoing maritime vessels and an assessment of whether the Navy and Coast Guard could better use commercial off-the-shelf components or capabilities to reduce costs, improve efficiencies, or enhance capabilities in the construction of new naval vessels and cutters, and in repair of naval vessels and cutters.
A determination as to whether shipbuilding and acquisition programs of the Navy and Coast Guard use modern best practices from the commercial maritime industry in terms of contracting, ship design, construction, overhaul, and maintenance.
An identification of technologies and procedures that are used in commercial shipbuilding that, if used by the Navy and Coast Guard, would improve the efficiency of designing and constructing new naval vessels.
An identification of technologies and procedures that are used in commercial shipbuilding and repair that, if used by the Navy and Coast Guard, would improve the efficiency of repairing naval vessels.
An identification of opportunities to improve commonality in ship design, ship components, and shipbuilding procedures between commercial, oceangoing maritime vessels, naval vessels, and cutters that could lead to improved efficiencies and a more resilient industrial base to support shipbuilding and repair for military and civil maritime vessels.
An identification of advanced nuclear technologies that are under development for use in commercial shipbuilding that, if used by the Navy and Coast Guard, would improve the operational capability of naval vessels and cutters.
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the President shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report on a plan of action for any use of authorities available under title III of the Defense Production Act of 1950 ()— 50 U.S.C. 4531 et seq.
to establish or enhance a domestic production capability for the construction of militarily useful, commercial maritime vessels that can be operated in foreign commerce or the domestic commerce of the United States;
to establish, improve, or enhance the defense shipyard industrial base; or
to establish, improve, or enhance maritime port infrastructure of the United States, including containers and ship-to-shore cranes that were built in the United States and are owned by citizens of the United States.
(b) Coordination
The President shall develop the plan of action required by subsection (a) in consultation with—
the maritime security advisor (as established by this Act);
the Maritime Security Board (as established by this Act);
an advisory committee established under section 708(d) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (); and 50 U.S.C. 4558(d)
such stakeholders in the private sector as the President considers appropriate.
(c) Appropriate committees of Congress defined
In this section, the term appropriate committees of Congress means—
the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; and
the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives.
(a) Authority To offer increased paid leave accrual
The Secretary of the Navy is authorized to offer government merchant mariners employed by Military Sealift Command paid leave accrual at a faster rate than provided pursuant to the standard General Schedule (GS) system to make government seafaring jobs more competitive with the commercial sector.
(b) Report on recruiting and retention efforts
(1) In general
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter, the Secretary of the Navy, in coordination with the Commander of the Military Sealift Command and the Maritime Security Board, and in consultation with the Commander of United States Transportation Command, the Commander of United States Fleet Forces Command, and the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research, Development and Acquisition, shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report on efforts to improve recruitment and retention of Military Sealift Command Mariners.
In general
(2) Elements
The report required under paragraph (1) shall consider—
opportunities to enhance the integration of Military Sealift Command civilian mariners into the military command structure;
providing training on the roles and significance of Military Sealift Command civilian mariner workforce to relevant military commands; and
authorities required to improve recruitment and retention of civilian mariners in Military Sealift Command.
(c) Report on extending charter durations
Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report assessing the merits of extending the maximum charter durations of commercial and specialty vessels for the Military Sealift Command.
Section 50307(e) of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
In general
in paragraph (1), by inserting after ; and
(2) Cooperative agreement
The cooperative agreement shall be with an organization or persons with substantial experience in the maritime industry, as determined by the Secretary, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board.
(3) Selection
The Center shall be—
selected through a competitive process of eligible entities, and if a private entity, a domestic entity;
based in the United States with technical expertise in emerging marine technologies and practices related to the maritime transportation system; and
located in close proximity to eligible entities with expertise in United States emerging maritime technologies and practices.
(4) Coordination
The Secretary of Transportation shall coordinate with the Maritime Security Board and other agencies critical for science, research, and regulation of emerging marine technologies for the maritime sector, including the Department of Defense, the Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Science Foundation, the Coast Guard, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association, and the Marine Board of the National Academies when establishing the Center.
(5) Responsibilities
The Center shall carry out the following activities:
Establish and support maritime incubators in accordance with paragraph (6).
Accelerate the adoption or integration of commercial technologies within the maritime industry to transform the capacity and capabilities of the merchant marine of the United States.
Serve as the principal liaison between the Maritime Security Board and maritime incubators.
Carry out programs, projects, and other activities to strengthen the merchant marine of the United States and the maritime industrial base.
Coordinate and harmonize the activities of other organizations and elements of the maritime industry on matters relating to commercial technologies, dual use technologies, and the innovation of such technologies.
Coordinate and advise efforts among elements of the maritime industry on matters relating to the development, procurement, and fielding of nontraditional capabilities and connect entities developing those capabilities with the relevant incubators.
Coordinate with maritime industry stakeholders to identify operational challenges that have the potential to be addressed through the use of nontraditional capabilities, including dual-use technologies that are being developed and financed in the commercial sector.
Coordinate with maritime industry stakeholders and relevant Federal agencies to enhance the capacity and performance of seaports of the United States, including through hardening security, enhancing preparedness, and developing United States-based supply chains for port technologies and equipment.
Section 50105(c) of title 46, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
(c) National Shipbuilding Research Program
(1) In General
The Maritime Administrator shall establish and carry out, in coordination with the Secretary of the Navy, the National Shipbuilding Research Program.
(2) Purposes
The purpose of the National Shipbuilding Research Program shall be to develop plans for the economical construction of vessels and their propelling machinery, of most modern economical types, giving thorough consideration to all well-recognized means of propulsion and taking into account the benefits from standardized production where practicable and desirable.
(3) Activities
The National Shipbuilding Research Program shall—
support technology transfers and industry networking;
select and execute research and development projects, which may include—
(i) advancing best practices in shipbuilding and ship repair, including alternative project management and project financing arrangements for shipyards, such as public-private financing;
(ii) improving efficiency across the shipyard industrial base of the United States; and
(iii) developing, maturing, and implementing industry-relevant shipbuilding and sustainment technologies;
carry out ad hoc initiatives focused on specific target areas in shipbuilding and ship repair; and
carry out additional activities as determined by the Maritime Administrator or the Secretary of Defense.
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator shall submit to Congress a report on the status and resources and authorities needed to execute and complete necessary vessels, harborcraft, port, shipyard, and other infrastructure improvements to ensure the national security interests of the United States and support the domestic and foreign commerce of the United States.
(b) Contents
The report under subsection (a) shall include—
consideration of existing literature and reporting from Federal and non-Federal sources;
an assessment of the number of commercial shipping vessels by class required to sustain a peace-time and wartime national economy;
an assessment of opportunities to leverage private sector funding to enhance the capability of marine infrastructure of the United States;
an evaluation of future infrastructure needs to support alternative fuels for vessels and harborcraft;
an assessment of an ability to construct and repair seaports and shipyards during national security emergencies, including readiness to construct temporary facilities, and carry out marine salvage and firefighting operations; and
an evaluation of the possible effects on the commercial operations of United States ports and other critical infrastructure of prohibiting any entity that owns or operates a port or terminal in the United States from using or sharing data with—
LOGINK;
any logistics platform controlled by, affiliated with, or subject to the jurisdiction of the Chinese Communist Party or the Government of the People’s Republic of China; or
any logistics platform that shares data with a system described in subparagraph (A) or (B).
(c) Definitions
The term critical infrastructure has the meaning given the term in section 721(a) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (). 50 U.S.C. 4565(a)
The term LOGINK means the public, open, shared logistics information network known as the National Public Information Platform for Transportation and Logistics by the Ministry of Transport of the People’s Republic of China.
Section 455(m) of the Higher Education Act of 1965 () is amended— 20 U.S.C. 1087e(m)
in paragraph (3)(B)(i), by inserting after ; and
by adding at the end the following:
(5) Full-time job in United States Merchant Marine
For purposes of loan cancellation under this subsection, a full-time job in the United States Merchant Marine shall mean possession of a Merchant Mariner Credential authorized by the Coast Guard and employment on board a vessel of the United States for not less than 150 days in a calendar year.
of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: Chapter 521
In General
(a) Eligibility
A covered individual shall be treated as an individual described in section 3311(b)(1) of title 38, United States Code, for purposes of entitlement to educational assistance under chapter 33 of such title.
(b) Covered individual
(1) In General
In this section, the term covered individual means an individual who—
served as a full-time, credentialed United States Merchant Mariner for not less than 10 years;
as a result of such service received the Merchant Marine Expeditionary Medal or another award for service in a designated combat zone after the date of enactment of this section; and
is not eligible under any other provision of law for benefits under laws administered by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
(2) Full-time, credentialed United States Merchant Mariner
For purposes of paragraph (1), serving as a means possession of a Merchant Mariner Credential authorized by the Coast Guard and employment on board a vessel of the United States for not less than 150 days in a calendar year. full-time, credentialed United States Merchant Mariner
(c) Reimbursement
There is authorized to be appropriated to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs such sums as may be necessary to carry out this section from the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title.
(b) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 521
Section 8545 of title 10, United States Code, is amended—
In general
The Secretary may permit an officer or unlicensed mariner of the United States Merchant Marine to receive instruction at the Naval Postgraduate School.
in subsection (a), by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
in subsection (b)(1), by adding at the end the following new sentence: ; and The Secretary of Transportation shall bear the cost of the instruction received by officers and unlicensed mariners of the United States Merchant Marine detailed for that instruction.
in subsection (c), by inserting after .
(b) Report required
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Transportation, in consultation with the Secretary of Defense, shall submit to Congress a report assessing what matters relating to military training it would be beneficial for mariners to study at the Naval Postgraduate School.
of title 46, United States Code, as amended by section 602, is further amended by adding at the end the following: Chapter 521
In General
(a) In General
The Secretary of Transportation shall establish a program to reimburse an individual serving in the merchant marine of the United States for qualified relicensing costs and qualified business costs of the spouse of that individual when the individual relocates to a new jurisdiction or geographic area as the result of a reassignment as a result of service as a commissioned officer in the Navy Reserve (including the Strategic Sealift Officer Program, Navy Reserve), the Coast Guard Reserve, or any other reserve component of the Armed Services of the United States.
(b) Limitations
(1) Relicensing
Reimbursement provided to a member under this subsection for qualified relicensing costs may not exceed $1,000 in connection with each relocation described in paragraph (1).
(2) Business costs
Reimbursement provided to a member under this subsection for qualified business costs may not exceed $1,000 in connection with each relocation described in paragraph (1).
(3) Deadline
No reimbursement may be provided under this subsection for qualified relicensing costs or qualified business costs paid or incurred after December 31, 2035.
(c) Qualified relicensing costs
In this section, the term qualified relicensing costs means costs, including exam, continuing education courses, business license, permit, and registration fees, incurred by the spouse of an individual serving in the merchant marine of the United States if—
the spouse was licensed or certified in a profession, or owned a business, during the individual's previous assignment and requires a new professional license or certification, or business license or permit, to engage in that profession in a new jurisdiction because of the individual's relocation described in paragraph (1); and
the costs were incurred or paid to secure or maintain the professional license or certification, or business license or permit, from the new jurisdiction in connection with such relocation.
(d) Qualified business costs
In this section, the term qualified business costs means costs, including moving services for equipment, equipment removal, new equipment purchases, information technology expenses, and inspection fees, incurred by the spouse of an individual serving in the merchant marine of the United States if—
the spouse owned a business during the individual's previous assignment and the costs result from the individual's relocation described in paragraph (1); and
the costs were incurred or paid to move such business to a new location in connection with such relocation.
of title 46, United States Code, as amended by sections 602 and 604, is amended by adding at the end the following: Chapter 521
Amendment
(a) Definition of agency
In this section, the term — agency
Definition of agency
has the meaning given the term in section 105 of title 5, United States Code; Executive agency
includes the United States Postal Service and the Postal Regulatory Commission; and
does not include the Government Accountability Office.
(b) Appointment authority
The head of an agency may appoint noncompetitively—
a graduate of the United States Merchant Marine Academy who has met all of the requirements of their cadet commitment agreement under section 51306 of title 46, United States Code; or
a credentialed United States Merchant Mariner with an officer or rating endorsement who has completed not less than 7 years of service aboard a vessel of the United States.
(b) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, as amended by sections 602 and 604, is amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 521
it takes years of training and experience, and costly license trainings, to earn mariner qualifications;
with just around 12,000 merchant mariners of the United States operating oceangoing vessels, compared with China’s more than 1,700,000 seafarers, the United States may not have a sufficient number of mariners to fully power the strategic sealift vessels necessary in a future prolonged conflict;
the United States requires a qualified workforce of sufficient size that is ready and available to crew vessels of the United States for national defense or national emergency; and
a workforce committed to take all measures possible to expand, develop, and protect the domestic maritime workforce should—
support a retention program to permit credentialed merchant mariners to maintain recency through a coordinated Federal program, in coordination with maritime labor organizations; and
implement civil service, workplace, and hiring protections.
(b) Amendment
of title 46, United States Code, as amended by sections 602, 604, and 605, is further amended by adding at the end the following: Chapter 521
(a) Establishment
The Maritime Administrator shall establish a program, to be known as the , to ensure that a qualified workforce of sufficient size is ready to crew strategic sealift vessels in the event of a national defense or national emergency activation. Through the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program, the Maritime Administrator shall establish and administer mechanisms to register merchant mariners and mariner employers to participate in the Program.
(b) Implementation
The Maritime Administrator shall—
appoint a board of directors to oversee the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program;
appoint and facilitate a working group to recommend policies, procedures, and a prioritization matrix for the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program, which shall be composed of representatives from major stakeholders, including maritime labor organizations, credentialed United States Merchant Mariners, vessel owners, vessel operators, the United States Merchant Marine Academy, State maritime academies, United States Military Sealift Command, and other likely employers of members of the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program; and
submit to Congress an annual evaluation of the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program.
(c) Membership in United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program
(1) In general
There shall be 2 paths to enrollment in the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program as described in paragraphs (2) and (3).
Section 539A of the Servicemember Quality of Life Improvement and National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (), is amended— Public Law 118–159
in subsection (a), by striking the heads of such other Federal agencies as the Secretary determines appropriateand inserting the Maritime Security Board; and
(f) Authorization of appropriations
(1) Fiscal years 2025 through 2028
There are authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund, established under section 50301(b) of title 46, United States Code, to the Secretary of the Navy, for each of fiscal years 2025 through 2028, $15,000,000 to carry out this section.
(2) Fiscal years 2029 through 2034
There are authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund, established under section 50301(b) of title 46, United States Code, to the Secretary of the Navy, for each of fiscal year 2029 through 2034, $25,000,000 to carry out this section.
Section 51706 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in subsection (c)(1)(B)(iii), by striking nonprofit entityand inserting entity; and
by adding to the end the following:
(d) Authorization of Appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund, established under section 50301(b) of this title, to carry out this section, $25,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035.
The term Administrator means the Maritime Administrator.
(2) Advisory Committee
The term Advisory Committee means the Maritime Career and Technical Education Advisory Committee established under subsection (b).
(b) Advisory Committee plan and establishment
(1) Plan
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Administrator shall develop a plan, and notify Congress of such plan, to establish a Maritime Career and Technical Education Advisory Committee to—
bring representatives of maritime industrial base employers and education providers together to identify joint opportunities to train needed workers for maritime careers; and
develop and disperse best practices and recommendations for the improvement of shipbuilding education and training programs, naval architecture education programs, and merchant marine training and certification programs.
(2) Establishment
Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the Administrator shall establish the Advisory Committee.
(c) Membership
(1) Administrator
The Advisory Committee shall include the Administrator (or a delegate of the Administrator) who shall serve as Chair of the Advisory Committee.
(2) Representatives
The Advisory Committee shall be composed of representatives from each of the following, to be appointed the Administrator:
Maritime education, including representatives from—
(i) the Centers of Excellence for Domestic Maritime Workforce Training and Education designated by the Maritime Administration, taking into consideration—
geographic diversity;
the rate of employment after graduation;
training or skillset diversity; and
other qualities as determined by the Administrator;
(ii) the United States Naval Sea Cadet Corps;
(iii) kindergarten through grade 12 maritime education programs designated by the Maritime Administration;
(iv) the oceanographic science community, including from a University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System institution; and
(v) institutions of higher education.
The maritime workforce, including representatives from—
(i) skilled workers representing a wide swath of the career and technical maritime industry both onshore and offshore;
(ii) career and technical education certified instructors; and
encourage and incentivize military recruiters to recommend the United States Department of Transportation Maritime Administration to potential recruits who do not qualify for military service in the Armed Forces; and
establish a mechanism for military recruiters to introduce recruits described in paragraph (1) who are interested in maritime service to representatives from the Maritime Administration, in accordance with the procedures established under subsection (b).
(b) Duties of the Maritime Administrator
The Maritime Administrator shall—
establish a mechanism to receive recruitment referrals from military recruiters;
provide hand-off services to connect recruits with educational resources and institutions, recognized Maritime Centers of Excellence, eligible maritime industry employers, and other maritime industry career services, as appropriate;
track the number of referrals from the Department of Defense; and
track the number of recruits who enroll in maritime industry programs, to the extent practicable.
(c) Reporting requirement
(1) Briefing on the implementation strategy
Not later than 90 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator, in coordination with the Secretary of Defense, shall submit a briefing to the appropriate committees of Congress about a strategy for implementing the activities required under this section, including—
a timeline for implementation; and
the identification of the Department of Defense recruiter incentives and training required for maximum utility in carrying out such activities.
(2) Annual report on program efficacy
One year after the date of enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter, the Maritime Administrator, in coordination with the Secretary of Defense, shall submit a report to the appropriate committees of Congress on the efficacy and utility of the activities carried out under this section, including—
the number of Department of Defense referrals to the Maritime Administration;
the number of Maritime Administration hand-offs to the maritime industry;
an assessment of the efficacy of the activities carried out under this section; and
challenges and recommendations relating to such activities.
The Maritime Administrator shall publish an biennial report on the state of the merchant mariner workforce.
(b) Completion of report
The Maritime Administrator shall complete the biennial report required under subsection (a) or enter into a contract with another entity to complete the report.
(c) Content of report
The biennial report required under subsection (a) shall include, at minimum—
a count of United States Merchant Mariners with valid merchant mariner credentials and credentials in continuity endorsement;
a count of inactive but credentialed and formerly credentialed United States Merchant Mariners, to the extent practicable, and an evaluation of—
the challenges to identifying such individuals;
opportunities to partner with Federal, State, local, and non-government entities to identify such individuals; and
an action plan of how to implement the opportunities described under subparagraph (B);
a count of United States mariners and foreign workers employed on vessels, rigs, platforms, and other vehicles or structures off the coast of the United States and an evaluation of the percentage of United States and foreign workers employed on—
coastwise-endorsed vessels; and
vessels of the United States which do not have a coastwise endorsement;
a listing of actively operating vessels of the United States;
a report of merchant mariner requirements needed in the event of a national defense sealift operation and any gaps identified in quantity and quality, and other variables of concern, as determined by the Administrator;
a general outlook for the future of the merchant mariner industry and potential gaps or surpluses of merchant mariners;
identification of any concerns in the credentialing of merchant mariners, which may include general processing issues, shortage of training providers or instructors, and barriers to entry due to costs to the economically disadvantaged; and
recommendations, based on data collected, on ways to—
improve retention of existing merchant mariners;
create expedited pathways for mariners with expired credentials to renew their credentials; and
encourage new merchant mariners to enter the industry.
(d) Accessibility of data
(1) In general
Except as provided in paragraph (2), the Maritime Administrator, and any authorized agent of the Maritime Administrator, shall have full access to available Coast Guard mariner credentialing data, in a manner that ensures the protection of personally identifiable information, in order to complete the report required under subsection (a).
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Secretary of the Navy, the Secretary of the Air Force, the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating, the Maritime Security Board, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the Department of Labor, shall submit a report to the appropriate committees of Congress containing—
recommendations about how to increase and improve opportunities for transitioning servicemembers to secure employment in the maritime industry at sea and shoreside; and
a plan to implement those recommendations.
(b) Considerations
In carrying out subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall—
identify barriers that servicemembers face when trying to transition to the United States maritime industry, including the merchant marines, shipbuilding, ship repair, and shipping;
consider opportunities to improve, expedite, and alleviate the burdens on servicemembers transitioning to the maritime industry, including efforts to—
inform transitioning servicemembers of employment opportunities in the United States maritime industry;
assist transitioning servicemembers in determining how their military credentials and experience translate to credentialed civilian employment in the maritime industry;
increase the establishment and uptake of accelerated or bridge programs to assist separating members of the Armed Forces in translating military credentials and experience into maritime industry credentials and employment;
increase the availability and accessibility of preparatory activities under the SkillBridge program established under section 1143(e) of title 10, United States Code, in the United States maritime industry;
incorporate the maritime industry in the Transition Assistance Program, as described in of title 10, United States Code; and chapter 58
enhance the activities carried out pursuant to the Military to Mariners Act of 2022 (section 11514 of division K of the James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 ()); and Public Law 117–263
specifically consider the transition of servicemembers to employment in the shipbuilding and ship repair maritime industries.
In the Secretary of the Navy's annual budget submission to Congress, the Secretary of the Navy shall include, as a distinct item, the funding request for the United States Naval Sea Cadet Corps.
(b) Engagement with elementary school and secondary school students
The Maritime Administrator shall encourage designated Centers of Excellence for Domestic Maritime Workforce Training and Education to engage with students in kindergarten through grade 12.
The Maritime Administrator shall establish an international exchange program for mariners, naval architects, and marine engineers between the United States and countries described in subsection (b).
(b) Eligible participants
In carrying out the program under this section, the Administrator shall limit participation to United States citizens and citizens of—
member countries of NATO;
treaty allies of the United States; and
major non-NATO allies of the United States.
(c) Placements
In carrying out the program under this section, the Administrator shall seek corporate and government partners for placement of eligible participants of the program.
(d) Authorization of appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund, established under section 50301(b) of title 46, United States Code, $2,000,000 to carry out this section for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035.
The United States Merchant Marine Academy plays a critical role in training service-obligated licensed merchant mariners to operate commercial vessels, in peacetime and during times of conflict.
The United States Merchant Marine Academy is 1 of the 5 Federal service academies and plays a critical role in maintaining a domestic, commercial maritime industry, with each graduate having a commitment to serve not less than 8 years in the foreign and domestic commerce and the national defense of the United States, which may include service on a merchant vessel documented under of title 46, and graduates make up more than 80 percent of the United States Navy’s Strategic Sealift Officer Program. chapter 121
The United States defense readiness and economic security relies on a strong investment in training and cultivating United States Merchant Marine officers at the United States Merchant Marine Academy.
Most of the facilities at the United States Merchant Marine Academy date back to the Academy’s founding, have not been modernized since, and are not conducive to the immersive training and demanding coursework today’s Midshipmen are required to complete.
Rehabilitating and modernizing the campus infrastructure at the United States Merchant Marine Academy is necessary to ensuring current and future generations of Midshipmen receive a first-class education.
(b) Sense of the Senate
It is the sense of the Senate—
to ensure that the United States continues to have a sufficient number of service-obligated licensed merchant mariners to meet current and future economic and national security needs, the Maritime Administration and the Department of Transportation have a responsibility to provide suitable academic, training, and dormitory facilities at the United States Merchant Marine Academy by rapidly implementing a comprehensive plan for campus-wide modernization in accordance with section 51329 of title 46, United States Code, (referred to in this section as the ) and providing sufficient accountability and oversight to ensure that milestones in such plan are met; Campus Modernization Plan
in developing the comprehensive Campus Modernization Plan for the United States Merchant Marine Academy, the Maritime Administration, and the Department of Transportation should utilize, to the maximum extent practicable, the developed by the Maritime Security Infrastructure Council as summarized in the Congressional Record, dated February 28, 2024; Merchant Marine Academy Full Speed Ahead Plan
given the conditions of the United States Merchant Marine Academy as of the date of enactment of this section, a comprehensive, campus-wide modernization is needed to significantly upgrade or replace facilities throughout the campus; and
the Maritime Administration and the Department of Transportation should identify opportunities to utilize design-build contracts to increase delivery times and reduce costs.
the United States Merchant Marine Academy, one of our Nation’s 5 Federal service academies, is vital to our national security, and modernizing the Academy's aging infrastructure and investing in faculty and students must be congressional priorities;
sufficient funding must be provided to enable the maximum student enrollment that the campus infrastructure of the United States Merchant Marine Academy can support; and
considering the Academy’s role as a co-equal military service academy, the United States Merchant Marine Academy should be included in the rotation of presidential attendance at graduations.
(b) Authorization of appropriations
(d) Authorization of appropriations
There are authorized to be appropriated to the Department of Transportation out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title, $125,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035 for Academy operations.
Section 51301 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
(c) Report on enrollment
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator shall submit a report to the appropriate committees of Congress identifying the additional resources needed to increase enrollment at the United States Merchant Marine Academy.
Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator shall submit a report to Congress containing the results of a study to evaluate the additional resources needed to allow State maritime academies to increase enrollment and produce additional mariners.
(b) Need for additional State maritime academies
Such study shall consider whether there is a need for additional State maritime academies in States that do not operate a maritime academy.
(c) Authorization of appropriations
(d) Authorization of appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title, $10,000,000 for assistance to State maritime academies under subsection (a) for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035.
Section 51501 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
each citizen who is appointed as a cadet at the United States Merchant Marine Academy and signs a cadet commitment agreement under section 51306 of title 46, United States Code, meets the service obligation requirements of that agreement; and
each individual that signs a student incentive payment agreement under section 51509 of title 46, United States Code, meets the service obligation requirements under that agreement.
(b) Reporting requirement
The Maritime Administrator shall establish an electronic system through which each individual with a service obligation under such section 51306 or 51509 (referred to in this section as a ) shall annually demonstrate that they are meeting their service obligation or have a valid deferment consistent with section 51310 of title 46, United States Code, or section 51510 of title 46, United States Code, as applicable. service-obligated mariner
(c) Notification of violation
The Maritime Administrator shall transmit a written notice to each service-obligated mariner who fails to meet the reporting requirement of subsection (b), notifying such individual of the applicable penalties established under section 51306 of title 46, United States Code, or section 51509 of title 46, United States Code, for failure to carry out the applicable service requirements, including cost recovery.
(d) Report to Congress
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this section, and annually thereafter, the Maritime Administrator shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report on the status of all service-obligated mariners, which shall include—
information about how each service-obligated mariner is meeting their service obligation requirement, which shall be based on the results of the data collected under subsection (b);
the number of service-obligated mariners who have not met their service obligation and have not complied with the reporting requirement under subsection (b); and
the number of actions taken by the Maritime Administrator under sections 51306(b), 51306(d), 51306(f), and 51509(g) to recover costs from service-obligated mariners who have not demonstrated that they have met their service obligation requirements.
Subject to the availability of appropriations, the Secretary shall pay to each State maritime academy the costs of fuel used by a vessel provided under this section while used for training in accordance with section 51512.
Section 51504 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking subsection (f) and inserting the following:
(b) Amendment
of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: Chapter 515
Amendment
(a) Fuel funding
(1) In general
Subject to the availability of appropriations, the Secretary shall pay to each State maritime academy the costs of fuel used by a vessel that is loaned to the State maritime academy in accordance with section 51504 while used for training.
In general
(2) Maximum amounts
The amount of the payment to a State maritime academy under subsection (a) may not exceed $20,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035.
(3) Prohibition
Maritime academies that receive funding under subsection (a) may not—
profit from charging cadets to go to sea for their licensing when using federally provided fuel; or
utilize the vessel as housing for students outside of seasonal training cruises, unless students elect voluntarily to live aboard the vessel.
(4) Requirement
Each State maritime academy that receives fuel costs under this section shall offer billets for liaison officers from each military service during the time such vessel is provided to that State maritime academy.
(b) Crew
(1) In General
Each State maritime academy shall make crew positions available on a vessel that is loaned to the State maritime academy for mariners enrolled in the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program established under section 52105.
(2) Crew funding
For each crew slot filled by a mariner enrolled in the career retention program, as provided for under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall pay the crew costs for that mariner, subject to the availability of appropriations.
(c) Authorization of appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund, established under section 50301(b) of this title, $120,000,000 to carry out this section for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035.
(c) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 515
of title 46, United States Code, as amended by section 627, is further amended by adding at the end the following: Chapter 515
In General
(a) In general
The Maritime Administrator shall work with private entities in the maritime industry to establish a scholarship program—
for students at State maritime academies to offset expenses associated with completion of a summer sea term to receive sea-time required to earn a Coast Guard license; and
which is entirely or predominantly funded through contributions from a private entity.
(b) Contributed funds
The Maritime Administrator shall enter into a cooperative agreement, or other agreement, with private entities in the maritime industry to accept funding from private entities for the purpose of establishing such a scholarship program. The cooperative agreement may include any terms considered necessary by the Maritime Administrator.
(c) Privileges
The Maritime Administrator may provide certain privileges to a private entity who contributes funds for a scholarship program under this section, including opportunities to provide information about employment opportunities with the private entity to students enrolled in the scholarship program.
(d) Structure
In establishing a scholarship program to offset expenses associated with a summer sea term—
the Maritime Administrator may enter into an agreement with a student at a State maritime academy that has an agreement with the Secretary of Transportation under section 51505 of this title, to offset expenses associated with completion of a summer sea term; or
the Maritime Administrator may enter into an agreement with a State maritime academy that has an agreement with the Secretary of Transportation under section 51505 of this title, to offset expenses for all students who participate in a summer sea term program.
(e) Relationship to financial assistance programs
Recognizing the need for licensed merchant mariners, the Maritime Administrator shall encourage participants of the financial assistance programs under part C of this subtitle, to enter into agreements under this section to establish scholarship programs to offset expenses associated with summer sea term.
(f) Requirements for students
Any student who benefits from a scholarship program under this section shall enter into an agreement with the Maritime Administrator which requires the student to—
complete the course of instruction at the academy the individual is attending;
obtain a merchant mariner license, without limitation as to tonnage or horsepower, from the Coast Guard as an officer in the merchant marine of the United States, accompanied by the appropriate national and international endorsements and certification required by the Coast Guard for service aboard vessels on domestic and international voyages, without limitation, within 3 months of completion of the course of instruction at the academy the individual is attending;
The Secretary of the Navy, in coordination with the Maritime Administrator, shall, to the extent practicable, include in national and international maritime warfare exercises not less than 1 training vessel used by a State maritime academy and maintained pursuant to section 51504 of title 46, United States Code, in order to provide an opportunity to integrate merchant mariners with naval and military operations.
(b) Participants
Subject to guidance issued by the Secretary of the Navy and Maritime Administrator, an individual may participate in the exercise aboard that training ship if the individual is—
a licensed merchant mariner; or
a student from the United States Merchant Marine Academy, a State maritime academy, a Center of Excellence for Domestic Maritime Workforce Training and Education, or a merchant marine center established under section 147 of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (), as added by section 612 of this Act. 29 U.S.C. 3197
(c) Priority
In selecting participants under subsection (b) the Administrator shall give priority to students described in paragraph (2) of subsection (b).
(d) Vessels
In coordination with the Secretary of the Navy, the Maritime Administrator shall rotate training vessels to ensure that each training vessel described in subsection (a) has an equal opportunity to participate in such exercises.
The Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating shall carry out necessary system and process changes to carry out the activities described in paragraphs (1) through (4).
(1) Licensing, certification, and documentation database
Replacement of the merchant mariner licensing, certification, and documentation database such that the database allows for—
the electronic submission of merchant mariner credential applications (including sea service, professional qualifications, course completion data, safety and suitability, and medical records) and course approval requests;
direct submission of sea service information from employers and course completion data from training providers and other stakeholders to provide data securely and directly so that documentation does not need to be submitted later by the merchant mariner; and
the electronic processing and evaluation of information for the issuance of credentials and course approvals, including the capability for the Secretary to complete remote evaluation of the information submitted.
(2) System for data exchange
Implementation of a system that provides for the exchange of data with government agencies and industry stakeholders, which provides the Maritime Administration and other agencies, as appropriate, anonymized and aggregated data showing the following:
The total amount of sea service for individuals with a valid merchant mariner credential.
The number of credentialed mariners by individual rating and the capability to filter data by endorsements.
Demographic information, including age, gender, ethnicity, and address or location.
National Maritime Center processing times.
The number of Coast Guard approved training providers, and, for each such training provider, the number of courses taken by individuals who have, or who are applying for, a merchant mariner credential from that training provider.
(3) Public facing portal
Implementation of a system that includes a public facing portal in the .gov domain instead of the .mil domain to accept merchant mariner applicant information, including credential applications, course completion data, and course approval requests, that complies with the requirements for cybersecurity and privacy information of electronic systems in the .gov domain.
(4) Examination processes
Upgrading the examination processes for merchant mariner examinations, by—
implementing an examination regime that provides for electronic and third party administration of examinations;
reassessing the content of tests through the development of job task analysis for all credentials; and
implementing a robust system to analyze examination data.
Section 2101 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
by redesignating paragraphs (20) through (56) as paragraphs (21) through (57), respectively; and
by inserting after paragraph (19) the following:
(b) Examinations
Section 7116 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking subsection (c).
(c) Merchant mariners documents
(1) General requirements
(a) In general
The Secretary may issue a merchant mariner credential, to members of the deck department in the following classes:
Able Seaman-Unlimited.
Able Seaman-Limited.
Able Seaman-Special.
Able Seaman-Offshore Supply Vessels.
Able Seaman-Sail.
Able Seaman-Fishing Industry.
Ordinary Seaman.
(b) Classification of credentials
The Secretary may classify the merchant mariner credential issued under subsection (a) based on—
the tonnage and means of propulsion of vessels;
the waters on which vessels are to be operated; or
other appropriate standards.
(c) Considerations
In issuing the credential under subsection (a), the Secretary may consider the following qualifications of the merchant mariner:
Age.
Character.
Habits of life.
Experience.
Professional qualifications demonstrated by satisfactory completion of applicable examinations or other educational requirements.
Physical condition, including sight and hearing.
Other requirements established by the Secretary, including career patterns and service appropriate to the particular service, industry, or job functions the individual is engaged.
Section 7306 of title 46, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
(2) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking the item relating to section 7306 and inserting the following: chapter 73
Chapter 81 of part F of subtitle II of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
In General
(a) In General
In General
(1) Inspection
The Secretary shall periodically, but not less than once annually, inspect each covered facility to verify that the owner or operator of the covered facility has a valid exemption under subsection (c) of section 30 of the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (). 43 U.S.C. 1356(c)
(2) Covered facility
In this subsection, the term covered facility means a vessel, rig, platform, or other vehicle or structure that, but for an exemption under subsection (c) of section 30 of the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act () would otherwise be subject to the regulations under subsection (a)(3) of such section. 43 U.S.C. 1356(c)
(b) Transportation security card
During an inspection under this section, the Secretary shall confirm that all crew members that are required to have a transportation worker identification credential pursuant to section 70105 have such a credential.
(b) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 81
Section 7507 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
(d) Renewal
With respect to any renewal of a valid merchant mariner credential issued under this part that is not an extension under subsection (a) or (b), the validity period of such credential shall begin the day after the expiration of the current credential.
Section 7102 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in the section heading, by inserting after ; and
by inserting after .
(2) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking the item relating to section 7102 and inserting the following: chapter 71
(b) Citizenship or noncitizen nationality notation on merchant mariners’ documents
(1) In general
Section 7304 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in the section heading, by inserting after ; and
by inserting after .
(2) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking the item relating to section 7304 and inserting the following: chapter 73
Chapter 75 of subtitle II of part E, of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
In General
(a) Licenses and certificates of registry
Notwithstanding sections 7106 and 7107, the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating may renew for not more than 2 years an expired license or certificate of registry issued for an individual under chapter 71 if the Secretary determines that the renewal is in response to a national emergency declared by Congress or declared under section 201 of the National Emergencies Act (), as deemed necessary by the Secretary. 50 U.S.C. 1621
(b) Merchant mariner documents
Notwithstanding section 7302(g), the Secretary may renew for not more than 2 years an expiring merchant mariner's document issued for an individual under chapter 73 if the Secretary determines that the renewal is in response to a national emergency proclaimed by the President or declared by Congress, as deemed necessary by the Secretary.
(c) Manner of renewal
Any renewal granted under this section may be granted to individual seamen or a specifically identified group of seamen.
(b) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 75
Authority for reactivation of United States Merchant Mariner credentials.
The maritime industry is inherently international. Eighty percent of United States goods are imported by sea, of which 98 percent come into the United States on foreign documented vessels. Only 2 percent of such goods come into the United States on vessels of the United States, leaving the United States economy disproportionately dependent on oceangoing trade controlled by often adversarial foreign nations. The Nation’s ability to provide services in both international and interstate commerce is critical to national and economic defense.
Since November 2023, vessels engaged in international commerce have been threatened by the Houthis, which has threatened global supply chains, increased costs, and required naval force protection operations in the Red Sea through the United States-led Operation Prosperity Guardian that formed in December 2023.
A fleet of commercial shipping vessels of the United States, crewed with citizen mariners, that is competitive in domestic and international trade enhances the United States military’s readiness, allows the United States to more strategically compete with China, and underwrites the security and survival of the United States in times of crisis and war.
encourage the shipping of commercial cargo on vessels of the United States, with the aim of growing the size and carrying capacity of the international fleet of vessels of the United States;
grow the shipping capacity of vessels of the United States and guarantee United States Government cargo during peacetime;
develop a whole-of-Government effort to expand, develop, and protect the maritime workforce;
recognize the need for more workers in the maritime sector and stimulate growth in the United States maritime and shipbuilding industries, including by increasing access to early maritime education, commissioning national marketing campaigns to demonstrate how United States shipbuilding, United States-documented shipping, and maritime workers are critical to national security, and implementing workforce accelerator programs;
remove barriers to training mariners, including reevaluating Coast Guard training requirements regarding faculty credentials, instructional facility designs, sea time requirements, and other identified barriers, consistent with international treaty obligations;
expand and nurture a robust mariner workforce that enhances the national security and strategic sealift readiness of the United States by increasing the number of United States mariners and improving existing pathways and establishing new pathways for new, current, and former merchant mariners to go to sea;
recognize that the United States Merchant Marine Academy and our State maritime academies are critical to training the next generation of licensed officers and engineers on vessels of the United States;
invest and innovate in domestic shipbuilding, ship repair, and the shipping capabilities and capacity of vessels of the United States to advance the power and influence of the maritime industry of the United States;
drive multi-stakeholder research, development, assessment, and deployment of emerging marine technologies and best practices related to the maritime transportation system to ensure United States leadership in next-generation shipbuilding, ship repair, and maritime logistics;
drive modern business and manufacturing approaches, such as innovative maritime logistics, clean fuels, and advanced nuclear energy, human-machine teaming, additive manufacturing, and other advanced technologies;
review and update regulations governing vessel design and engineering, vessel and facility operation, and merchant mariner credentialing, in order to revitalize the United States maritime industry;
seek mutually beneficial relationships with treaty allies and strategic partners to grow the domestic shipping and shipbuilding industries of the United States and to share the burden of providing freedom of navigation on the high seas, while de-risking the United States maritime domain from the People’s Republic of China, foreign countries of concern, and asymmetric or emerging maritime threats;
harden critical maritime infrastructure and networks, and incrementally replace infrastructure built by foreign adversaries with domestic-built and allied-built infrastructure; and
promote the values of the United States for freedom of the seas, worker safety and quality of life, environmental stewardship, and the resilience of our oceans, seas, and inland waterways.
(iv) The Secretary of the Navy.
(v) The Commander of the United States Transportation Command.
(vi) The Chair of the Federal Maritime Commission.
(vii) The Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works.
(viii) The chief United States delegate to the International Maritime Organization.
(ix) The Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere.
(x) The Commissioner for Customs and Border Protection.
(xi) The Director of the Office of Management and Budget, or a designee.
(xii) The Secretary of Transportation, or a designee.
(xiii) The Secretary of Homeland Security, or a designee.
(xiv) The Secretary of State, or a designee.
(xv) The Secretary of Labor, or a designee.
(xvi) The Secretary of Commerce, or a designee.
(xvii) The Secretary of the Treasury, or a designee.
(xviii) The Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, or a designee.
(xix) The United States Trade Representative, or a designee.
(xx) The head of each agency with a statutory responsibility for administering the Food for Peace Act (), or a designee. 7 U.S.C. 1691 et seq.
(xxi) From the Department of Defense—
the Secretary of Defense, or a designee;
The Commander of the Military Sealift Command;
The Commander of Naval Sea Systems Command;
a representative of the Army, as appointed by the Secretary of Defense;
a representative of the Air Force, as appointed by the Secretary of Defense; and
a representative of the Navy, as appointed by the Secretary of Defense.
(B) Nonvoting members
The individuals and representatives listed in clauses (xi) through (xxi) shall be nonvoting members.
(C) Chair
The Maritime Security Advisor shall serve as the Chair of the Board.
(2) Duties
Consistent with the National Maritime Strategy under section 50114 of this title, the Board shall carry out the following duties:
Supporting the development of the marine transportation system of the United States, including—
(i) assessing the adequacy of the marine transportation system (including ports, waterways, channels, and their intermodal connections);
(ii) promoting the integration of the marine transportation system with other modes of transportation and other uses of the marine environment; and
(iii) coordinating, improving the coordination of, and making recommendations with regard to Federal policies that impact the marine transportation system.
Establishing policy priorities relating to, and conducting independent oversight over, the financial assistance programs under part C of subtitle V of this title, including—
(i) not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of the and annually thereafter, establishing targets for the number, type, and requirements of vessels to be included in each of—
the Maritime Security Fleet (consistent with the most recent Mobility Capability Requirements Study produced by United States Transportation Command);
the Cable Security Fleet;
the Tanker Security Fleet (consistent with the most recent Mobility Capability Requirements Study produced by United States Transportation Command);
the Strategic Commercial Fleet; and
the Shipbuilding Financial Incentives Program;
(ii) submitting annual recommendations to the appropriate committees of Congress for any needed changes in the authorized number of vessels eligible to participate in the programs under part C of subtitle V of this title; and
(iii) conducting oversight of the administration of such financial assistance programs to ensure such programs support the strategic sealift objectives and policy of the United States, as established in section 59101 of this title.
Supporting the Maritime Administrator in all efforts to conduct independent oversight of passenger and cargo preference requirements and supporting efforts to enable cargo to be carried on vessels of the United States, including—
(i) conducting oversight and coordinating interagency efforts to comply with cargo preference requirements established under chapter 553 of this title and section 2631 of title 10;
(ii) independently verifying that all Federal agencies follow the requirements for cargoes procured, furnished, or financed by the United States Government under section 55305 of this title, and notifying the appropriate committees of Congress of any identified violations of the requirements of such section;
(iii) conducting outreach among nongovernmental stakeholders, including private industry, to encourage more cargo to be moved on vessels of the United States;
(iv) developing recommendations for regulations to be issued by Federal agencies to preference the movement of cargo on vessels of the United States; and
(v) submitting recommendations to the appropriate committees of Congress for changes to laws relating to passenger and cargo preferences for the purpose of establishing a more robust fleet of vessels of the United States.
Conducting independent oversight and developing guidance and recommendations related to the enforcement of the requirements of chapters 121 and 551 of this title.
Coordinating national efforts to develop a robust maritime workforce that enhances the national security and strategic sealift readiness of the United States, including—
(i) coordinating and conducting oversight of interagency efforts and partnerships with the maritime industry and qualified labor organizations to recruit, train, and retain qualified licensed and unlicensed merchant mariners; and
(ii) coordinating and conducting oversight of interagency efforts and partnerships with the shipbuilding industry to recruit, train, and retain qualified workers in the shipbuilding industry of the United States.
Establishing national priorities for research and development of next-generation technologies to enhance United States leadership in the shipbuilding and maritime industries, including through the Center for Maritime Innovation established under section 50307.
Coordinating interagency efforts to ensure vessels of the United States operating in international commerce are privileged in regulation, taxation, fees, insurance, and policy compared to foreign vessels conducting trade with a United States-domiciled entity, while remaining consistent with the international obligations of the United States.
Coordinating efforts to protect vessels of the United States operating in international or domestic commerce from physical and cybersecurity threats.
Conducting oversight of the use of funds from the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title, and making recommendations to Congress for expenditures from the Trust Fund.
Conducting studies on subjects related to the maritime industry and international shipping, and undertaking other efforts related to strengthening the maritime security of the United States.
Carrying out other duties, as assigned by the President in consultation with the Maritime Security Advisor, related to the maritime industry, shipbuilding, ship repair, strategic sealift, and the marine transportation system of the United States.
(3) Delegation
The Board may task agencies who are represented by individuals on the Board (as described under paragraph (1)(A)) to carry out any duties of the Board.
(4) Meetings
The Board shall meet not less frequently than quarterly.
(5) Staff
The Board may hire staff to support its activities.
(c) Authorization of appropriations
There are authorized to be appropriated $5,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035, from the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title, to the Maritime Security Board to staff the Board and carry out the duties described in this section.
(d) Report to Congress
(1) In General
Not later than 180 days after the President establishes the Maritime Security Board under this section, and annually thereafter, the Board shall submit a report to the appropriate committees of Congress describing—
the actions that the Board has taken to carry out the duties required of the Board under subsection (b)(2); and
a list of recommended actions that the Board recommends Congress take to enhance the strength of the United States maritime industry and support the economic and national security needs of the United States;.
(2) Appropriate committees of Congress
In this section, the term appropriate committees of Congress has the meaning given that term in section 4 of the .
The table of sections for chapter 504 of subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
(c) National Maritime Strategy
Section 50114 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
by striking subsection (a), and inserting the following:
(a) In General
(1) In General
Subject to paragraph (2), the Maritime Security Advisor, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board, shall develop a National Maritime Strategy and submit that National Maritime Strategy to the appropriate committees of Congress (as that term is defined in section 4 of the ).
(2) Transition
Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if a national maritime strategy has been developed and submitted in accordance with this section, as in effect on the day before the date of enactment of the , in the 1-year period before such date of enactment, the Maritime Security Advisor shall implement and update that national maritime strategy and shall not develop a new national maritime strategy.
by striking subsections (c) and (d) and inserting the following:
(c) Implementation
Upon the release of a strategy under this section, the Maritime Security Advisor, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board, shall be responsible for implementing the contents and recommendations of the strategy.
(d) Update
The Maritime Security Advisor, in coordination with the Maritime Security Board, shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress (as that term is defined in section 4 of the ) an update to the strategy developed under subsection (a) not less often than every 5 years.
(e) Public availability; implementation plan
Not later than 6 months after the submission of a strategy or update under subsection (a), the Maritime Security Advisor, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board, shall make publicly available on an appropriate website each strategy or updated strategy and an implementation plan for such strategy or update.
$2,000,000 to the Federal Maritime Commission for administrative expenses of the Federal Maritime Commission to administer subtitle IV of title 46, United States Code.
(iii) duties imposed under section 60502 of this title (relating to discriminating duty on goods imported in foreign vessels or from contiguous countries).
Any penalties paid with respect to a vessel pursuant to any of the following sections of this title:
(i) Section 2017.
(ii) Section 2302.
(iii) Section 3318.
(iv) Section 3718.
(v) Section 4106.
(vi) Section 5116.
(vii) Section 11303.
(viii) Section 11501.
(ix) Section 12151.
(x) Section 12507.
(xi) Section 14701.
(xii) Section 30707, with respect to the portion of the fine that goes to the United States Government under subsection (c) of such section.
(xiii) Section 31309.
(xiv) Section 31330.
(xv) Section 41107.
(xvi) Section 41108.
(xvii) Section 42108.
(xviii) Section 44104.
(xix) Section 70052.
(xx) Section 70119.
(xxi) Section 70506.
(xxii) Section 80509.
Any revenue generated in connection with the seizure and forfeiture of a maritime vessel under—
(i) section 3 of the Act of August 5, 1935 (49 Stat. 518, chapter 438; ); 19 U.S.C. 1703
(ii) section 70052 of this title; and
(iii) section 70507 of this title.
(3) Total Balance
The total amount in the Maritime Security Trust Fund at any time shall not exceed $20,000,000,000.
(4) Expenditures
Amounts in the Maritime Security Trust Fund shall be available for making expenditures before October 1, 2035, to meet those obligations of the United States heretofore and hereafter incurred which are authorized to be paid out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund under the SHIPS for America Act of 2025, including the amendments made in such Act.
by adding at the end the following:
$3.50 per ton for a vessel that is owned or operated by an entity, with respect to which—
(i) an amount equal to 25 percent or more, but less than 50 percent, of the total number of vessels ordered at the time of the determination of the application of subsection (a) or (b) are vessels ordered from a shipyard of concern; or
(ii) an amount equal to 25 percent or more, but less than 50 percent, of the total number of vessels that the entity expects to have delivered in the period of 24 months after the time of such determination are vessels expected to be delivered by a shipyard of concern;
$1.25 per ton for a vessel that is owned or operated by an entity with a fleet of vessels, of which an amount equal to 50 percent or more of the number of such vessels were constructed or underwent any repairs (excluding necessary repairs as described in paragraph (1) of section 466(d) of the Tariff Act of 1930 ()) in a shipyard of concern at any time during the 3 years preceding the date of the determination of the application of subsection (b). 19 U.S.C. 1466(d)(1)
(2) Highest applicable rate
A vessel with respect to which the descriptions in 2 or more subparagraphs in paragraph (1) apply, shall be subject to the highest applicable rate described in that paragraph.
(3) Definitions
In this subsection—
the terms and have the meanings given those terms in section 4 of the ; and foreign country of concern,foreign entity of concern
the term foreign shipyard of concern has the meaning give that term in section 202 of that Act.
(d) Index for inflation
The taxes imposed under this section shall be annually increased to account for inflation.
(d) Report required
(1) In General
Upon completion, the Maritime Security Board shall transmit to the appropriate committees of Congress a summary of the strategy developed under subsection (c), with a classified annex as necessary.
(2) Definition
In this part, the term appropriate committees of Congress has the meaning given that term in section 4 of the .
(a) Statement of policy
The Maritime Administrator, in coordination with the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Homeland Security, shall build, acquire, maintain, coordinate, support, and operate a sufficient and privileged fleet of vessels of the United States with commercial and military sealift capability.
(b) Supplemental capability
In developing sealift capability under this part, the Secretary of Transportation and the Secretary of Defense shall continue to support a sufficient Maritime Security Fleet under chapter 531 of this title, a Cable Security Fleet under chapter 532 of this title, a Tanker Security Fleet under chapter 534 of this title, the Strategic Commercial Fleet under chapter 536 of this title, a Military Sealift Command of the Department of the Navy, and a Ready Reserve Force component of the National Defense Reserve Fleet under section 57100 of this title, to provide capacity and resiliency for unilateral United States strategic sealift in peace, crisis, and war.
(c) Judicial review
No court shall have jurisdiction to review decisions made by the Maritime Administrator, the Secretary of Defense, or the Secretary of Homeland Security with respect to this section.
(a) In general
In acquiring, maintaining, coordinating, and supporting a fleet of vessels capable of providing sealift capacity during wartime and crisis, the Maritime Administrator, in coordination with the Secretary of Defense, shall ensure the availability of vessels, in the following order of priority:
In general
Commercial vessels of the United States.
Vessels of the United States that are owned and operated by the United States Government.
Vessels of countries that are defense treaty allies of the United States.
Vessels of countries that are strategic partners of the United States.
(b) Judicial review
No court shall have jurisdiction to review decisions made by the Maritime Administrator or the Secretary of Defense with respect to this section.
(a) In general
Not later than March 1, 2026, the Secretary of Transportation, in coordination with the Secretary of Commerce, the Chair of the Federal Maritime Commission, and the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report including ways to ensure vessels of the United States operating in foreign commerce are privileged in regulation, taxation, fees, insurance, and policy compared to foreign vessels conducting trade with a United States domiciled entity, while remaining consistent with the international obligations of the United States.
(b) Contents
In submitting the report under subsection (a), the Secretary of Transportation shall include options for regulating trade with foreign vessels in order to sustain and grow the Maritime Security Fleet under chapter 531 of this title, the Cable Security Fleet under chapter 532 of this title, the Tanker Security Fleet under chapter 534 of this title, the Strategic Commercial Fleet under chapter 536 of this title, and other vessels of the United States operating in foreign commerce.
Subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
The table of chapters for subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
ensure that the total number of vessels included in the fleet shall be not more than 250 vessels at any point in time.
(c) Solicitation; entry into fleet
(1) Solicitation
(A) In general
Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this section, the Administrator shall solicit applications from covered entities to competitively select vessels that are eligible under subsection (d) and meet the requirements of this subsection for inclusion in the Fleet.
In general
(B) Public solicitation requirements
In soliciting applications under subparagraph (A), the Administrator—
(i) shall—
publish a notice in the Federal Register, which, at a minimum, identifies the requirements for the number of vessels as established by the Administrator and the Maritime Security Board under subsection (b); and
allow applicants not less than 30 days to submit an application for entry into the Fleet; and
(ii) may, in coordination with the Maritime Security Board, include in the notice in the Federal Register—
target numbers for each vessel type that will be selected for inclusion in the Fleet each year; and
guidance on proposed annual operating support payments and annual capital support payments for each vessel type solicited, to ensure—
covered entities submit applications that are priced competitively and meet the needs of the Fleet; and
there is a competitive selection process as described in this section.
(2) Eligible applications
The Administrator shall solicit and accept applications in separate processes for each of the following:
(A) Newly constructed vessels
(i) A covered entity may submit an application for the Fleet that involves the construction of a United States built vessel and operation of such vessel as a vessel of the United States in foreign commerce.
(ii) An application described in clause (i) from a covered entity may include a proposal for the use of an interim vessel, if such proposal provides that—
the covered entity will operate a qualified foreign-built vessel as a vessel of the United States in foreign commerce as part of the Fleet until the United States built vessel described in such clause enters the Fleet, in accordance with the milestones established within the operating agreement under section 53603(c)(1);
when the United States built vessel enters the Fleet or the covered entity fails to meet milestones established in the operating agreement, the qualified foreign-built vessel shall be removed from the Fleet; and
the covered entity may then transfer and register the qualified foreign-built vessel under a registry of any foreign country that is not a foreign country of concern.
(B) Qualified foreign-built vessels
(i) Through fiscal year 2030, a covered entity may submit an application for the Fleet that involves the operation of a qualified foreign-built vessel as a vessel of the United States in foreign commerce.
(ii) After fiscal year 2030, the Administrator may not enter into a new agreement to bring a qualified foreign-built vessel into the Fleet unless—
the vessel is operating as an interim vessel under subparagraph (A)(ii); or
the Administrator and Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board, jointly certify to the appropriate committees of Congress that adding additional qualified foreign-built vessels to the Fleet is necessary for the national security of the United States until replaced by a newly constructed vessel to meet the schedule under subsection (b).
(3) Procedure
(A) In general
A covered entity desiring to have a vessel selected for the Fleet shall submit an eligible application under paragraph (2) as at such time, in such manner, and containing such information as the Administrator may require. Such application shall include—
(i) a proposed annual operating support payment, which may cover the difference in operating costs (including costs associated with vessel repair) associated with operating the vessel as a vessel of the United States as compared to a fair and reasonable estimate of the cost of operating that type of vessel under the laws of a foreign country;
(ii) in the case of an application described in paragraph (2)(A), a proposed annual capital support payment, which may cover the difference in capital costs associated with constructing the vessel in the United States as compared to a fair and reasonable estimate of the cost of constructing that type of vessel in a foreign shipyard; and
(iii) any other support payments needed to make a vessel commercially viable in foreign commerce.
(B) Bid team
In the case of an eligible entity that is a bid team described in section 53601(4)(B), such team shall jointly submit an application under this subsection for inclusion in the Fleet.
(4) Acceptance into fleet
(A) In general
The Administrator shall evaluate eligible applications submitted under this subsection in order to, in accordance with this paragraph, select applications that meet the requirements of this section for acceptance in the Fleet.
(B) Citizenship preference
In selecting applications to meet the requirements of this section, the Administrator shall ensure, to the extent sufficient qualified applications are received under this subsection, that not less than 25 percent of vessels selected for the Fleet shall be owned or operated by a covered entity that is, or a bid team led by, a citizen of the United States under section 50501.
(C) Priority
In evaluating eligible applications for selection in the Fleet and subject to subparagraph (B), the Administrator shall give priority to—
(i) applications that represent the best value to the Federal Government; and
(ii) applications for vessels, or for vessels providing services, that are determined by the Maritime Security Board to have capabilities critical to the national and economic security of the United States.
(D) Relationship to the tanker security fleet
If the most recent Mobility Capability Requirements Study produced by United States Transportation Command identifies a need for a fleet of tanker vessels that are vessels of the United States that exceeds the size of the Tanker Security Fleet established under chapter 534 of this title, the Administrator, in coordination with the Maritime Security Board, may select for inclusion in the Fleet a number of tanker vessels that is consistent with the requirements of the Study.
(E) Considerations for review
In evaluating eligible applications submitted under this subsection for selection in the Fleet, the Administrator shall—
(i) determine that any vessel so selected will be suitable for use by the United States for national defense or military purposes in time of war or national emergency;
(ii) determine that any vessel so selected will aid in the promotion and development of foreign commerce;
(iii) determine that—
the proposed use of the vessel in commercial service is reasonable; and
the owner or operator of the vessel possesses the ability, experience, financial resources, and other qualifications necessary for the operation and maintenance of the vessel;
(iv) determine that a shipyard selected to construct a vessel under this section possesses the ability, experience, financial resources, equipment, and other qualifications necessary to properly construct the vessel;
(v) determine that the price for the construction (if applicable) and operation of a vessel under this section is fair and reasonable;
(vi) consider whether the covered entity commits to—
(5) Timing
(A) Qualified foreign vessel
Not later than 180 days after entering into an operating agreement under section 53603 with a covered entity for inclusion of a qualified foreign-built vessel into the Fleet, such vessel shall be placed into service as part of the Fleet.
(B) Newly constructed vessel
Not later than 36 months after entering into an operating agreement under section 53603 with a covered entity for inclusion of a newly constructed United States built vessel described in paragraph (2)(A), such vessel shall be placed into service as part of the Fleet.
(C) Delayed admission
The Administrator may delay the entry of a vessel selected to participate in the Fleet for—
(i) a delay in the construction of such vessel; or
(ii) difficulty of the owner or operator of such vessel in recruiting United States mariners as required under section 53603(b)(1)(A).
(d) Vessel eligibility
A vessel is eligible to be included in the Fleet if—
the vessel—
is a vessel of the United States; or
is not a vessel of the United States, but—
(i) the owner of the vessel has demonstrated an intent to have the vessel documented under chapter 121 of this title if it is included in the Fleet; and
(ii) by the time an operating agreement is entered into under section 53603, the vessel is documented under chapter 121 of this title;
the vessel is a United States built vessel or a qualified foreign-built vessel;
the vessel is—
a bulk carrier vessel;
a tanker vessel;
a roll-on/roll-off vessel;
a liquefied natural gas tanker vessel;
a container vessel;
a multi-purpose vessel;
a cable vessel (as defined in section 53201 of this title);
a heavy-lift vessel; or
any other type of vessel determined appropriate by the Administrator, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board;
the vessel is operated (or will be operated) in providing transportation in foreign commerce;
the vessel meets the requirements of paragraph (1), (2), (3), or (4) of subsection (e);
the vessel—
is suitable for use by the United States for national defense or military purposes in time of war or national emergency, as determined by the Secretary of Defense;
is commercially viable, as determined by the Administrator; and
has dedicated space for the training of—
(i) cadets of the Merchant Marine Academy consistent with the requirements of section 51307(b);
(ii) students of a State maritime academy, consistent with the requirements of section 51507; or
(iii) participants in another workforce training program identified by the Administrator; and
the vessel will, for the period of an operating agreement under section 53603 that applies to the vessel, meet any other requirement determined appropriate by the Administrator.
(e) Requirements regarding citizenship of owners, charterers, and operators
(1) Vessel owned and operated by section 50501 citizens
A vessel meets the requirements of this paragraph if, during the period of an operating agreement under this chapter that applies to the vessel, the vessel will be owned and operated by 1 or more persons that are citizens of the United States under section 50501.
(2) Vessel owned by section 50501 citizen or United States citizen trust and chartered to documentation citizen
A vessel meets the requirements of this paragraph if—
during the period of an operating agreement under this chapter that applies to the vessel, the vessel will be—
(i) owned by a person that is a citizen of the United States under section 50501 of this title or that is a United States citizen trust; and
(ii) demise chartered to a person—
that is eligible to document the vessel under chapter 121 of this title;
the chairman of the board of directors, chief executive officer, and a majority of the members of the board of directors of which are citizens of the United States under section 50501 of this title, and are appointed and subjected to removal only upon approval by the Administrator; and
that certifies to the Administrator that there are no treaties, statutes, regulations, or other laws that would prohibit the covered entity for the vessel from performing its obligations under an operating agreement under this chapter;
in the case of a vessel that will be demise chartered to a person that is owned or controlled by another person that is not a citizen of the United States under section 50501 of this title, the other person enters into an agreement with the Administrator not to influence the operation of the vessel in a manner that will adversely affect the interests of the United States; and
the Administrator and the Secretary of Defense notify the appropriate committees of Congress that they concur with the certification required under subparagraph (A)(ii)(III) and have reviewed and agree that there are no other legal, operational, or other impediments that would prohibit the covered entity for the vessel from performing its obligations under an operating agreement under this chapter.
(3) Vessel owned and operated by defense contractor
A vessel meets the requirements of this paragraph if—
during the period of an operating agreement under this chapter that applies to the vessel, the vessel will be owned and operated by a person that—
(i) is eligible to document a vessel under chapter 121 of this title;
(ii) operates or manages other United States-documented vessels for the Secretary of Defense, or charters other vessels to the Secretary of Defense;
(iii) has entered into a special security agreement for purposes of this paragraph with the Secretary of Defense;
(iv) makes the certification described in paragraph (2)(A)(ii)(III); and
(v) in the case of a vessel described in paragraph (2)(B), enters into an agreement referred to in that paragraph; and
the Administrator and the Secretary of Defense notify the appropriate committees of Congress that they concur with the certification required under subparagraph (A)(iv), and have reviewed and agree that there are no other legal, operational, or other impediments that would prohibit the covered entity for the vessel from performing its obligations under an operating agreement under this chapter.
(4) Vessel owned by documentation citizen and chartered to section 50501 citizen
A vessel meets the requirements of this paragraph if, during the period of an operating agreement under this chapter that applies to the vessel, the vessel will be—
owned by a person that is eligible to document a vessel under chapter 121; and
demise chartered to a person that is a citizen of the United States under section 50501.
(a) In general
The Administrator shall require, as a condition of including any vessel in the Fleet, that the covered entity for the vessel enter into an operating agreement under this section.
(b) Requirements
(1) General requirements
An operating agreement required under subsection (a) shall require the vessel subject to such agreement to meet the following requirements:
During the period in which the vessel is operating under the agreement—
(i) the vessel will be crewed in accordance with section 8103 of title 46, United States Code;
(ii) the vessel shall be operated within the Fleet exclusively in foreign commerce and not in coastwise trade;
(iii) the covered entity will have in effect an emergency preparedness agreement described in section 53605 for the period of such agreement; and
Beginning on the first day of the operating agreement, the vessel will be permanently ineligible for a coastwise endorsement under section 12112 of this title or to otherwise participate in the coastwise trade, even if the operating agreement is terminated or not renewed.
(2) Vessel repair requirements
(A) In general
Subject to subparagraphs (B) and (C), the operating agreement required under subsection (a) shall—
(i) require that the vessel subject to such agreement undergo a set percentage, agreed to between the Administrator and the covered entity, of repair work (excluding necessary repairs as described in paragraph (1) of section 466(d) of the Tariff Act of 1930 ()) at a shipyard in the United States; and 19 U.S.C. 1466(d)(1)
(ii) prohibit the vessel subject to such agreement from receiving repairs at a shipyard in a foreign country of concern (as defined in section 4 of the SHIPS for America Act of 2025).
(B) Exception for interim vessels
The requirements of clauses (i) and (ii) of subparagraph (A) shall not apply to interim vessels included in the fleet under 53602(c)(2)(A)(ii).
(C) Authority of the Secretary of Transportation
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Secretary of Transportation may modify or waive any requirement of subparagraph (A) only if the Secretary, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board—
(i) determines that waiving such requirements are in the national security interest of the United States; and
(ii) makes such a determination publicly available in writing and submits the determination to the appropriate committees of Congress (as defined in section 4 of the ).
(3) Coordination with Coast Guard regarding coastwise trade prohibition
The Administrator shall coordinate with the Secretary of the Department in which the Coast Guard is operating to ensure that any vessel that is, or was, covered by an operating agreement under this chapter is permanently ineligible for a coastwise endorsement under section 12112 of this title or to otherwise participate in the coastwise trade, as required under paragraph (1)(B).
(c) Milestones and payments
The operating agreement shall—
Milestones and payments
prescribe specific milestones for project completion, as agreed upon between the Administrator and the covered entity; and
specify the schedule of operating support payments, and as applicable, capital support payments and other incentives and payments, based on completion of such milestones and consistent with the eligible application submitted by the covered entity under section 53602(c)(3)(A), as agreed to by the Administrator and the covered entity.
(d) Incentives
(1) State-of-the-art technology incentives
An operating agreement required under subsection (a) may include incentives to support the testing or adoption of state-of-the-art technology, including artificial intelligence, advanced shipbuilding techniques, automation, modern propulsion systems, environmental performance, crew safety, national defense features, and other technologies identified by the Maritime Security Board to be relevant in advancing the military and economic security of the United States.
(2) Performance incentives
The operating agreement may include incentive payments for eligible entities that exceed the milestones established under subsection (c)(1).
(e) Term of operating agreement
(1) In general
An operating agreement to participate in the Fleet shall be for a period of 7 years.
(2) Renewal of agreement
(A) In general
A covered entity for a vessel participating in the Fleet under an operating agreement under this section may apply to renew such operating agreement.
(B) Renewal limitation
An operating agreement under this section may be renewed not more than 2 times.
(3) Termination payment
(A) No-fault termination during contract
Subject to subparagraph (B), a covered entity for a vessel operating under an operating agreement under this section shall receive a termination payment if any of the following applies:
(i) Capital support payments provided to a covered entity under an operating agreement are terminated during a contract term.
(ii) An operating agreement is not selected to be renewed under paragraph (2).
(B) Administrator determination for material lack of compliance
In any case in which the Administrator determines under subsection (f) that a covered entity for a vessel operating under an operating agreement under this section materially fails to comply with the terms of the operating agreement and, due to such failure to comply, the operating agreement is terminated or not selected for renewal, the Administrator may determine that the covered entity is not entitled to a termination payment and subparagraph (A) shall not apply.
(C) Termination payment defined
In this paragraph, the term termination payment means a payment in an amount that equals the product of—
(i) the percentage of the remaining useful life of the vessel, calculated using 21 years as the maximum useful life of the vessel; multiplied by
(ii) the difference in the cost of constructing the vessel in the United States and the cost of constructing the vessel in a foreign country, to the extent such cost difference was not recovered by the covered entity through payments received under any operating agreement under this section.
(f) Termination by Administrator for lack of program participant compliance
If a covered entity for a vessel operating under an operating agreement under this section materially fails to comply with the terms of the operating agreement—
the Administrator shall notify the covered entity and provide a reasonable opportunity to comply with the operating agreement; and
if the covered entity fails to achieve such compliance, the Administrator—
shall terminate the operating agreement;
shall not renew the operating agreement under subsection (e)(2); and
may take steps to recover an amount equal to the payments and incentives provided to the covered entity under this chapter.
(g) Nonrenewal for lack of funds
If, by the first day of a fiscal year, sufficient funds have not been appropriated under the authority provided by this chapter for that fiscal year, then the Administrator shall notify the appropriate committees of Congress that operating agreements authorized under this chapter for which sufficient funds are not available will not be renewed for that fiscal year if sufficient funds are not appropriated by the 60th day of that fiscal year.
(h) Release of vessels from obligations
(1) In general
A vessel covered by an operating agreement under this chapter is released from any further obligation under the operating agreement, except for the requirements of paragraph (2), if—
the Administrator terminated or did not renew the operating agreement under subsection (f);
the covered entity elects to not renew its operating agreement with the Administrator;
the vessel is ineligible for renewal under subsection (e)(2); or
funds are not appropriated to the Administrator for payments under the operating agreement under this chapter for any fiscal year by the 60th day of that fiscal year.
(2) Coastwise trade
Consistent with the requirements of subsection (b)(1)(B), a vessel released from obligations under paragraph (1) shall remain permanently ineligible for a coastwise endorsement under section 12112 of this title or to otherwise participate in the coastwise trade.
(3) Authority to transfer vessel
(A) In general
After a vessel is released from obligations under paragraph (1), the covered entity may transfer and register such vessel under a foreign registry that—
(i) is acceptable to the Administrator and the Secretary of Defense, and allows the requisitioning of the vessel for title or use, notwithstanding section 56101 of this title; and
(ii) is not a foreign country of concern.
(B) Emergency acquisition of vessels
If chapter 563 of this title is applicable to a vessel after registration in a foreign registry described in subparagraph (A), then the vessel is available to be requisitioned by the Secretary of Transportation pursuant to such chapter.
(i) Judicial review
No court shall have jurisdiction to review the Administrator's decision with respect to the award or non-award of an operating agreement issued under this chapter.
(a) In general
An operating agreement under this chapter shall require that the Administrator make payments to the covered entity, in accordance with the milestones established under section 53603(c)(1) and the operating agreement under section 53603 and subject to the availability of appropriations under subsection (e).
(b) Limitations
Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, the Administrator shall not make any payment under this chapter for a vessel—
with respect to any day for which—
the vessel is not operated or maintained in accordance with an operating agreement under this chapter;
the vessel is under a charter to the United States Government; or
except as provided under subsection (c), the vessel is engaged in transporting military or other preference cargoes under section 55302(a), 55304, 55305, or 55314 of this title, section 2631 of title 10, or any other cargo preference law of the United States; or
that participates in the coastwise trade in violation of the operating agreement and section 53603(b)(1)(B).
(c) Preference cargos
(1) In general
The Secretary of Transportation may waive the requirement of subsection (b)(1)(C) to the extent, in the manner, and on the terms the Secretary prescribes, only if—
the Administrator, acting in the Administrator's capacity as Director of the National Shipping Authority—
(i) determines the non-availability of qualified vessels of the United States that are not enrolled in the Strategic Commercial Fleet; and
(ii) notifies the Secretary of such determination;
the Secretary ensures reasonable notice has been provided to the owners and operators of qualified vessels of the United States that are not enrolled in the Strategic Commercial Fleet prior to making the waiver determination; and
by not later than 7 days after issuing a waiver under this subsection, the Secretary notifies the appropriate committees of Congress and posts such waiver on a public website of the Maritime Administration.
(2) Non-delegation
The Secretary of Transportation shall not delegate the waiver authority provided under paragraph (1).
(d) Operating agreement is obligation of United States Government
An operating agreement under this chapter constitutes a contractual obligation of the United States Government to pay the amounts provided for in the agreement, subject to the availability of appropriations under subsection (e).
(e) Appropriations from the Maritime Security Trust Fund
(1) In general
There is authorized to be appropriated to the Administrator for payments to covered entities under this section, out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title—
for fiscal year 2026, $150,000,000;
for fiscal year 2027, $300,000,000;
for fiscal year 2028, $550,000,000;
for fiscal year 2029, $800,000,000;
for fiscal year 2030, $1,000,000,000;
for fiscal year 2031, $1,200,000,000;
for fiscal year 2032, $1,400,000,000;
for fiscal year 2033, $1,600,000,000;
for fiscal year 2034, $1,900,000,000; and
for fiscal year 2035, $2,100,000,000.
(2) Availability
Amounts made available under paragraph (1) shall remain available until expended.
(f) Clarification
The provision by the Administrator of a payment under this section shall not be considered to be a major Federal action under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 () or an undertaking for the purposes of division A of subtitle III of title 54, United States Code. 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.
(g) Buy America
Section 54101(d)(2) shall apply to any funds obligated by the Administrator under this section that are used to construct or repair a United States-built vessel.
(a) Emergency preparedness agreement required
The Administrator, in coordination with the Secretary of Defense, shall establish an emergency preparedness program under this section under which the program participant for an operating agreement under this chapter shall agree, as a condition of the operating agreement, to enter into an emergency preparedness agreement with the Administrator. The Administrator shall negotiate and enter into an emergency preparedness agreement with each program participant as promptly as practicable after the program participant has entered into the operating agreement.
(b) Use of existing program
The Administrator may use an existing emergency preparedness program, as of the date of enactment of the , to satisfy the requirements of subsection (a).
(c) Terms of agreement
The terms of an emergency preparedness agreement under this section shall—
provide that upon request by the Secretary of Defense during time of war or national emergency, or whenever determined by the Secretary of Defense to be necessary for national security or contingency operation (as that term is defined in section 101(a) of title 10), the program participant shall make available commercial transportation resources (including services) described in subsection (e) to the Secretary of Defense;
shall include such additional terms as may be established by the Administrator and the Secretary of Defense; and
shall allow for the modification or addition of terms upon agreement by the Administrator and the program participant and the approval by the Secretary of Defense.
(d) Participation after expiration of operating agreement
The Administrator may not require, through an emergency preparedness agreement or an operating agreement, that a program participant covered by an operating agreement continue to participate in an emergency preparedness agreement after the operating agreement has expired according to its terms or is otherwise no longer in effect. After the expiration of an emergency preparedness agreement, a program participant may voluntarily continue to participate in the agreement.
(e) Resources made available
The commercial transportation resources to be made available under an emergency preparedness agreement shall include vessels or capacity in vessels, terminal facilities, management services, and other related services, or any agreed portion of such nonvessel resources for activation as the Secretary of Defense may determine to be necessary, seeking to minimize disruption of the program participant's service to commercial customers.
(f) Compensation
(1) In general
The Administrator shall include in each emergency preparedness agreement provisions approved by the Secretary of Defense under which the Secretary of Defense shall pay fair and reasonable compensation for all commercial transportation resources provided pursuant to this section.
(2) Specific requirements
Compensation under this subsection—
shall not be less than the program participant's commercial market charges for like transportation resources;
shall be fair and reasonable considering all circumstances;
shall be provided from the time that a vessel or resource is required by the Secretary of Defense until the time it is redelivered to the program participant and is available to reenter commercial service; and
shall be in addition to and shall not in any way reflect amounts payable under section 53604 of this title.
(g) Temporary replacement vessels
Notwithstanding section 55302(a), 55304, 55305, or 55314 of this title, section 2631 of title 10, or any other cargo preference law of the United States—
a program participant may operate or employ in foreign commerce a foreign vessel, or capacity in a foreign vessel, as a temporary replacement for a vessel of the United States or vessel of the United States capacity that is activated by the Secretary of Defense under an emergency preparedness agreement or a primary Department of Defense sealift-approved readiness program; and
such replacement vessel or vessel capacity shall be eligible during the replacement period to transport preference cargoes subject to sections 55302(a), 55304, 55305, and 55314 of this title and section 2631 of title 10, to the same extent as the eligibility of the vessel or vessel capacity replaced.
(h) Redelivery and liability of the United States for damages
(1) In general
All commercial transportation resources activated under an emergency preparedness agreement shall, upon termination of the period of activation, be redelivered to the program participant in the same good order and condition as when received, less ordinary wear and tear, or the Secretary of Defense shall fully compensate the program participant for any necessary repair or replacement.
(2) Limitation on United States liability
Except as may be expressly agreed in an emergency preparedness agreement, or as otherwise provided by law, the Government shall not be liable for disruption of a program participant's commercial business or other consequential damages to the program participant arising from the activation of commercial transportation resources under an emergency preparedness agreement.
The Administrator and the Secretary of Defense may each prescribe rules as necessary to carry out their respective responsibilities under this chapter.
(b) Conforming amendments
Section 51307(b) of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in paragraph (1)—
in the matter preceding subparagraph (A)—
(i) by striking , or theand inserting , the; and
(ii) by inserting before ; and
in subparagraph (A), by striking or Tanker Security Fleet vesseland inserting Tanker Security Fleet vessel, or Strategic Commercial Fleet vessel; and
in paragraph (2), by striking or 534and inserting 534, or 536.
(c) Clerical amendment
The table of chapters for subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, is amended by inserting after the item relating to chapter 535 the following:
Strategic Commercial Fleet
evaluating the effectiveness of section 466 of the Tariff Act of 1930 () in encouraging the repair of vessels of the United States in shipyards of the United States; and 19 U.S.C. 1466
making recommendations for additional regulatory or legislative steps which could be taken to support the United States vessel repair industrial base.
(c) Effective date
The amendments made by subsection (a) apply with respect to parts, materials, and equipment purchased, and repairs to vessels initiated, after the date of enactment of this Act.
(B) Interagency agreement for the determination of non-availability
(i) Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of the , the Maritime Security Advisor shall facilitate an interagency agreement between the Maritime Administrator and the head of each agency subject to the requirements of subsection (a).
(ii) Each interagency agreement shall include—
an explanation of the process the agency shall follow to request a determination of non-availability by the Maritime Administrator under subparagraph (A);
a standard process that the Maritime Administrator shall follow for making such a determination of non-availability; and
deadlines—
for when an agency shall submit a request for such a determination of non-availability prior to the transportation of equipment, materials, or commodities subject to subsection (a); and
for when the Maritime Administrator shall make such a determination of non-availability after receiving a request for a temporary waiver under subparagraph (A).
(iii) The Maritime Security Advisor shall notify the appropriate committees of Congress—
when each interagency agreement required under this subparagraph is finalized; and
any time that an interagency agreement required under this subparagraph is updated.
Section 55305(d)(1) of title 46, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
(d) Clarification
Section 55305(d)(3)(B) of title 46, United States Code, is amended by inserting after .
when each interagency agreement required under this subsection is finalized; and
any time that an interagency agreement required under this subsection is updated.
(d) Agricultural product defined
In this section, the term agricultural product has the meaning given the term in section 55314 of title 46, United States Code.
(e) Audit required
(1) In general
For each fiscal year, the Inspector General of the Department of Transportation shall conduct an audit of all reimbursements made by the Secretary of Transportation under this section during such fiscal year to ensure all such reimbursements were made in accordance with the requirements of this section.
(2) Documents required
Each agency entitled to reimbursement under subsection (b) shall—
provide to the Inspector General any documents or other information requested by the Inspector General in order to complete the audit, including the information described in subparagraph (B); and
require any party that enters into a contract with such agency related to the implementation of section 55305 of this title, or any activities specified in section 55314(b) of this title, to provide the agency, as a condition for entering into such contract, with information relevant for the audit as determined by the Inspector General.
(3) Report
Not later than 90 days after the end of each fiscal year, the Inspector General shall submit a report detailing the findings of such audit with respect to such fiscal year to the appropriate committees of Congress and make the report publicly available.
(f) Authorization of appropriations
For each fiscal year, there is authorized to be appropriated, out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title, an amount sufficient to reimburse the Secretary of Transportation for the costs incurred under this section, including administrative expenses.
(g) Definition of covered agency
For purposes of this section, the term covered agency means any agency that administers an activity specified in section 55314(b) of this title.
(b) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for subchapter II of of title 46, United States Code, is amended by inserting after the item relating to the following: chapter 553; section 55315
Financing the transportation of agricultural products and other cargo.
identifies persons and goods that are subject to the requirements of this section;
establishes requirements for such persons and goods that meet the applicable percentages established under subsection (b);
establishes clear enforcement mechanisms to ensure compliance with this section; and
determines the amount of a fine issued under subsection (d).
(f) Definitions
In this section:
The term country with an open registry means a country that allows vessels to be documented under the laws of the country, without regard to the citizenship of the owner of the vessel or the citizenship of the crew of the vessel.
The term covered goods means goods manufactured in the People’s Republic of China.
The term shipper has the meaning given such term in section 40102 of this title.
(b) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 605
the vessel is documented under the laws of the United States;
all major components of the hull or superstructure of the vessel are manufactured (including all manufacturing processes from the initial melting stage through the application of coatings for iron or steel products) in the United States; and
the components of the vessel listed in paragraph (4) are manufactured in the United States; and
with respect to the 6th calendar year following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, and each calendar year thereafter, if the vessel meets the requirements of subparagraph (A)(ii).
(4) Components
The components of a vessel listed in this paragraph are the following:
Air circuit breakers.
Welded shipboard anchor and mooring chain.
Powered and non-powered valves in Federal Supply Classes 4810 and 4820 used in piping.
Machine tools in the Federal Supply Classes for metal-working machinery numbered 3405, 3408, 3410 through 3419, 3426, 3433, 3438, 3441 through 3443, 3445, 3446, 3448, 3449, 3460, and 3461.
Auxiliary equipment for shipboard services, including pumps.
Propulsion equipment, including engines, propulsion motors, reduction gears, and propellers.
Shipboard cranes.
Spreaders for shipboard cranes.
Rotating electrical equipment, including electrical alternators and motors.
Compressors, pumps, and heat exchangers used in managing and re-liquefying boil-off gas from liquefied natural gas.
(5) Waiver authority
The Commission may waive the requirement under clause (i)(II)(bb) or (ii)(IV), as applicable, of paragraph (3)(A) with respect to a component of a vessel if the Maritime Administrator determines that—
application of the requirement would—
(i) result in an increase of 25 percent or more in the cost of the component of the vessel; or
(ii) cause unreasonable delays to be incurred in building or retrofitting the vessel; or
such component is not manufactured in the United States in sufficient and reasonably available quantities of a satisfactory quality.
(6) Opportunities for credentialed merchant mariners
Except as provided in paragraph (7), the Commission shall include, in any order issued under subsection (a) that authorizes a person to export natural gas a condition that the person provide opportunities for individuals with a merchant mariner credential (as defined in section 2101 of title 46, United States Code) to receive experience and training necessary to become credentialed in working on a vessel transporting natural gas.
(7) Exception
The Commission may not include in any order issued under subsection (a) authorizing a person to export natural gas to a nation with which there is in effect a free trade agreement requiring national treatment for trade in natural gas a condition described in paragraph (1), or a condition described in paragraph (6), if the United States Trade Representative certifies to the Commission, in writing, that such condition would violate obligations of the United States under such free trade agreement.
(8) Use of Federal information
In carrying out paragraph (1), the Commission—
shall use information made available by—
(i) the Energy Information Administration; or
(ii) any other Federal agency or entity the Commission determines appropriate; and
may use information made available by a private entity only if applicable information described in subparagraph (A) is not available.
(2) Conforming amendment
Section 3(c) of the Natural Gas Act () is amended by striking or the exportation of natural gasand inserting or, subject to subsection (g), the exportation of natural gas. 15 U.S.C. 717b(c)
(b) Crude oil
Section 101 of title I of division O of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 () is amended— 42 U.S.C. 6212a
in subsection (b), by striking subsections (c) and (d)and inserting subsections (c), (d), and (f); and
(f) Transportation of exports of crude oil on vessels documented under laws of the United States
(1) In general
Notwithstanding any other provision of law and except as provided in paragraph (6), as a condition to export crude oil, the President shall require that a person exporting crude oil transport the crude oil on a vessel that meets the requirements described in paragraph (3).
(2) Purpose
The purpose of the requirement under paragraph (1) is to ensure that, of all crude oil exported by vessel in a calendar year, the following percentage is exported by a vessel that meets the requirements described in paragraph (3):
In each of the 7 calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 3 percent.
In each of the 8th, 9th, and 10th calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 6 percent.
In each of the 11th, 12th, and 13th calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted, not less than 8 percent.
In the 14th calendar year following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted and each calendar year thereafter, not less than 10 percent.
(3) Requirements for vessels
A vessel meets the requirements described in this paragraph—
with respect to each of the 4 calendar years following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted—
(i) if—
the vessel is documented under the laws of the United States; and
with respect to any retrofit work necessary for the vessel to export crude oil—
such work is done in a shipyard in the United States; and
any component of the vessel listed in paragraph (4) that is installed during the course of such work is manufactured in the United States; or
(ii) if—
the vessel is built in the United States;
the vessel is documented under the laws of the United States;
all major components of the hull or superstructure of the vessel are manufactured (including all manufacturing processes from the initial melting stage through the application of coatings for iron or steel products) in the United States; and
the components of the vessel listed in paragraph (4) are manufactured in the United States; and
with respect to the 5th calendar year following the calendar year in which this subsection is enacted and each calendar year thereafter, if the vessel meets the requirements of subparagraph (A)(ii).
(4) Components
The components of a vessel listed in this paragraph are the following:
Air circuit breakers.
Welded shipboard anchor and mooring chain.
Powered and non-powered valves in Federal Supply Classes 4810 and 4820 used in piping.
Machine tools in the Federal Supply Classes for metal-working machinery numbered 3405, 3408, 3410 through 3419, 3426, 3433, 3438, 3441 through 3443, 3445, 3446, 3448, 3449, 3460, and 3461.
Auxiliary equipment for shipboard services, including pumps.
Propulsion equipment, including engines, propulsion motors, reduction gears, and propellers.
Shipboard cranes.
Spreaders for shipboard cranes.
Rotating electrical equipment, including electrical alternators and motors.
(5) Waiver authority
The President may waive the requirement under clause (i)(II)(bb) or clause (ii)(IV), as applicable, of paragraph (3)(A) with respect to a component of a vessel if the Maritime Administrator determines that—
application of the requirement would—
(i) result in an increase of 25 percent or more in the cost of the component of the vessel; or
(ii) cause unreasonable delays to be incurred in building or retrofitting the vessel; or
such component is not manufactured in the United States in sufficient and reasonably available quantities of a satisfactory quality.
(6) Exception
The President may not, under paragraph (1), condition the export of crude oil to a nation with which there is in effect a free trade agreement requiring national treatment for trade in crude oil if the United States Trade Representative certifies to the President, in writing, that such condition would violate obligations of the United States under such free trade agreement.
(7) Opportunities for credentialed merchant mariners
The Maritime Administrator shall ensure that the owner or operator of a vessel transporting crude oil provides opportunities for individuals with a merchant mariner credential (as defined in section 2101 of title 46, United States Code) to receive experience and training necessary to become credentialed in working on such vessels.
(8) Use of Federal information
In carrying out paragraph (1), the President—
shall use information made available by—
(i) the Energy Information Administration; or
(ii) any other Federal agency or entity the Commission determines appropriate; and
may use information made available by a private entity only if applicable information described in subparagraph (A) is not available.
by adding at the end the following:
(c) Energy Information Administration information
The Secretary of Energy, acting through the Administrator of the Energy Information Administration (referred to in this section as the ), shall collect, and make readily available to the public on the internet website of the Energy Information Administration, information on exports by vessel of natural gas and crude oil, including—
forecasts for, and data on, those exports for the calendar year following the calendar year in which this Act is enacted and each calendar year thereafter; and
forecasts for those exports for multiyear periods after the date of enactment of this Act, as determined appropriate by the Secretary.
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 553
if the foreign classification society has offices and maintains records in the United States.
(e) Rulemaking procedure
The Secretary may initiate a rulemaking procedure to implement this standard.
(f) Savings provision
Nothing in this section shall be interpreted to affect requirements related to merchant seamen credentials under part E of subtitle II of this title or the requirements related to manning of vessels under part F of such subtitle.
(b) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking the items relating to sections 3317 and 3318 and inserting the following: chapter 33
A member of the rulemaking committee shall be appointed for the life of the rulemaking committee.
(B) Vacancies
A vacancy in the rulemaking committee—
(i) shall not affect the powers of the rulemaking committee; and
(ii) shall be filled in the same manner as the original appointment.
(3) Chairperson and vice chairperson
The Secretary shall select a Chairperson and Vice Chairperson from among the members of the rulemaking committee.
(d) Meetings
(1) Initial meeting
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall convene the rulemaking committee for the first meeting of the rulemaking committee.
(2) Quorum
A majority of the members of the rulemaking committee shall constitute a quorum, but a lesser number of members may hold hearings.
(e) Duties of committee
(1) Considerations
The rulemaking committee shall consider each of the following:
How the covered regulations interact with and compare to the treaty requirements and regulations established by the International Maritime Organization, including comparisons and interactions on the basis of—
(i) safety;
(ii) cost;
(iii) enforceability and compliance; and
(iv) international competitiveness.
The benefits and challenges vessel owners and operators and United States mariners encounter when complying with both regulations of the International Maritime Organization and the covered regulations.
The role that covered regulations play in enhancing the size and strength of the merchant marine and the domestic and international fleet of the United States.
Recommended changes to covered regulations, and regulatory frameworks, to better promote alignment with international standards and the standards of countries that are allies and partners, with a focus on—
(i) increasing opportunities for qualified mariners that enter the merchant marine and reducing the barriers that lead qualified mariners to leave the merchant marine;
(ii) increasing the number of vessels documented under the laws of the United States that are operating in domestic and foreign commerce;
(iii) enhancing United States leadership within the International Maritime Organization and other international treaty organizations with a focus on the maritime industry;
(iv) streamlining regulatory processes and processing timelines to minimize duplicative reviews and eliminate preventable delays; and
(v) maintaining and enhancing the safety and security of the merchant marine.
Recommended changes to covered regulations and regulatory frameworks that govern mariner education training requirements, which may include—
(i) expanding the pool of qualified instructors for mariner training programs;
(ii) streamlining requirements related to training facility size and design to improve operational efficiencies at mariner training facilities, including requirements related to classroom size and design;
(iii) standardizing and streamlining training course and curriculum approval and evaluation to provide more certainty to mariner training programs; and
(iv) enhancing opportunities for mariner training programs to flexibly integrate sea-time into course instruction, consistent with treaty requirements and regulations established by the International Maritime Organization.
Any other matters the Secretary determines appropriate.
(2) Report
Not later than 12 months after the date of enactment of this Act, the rulemaking committee shall submit to the Secretary a report that includes the findings and recommended changes to covered regulations of the rulemaking committee, as required under paragraph (1).
(f) Powers of rulemaking committee
(1) Hearings
The rulemaking committee may hold such hearings, sit and act at such times and places, take such testimony, and receive such evidence as the rulemaking committee considers advisable to carry out this section.
(2) Information from Federal agencies
(A) In general
The rulemaking committee may secure directly from a Federal department or agency such information as the rulemaking committee considers necessary to carry out this section, as permitted by law.
(B) Furnishing information
On request of the Chairperson of the rulemaking committee, the head of the department or agency shall furnish the information to the rulemaking committee.
(g) Rulemaking committee personnel matters
(1) No compensation
A member of the rulemaking committee shall not be compensated for service on the rulemaking committee.
(2) Travel expenses
A member of the rulemaking committee shall be allowed travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, at rates authorized for employees of agencies under subchapter I of of title 5, United States Code, while away from their homes or regular places of business in the performance of services for the rulemaking committee. chapter 57
Travel expenses
(h) Administration
Except as specified otherwise in this section, the rulemaking committee shall be treated as a committee established under of title 46, United States Code, for purposes of section 15109 of such title and shall not be considered a temporary organization under section 3161 of title 5, United States Code. chapter 151
(i) Termination
The rulemaking committee shall terminate on the earlier of—
the date that is 90 days after the date on which the rulemaking committee submits the report under subsection (e)(2); or
the date that is 7 years after the date on which the rulemaking committee is established.
(j) Duties of the Secretary
The Secretary shall—
not later than 30 days after receiving the rulemaking committee’s report under subsection (e)(2), submit to the appropriate committees of Congress, and make publicly available, a copy of such report and the Secretary’s views on the recommendations of the committee; and
not later than 90 days after submitting the report under paragraph (1)—
initiate a rulemaking activity and make such policy and guidance updates determined necessary by the Secretary to address the consensus recommendations reached by the rulemaking committee under subsection (e);
submit a report to the appropriate committees of Congress identifying the recommendations of the rulemaking committee that require legislative changes; and
submit a report to the Secretary of State identifying recommendations of the rulemaking committee that require changes to treaty requirements and regulations established by the International Maritime Organization, including recommendations that should inform the policy of the United States as a member of the International Maritime Organization.
(3) Review of applications
(A) Considerations for review
With respect to the review by the Maritime Administrator of an application submitted—
(i) the Maritime Administrator may not approve an application for construction of a vessel as described in subsection (a)(1) unless the Administrator—
determines that a vessel funded through the program—
will aid in the promotion and development of foreign commerce; and
will be suitable for use by the United States for national defense or military purposes in time of war or national emergency;
determines that the vessel purchaser applying for funding under this section possesses the ability, experience, financial resources, and other qualifications necessary for the operation and maintenance of the proposed new vessel;
determines that the shipyard that will construct a vessel under this section possesses the ability, experience, financial resources, equipment, and other qualifications necessary to properly construct the proposed vessel;
confirms that any newly constructed vessel has dedicated space for the training of cadets of the United States Merchant Marine Academy (consistent with the requirements of section 51307(b)), State maritime academies (consistent with the requirements of section 51507), or other workforce training programs identified by the Administrator; and
has notified the appropriate committees of Congress not later than 15 days before making any commitment to provide Federal financial assistance to any covered entity; and
(ii) the Maritime Administrator may not approve an application to incentivize qualified shipyard investments as described in subsection (a)(2) unless the Administrator—
confirms that the covered entity has received an incentive offered by a governmental entity to a covered entity for the purposes of supporting a qualified shipyard investment within that jurisdiction;
ensures that the covered entity has an executable plan to sustain the facility without additional Federal financial assistance under this subsection for the facility;
determines that the project to which the application relates is in the economic and national security interests of the United States; and
receives detailed information on—
the customers, or categories of customers, which the covered entity plans to serve;
the type of expenditures which the covered entity plans to make; and
the workforce positions that the covered entity plans to employ, including any required recruitment, training, and hiring; and
(iii) the Maritime Administrator may consider—
whether the covered entity has previously received financial assistance under this section;
the price for the construction or repair of a vessel that has been negotiated between a shipyard and proposed vessel purchaser, and whether the negotiated price is fair and reasonable;
whether the covered entity commits to use equipment, materials, and supplies that are produced in the United States, and utilize, to the maximum extent practicable, subcontractors and suppliers that are based in the United States; and
whether the covered entity commits to utilizing new or emerging technologies.
(B) Records
The Maritime Administrator may request records and information from the covered entity. The covered entity shall provide the records and information requested by the Administrator.
(C) Priority
In providing Federal financial assistance to covered entities under this section, the Maritime Administrator may—
(i) for an application for construction of a vessel as described in subsection (a)(1), give priority to applicants that—
propose the construction of vessels of higher transport capability and productivity;
commit to have modifications done in the United States to a vessel constructed with such financial assistance; or
propose the construction or modification of a vessel to meet the national security needs of the United States; and
(ii) for an application to incentivize a qualified shipyard investment as described in subsection (a)(2), give priority to applicants that—
propose to expand production capacity to enable more military or commercial vessels to be constructed or repaired in the United States;
commit to using new or emerging technologies or vessel design processes that increase production times or lower production costs; or
have experience making qualified shipyard investments or operating shipyards for commercial or military oceangoing vessels.
(4) National defense features
(A) In general
Upon receiving an application for the construction of a vessel under this section, the Maritime Administrator shall submit to the Secretary of the Navy the plans and specifications for the proposed vessel for review.
(B) Recommendations
Not later than 30 days after the date of receiving the plans and specifications for a vessel as provided for under subparagraph (A), the Secretary of the Navy may make recommendations to the Maritime Administrator for the design of the vessel, which would enable the economical and speedy conversion of the vessel into a vessel suitable for use of the United States Government in times of war or national emergency.
(C) Requirement to implement recommendations
If the Maritime Administrator agrees with such recommendations, the Maritime Administrator shall require the covered entity to carry out such recommendations as a condition of receiving Federal financial assistance under this section with respect to that vessel.
(5) Relationship to other financial assistance programs
A covered entity may not receive financial assistance under this section for a vessel which is enrolled in the Strategic Commercial Fleet Program.
(d) Award amounts
(1) Construction of a vessel of the United States
(A) In General
For financial assistance related to construction of a vessel of the United States, as described in subsection (a)(1), the Maritime Administrator shall determine the appropriate amount and funding for each financial assistance award made under this section.
(B) Determination
In making the determination under subparagraph (A), the Maritime Administrator shall consider the difference in the cost of constructing the proposed vessel within the United States over the fair and reasonable estimate of cost of the construction of that type of vessel if it were constructed under similar plans and specifications (excluding national defense features as described in subsection (c)(4)) in a foreign shipbuilding center that is deemed by the Administrator to furnish a fair and representative example for the determination of the estimated foreign cost of construction of vessels of the type proposed to be constructed.
(2) Qualified shipyard investments
For financial assistance provided to incentivize qualified shipyard investments as described in subsection (a)(2), the Maritime Administrator shall determine the appropriate amount for each financial assistance award made to a covered entity to maximize private sector investments and to expand shipyard and ship building capacity of the United States.
(3) Use of funds
A covered entity that receives a financial assistance award under this section may only use the financial assistance award amounts to—
(A)
(i) finance the construction of a vessel to be built in the United States and documented under the laws of the United States; or
(ii) support site development, construction, and modernization for qualified shipyard investments; and
support workforce development for a shipyard or qualified shipyard investment.
(e) Applications for reconstruction, conditioning, or repowering
The Maritime Administrator may, if determined to be in the national and economic security interests of the United States and consistent with the requirements of this section, consider an application as described in subsection (a)(1), and award financial assistance under this section, for the reconstruction, reconditioning, or repowering of an existing vessel in a shipyard of the United States.
(f) Pilot program for vessels in domestic commerce
(1) In general
The Maritime Administrator may, if determined to be in the national and economic security interests of the United States and consistent with all other requirements of this section (except the requirement under subsection (c)(3)(A)(i)(I)(aa)), establish a pilot program to consider an application as described in subsection (a)(1), and award financial assistance under this section for the construction of a vessel for use in service other than the foreign commerce.
(2) Eligible vessels
In addition to all other requirements of this section (except the requirement under subsection (c)(3)(A)(i)(I)(aa)), a vessel qualifying for funding through the pilot program under this subsection shall only be eligible if the Administrator certifies that the vessel of the United States that will be constructed—
(A)
(i) will operate in an emerging industry or a new trade lane;
(ii) will not compete with existing vessels of the United States; and
(iii) will not serve a market already served by a vessel of the United States with a coastwise endorsement;
(B)
(i) will replace an existing vessel of the United States that is or will be acquired by the Administrator to be placed in the National Defense Reserve Fleet, pursuant to section 57101; and
(ii) will operate for not longer than 21 years and upon disposition will be placed in the National Defense Reserve Fleet, pursuant to section 57101; or
will be an oceanographic research vessel (as defined in section 2101 of this title).
(3) Rule of construction
Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to alter the requirements under section 55102.
(g) Clawback
(1) Milestones
For all awards to covered entities under this section, the Administrator shall, before the award is made, determine target milestones by which the vessel’s construction or a qualified shipyard investment shall be completed.
(2) Progressive recovery for delays
Subject to paragraph (3), if a covered entity does not meet such target milestones, the Administrator shall progressively recover up to the full amount of an award provided to a covered entity under this section.
(3) Waiver
In the case of delays that do not meet such target milestones, the Administrator may waive elements of the progressive recovery described in paragraph (2) that is incorporated in each award after—
making a formal determination that circumstances beyond the ability of the covered entity to foresee or control are responsible for delays; and
submitting congressional notification.
(4) Congressional notification
The Administrator shall notify the appropriate committees of Congress—
of the target dates described in paragraph (1) for each award; and
of any waivers provided under paragraph (3) not later than 15 days after the date on which such a waiver was provided.
(h) Emergency preparedness
The Maritime Administrator shall require any vessel that is constructed with financial assistance under this section to participate in an emergency preparedness program that is approved by the Secretary of Defense.
(i) Clarification
The provision by the Administrator of Federal financial assistance for a project described in this section shall not be considered to be a major Federal action under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 () or an undertaking for the purposes of division A of subtitle III of title 54, United States Code. 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.
(j) Buy America
Section 54101(d)(2) shall apply to any funds obligated by the Administrator under this section.
(k) GAO review
The Comptroller General of the United States shall—
not later than 2 years after the date of disbursement of the first financial award under this section, and biennially thereafter for 10 years, conduct a review of the program under this section; and
submit to the appropriate committees of Congress the results of each review.
(l) Prohibition on use of funds
(1) In general
No funds made available under this section may—
be used to construct, modify, or improve a facility outside of the United States;
be provided to a foreign entity of concern or to support a foreign entity of concern; or
be used to purchase materials that are procured or sourced from a foreign entity of concern, if such funds are for construction of a vessel as described in subsection (a)(1).
(2) Stock buybacks
An entity receiving financial assistance under this section may not engage in any stock buyback for a period of 5 years after receiving such assistance.
(m) Authorization of appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated to the Administrator, out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title, $250,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035 to provide financial assistance to covered entities under this section, to remain available until expended.
Part C of subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, is amended by inserting after chapter 537 the following:
(b) Clerical amendment
Shipbuilding financial incentives
The table of chapters at the beginning of part C of subtitle V of title 46, United States Code, and at the beginning of subtitle V of such title, are each amended by inserting after the item relating to chapter 537 the following new item:
(c) Conforming amendment
Title V of the Act of June 29, 1936 (49 Stat. 1995; chapter 858) is repealed.
(iv) the Strategic Commercial Fleet under chapter 536;
(v) the Shipbuilding Financial Incentive under chapter 538; or
(vi) the National Defense Reserve Fleet under section 57100.
by adding at the end the following new subparagraphs:
(d) Buy America
(f) Buy America
Section 54101(d)(2) shall apply to any funds obligated by the Administrator under this section.
Section 53733 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking subsection (f) and inserting the following:
(e) Basis for determining gain or loss
Section 53307 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in the section heading, by striking and inserting ;
by striking a new vesseland inserting an eligible vessel;
by striking the new vesseland inserting the eligible vessel;
by inserting after ; and
by inserting after .
(f) Obligation of deposits
Section 53310 of title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in subsection (a)—
by striking each place the term appears and inserting an eligible vessel; and
in paragraph (1)(A), by striking or reconditioningand inserting , repowering, or reconditioning; and
(b) Additional requirements for certain vessels
In addition to the requirements of subsection (a)(1), for an eligible vessel not constructed under the construction-differential program or not bought from the Secretary of Transportation, construction shall commence with reasonable dispatch after the date of the construction contract, as determined by the Secretary of Transportation and certified by such Secretary to the Secretary of the Treasury.
(c) Extensions
The Secretary of Transportation may grant extensions of the period within which the deposits must be expended or obligated, except that such extensions may not be for a total of more than 15 years for the expenditure or obligation of deposits.
by striking subsections (b) and (c) and inserting the following:
(g) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking the item relating to section 53307 and inserting the following: chapter 533
. 53307. Basis for determining gain or loss and for depreciating eligible vessels.
owns or leases an eligible vessel; or
commits, as a part of such agreement, to build and operate an eligible vessel not later than 5 years after establishing the capital construction fund.
(2) Operator agreements
An operator of a United States marine terminal may make an agreement with the Secretary under this chapter to establish a capital construction fund for the marine terminal.
(b) Allowable purpose
The purpose of the agreement shall be to provide—
replacement vessels, additional vessels, or reconstructed vessels, built in the United States and documented under the laws of the United States, for operation in the foreign commerce or domestic trade of the United States or in the fisheries of the United States; or
replacement cargo handling equipment, additional cargo handling equipment, or reconstructed cargo handling equipment for operation at marine terminals in the United States.
by striking subsection (b), and inserting the following:
in section 53504(b), by inserting after ;
(a) Maximum deposits
The amount deposited in a capital construction fund for a taxable year may not exceed the amount specified in the agreement under section 53503(a), which shall be an amount that is related to a commitment to invest the revenue from the capital construction fund into funding the construction of new vessels or funding cargo handling equipment.
(b) Revenue
For the purposes of subsection (a), the revenue from the capital construction fund may include—
income attributable to the operation of the agreement vessel in foreign commerce or domestic trade or fisheries or the operation of a marine terminal in the United States;
the amount allowable as a deduction under of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 for the taxable year with respect to the agreement vessels or cargo handling equipment; section 167
the net proceeds from the disposition of an agreement vessel or cargo handling equipment or insurance or indemnity attributable to the vessel or cargo handling equipment; and
the receipts from the investment or reinvestment of amounts held in the fund.
(c) Reductions for lessees
For a lessee, the maximum amount that may be deposited for an agreement vessel under subsection (a) for any period shall be reduced by any amount the owner is required or permitted, under the capital construction fund agreement, to deposit for that period for the vessel under subsection (a).
by striking section 53505 and inserting the following:
in section 53506—
in subsection (a), by striking ; and
in subsection (b), by striking With the approval of the Secretary, an agreed percentage (but not more than 60 percent) of the assets of the fundand inserting An agreed percentage of the assets of the fund;
in section 53509—
(a) In general
Subject to subsections (b) and (c), a withdrawal from a capital construction fund is a qualified withdrawal if it is made under the terms of the agreement and is for—
the acquisition, construction, repowering, or reconstruction of—
a qualified vessel or a barge or container that is part of the complement of a qualified vessel; or
cargo handling equipment; or
the payment of the principal on indebtedness incurred in the acquisition, construction, repowering, or reconstruction of—
a qualified vessel or a barge or container that is part of the complement of a qualified vessel; or
cargo handling equipment.
by striking subsection (a), and inserting the following:
by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (e); and
(c) Restriction
No withdrawals may be made from a capital construction fund to purchase fully automated cargo handling equipment that is remotely operated or remotely monitored with or without the exercise of human intervention or control, if the Secretary determines such equipment would result in a net loss of jobs within a marine terminal.
(d) Prohibition on certain cranes
No withdrawals may be made from a capital construction fund to purchase cranes manufactured in the People’s Republic of China or by foreign entities of concern (as defined in section 4 of the ).
by inserting after subsection (b) the following:
in section 53510—
in subsection (b), by inserting after both places the term appears;
in subsection (c), by inserting after both places the term appears; and
in subsection (d), by inserting after ;
in section 53511(e)(1), by striking the table contained therein and inserting the following:
and
in section 53512(b)(1), by adding after . cargo handling equipment,advanced
(b) Cargo handling equipment availability
The Secretary shall annually publish in the Federal Register a request for information regarding the availability of cargo handling equipment manufactured in the United States and shall share the results of such request for information with capital construction fund holders.
(e) Participation
The Administrator may not require any owner, agent, or operator of a commercial vessel of the United States to participate in the survey unless that owner, agency, or operator is participating in a financial assistance program established under part C of this subtitle.
(f) Release of findings
(1) Distribution
Each year, the Maritime Administrator may release the findings of the survey with shipyards in the United States and other maritime industrial base stakeholders the results of the survey conducted under this section for such year in such a manner as the Administrator determines appropriate.
(2) Proprietary information
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, including section 552 of title 5, United States Code, at the request of a survey participant, the Maritime Administrator shall withhold proprietary information provided as a part of a survey conducted under this section.
(3) Coordination
To the maximum extent practicable, the Maritime Administrator shall seek to conduct the annual surveys under this section and publish the results of such surveys on a similar timeline as the timeline for the annual naval vessel construction plans under section 231(a)(1) of title 10 and other shipbuilding construction surveys published by other Federal agencies.
(b) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by inserting after the item relating to the following: chapter 501; section 50114
Anticipated commercial vessel construction survey.
An identification of the barriers preventing or making prohibitive the use of small modular reactors in naval or commercial, oceangoing maritime vessels, including—
(i) ambiguity in regulations governing nuclear propulsion restricting the commercial maritime industry from utilizing nuclear propulsion or collaborating between United States and foreign entities under export controls requirements, including section 744.5 of title 15, Code of Federal Regulations (or a similar successor regulation); and
(ii) a lack of clarity in the meaning of contained in the Export Administration Regulations and contained in the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (Cat VI). maritime (civil) nuclear propulsion plant projects,Naval Nuclear Propulsion
An evaluation of education and technology development best practices used by commercial shipyards in foreign allied countries, and an identification of education and technology development opportunities, that could improve the efficiency of shipbuilding and repair by the Navy and Coast Guard.
An evaluation of whether adoption of the best practices evaluated under subparagraph (A) for the construction and repair of naval vessels and cutters would support the domestic commercial maritime shipbuilding industry, the commercial maritime industrial base, and the merchant marine of the United States.
(b) Briefing
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall provide to the congressional defense committees a briefing on—
the results of the assessment required by subsection (a); and
a plan to execute any measures pursuant to such assessment.
(c) Strategy Required
Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, and biennially thereafter, the Secretary of the Navy and Secretary of the Department in which the Coast Guard is operating shall—
provide to the appropriate committees of Congress strategies describing how measures identified as a result of the assessment required by subsection (a) will be incorporated into shipbuilding programs for the Navy and Coast Guard; and
publish a public version of the strategies.
(d) Congressional defense committees defined
In this section, the term congressional defense committees has the meaning given that term in section 101(a) of title 10, United States Code.
Coordinate with other research and development programs and centers focused on modes of transportation besides maritime to develop intermodal interoperability with the maritime industry.
Develop a standard design for commercial vessels and components and features of commercial vessels to be manufactured in the United States, using mature, proven designs, which—
(i) includes, to the maximum extent practicable, included parts, components, and material manufactured in and sourced from the United States;
(ii) does not include any parts, components, or materials manufactured by foreign entities of concern or which are produced in foreign countries of concern (as such terms are defined in section 4 of the ); and
(iii) includes priorities for design identified in consultation with the Secretary of the Navy, as necessary for strategic sealift, informed by requirements to sustain a wartime economy and military operations.
Lead engagement with industry, academia, labor organizations, and other nongovernmental entities to develop—
(i) innovative, commercial, and dual-use manufacturing technologies and processes to construct, rehabilitate, or repair maritime vessels of the Armed Forces or the merchant marine of the United States;
(ii) additional naval architecture programs at institutions of higher education in the United States and to expand existing naval architecture programs;
(iii) next-generation propulsion technologies for the merchant marine of the United States, to include small modular reactors, low-emission or carbon capture propulsion technologies, and other renewable energy solutions;
(iv) new and innovative hardware, software, and systems for remote or autonomous operations at ports, intermodal facilities, or aboard oceangoing vessels;
(v) technology and infrastructure solutions that enhance the safe operation of oceangoing vessels to protect lives, property, and the environment;
(vi) solutions to recruit, train, and retain a skilled workforce capable of supporting a vibrant and growing United States maritime industry; and
(vii) the capacity of international allies and partners of the United States, with respect to manufacturing technologies and processes, to construct, rehabilitate, or repair maritime vessels.
Work with academic and private sector response training centers and Centers of Excellence for Domestic Maritime Workforce Training and Education to develop maritime strategies and workforce development plans applicable to various segments of the United States maritime industry, including the inland, deep water, and coastal fleets.
Establish programs and initiatives to share—
(i) shipbuilding best practices and maritime technology between vessels of the Department of Defense and commercial vessels of the United States; and
(ii) port technology and logistics best practices between the Department of Defense and commercial port operators and port authorities within the United States.
Carry out such other activities as the Maritime Security Board determines appropriate.
(6) Establishment of maritime incubators
(A) Establishment
The Center shall, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board, seek out, identify, and support the development of and experimentation with commercial technologies that have the potential to be implemented within the maritime industry, through the establishment of a series of maritime incubators.
(B) Reflection
Each incubator shall reflect the unique nature of the region’s capabilities and academic and investor base.
(C) Selection
Incubators shall be—
(i) selected through a competitive process of eligible entities, and if a private entity, a domestic entity;
(ii) based in the United States with technical expertise in emerging marine technologies and practices related to the maritime transportation system; and
(iii) topic-specific, according to regional maritime expertise in United States emerging maritime technologies and practices, to include designated incubators focused on—
clean energy, carbon capture, and alternative fuels;
ports and shoreside infrastructure;
vessel design and naval architecture;
shipbuilding and next generation manufacturing;
advanced materials for ship construction; and
other areas for maritime innovation and technology, as determined by the Center in coordination with the Maritime Security Board.
(D) Incubator Responsibilities
Each maritime incubator shall—
(i) serve as the principal liaison between the Center and individuals and entities that can contribute to innovation within the maritime industry, including other maritime incubators under this subsection, entrepreneurs, startups, commercial technology companies, and venture capital sources; and
(ii) establish and support multi-stakeholder research and innovation partnerships, as described in subparagraph (G).
(E) Report
Each incubator shall submit quarterly activity and status reports to the Center.
(F) Review and termination
(i) The Maritime Administrator may, in consultation with the Maritime Security Board, terminate an agreement with an eligible entity selected to lead a maritime incubator if the Administrator certifies that the eligible entity is failing to meet the requirements of this section.
(ii) If the Administrator terminates an agreement with an eligible entity to lead a maritime incubator, the Center shall initiate a new selection process as required under subparagraph (C) to select a new eligible entity.
(iii) Not later than 5 years after the establishment of maritime incubators under this paragraph, and every 5 years thereafter, the Administrator, in coordination with the Maritime Security Board, shall conduct a review of all eligible entities selected to lead a maritime incubator and confirm the entity is adequately fulfilling the requirements of this section.
(G) Multi-stakeholder partnerships
(i) The maritime incubators established under this subsection shall establish and support multi-stakeholder research and innovation partnerships that—
have the potential to generate technologies, processes, products, or other solutions that support the United States maritime industry;
have as an objective the technology transfer or commercialization of the work product generated by the partnership, which may include work product that incorporates intellectual property developed by the Federal Government and licensed to the partnership in accordance with clause (iii); and
incentivize and expand geographically diverse participation in graduate and undergraduate institutions of higher education, community college, and other workforce programs relevant to the maritime industry.
(ii) Support provided by the maritime incubator to a multi-stakeholder research and innovation partnership under this subsection may include—
providing funding or other resources to the partnership;
participating in the partnership;
providing technical and technological advice and guidance to the partnership;
suggesting and introducing other participants for inclusion in the partnership;
providing the partnership with insight into desired solutions for defense and security needs;
providing access to Ready Reserve ships for testing new technologies and conducting research, as the maritime incubator determines appropriate, in coordination with the Center and the Administrator; and
such other forms of support as the Center, in consultation with maritime incubators and Maritime Security Board, determines appropriate.
(iii) To the extent the Center determines appropriate, the Center, in coordination with the maritime incubators, shall seek to actively inform potential participants in multi-stakeholder research and innovation partnerships of the availability of intellectual property developed by the Federal Government that may be licensed to the partnership.
(7) Report
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of the , and annually thereafter, the Center shall submit to the Maritime Security Board and the appropriate congressional committees a report on the activities, advances, outcomes, and work product of the maritime incubators and the multi-stakeholder research and innovation partnerships supported under this subsection.
(8) Authorization of appropriations
In addition to the funding contributed under subsection (a)(4), there is authorized to be appropriated, out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title, $50,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035.
(9) Definitions
In this subsection:
(A) Multi-stakeholder research and innovation partnership
The term multi-stakeholder research and innovation partnership means a partnership composed of any combination of 2 or more of the following:
(i) Institutions of higher education (as defined in section 102 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 ()) with research and innovation capability. 20 U.S.C. 1002
(ii) Nonprofit organizations that provide policy, research, outreach, operations, organizational, management, testing, evaluation, technology transfer, legal, financial, or advocacy expertise.
(iii) For-profit commercial enterprises that may be publicly or privately owned, early stage or mature, and incorporated or operating by another ownership structure.
(iv) Centers of excellence for domestic maritime workforce training and education (established under section 51706).
(v) Maritime labor organizations.
(vi) Departments or agencies of the Federal Government with expertise, operations, or resources related to the objectives of the multi-stakeholder research and innovation partnership.
(vii) State maritime academies (as defined in section 51102(4)).
(viii) The United States Merchant Marine Academy.
(ix) National research laboratories with expertise, operations, or resources related to the objectives of the partnership.
(x) Operators and users of vessels of the University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System.
(B) Nontraditional capability
The term nontraditional capability means a solution to an operational challenge that can significantly leverage commercial innovation or external capital with minimal dependencies on fielded systems.
(C) Maritime industry
The term includes— maritime industry
(i) shipbuilders and ship repair facilities;
(ii) ship owners;
(iii) port operators;
(iv) personnel of the merchant marine of the United States;
(v) manufacturers of equipment, software, and technology instrumental to the facilitation of maritime trade and commerce; and
(vi) other members of the industrial base that support the Navy or the merchant marine of the United States.
by striking paragraphs (2), (3), and (4), and inserting the following:
(b) Transition
A Center for Maritime Innovation established by the Secretary of Transportation through a cooperative agreement pursuant to section 50307 of title 46, United States Code, as of the day before the date of enactment of this Act shall—
be deemed to be the United States Center for Maritime Innovation under section 50307 of title 46, United States Code, as of the date of enactment of this Act, with all the authorities granted by such section; and
coordinate activities of the Center with the Maritime Security Board pursuant to subsection (e)(4) of such section, as amended by this Act.
(e) Authorization of Appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund, established under section 50301(b) of this title, to carry out this section, $500,000 for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035.
(b) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, as amended by section 602, is further amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 521
Reimbursement of qualifying spouse relicensing costs and business costs.
(2) Members who work ashore who hold mariner qualifications
(A) Opportunities
The United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program shall provide individuals who hold Coast Guard issued mariner qualifications who work ashore with an opportunity to maintain, or potentially upgrade, their mariner qualifications and credentials by—
(i) providing qualified service at sea on vessels of the United States; and
(ii) participating in compulsory training.
(B) Structure
The United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program shall be open for enrollment to both licensed and unlicensed mariners and provide members with an 8–3–1 schedule as follows:
(i) 8 months shoreside employment.
(ii) 3 months sailing employment designed to ensure that members meet the minimum sea-time requirement to maintain the credentials required by the Standards of Training, Certification, and Watchkeeping certification, or, depending on mariner and employer requirements, more frequent, but shorter-duration sailing assignments.
(iii) 1 month vacation, which is in addition to vacation provided by the shoreside employer.
(C) Ashore employers
(i) The employer of a member of the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program described under this paragraph shall grant the member—
an unpaid leave of absence for the duration of the member’s training, sailing, and vacation with the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program; and
the same or an equivalent position with the employer when the member returns from training, sailing, or vacation with the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program.
(D) Sea day assignments
The United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program shall, with respect to members described under this paragraph—
(i) maintain records of each member’s qualifications, sea time, and availability, and prioritize assignments on these and other factors with the goal of maximizing the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program readiness to support strategic sealift;
(ii) maintain a program office that coordinates how jobs become available for members from State maritime academies, vessel operating companies, maritime labor organizations, United States Military Sealift Command, and other organizations responsible for crewing vessels of the United States of qualifying tonnage or horsepower; job call
(iii) establish partnerships with State maritime academies and the United States Military Sealift Command that aim to establish reliable crewing jobs with job cycles that maximize the readiness of United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program;
(iv) dispatch members to fill available jobs, prioritizing maximizing readiness for strategic sealift, taking into consideration mariner availability and credentials, sea time requirements to maintain merchant mariner credentials, predicted program demand for specific ratings, and expected expansion or contraction of the program’s membership; and
(v) coordinate with vessel operators and labor organizations to ensure that members in the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program are given opportunities to fulfill their sea time and maintain the credentials required by the Standards of Training, Certification, and, Watchkeeping certification.
(E) USERRA protections
Members of the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program described under this paragraph shall be entitled to protections and obligations under of title 38 (commonly known as the ). Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act chapter 43
(F) Requirement
A member in the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program described under this paragraph may not fail to accept a sea day assignment and remain in good standing with the Program, unless a hardship exemption is provided by the Maritime Administrator under subsection (e).
(3) Members serving on foreign vessels
(A) In general
The United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program shall be open for enrollment to individuals who—
(i) hold Coast Guard issued merchant mariner credentials required by the Standards of Training, Certification, and Watchkeeping Certification;
(ii) have completed their service obligations with respect to any previous enrollment in a Federal or State maritime academy, if applicable; and
(iii) are serving on a foreign vessel (as defined in section 110) that is not owned by a foreign entity of concern (as that term is defined in section 4 of the ) or a vessel registered under a registry of a foreign country of concern or operated under the authority of a foreign country of concern (as that term is defined in such section 4).
(B) Requirement
Members of the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program described under this paragraph shall maintain—
(i) Standards of Training, Certification, and Watchkeeping Certification currency;
(ii) a valid merchant mariner credential, unlimited as to horsepower or tonnage, issued by the United States Coast Guard as an officer in the merchant marine of the United States, accompanied by the appropriate national and international endorsements and certifications required by the Coast Guard for service aboard vessels on domestic and international voyages, without limitation;
(iii) a valid transportation worker identification credential;
(iv) a Coast Guard medical certificate; and
(v) classes and certifications described in subparagraph (C).
(C) Certifications
The Administrator shall publish a list of classes and certifications required for individuals described in subparagraph (A) to be eligible for the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program.
(D) Rule of construction
Nothing in subparagraph (A) shall be construed to allow the United States Coast Guard to prevent or delay a merchant mariner who is otherwise eligible from attaining a more advanced rank or credential for Merchant Mariners sailing on foreign vessels.
(E) USERRA protections
Members of the United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program described under this paragraph shall be entitled to protections and obligations under of title 38 (commonly known as the ). Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act chapter 43
(d) Enforcement
The Maritime Administrator shall ensure all members of the Merchant Marine Career Retention Program remain in good standing with the requirements of the Program.
(1) Enforcement
Subject to paragraph (2), members found to be in noncompliance with the requirements of the Program shall—
have their reservist status terminated; and
forfeit the protections provided under of title 38 (commonly known as the ). Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act chapter 43
(2) Exception
In cases where the Maritime Administrator determines a hardship exists, which prevents the mariner from meeting the requirements of the Program, the requirements of paragraph (1) shall not apply.
(e) Authorization of appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title, to carry out this section, $2,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2025 through 2034.
(c) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, as amended by sections 602, 604, and 605, is amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 521
United States Merchant Marine Career Retention Program.
Maritime industry, including representatives from—
(i) shipbuilding, ship repair, and shipyard industry stakeholders;
(ii) maritime industrial base coalitions;
(iii) shipping industry stakeholders; and
(iv) owners and operators of vessels of the United States.
Technical nonprofit organizations with expertise in the maritime industry, including representatives from—
(i) think tanks;
(ii) recognized classification societies; and
(iii) professional societies.
The Federal Government, including representatives from—
(i) the Department of Education;
(ii) the Department of Labor;
(iii) the Department of Transportation;
(iv) the Department of the Navy;
(v) the United States Coast Guard;
(vi) the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration;
(vii) the Army Corps of Engineers; and
(viii) the Federal Maritime Commission.
Any other representatives that the Maritime Administrator determines appropriate to appoint.
(d) Meetings
(1) In general
The Advisory Committee shall meet not less often than annually.
(2) Quorum established
Two thirds of all members appointed by the Administrator under subsection (c) shall constitute a quorum for a meeting of the Advisory Committee.
(3) Working groups
The Advisory Committee shall include working groups that shall meet not less often than quarterly each year.
(e) FACA
of title 5, United States Code, shall apply to the Advisory Committee. Chapter 10
(f) Development of curricula
Consistent with the purposes of the Advisory Committee established in subsection (b) and applicable law (including regulations), the Advisory Committee shall recommend curricula for key skills for maritime professionals and make such curricula publicly available to institutions of higher education, career and technical education schools, and State maritime academies.
Development of curricula
(g) Reporting
The Advisory Committee shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress and the Maritime Security Board and publish on the website of the Maritime Administration, an annual report that includes best practices and policy recommendations, as described in subsection (b).
(h) Rule of construction
Nothing in this section shall be construed to create new regulatory authority or supersede existing law (including regulations) as of the day before the date of enactment of this Act, relating to shipbuilding education and training programs, naval architecture education programs, and merchant marine training and certification programs.
The Maritime Administrator, and any authorized agent of the Maritime Administrator, may not have access to confidential medical information pursuant to paragraph (1).
(e) Authorization of appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund, established under section 50301(b) of title 46, United States Code, to carry out this section, $1,000,000 for each of the fiscal years 2026 through 2030.
(c) Campus Modernization Plan
of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: Chapter 513
(a) In general
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this section, the Secretary shall develop and begin to implement a comprehensive Campus Modernization Plan (referred to in this section as the ), informed by the developed by the Maritime Security Infrastructure Council as summarized in the Congressional Record, dated February 28, 2024, to carry out a campus-wide modernization at the United States Merchant Marine Academy. United States Merchant Marine Academy Full Speed Ahead Plan
(b) Objectives
In carrying out the Campus Modernization Plan authorized under subsection (a), the Administrator shall prioritize the following objectives:
Promoting modern education best practices by constructing learning facilities that leverage state-of-the art technologies and learning best practices.
Providing Midshipmen with access to facilities needed to pass the United States Coast Guard License Exam for Third Mate or Third Assistant Engineer Unlimited.
Ensuring Midshipmen have access to facilities sufficient to enable Midshipmen to maintain physical readiness standards required of United States Navy officers.
Developing campus infrastructure to ensure the Academy attracts a diverse pool of applicants.
Providing facilities that enable industry engagement and continuing education opportunities.
Maintaining a safe and secure campus environment for all Midshipmen, which shall include any facilities or infrastructure needed to meet the requirements of sections 51326, 51327, or 51328 of this title.
Implementing, to the extent practicable, the facilities and infrastructure recommendations in chapter 4 of the report titled issued by the National Academy of Public Administration in November 2021. Organizational Assessment of the United States Merchant Marine Academy: A Path Forward
(c) Inclusions
In meeting the objectives of subsection (b), the Campus Modernization Plan authorized under subsection (a) shall include—
construction of new facilities or significant renovation of existing facilities to provide—
Standards of Training, Certification, and Watchkeeping applications laboratories;
a Safety Of Life At Sea training pool;
engineering power plant laboratories;
athletic facilities that meet the needs of both male and female students;
enhanced waterfront facilities, to include a new pier;
a visitor welcome center and main campus security office building;
housing facilities for senior staff and faculty; and
sufficient parking facilities for faculty, staff, and campus visitors;
upgrades to all classrooms and laboratories with modern information technology infrastructure;
a campus-wide upgrade and retrofit of—
the electric distribution power grid;
the sanitary sewer system piping;
the storm drainage system; and
the drinking water system, including development of a separate and redundant fire suppression system; and
renovations of existing campus facilities to ensure all campus facilities—
are structurally sound;
have reliable heating and air conditioning systems;
have functioning plumbing and electrical systems;
are protected from the elements, including through roof replacements and window repairs or replacements, as needed;
are accessible in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990; and
have working fire alarm and fire suppression systems.
(d) Requirements
For the duration of the Campus Modernization Plan authorized under subsection (a), the Administrator shall ensure that the Academy remains fully operational.
(e) Use of a Federal construction agent
Consistent with the requirements of section 3515(d)(3) of the James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (), the Administrator shall seek to enter into an agreement with a Federal construction agent to carry out the Campus Modernization Plan authorized under subsection (a). Public Law 117–263
(f) Authorization of appropriations
There are authorized to be appropriated to the Department of Transportation, out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund established under section 50301(b) of this title, for fiscal years 2026 through 2035, for the phased rehabilitation, modernization, and construction of facilities and infrastructure at the United States Merchant Marine Academy, in accordance with this section, including the Campus Modernization Plan authorized in subsection (a), $1,020,000,000 of which—
$54,000,000 is authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2026 for design and planning purposes, which shall be used for the development of a design-build plan for the phased rehabilitation, modernization, and construction of facilities and infrastructure at the United States Merchant Marine Academy in accordance with the Campus Modernization Plan; and
for fiscal years 2027 through 2035, $107,333,333 is authorized to be appropriated for each year for construction and contingency purchases necessary to execute the Campus Modernization Plan.
(d) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 513
Fuel funding for training ships operated by State maritime academies.
serve in a position that supports the foreign and domestic commerce and the national defense of the United States for at least 1 year after graduation from the academy—
as a merchant marine officer on a documented vessel or a vessel owned and operated by the United States Government or by a State; or
as a commissioned officer on active duty in an Armed Force of the United States, as a commissioned officer in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or in other maritime-related Federal employment which serves the national security interests of the United States, as determined by the Maritime Administrator; and
report to the Maritime Administrator on compliance with this subsection.
(g) Authorization of appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund, established under section 50301(b) of this title, $2,500,000 to carry out this section for each of fiscal years 2026 through 2035.
(b) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, as amended by section 627, is further amended by adding at the end the following: chapter 515
State Maritime Academy Sea Term Scholarship Programs.
(b) Report
The Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating shall submit—
an annual report to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, the Committee on Appropriations, and the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate, and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, the Committee on Appropriations, and the Committee on Armed Services of the House of Representatives, on the progress of the system and process changes required under subsection (a); and
a final report to those Committees 1 year after full operating capability of the complete system, comprised of all 4 systems required under subsection (a).
(c) Authorization of appropriations
There is authorized to be appropriated out of the Maritime Security Trust Fund, established under section 50301(b) of title 46, United States Code, to carry out this section, $20,000,000 for fiscal year 2026, to remain available until expended.
Graduation from a nautical school program approved by the Secretary may be substituted for the service requirements under sections 7307 through 7311a and 7314.
by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
in subsection (b)—
(i) by striking one-thirdand inserting one-half; and
(ii) by striking 7307–7311 of this titleand inserting 7307–7311a and 7314; and
by striking subsection (c).
(d) Reduction of lengths of certain periods of service
(1) In general
Title 46, United States Code, is amended—
in section 7307, by striking 3 yearsand inserting 18 months;
in section 7308, by striking 18 monthsand inserting 12 months; and
in section 7309, by striking 12 monthsand inserting 6 months.
(2) Temporary reduction of lengths of certain periods of service
Section 3534(j) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 () is repealed. Public Law 118–31
(e) Merchant mariner credentials
Section 7510 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking subsection (d).
(f) Implementation
The Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating shall implement the amended requirements under subsections (c)(3), (c)(4), and (d)(1) of this section without regard to chapters 5 and 6 of title 5, United States Code, and Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 ( note). 5 U.S.C. 601
by adding at the end the following:
(2) Clerical amendment
The table of sections for of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking the item relating to section 8103 and inserting the following: chapter 81
Citizenship or noncitizen nationality and Navy Reserve requirements.
(d) Command of documented vessels
Section 12131(a) of title 46, United States Code, is amended by inserting after .
(e) Invalidation of certificates of documentation
Section 12135(2) of title 46, United States Code, is amended by inserting after .
use equipment, materials, and supplies that are produced in the United States; and
utilize, to the maximum extent practicable, subcontractors and suppliers that are based in the United States;
(vii) consider whether the covered entity commits to repair, repower, and recondition a vessel under this section in a shipyard in the United States; and
(viii) consider whether the covered entity has made commitments to worker and community investment, including through—
programs to expand employment opportunity for economically disadvantaged individuals; or
securing commitments from regional educational and training entities and institutions of higher education, as defined in section 102 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (), to provide workforce training, including programming for training and job placement of economically disadvantaged individuals. 20 U.S.C. 1002