To authorize appropriations for the Federal Maritime Commission for fiscal years 2026 through 2029, and for other purposes.
Summary
What This Bill Does
The Federal Maritime Commission Reauthorization Act of 2025 authorizes $49.2 million for the Federal Maritime Commission for fiscal year 2026 and $49.2 million for fiscal year 2027. It updates title 46 purposes so the ocean-shipping statutes focus on common carriage of goods by water in foreign commerce and on supporting, rather than promoting, U.S. exports. It broadens the controlled-carrier concept to include ocean carriers tied to corporations based in, headquartered in, or significantly linked to nonmarket economies or countries identified through U.S. Trade Representative priority-watch or monitoring processes.
The bill creates a process for people to submit information to the FMC about alleged shipping-exchange market manipulation or anticompetitive practices. If the Commission believes an incident occurred, it must investigate and report to the House Transportation and Senate Commerce committees. Shipping exchanges must update their FMC registration if registration information changes. The bill also limits duplicative FMC data collection when similar data is already required by the Army Corps of Engineers, Customs and Border Protection, or Commerce Department import-export monitoring programs.
For investigations, the bill makes FMC-developed information and documents confidential unless a Commission majority votes that disclosure is relevant and necessary. It restructures national advisory committees by establishing a National Port Advisory Committee with marine terminal operators, port authorities, and longshore or maritime labor representatives, and a National Ocean Carrier Advisory Committee with ocean carriers and at least three ocean transportation intermediaries. Those committees advise on competitiveness, reliability, and efficiency of the international ocean freight delivery system. The bill expands annual-report disclosures on trade imbalances and vessel-operating-common-carrier audit findings, and it requires an advance notice within one year and a final rule within three years on data acquisition, use, and protection for containerized ocean freight price indexes maintained by shipping exchanges.
Who Benefits and How
Federal Maritime Commission program offices, U.S. exporters, U.S. importers, shippers using containerized ocean freight, marine terminal operators, port authorities, longshore labor unions, maritime labor unions, ocean carriers, ocean transportation intermediaries, shipping exchange users, House Transportation Committee staff, and Senate Commerce Committee staff benefit from clearer statutory authority, renewed appropriations, complaint pathways, advisory seats, trade-imbalance disclosures, audit disclosures, and freight-index data rules.
Who Bears the Burden and How
The Federal Maritime Commission, FMC enforcement staff, FMC data-collection staff, shipping exchanges, nonmarket-economy-linked ocean carriers, controlled carriers, ocean carriers subject to audit disclosures, marine terminal operators seeking advisory representation, port authorities seeking advisory representation, longshore labor representatives, ocean transportation intermediaries, the Army Corps of Engineers, Customs and Border Protection, and Commerce Department trade-data programs must comply with registration updates, investigations, confidentiality votes, committee administration, duplicative-data limits, annual disclosures, and containerized freight-index rulemaking.
Key Provisions
- Authorizes $49.2 million for the Federal Maritime Commission for fiscal year 2026 and $49.2 million for fiscal year 2027.
- Amends ocean-shipping purposes and controlled-carrier definitions for carriers tied to nonmarket economies or USTR watch-list countries.
- Creates complaint, investigation, and congressional-reporting procedures for shipping-exchange market manipulation or anticompetitive practices.
- Requires shipping exchanges to update FMC registrations when registration information changes.
- Limits duplicative FMC data collection when similar data is already reported to the Army Corps, CBP, or Commerce Department.
- Restricts disclosure of FMC investigation materials unless a Commission majority approves disclosure as relevant and necessary.
- Creates National Port and National Ocean Carrier advisory committees with specified industry and labor representation.
- Requires annual-report trade-imbalance and ocean-carrier audit disclosures.
- Directs FMC rulemaking on data acquisition, use, and protection for containerized ocean freight price indexes.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Reauthorizes the Federal Maritime Commission at $49.2 million for fiscal years 2026 and 2027 while revising ocean-shipping purposes, controlled-carrier definitions, shipping-exchange complaint and registry rules, data-collection limits, investigation confidentiality, advisory committees, annual disclosures, and containerized freight-index rulemaking.
Key Policy Areas
Maritime Transportation, Trade, Agency Oversight, Antitrust
Primary Purpose
Reauthorizes the Federal Maritime Commission at $49.2 million for fiscal years 2026 and 2027 while revising ocean-shipping purposes, controlled-carrier definitions, shipping-exchange complaint and registry rules, data-collection limits, investigation confidentiality, advisory committees, annual disclosures, and containerized freight-index rulemaking.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- Federal Maritime Commission program offices
- U.S. exporters
- U.S. importers
- Shippers using containerized ocean freight
- Marine terminal operators
- Port authorities
- Longshore labor unions
- Maritime labor unions
- Ocean carriers
- Ocean transportation intermediaries
- Shipping exchange users
- House Transportation Committee staff
- Senate Commerce Committee staff
Identified Costs
- Federal Maritime Commission
- FMC enforcement staff
- FMC data-collection staff
- Shipping exchanges
- Nonmarket-economy-linked ocean carriers
- Controlled carriers
- Ocean carriers subject to audit disclosures
- Army Corps of Engineers
- Customs and Border Protection
- Commerce Department trade-data programs
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
Passed HouseReceived; read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, …
Passed House (inferred from eh version)
Reported with an amendment; committed to the Committee of the …
Mr. Johnson of South Dakota (for himself, Mr. Garamendi, Mr. …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Controlled carriers, Marine terminal operators, Marine terminal operators filing federal data reports
Positive-direction: Marine terminal operators, Marine terminal operators filing federal data reports, Marine terminal operators under FMC investigation, Ocean carriers, Ocean carriers filing federal data reports, Ocean carriers subject to section 40706, Ocean carriers under FMC investigation, Ocean transportation intermediaries, Port authorities, Shippers using containerized ocean freight, Shipping exchange users
Negative-direction: Controlled carriers, Nonmarket-economy-linked ocean carriers, Ocean carriers subject to FMC audits, Shipping exchanges
Army Corps of Engineers, Commerce Department trade-data programs, Customs and Border Protection
Positive-direction: FMC program offices, Federal Maritime Commission, Federal Maritime Commission legal staff, House Transportation Committee staff, Senate Commerce Committee staff
Negative-direction: Federal Maritime Commission advisory-committee staff, Federal Maritime Commission commissioners, Federal Maritime Commission data-collection staff, Federal Maritime Commission enforcement staff, Federal Maritime Commission policy staff, Federal Maritime Commission registry staff, Federal Maritime Commission reporting staff, Federal Maritime Commission rulemaking staff
U.S. exporters, U.S. importers, U.S. importers filing federal data reports
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "fmc"
- → Federal Maritime Commission
- "ustr"
- → United States Trade Representative
- "commission"
- → Federal Maritime Commission
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology