Earlier this week, Rep Rouzer (R,NC) introduced HR 2390, the Maritime Supply Chain Security Act. The bill would allow the use of grant funds under Port infrastructure development program (46 USC 54301) to be used to replace upgrade or replace Chinese port cranes. No new funding is provided in this legislation.
Moving Forward
Rouzer is a member of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee to which this bill was assigned for consideration. This means that there may be sufficient influence to see the bill considered in Committee. I see nothing in the bill that would engender any significant opposition. In fact, keeping with the anti-Chinese sentiment of the current leadership, I would not be surprised to see this bill considered early in Committee or even possibly moved directly to the floor of the House under the suspension of the rules process.
Commentary
The cost of replacing Chinese made cranes in US ports would
be very high and would be a long lead time proposition, probably relying on
South Korean or Japanese technology. While replacing the software would seem to
take fewer resources and would seem to remove the threat of Chinese lockouts or
information theft (though that seems like a relatively minor issue to me), that
process would be fraught with problems. If Chinese programmers have followed
the lead of their western counterparts, trying to replace the software would
likely brick large portions of the control equipment, making the cranes
essentially industrial sculptures, testimony to the post-industrial decline of
the United States.
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