The Department of Commerce should balance the Trump administration’s goal of expanding American manufacturing with the administration’s priority of strengthening US energy infrastructure, explains Johanna H. Jochum. Esq., Babst Calland, USA.
On 24 January 2017, US President Donald Trump signed a presidential memorandum on the use of American steel in domestic pipeline projects, which could have far reaching consequences for the global energy market. While not imposing any immediate legal requirements, the Construction of American Pipelines Memorandum (Memorandum) directed the Secretary of the United States Department of Commerce to develop a plan that would require all new, retrofitted, repaired or expanded pipelines in the US to use materials and equipment produced in the US to the “maximum extent possible and to the extent permitted by law.” The Memorandum imposed a six month deadline for the Secretary to submit the plan to the President. To date, the Department of Commerce has not released the plan the public.
Unlike the more discussed ‘Buy American and Hire American’ Executive Order No. 13788 that was issued several months afterwards, the Memorandum was specific in its application to pipelines. The pipeline industry immediately expressed significant concerns with several aspects of the Memorandum to the Administration. On 16 March 2017, the Department of Commerce issued a request for comments on the Memorandum and provided additional clarity to certain critical aspects of the proposal.
In response, the Department of Commerce received more than 90 comments from a variety of stakeholders during the three week comment period: pipeline operators, steel manufacturers, trade organisations and foreign governments. The comments ranged from enthusiastic support to complete dismissal, but nearly all commenters shared some amount of skepticism that such a proposal could be achieved.
Manufacturing capacity
One of the primary concerns identified by industry commenters was manufacturing capacity. …