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Tuesday, September 29, 2015
GAO: Jones Act Ships Drive up Cost of US Food Aid
By Michael Hansen @ 7:28 PM :: 6158 Views :: Agriculture, Jones Act

by Michael Hansen, Hawaii Shippers Council, September 28, 2015

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) publically released on Friday, September 25, 2015, a report on U.S. flag ocean shipping for government cargoes entitled “International Food Assistance: Cargo Preference Increases Food Aid Shipping Costs, and Benefits Are Unclear" (GAO-15-666).

This is an important report that reveals how much more expensive is U.S. flag shipping on international trade lanes, and questions the assumption that national security benefits arise from federal laws and policies requiring federal agencies to use U.S. flag shipping for international shipments.

Key excerpt quote.

What GAO Found

Cargo preference for food aid (CPFA) requirements increased the overall cost of shipping food aid by an average of 23 percent, or $107 million, over what the cost would have been had CPFA requirements not been applied from April 2011 through fiscal year 2014. Moreover, differences in the implementation of CPFA requirements by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) contributed to a higher shipping rate for USDA. Following the July 2012 reduction in the minimum percentage of food aid to be carried on U.S.-flag vessels, USAID was able to substantially increase the proportion of food aid awarded to foreign-flag vessels, which on average have lower rates, helping to reduce its average shipping rate. In contrast, USDA was able to increase the proportion of food aid awarded to foreign-flag vessels by only a relatively small amount because it is compelled by a court order to meet the minimum percentage of food aid carried on U.S.-flag vessels by individual country, a more narrow interpretation of the geographic area requirement than what USAID applies. Despite GAO's past recommendations, U.S. agencies have not fully updated guidance or agreed on a consistent method for agencies to implement CPFA, which would allow USDA to administer CPFA using a method other than country-by-country.

  *   *   *   *   *

The American Shipper Magazine in a news article “GAO report details cost of food aid shipping requirements” posted on September 28, 2015, reported on the transportation costs and benefits of the preference cargo legislation disclosed in a new Government Accounting Office (GAO) report released Friday, September 25, 2015.

The GAO report is entitled “International Food Assistance: Cargo Preference Increases Food Aid Shipping Costs, and Benefits Are Unclear” (GAO-15-666), which is indicative of the reports results.

Federal preference cargo legislation requires that certain “government impelled cargoes” must be exported or imported on U.S. flag ships. Government impelled cargoes include: (1) military cargo (Military Cargo Preference Act of 1904); (2) civilian cargoes (Public Resolution 17 of 1934) which currently covers Food for Peace (P.L. 480) cargo, Export Import Bank financed cargo, and materials and equipment acquired with funds from Title XI Federal Ship Financing Program; and, (3) the personal effects of federal government employees moving on government business (Cargo Preference Act of 1954).

The Merchant Marine Act of 1970 (P.L. 91-469) authorized the U.S. Maritime Administration (MARAD) to issue regulations governing cargo preference shipments by the other agencies.

Preference cargoes are important in support of, and integral to, the U.S. Flag international trade fleet which is comprised of foreign-built, U.S. flag ships, which are not Jones Act qualified and not eligible for domestic coastwise trading. The U.S. flag international trade fleet of self-propelled ships over 1,000 gross tons stood at 79 ships as of June 30, 2015.

These U.S. flag international trade ships are manned with a full U.S. crew (all officers and 75% of unlicensed crew must be U.S. citizens and the balance of the unlicensed crew may be resident aliens, also known as green card holders). These ships are more expensive to operate than their international competition which are largely operating flag of convenience (FOC).

As of December 31, 2014, sixty (60) of the U.S. flag international trade ships were enrolled in the Maritime Security Program (MSP) and receiving an operating subsidy of $3 million per annum. MSP is administered by MARAD.

The GAO report was requested by U.S. Senator Bob Corker, Chairman, Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate, and U.S Representative Edward Royce, Chairman, Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives. As chairmen of the committees of jurisdiction, they made the request on behalf of the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). The USAID provides a majority of the food aid under the Food for Peace Program (P.L. 480), and a smaller proportion is provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).

Sen Corker, Rep Royce. the State Department, USAID and the international aid community are collectively seeking the ability to use more foreign flag shipping for the Food for Peace cargoes to save on freight expense and make the government’s aid dollars go further in actually providing food.

MARAD and the Jones Act / U.S. flag maritime industry are seeking more stringent requirements to use U.S. flag shipping for preference cargoes. The U.S. shipping interests claim that it is necessary to maximize preference requirements to support the U.S. flag international trade fleet and maintain that sealift capacity for national security purposes.

As the number of ships in Jones Act and U.S. flag international trade fleets continues to decline, MARAD and the U.S. maritime industry is aggressively seeking to maintain (and hopefully increasing) government support for their fleets. Over the past year, the number of ships in the two fleets has fallen by 15 (92 Jones Act and 89 U.S. flag International Trade at December 31, 2015 to 87 and 79 respectively at June 30, 2015).

The GAO recommends that the Congress pass new cargo preference legislation to more clearly establish when a U.S. flag ship must be used and conversely when a foreign flag ship can be used.

The GAO found that over the period from April 2011 through June 2014, the USAID and USDA’s cost of shipping U.S. flag was 23% greater than would have been by foreign flag. The GAO was also unable to substantiate whether or not the Food for Peace program preference contributes to sealift capacity for the purposes of national security.

This GAO finding is important for the noncontiguous jurisdictions – Alaska, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI), Guam, Hawaii and Puerto Rico – which are completely reliant on Jones Act shipping for interstate surface transportation.

We now know that Imposition of U.S. flag shipping on international trade lanes increases freight costs by 23%. The U.S. flag international trade cost does not include the Jones Act cabotage domestic ship build requirement, which is substantially greater in magnitude. As the cost of a U.S. newbuilding is four to five times that of constructing a comparable ship in Japan and South Korea, presumably the Jones Act build provision adds considerably more to the cost of domestic shipping.

Key excerpts:

The U.S. Government Accountability Office said in a report issued Friday CPFA requirements have increased the overall cost of shipping food aid by an average of 23 percent from April 2011 through fiscal year 2014.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) said in a report issued Friday that cargo preference for food aid (CPFA) requirements increased the overall cost of shipping food aid by an average of 23 percent between April 2011 through fiscal year 2014, or $107 million over what the cost would have been had had cargo preference for food aid requirements not been in place.

"Cargo preference laws require that a percentage of U.S. government cargo, including international food aid, be transported on U.S.-flag vessels according to geographic area of destination and vessel type. One intention is to ensure a merchant marine — both vessels and mariners — capable of providing sealift capacity in times of war or national emergency, including a full, prolonged activation of the reserve fleet," GAO said. But it added "the contribution of such requirements to sealift capacity is uncertain."

The GAO report noted that different food aid requirements for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) contributed to a higher shipping rate for USDA.

In July 2012, the minimum percentage of food aid to be carried on U.S.-flag vessels was reduced for USAID so that the agency was “able to substantially increase the proportion of food aid awarded to foreign-flag vessels, which on average have lower rates, helping to reduce its average shipping rate,” noted GAO.

USAID paid $281.5 million in shipping costs, $44.9 million or 16 percent more than the estimated $236.6 cost of shipping without preference requirements between April 2011 and the end of Fiscal Year 2014.

In contrast, USDA paid $174.8 million - $62.2 million or 36 percent more than the than the $112.6 cost of shipping without preference requirements between April 2011 and the end of Fiscal Year 2014

Requirements for the amount of food aid that must move on U.S.-flag ships "has varied over the years, and was reduced from 75 to 50 percent in 2012," said GAO.

The agency recommended that since cargo preference serves statutory policy goals, Congress should consider clarifying cargo preference for food aid legislation "to define 'geographic area' in a manner that ensures agencies can fully utilize the flexibility Congress granted to them when it lowered the CPFA requirement."

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