HR-1850-119
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Sponsored by Jodey Arrington (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would narrow the conditions under which the President can restrict crude oil exports from the United States. Currently, the President can impose export restrictions under three circumstances: a declared national emergency, national security sanctions, or a Commerce Department finding of domestic oil supply shortages or price spikes. This bill would eliminate the standalone Commerce Department finding as a trigger and would require that any national emergency declaration be supported by joint findings from the Departments of Defense, Energy, and Commerce before export restrictions could take effect.
Who benefits
U.S. crude oil producers and exporters who would face fewer potential restrictions on selling oil abroad. Oil-importing nations that purchase U.S. crude, particularly allies in Europe and Asia who rely on American exports for energy security. Shareholders and investors in U.S. oil companies. Domestic refinery operators who export refined products and benefit from stable crude supply chains. Port and shipping industries that handle crude oil exports.
Who is hurt
Domestic consumers and industries that use petroleum products, who could face higher prices if crude oil is freely exported during a domestic supply shortage, since the bill removes a unilateral executive tool to retain supply domestically. The President and the executive branch, who would lose flexibility to respond quickly to domestic energy emergencies without multi-agency consensus. Domestic manufacturers and transportation sectors sensitive to fuel price increases. Low-income households, who spend a higher share of income on energy and would be more exposed to price increases during supply disruptions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current law gives the executive branch overly broad, unilateral authority to restrict energy exports in ways that harm U.S. producers and undermine long-term trade relationships. They contend that requiring joint findings from three cabinet-level departments creates a more rigorous, evidence-based standard that prevents politically motivated export restrictions, and that robust U.S. crude exports strengthen energy security for allied nations while supporting domestic energy jobs and trade balances.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that requiring consensus from three separate federal departments before the President can act would dangerously slow the executive branch's ability to respond to sudden domestic energy supply crises. They contend that the existing Commerce Department finding mechanism exists precisely to protect American consumers and industries from price shocks and shortages, and that removing this flexible tool could leave the government unable to act quickly enough when domestic fuel supplies are threatened by market disruptions or geopolitical events.