HR-3973-119
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and in addition to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
What it does
This bill would make commercial vessels owned by citizens of NATO countries, Ukraine, or other Secretary of State-designated countries eligible for U.S. government war risk insurance when importing or exporting cargo to or from Ukraine, for a period of five years after enactment. It would also establish an "Insurance for Ukraine Initiative" within the State Department to coordinate international insurance efforts, promote Ukraine's economic recovery, and facilitate grain and food commodity shipments. The Secretary of State would be directed to seek a multilateral insurance mechanism at the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and to provide diplomatic support to countries that offer war risk insurance for Ukraine-bound shipping.
Who benefits
Shipping companies (particularly those owned by NATO-country or Ukrainian citizens) that currently cannot obtain affordable private war risk insurance for Ukraine routes. Ukrainian exporters and importers who depend on maritime trade. Global food importers — especially in Middle Eastern and African countries — who rely on Ukrainian grain and commodity shipments. U.S. and European businesses seeking to trade with or invest in Ukraine. Private insurers who may benefit from a government backstop reducing their exposure. Ukraine's broader economy and reconstruction efforts.
Who is hurt
U.S. taxpayers who would bear the financial risk if insured vessels are damaged or destroyed in the conflict zone. Private war risk insurers who may face reduced market share if government-backed insurance undercuts their pricing. Shipping companies from non-NATO, non-designated countries who would remain ineligible. Competing grain-exporting nations (e.g., Russia, Argentina, Australia) whose market position could be weakened if Ukrainian grain exports increase. The State Department, which would absorb new administrative and diplomatic responsibilities without explicit new funding in the bill.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that private war risk insurance for Ukraine-bound shipping has become prohibitively expensive or unavailable since Russia's full-scale invasion, effectively blockading Ukraine's maritime trade even when sea lanes are technically open. They contend that U.S. government war risk insurance — a tool used successfully in World War II and subsequent conflicts — would restore commercial shipping confidence, support Ukraine's economic survival, and help stabilize global food prices that have spiked due to disrupted Ukrainian grain exports, which historically supply roughly 10% of global wheat trade.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending U.S. government war risk insurance to an active war zone exposes American taxpayers to potentially enormous, open-ended financial liability if vessels are sunk or damaged — a risk that private markets have deliberately priced out of reach for good reason. They contend that the bill effectively deepens U.S. entanglement in the Russia-Ukraine conflict by subsidizing commerce in a war zone, and that the Secretary of State's broad discretion to designate additional eligible countries creates an unchecked expansion of the program with minimal congressional oversight.