HR-8583-119
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Sponsored by Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-IA)
What it does
This bill would prohibit the federal government from imposing tariffs on phosphate fertilizers (HTS headings 3103 and 3105) imported from Morocco under Section 122 or Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974. It would also nullify the countervailing duty orders issued in April 2021 against Moroccan phosphate fertilizers, direct the Commerce Department to stop collecting those duties, and require U.S. Customs and Border Protection to refund cash deposits already paid by importers within 90 days of enactment.
Who benefits
American farmers and agricultural producers who use phosphate fertilizers as a key crop input, particularly large-scale row crop farmers growing corn, soybeans, and wheat who face high input costs. Fertilizer importers and distributors who source from Morocco and would receive refunds on previously paid cash deposits. Downstream food processors and consumers who could see modest price relief if lower input costs reduce commodity prices. The Moroccan phosphate industry (primarily the state-owned OCP Group), which would regain tariff-free access to the U.S. market. U.S.-Morocco trade relations broadly.
Who is hurt
U.S. domestic phosphate fertilizer producers — primarily Mosaic Company, the largest U.S. producer — who originally petitioned for the 2021 countervailing duty orders and would lose the competitive protection those duties provided. Workers at domestic phosphate mining and processing facilities, concentrated in Florida and Idaho, who may face increased competitive pressure. The U.S. International Trade Commission and Commerce Department, whose trade remedy determinations would be legislatively overridden. Domestic producers who paid into the trade remedy process and relied on its outcome.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that phosphate fertilizer is a critical agricultural input with no domestic substitute at sufficient scale, and that the 2021 countervailing duty orders have driven up fertilizer costs for American farmers at a time of already elevated input prices. They contend that Morocco's OCP Group controls roughly 70% of the world's known phosphate reserves, making access to Moroccan supply essential to U.S. food security, and that the duties effectively function as a tax on American agriculture rather than a meaningful protection of domestic production capacity.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the 2021 countervailing duty orders were the result of a rigorous, evidence-based legal process that found Morocco's state-owned OCP Group received unfair government subsidies, and that legislatively nullifying those findings sets a dangerous precedent of Congress overriding independent trade remedy determinations. They contend that removing these duties exposes U.S. phosphate producers to below-cost foreign competition, threatening domestic production capacity that is strategically important for national food security — and that refunding already-collected deposits retroactively undermines the integrity of the trade enforcement system.