S-2502-116
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 547.
Sponsored by Rick Scott (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would prohibit federal agencies from buying, operating, or using drones (unmanned aircraft systems, or UAS) made or assembled by certain foreign companies, particularly those connected to China. It would require agencies to take inventory of any foreign-made drones they already own, bar the use of government purchase cards to buy foreign drones, and direct the Office of Management and Budget to create a government-wide drone procurement policy. The Government Accountability Office would also be required to report on how many commercial drones have been purchased from foreign sources.
Who benefits
U.S.-based drone manufacturers and assemblers, who would gain a larger share of federal procurement contracts. Federal agencies and personnel whose communications and data may be at risk from foreign-manufactured hardware. Defense and intelligence communities concerned about supply chain security. Domestic technology and aerospace workers whose jobs may expand due to increased demand for American-made drones.
Who is hurt
Foreign drone manufacturers — particularly Chinese companies such as DJI, which holds a large share of the commercial drone market — would lose access to federal contracts. Federal agencies that currently rely on lower-cost foreign drones may face higher procurement costs or reduced operational capacity during a transition period. Taxpayers could bear increased costs if domestic alternatives are more expensive. Researchers and operators who depend on specific foreign drone models for ongoing programs may face disruption, though limited exceptions exist.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that allowing foreign-manufactured drones — especially those linked to Chinese state influence — to operate within federal agencies creates serious national security and data privacy risks. Drones can collect sensitive imagery, location data, and communications; hardware or software built by entities subject to a foreign government's control could enable surveillance or data exfiltration. Supporters contend that the federal government has a fundamental responsibility to secure its own supply chain, and that this bill takes a targeted, measured step by focusing only on government procurement rather than imposing a broader ban. They also argue the bill would strengthen the domestic drone industry, reducing long-term dependence on foreign suppliers for critical technology.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's broad definition of "foreign entity subject to influence or control by China" could be applied inconsistently, creating legal uncertainty for agencies and contractors. They contend that foreign-made drones — particularly those from established commercial manufacturers — have not been shown to pose a demonstrated, documented security threat in federal operations, and that the bill may be driven more by trade competition concerns than verified intelligence. Critics also argue that domestic drone manufacturing capacity is currently insufficient to meet federal demand, meaning the ban could disrupt agency operations and drive up procurement costs significantly. Some argue that targeted security reviews of specific hardware and software would be a more proportionate and effective response than a categorical procurement ban.