S-4708-119
Committee on Foreign Relations. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.
Sponsored by Mike Lee (R-UT)
What it does
This bill would require foreign scientists and vessels to obtain prior U.S. government consent before conducting marine scientific research in U.S. waters, and would prohibit vessels linked to designated foreign adversaries (China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran) from receiving that consent except by a national-interest waiver. It would direct the Secretary of State to develop a strategy — within 180 days — to counter espionage and influence operations by foreign adversaries in the Arctic, in coordination with the intelligence community and the Department of Homeland Security. It would also require a classified-capable report to Congress within one year assessing the scope of foreign adversary espionage through marine survey activities.
Who benefits
U.S. national security and intelligence agencies, which would gain a clearer legal framework for screening and denying foreign research vessel access. NATO allies and Arctic-adjacent nations (Canada, Norway, Denmark/Greenland, Iceland) that share counterespionage interests. U.S. commercial and defense interests in Arctic natural resources and undersea infrastructure. Domestic marine research institutions that compete with state-subsidized foreign research programs. U.S. military and Coast Guard operations in the Arctic, which would face reduced surveillance risk from dual-use foreign vessels.
Who is hurt
Legitimate foreign scientists — including those from China and Russia — conducting genuine academic or environmental research who would face new bureaucratic barriers or outright denial. International scientific collaborations and joint research programs that depend on open data-sharing in Arctic waters. U.S. universities and research institutions with existing partnerships with Chinese or Russian scientific bodies, which may lose access to collaborative data. Arctic shipping and commercial interests that rely on shared hydrographic data. Countries with observer status on the Arctic Council, particularly China, whose scientific engagement in the region would be formally constrained.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the threat is documented and immediate: the 2026 U.S. intelligence community threat assessment, the 2025 NATO Maritime Strategy, and allied security services in Canada and Denmark have all flagged Chinese and Russian dual-use marine surveying as active espionage risks. They contend that seabed mapping, hydrographic surveys, and oceanographic data collection near NATO undersea infrastructure have direct military applications, and that the U.S. already has the legal right under international law to regulate marine scientific research within its 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone — making this bill a codification of existing authority rather than a novel restriction.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that broadly restricting research access based on vessel nationality risks damaging legitimate scientific cooperation on shared challenges like climate change and Arctic ecosystem monitoring, where Chinese and Russian data is often irreplaceable. They contend that the bill's definition of "covered vessel" — any vessel the Secretary of State "reasonably believes" is associated with a foreign adversary — grants broad executive discretion with limited judicial review, potentially chilling research by third-country scientists aboard vessels with any commercial or logistical ties to China or Russia. Critics may also argue that diplomatic retaliation could restrict U.S. scientists' access to foreign Arctic waters in kind.