Close Menu
  • Home
  • Maritime
  • Offshore
  • Port
  • Oil & Gas
  • Energy
  • Technology
  • Incidents
  • Environment
  • Events
    • Maritime
    • Offshore
    • Oil & Gas
    • Energy
  • Advertising
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Trending
  • Regional Ban on Scrubber Wash Among Environmental Steps Adopted by OSPAR
  • DOF Group ASA Awarded Two Long-Term Contracts With Petrobras
  • Ship Recycling To Double With 16,000 Vessels Expected To Be Scrapped In Next Decade
  • New Energy Giant Emerges in UK North Sea
  • Chinese firm introduces 480 W floating solar module for offshore use
  • $19 billion takeover bid takes step forward: Santos and ADNOC-led firm embark on talks
  • Centrica and Thailand’s PTT Ink Long-Term LNG Supply Deal
  • Petrobas Awards Fugro Four Multi-Year Contracts
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Maritime247.comMaritime247.com
  • Home
  • Maritime
  • Offshore
  • Port
  • Oil & Gas
  • Energy
  • Tech
  • Incidents
  • Environment
  • Events
    • Maritime
    • Oil & Gas
    • Offshore
    • Energy
  • Advertising
Maritime247.comMaritime247.com
Home»Maritime»Proposed Transfer Of Regulatory Authority Over
Maritime

Proposed Transfer Of Regulatory Authority Over

June 27, 2025
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

The Future of Deepwater Port Regulation in the United States

By Jeffrey H. Lewis, Transportation and Trade Group, Cozen O’Connor

June 27, 2025

On March 5, 2025, the United States Senate passed an important bill to authorize funding for our United States Coast Guard, after failing to do so in the previous Congress. S. 524, the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2025, would if enacted into law authorize appropriations to fund the Coast Guard totaling $30.45 billion for fiscal years 2025 and 2026. The bill is sponsored by Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee Chairman Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) and cosponsored by Senators Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Dan Sullivan (R-AK), and Tammy Baldwin (D-WI). It was approved by the Senate by unanimous consent and now awaits further action in the House of Representatives.

S. 524 is a relatively skinny bill by today’s standards, weighing in at a modest 437 pages. In addition to authorizing congressional spending on the Coast Guard for the current and coming fiscal years, the legislation contains numerous provisions that would make changes and refinements to current law, including to the Coast Guard’s organic statute at Title 14, United States Code, federal shipping and navigation laws, and other related provisions of the U.S. Code and federal statutes at large.

One such provision is section 243 of the bill, innocuously titled “Clarification of authorities.”

  • It would amend section 5 of the Deepwater Port Act of 1974 (33 U.S.C. 1504) (DPA) to take away general implementing rulemaking authority for the Act from the Coast Guard and vest that authority instead in the Secretary of Transportation and DOT’s Maritime Administration (MARAD), which have no such expertise.

In particular, it would shift the “lead agency” role in reviewing deepwater port license applications for environmental impacts under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) from the Coast Guard to MARAD. This transfer of authorities and roles from the Coast Guard to DOT and MARAD is ill-advised for several reasons.

First, a little background: the term “deepwater port” refers to a crude oil or natural gas terminal sited on an offshore platform at the end of a miles-long subsea pipeline. Deepwater ports make it possible to load crude oil and LNG from onshore facilities onto the largest supertankers in a safe and environmentally sound manner.

Currently, MARAD and Coast Guard split responsibilities for license application review based on longstanding delegations of authority by the Secretaries of Transportation and Homeland Security, respectively. The Coast Guard is, and has always served as, the lead agency for NEPA compliance review and been responsible for matters of deepwater port navigation safety, engineering and safety standards, operations, and inspections. MARAD is responsible for determining applicant financial capability and citizenship, preparing the project record of decision, and issuing or denying the license.

With the dozens of deepwater port license applications submitted to the federal government and more likely to come, now is not the time for Congress to change the well-established and complementary roles and responsibilities of the Coast Guard and MARAD. These proposed changes will only cause confusion and inefficiency, slowing and possibly even halting the processing of deepwater port license applications.

About the Author

Jeff Lewis is a Member of Cozen O’Connor’s Transportation and Trade Group in Washington, DC. Jeff brings over 30 years of extensive experience representing and advising clients, members of Congress, and federal agencies on a wide range of legislative, regulatory, and policy matters. His clients benefit from his deep understanding of maritime and transportation law and policy, cultivated through senior leadership and advisory roles within the U.S. Department of Transportation, where he served as Chief Counsel of the Maritime Administration, and at both the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, where he served as a senior attorney-advisor.

See also  'World's first' biomethanol-powered crew transfer vessel ready to work in offshore wind
Authority Proposed Regulatory Transfer
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related Posts

Ship Recycling To Double With 16,000 Vessels Expected To Be Scrapped In Next Decade

June 27, 2025

Five Crewmembers Caught Smuggling Drugs on Tanker in Zeebrugge

June 27, 2025

IMO agrees to start revision of outdated regulations for nuclear-powered ships

June 27, 2025
Top Posts

Car Carrier ‘Morning Midas’ Catches Fire with Electric Vehicles Off Alaska

June 5, 2025

China Fights Australia’s Plans to Reclaim Darwin Port Citing U.S. Influence

May 27, 2025

Denmark awards first-ever offshore wind farm life extension permit

June 4, 2025

Fire-Stricken Wan Hai 503 Continues to Drift Off Indian Coast as Salvage Efforts Intensify

June 11, 2025
Don't Miss
Oil & Gas

Black Sea drillship reactivation job lands on ModuSpec’s table

June 3, 2025

ModuSpec Secures Major Support Assignment for Drillship Intake Process in the Black Sea MR Group’s…

ILA-USMX to Resume Contract Negotiations for East/Gulf Coast Ports

January 2, 2025

Aker Solutions secures work on German offshore wind project

February 11, 2025

BAR Technologies, CMET Team on WindWings

February 19, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Your Weekly Dive into Maritime & Energy News.

About Us
About Us

Stay informed with the latest in maritime, offshore, oil & gas, and energy industries. Explore news, trends, and insights shaping the global energy landscape.

For advertising inquiries, contact us at
info@maritime247.com.

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
Our Picks

Havila Shipping disputes lenders’ allegations of default

January 23, 2025

“Seas And Greetings” From NOC

December 24, 2024

Strengthening the fight against seafarer abandonment

March 5, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Your Weekly Dive into Maritime & Energy News.

© 2025 maritime247.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Advertising

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.