H.R. 1189 · 118th Congress · House

Undersea Cable Control Act

In Congress· Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Introduced
Feb 24, 23
Passed House
Mar 27, 23
Passed Senate
Pending
Sent to President
Pending
Signed into Law
Pending

Executive Summary

Undersea Cable Control Act

The bill seeks to prevent foreign adversaries from acquiring goods and technologies capable of supporting the construction, maintenance, or operation of undersea cable projects. For the purposes of this bill, a foreign adversary is China or any foreign government or nongovernment person (entity or individual) engaged in certain conduct that significantly and adversely affects U.S. security.

The President must seek to enter into agreements with allies and partners to prevent such goods and technologies from being available to foreign adversaries.

Furthermore, the Department of Commerce must determine the appropriate level of export and transfer controls for such technologies under the Export Administration Regulations.

The bill also requires the Department of State to develop a strategy to prevent such goods and technologies from being available to foreign adversaries. The President must report annually to Congress on this strategy.

Previous Versions

00Feb 24, 2023

Undersea Cable Control Act

The bill seeks to prevent foreign adversaries from acquiring goods and technologies capable of supporting the construction, maintenance, or operation of undersea cable projects. For the purposes of this bill, a foreign adversary is China or any foreign government or nongovernment person (entity or individual) engaged in certain conduct that significantly and adversely affects U.S. security.

The President must seek to enter into agreements with allies and partners to prevent such goods and technologies from being available to foreign adversaries.

Furthermore, the Department of Commerce must determine the appropriate level of export and transfer controls for such technologies under the Export Administration Regulations.

The bill also requires the Department of State to develop a strategy to prevent such goods and technologies from being available to foreign adversaries. The President must report annually to Congress on this strategy.

Action Timeline

12
  1. MAR 28, 2023IntroReferral

    Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.

  2. MAR 27, 2023Floor

    Mr

    Mast moved to suspend the rules and pass the bill.

  3. MAR 27, 2023Floor

    Considered under suspension of the rules

    (consideration: CR H1451-1452)

    1451Yea
    1452Nay
    0NV
  4. MAR 27, 2023Floor

    DEBATE - The House proceeded with forty minutes of debate on H.R. 1189.

  5. MAR 27, 2023Floor

    Passed/agreed to in House

    On motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill Agreed to by voice vote. (text: CR H1451)

  6. MAR 27, 2023Floor

    On motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill Agreed to by voice vote. (text: CR H1451)

  7. MAR 27, 2023Floor

    Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.

  8. FEB 28, 2023Committee

    Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held.

  9. FEB 28, 2023Committee

    Ordered to be Reported by Voice Vote.

  10. FEB 24, 2023IntroReferral

    Introduced in House

  11. FEB 24, 2023IntroReferral

    Introduced in House

  12. FEB 24, 2023IntroReferral

    Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

Committees

3

Foreign Relations Committee

ssfr00

Referred: Mar 28, 2023

Active

Foreign Affairs Committee

hsfa00

Referred: Feb 28, 2023

Active

Foreign Affairs Committee

hsfa00

Referred: Feb 24, 2023

Active