Korean War The Defense Production Act was first used during the Korean War to establish a large defense mobilization infrastructure and bureaucracy. Under the authority of the act, President
Harry S. Truman eventually established the
Office of Defense Mobilization, instituted
wage and price controls, strictly regulated production in
heavy industries such as steel and mining, prioritized and allocated industrial materials in short supply, and ordered the dispersal of wartime manufacturing plants across the nation.
Cold War The Defense Production Act played a vital role in the establishment of the domestic
aluminum and
titanium industries in the 1950s. Using the act, Department of Defense provided capital and interest-free loans, and directed mining and manufacturing resources as well as skilled laborers to these two processing industries. The DPA was also used in the 1950s to ensure that government-funded industries were geographically dispersed across the United States to prevent the industrial base from being destroyed by a single nuclear attack. During the late 1960s and early 1970s, the DPA increasingly was used to diversify the US energy mix by funding the trans-Alaskan pipeline, the US synthetic fuels corporation, and research into
liquefied natural gas.
Technological innovation Beginning in the 1980s, the Department of Defense (DOD) began using the contracting and spending provisions of the Defense Production Act to provide seed money to develop new technologies. The DOD has since used the act to help develop a number of new technologies and materials, including
silicon carbide ceramics,
indium phosphide and
gallium arsenide semiconductors,
microwave power tubes, radiation-hardened
microelectronics,
superconducting wire, metal
composites and the mining and processing of
rare earth minerals.
FEMA national security resource preparedness In June 1994, President
Bill Clinton invoked the Defense Production Act to implement national security resource preparedness during disasters under the advisement of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) director. The order allows FEMA work with other federal departments to order producers and distributors to prioritize resources in preparation of and in times of disasters.
21st century California energy crisis In January 2001, President
Bill Clinton invoked the Defense Production Act to force gas suppliers to continue to supply
Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), the largest California energy provider at the time, with gas regardless of loss as a result of suppliers shutting off gas supplies due to the PG&E's non-payment during the
2000–01 California electricity crisis. The order was later rescinded under the George W. Bush administration, but it resulted in the expansion of blackouts in California for several months and PG&E's bankruptcy.
Cyber espionage In 2011, President
Barack Obama invoked the Defense Production Act to force telecommunications companies, under criminal penalties, to provide detailed information to the Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security on the use of foreign-manufactured hardware and software in the companies' networks, as part of efforts to combat
Chinese cyberespionage. The second referenced "items affecting adenovirus vaccine production capability; high strength, inherently fire and ballistic resistant, co-polymer aramid fibers industrial capability; secure hybrid composite shipping container industrial capability; and three-dimensional ultra-high density microelectronics for information protection industrial capability".
COVID-19 pandemic On March 18, 2020, in response to the
COVID-19 outbreak in the United States, President Donald Trump invoked the Defense Production Act (DPA) through an executive order that defined ventilators and
personal protective equipment as "essential to the national defense." Trump named Director of Trade and Manufacturing Policy Peter Navarro as the policy coordinator for using the DPA in response to the COVID-19 crisis, and designated Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar the authority to determine quantities of essential supplies. Trump received criticism for not taking advantage of the DPA's capabilities sooner. Fifty-seven Democratic representatives in the House of Representatives sent a letter to Trump during the week prior, urging him to make use of the DPA for public health purposes, and Democratic speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi warned that "we must put more testing, more protective equipment, and more ventilators into the hands of our front-line workers immediately." On March 23, 2020, Trump issued an executive order classifying "health and medical resources necessary to respond to the spread of COVID-19" as subject to the authority granted by the DPA to prohibit hoarding and price gouging. Automotive manufacturers such as General Motors (GM) and Ford Motor Co. were identified as private companies capable of focusing on ventilator production in response to the DPA. At the beginning of April 2020, Trump expanded his use of the DPA to require a total of six private companies, now including General Electric and Medtronic, to secure supplies to manufacture ventilators. On April 28, 2020, Trump invoked the DPA with regards to the food supply chain, giving the United States Department of Agriculture as well as Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue the authority to require meat and poultry plants to maintain production. This order was also met with criticism over coronavirus safety concerns for workers at such plants. In January 2021, President
Joe Biden invoked the DPA on his second day in office to increase production of supplies related to the pandemic, such as protective equipment. On March 2, Biden invoked the DPA again to supply equipment to Merck facilities needed to safely manufacture
Johnson & Johnson vaccines.
Wildfire crisis California experienced a severe
wildfire season in 2021. In September of that year, President Biden invoked the Defense Production Act to increase the national production of fire hoses. NewView Oklahoma, a manufacturing company which provides accessible employment to visually impaired and blind workers, is the main producer of fire hoses for the United States Fire Service. Biden's use of the DPA restarted NewView Oklahoma's production, which had halted during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Virginia-class attack submarines In December 2021, President Biden invoked the Defense Production Act to scale production and provide the needed parts and labor training to support
Virginia-class attack submarines.
Critical mineral supplies In March 2022, President Biden invoked the Defense Production Act to increase the extraction of minerals deemed necessary for the
clean energy transition in the United States, which include lithium, nickel, cobalt, graphite, and manganese used in large-capacity
batteries for energy storage and
electric vehicles. As defined by the United States Geological Survey, these minerals are "called critical or strategic owing to concerns about risk of supply interruption and the cost of such a disruption". The United States currently relies largely on foreign sources, such as China, Russia, South Africa, Brazil, and Canada, for the mining and processing of these metals. Some are in favor of capitalizing on minerals like lithium to quickly electrify the transportation industry, while others caution against mining due to the process's long-term consequences for ecosystems.
Baby formula shortage On May 18, 2022, President Biden invoked the Defense Production Act in response to the
2022 United States infant formula shortage, requiring manufacturers to prioritize fulfilling orders of formula ingredients to key suppliers before fulfilling other orders. The
United States Department of Health and Human Services and the
United States Department of Agriculture were authorized to use Department of Defense aircraft to import formula to the United States from overseas as long as the formula met US health and safety standards.
Green energy On June 6, 2022, President Biden invoked the Defense Production Act to accelerate domestic production of green energy technology. The administration responded to growing energy costs related to
Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The invocation came along with a 2-year tariff exemption, ending in June 2024, on solar panels from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam. The technology included in Biden's invocation included solar energy; transformers and electric grid components; heat pumps; insulation; and electrolyzers, fuel cells, and platinum group metals. Communities in these areas have experienced prolonged and disproportionate exposure to pollutants generated by such processes, increasing their priority to benefit from the IRA's clean energy goals. The assessment also found that at its time of publication, 78% of the IRA-incentivized clean energy investments were intended for counties with below-average median household incomes. On November 17, 2023, the US Department of Energy (DOE) announced $169 million funded by the IRA for nine projects at 15 sites to accelerate US-made electric heat pump manufacturing. On February 14, 2024, the DoE announced a further $63 million funded by the Inflation Reduction Act to accelerate the growth of domestic manufacturing of residential heat pumps, heat pump water heaters, and other heat pump systems and components. The joint invocation of the DPA and the IRA was intended to advance the
Justice40 Initiative, which aims to ensure that forty percent of the benefits (economic and otherwise) to come from federal investing in measures to halt climate change will be reaped by disadvantaged and marginalized communities.
Printed circuit boards On March 27, 2023, President Biden invoked the Defense Production Act to accelerate and assure the production capacity of "
printed circuit boards and advanced packaging, their components, and the manufacturing systems that produce such systems and components."
Artificial intelligence On October 30, 2023, President Biden invoked the Defense Production Act to "require that developers of the most powerful AI systems share their safety test results and other critical information with the U.S. government" when "developing any foundation model that poses a serious risk to national security, national economic security, or national public health."
Pharmaceutical supply chain On November 27, 2023, President Biden announced he would invoke the Defense Production Act "to enable investment in domestic manufacturing of essential medicines, medical countermeasures, and critical inputs that have been deemed by the President as essential to the national defense." An initial investment of $35 million is identified by the Department of Health and Human Services for domestic production of materials utilized for sterile injectable medicines. In addition, the Department of Defense was instructed to issue a report on reducing reliance on foreign suppliers that are high-risk to pharmaceutical supply chain. On December 27, 2023, Biden invoked the DPA for "essential medicines, medical countermeasures, and critical inputs." == See also ==