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00:00Once upon a time, America dominated commercial shipbuilding, but no more.
00:04Today, China, Japan, and South Korea reign supreme.
00:08Senators Todd Young and Mark Kelly are on a mission to reinvigorate an industry
00:12that sank in the United States generations ago and never recovered.
00:16This is a national security bill.
00:18The stakes are high.
00:22So the senators introduced the Ships for America Act,
00:25which seeks to not just galvanize commercial shipbuilding,
00:28but ensure the United States has the highly trained professionals needed to build and operate these vessels.
00:34You will not have a cost-effective and on-time naval shipbuilding enterprise
00:39if you do not have a strong commercial shipbuilding enterprise.
00:43So can these senators get their bills signed into law
00:45and bring American shipbuilding back to its former glory in just a few years?
00:50We can't fail.
00:54American shipyards, the envy of the world.
00:56Oh, wait, sorry. This is video from China, and they are crushing the United States.
01:01The Chinese build 1,700 ships per year.
01:05China, along with Japan and South Korea, dominate the industry,
01:08with 90 percent of all new ocean-going vessels.
01:11I need one hand to count how many ocean-going vessels the United States builds annually.
01:16Five.
01:17That's right, five.
01:18How did we get to this depleted state?
01:20Well, we took our eye off the ball.
01:23Other countries had prioritized shipbuilding for domestic political reasons,
01:28but more importantly, for national security reasons.
01:31They rightly understood that shipbuilding has national security spillover implications,
01:38and it's really important for a country to have shipbuilding capacity.
01:42Here's a timeline of America's shipbuilding decline.
01:45America truly was the envy of the world after World War II.
01:49The United States had more than 4,400 flagships of all types and sizes capable of carrying 57 percent of U.S. trade.
01:58The government sold many of those surplus vessels to shipping companies at great prices.
02:02That, combined with the United States' higher labor costs,
02:06dried up demand for new American ships, and the yards closed.
02:09By the 1970s, the United States was only building 15 to 25 new commercial ships per year.
02:15That dropped to five by the 80s, and it's where we remain today.
02:19There are only six shipyards in the United States building large commercial vessels.
02:24That includes Philly Shipyard, owned by Hanwha.
02:27The South Korea-based company supports the Ships for America Act and its stated goal of unlocking investment
02:32to build new shipyards and revive some of the 60 shipyards that have fallen out of service.
02:38What's it take to get a new shipyard up and running or bring one back into commission?
02:42It's a lot, but for frame of reference in World War II, and obviously that's a challenging time,
02:48we stood up six emergency shipyards in six months.
02:50So we can do it.
02:52It's a doable feat.
02:54Is shipbuilding more complicated than it was then?
02:56Yes.
02:56Are ships more complicated?
02:58Yes.
02:58But if you have the funding available, it's possible.
03:04But that is where you run into challenges.
03:07In the United States, a private shipyard has not been stood up without significant government
03:11assistance since the 19th century.
03:14So if we are standing up new shipyards in the United States, it's going to have to involve
03:19U.S. government support.
03:20Due to low demand, Philly Shipyard currently builds 1.2 ships per year.
03:24In an industry with tight margins, scaling up can have compounding effects.
03:28I'll make it simple math.
03:30If at Philadelphia you build 1.2 ships a year, any CapEx investment you make, your labor costs,
03:36they're spread off 1.2 ships a year.
03:39In Korea, we build anywhere from 35 to 50 ships a year.
03:42Now my CapEx investment is amortized out across those number of ships, the profit.
03:48My labor costs, which are not linear, are now spread out over 40 ships instead of 1.2.
03:54And it's not like 40 ships takes 40 times the labor of one ship.
03:58You're benefiting significantly.
04:00Here's how the Ships for America Act would help with that.
04:02It would create a Maritime Security Trust Fund, very similar to the Highway and Aviation Trust
04:07Funds.
04:08That money would be used to help shipyards and shipbuilding.
04:11It would create a program to establish a fleet of 250 U.S. flagged vessels in international
04:16commerce.
04:17Establish tax and import duty incentives for shipping goods into the U.S. on American ships.
04:22It would also create incentives for Americans to make a career as a mariner, like public
04:27service loan forgiveness.
04:28The 310-page bill is a comprehensive overhaul of the American maritime industry.
04:34All right, so we're out here in the Chesapeake Bay, where there's about a half a dozen ships
04:38waiting their turn to get into the port of Baltimore.
04:40So this is probably a good time to explain what exactly is an ocean-going vessel.
04:44Well, to put it simply, it's a large ship that's capable of crossing the open ocean.
04:48They include container ships, bulk carriers, general cargo ships, passenger ships, oil tankers,
04:56and roll-on-roll-off vehicle carriers like the Lake Victoria.
04:59The objective is to not only train a bunch of people, but to build 250 ocean-going vessels
05:05in the next 10 years, which is pretty ambitious.
05:08In the very beginning of this video, Senator Young called this a national security bill.
05:13Here's a bit more context.
05:14It's also a bill about economic security and economic opportunity and making sure that
05:21we're independent of other countries for, you know, essential services like shipping.
05:28But more than anything else, this is a national security bill.
05:32So why do commercial ocean-going vessels matter to national security, specifically the military?
05:38A couple reasons.
05:39For starters, if the United States ever went to war, there would be what's called a sea lift.
05:43That's when troops, weapons, vehicles, and supplies are sent to the war zone
05:47on a combination of military and commercial vessels.
05:51It's an essential part of war logistics because sea lifts can carry substantially heavier payloads
05:56than air lifts.
05:57In fact, cargo ships could transport 90 percent of the military equipment needed overseas.
06:02Right now, we don't have that capacity.
06:04You can imagine a military conflict that lasts for more than a few months.
06:13If that were to happen, we would not have the capacity under so many scenarios to repair
06:20the vessels that need to be repaired and to build new vessels.
06:23That ought to be alarming to every American.
06:26Another reason, cost and efficiency.
06:29Let's say I make a widget.
06:31I'm a member of the supply chain.
06:32It goes into the naval ship.
06:34If that widget only goes into a naval ship, the amount of premium the U.S. government has
06:39to pay to keep me in business to exclusively supply that widget for the naval ship is much
06:44higher than if my widget goes into the naval ship and goes into these three classes of commercial
06:49ship, and I have other lines of business that allow me then to price my product appropriately
06:54to the Navy because they're not the sole reason I exist.
06:58Anytime the government is the sole reason a supply chain member or even a prime, such as
07:04the shipbuilder themselves, exists, the U.S. government pays a premium.
07:08All right, so the sun is setting, and it's time to head back to Doc, so we'll leave you
07:11with this.
07:13If this bill were signed into law tomorrow, it would take years for United States shipbuilding
07:18to get to where these senators want it to be, and it would also take an investment from
07:22the government of hundreds of millions of dollars, so this is going to be a long-term national
07:29commitment.
07:30I'm Ray Bogan for Straight Hour News.
07:32For more unbiased reporting straight from the Chesapeake Bay, download the SAN app.
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