Sec. 20002. Enhancement of Department of Defense resources for shipbuilding | Impact

Legislative and Policy Analysis

Section 20002: Enhancement of Department of Defense resources for shipbuilding

Executive Summary

Section 20002 appropriates $29.176301 billion in additional fiscal year 2025 funding to the Secretary of Defense for shipbuilding, naval industrial-base expansion, supplier development, shipyard capacity, maritime workforce programs, ship procurement, unmanned maritime systems, sealift, and related naval production needs.[1]

This is a direct funding section. It does not create a new consumer program, tax benefit, regulatory standard, or environmental program. Instead, it gives the Department of Defense additional multi-year budget authority, available through September 30, 2029, to expand shipbuilding capacity and buy or support specific naval and maritime platforms.[1]

The largest funding lines are $5.4 billion for two additional Guided Missile Destroyer ships, $4.6 billion for a second Virginia-class submarine in fiscal year 2026, $2.725 billion for T-AO oilers, $2.1 billion for purpose-built medium unmanned surface vessels, $1.803941 billion for Landing Ship Medium procurement, $1.534 billion for small unmanned surface vessel production, $1.47 billion for a multi-ship amphibious warship contract, and $1.3 billion for unmanned underwater vehicle production.[1]

Day to day, Section 20002 would push DoD, the Navy, Naval Sea Systems Command, contracting offices, shipyards, defense suppliers, workforce training partners, and oversight bodies to convert a large one-time appropriation into procurement awards, contract modifications, supplier investments, industrial-base projects, workforce pipelines, shipyard improvements, and spending reports.

What Section 20002 Actually Does

Section 20002 provides $29.176301 billion in total additional budget authority to the Secretary of Defense for fiscal year 2025, out of Treasury funds not otherwise appropriated, with the money remaining available until September 30, 2029.[1] The Congressional Research Service summarized the enacted amount for this section as $29.176 billion in mandatory defense funding.[2]

The section funds 36 specified shipbuilding and maritime-industrial activities:

Program or activity Amount What the money supports
Accelerated Training in Defense Manufacturing $250 million Expands defense manufacturing training capacity
United States production of turbine generators $250 million Supports domestic turbine-generator production for the shipbuilding industrial base
Additive manufacturing for wire production and machining $450 million Builds additive manufacturing, wire-production, and machining capacity
Next-generation shipbuilding techniques $492 million Supports new shipbuilding methods and production modernization
United States-made steel plate $85 million Supports domestic steel plate for the shipbuilding industrial base
Naval propeller machining capacity $50 million Expands machining capacity for naval propellers
Rolled steel and fabrication facility $110 million Supports rolled steel and fabrication capacity
Collaborative campus for naval shipbuilding $400 million Expands a collaborative shipbuilding campus
Autonomy and artificial intelligence $450 million Applies autonomy and artificial intelligence to naval shipbuilding
Advanced manufacturing techniques $500 million Supports adoption of advanced manufacturing in the shipbuilding industrial base
Additional dry-dock capability $500 million Expands dry-dock capacity
Cold spray repair technologies $50 million Expands cold spray repair technology
Maritime industrial workforce development $450 million Funds additional maritime workforce development programs
Supplier development $750 million Supports additional supplier development across the naval shipbuilding industrial base
Advanced manufacturing processes $250 million Expands advanced manufacturing processes across the naval shipbuilding industrial base
Virginia-class submarine $4.6 billion Funds a second Virginia-class submarine in fiscal year 2026
Guided Missile Destroyer ships $5.4 billion Funds two additional Guided Missile Destroyer ships
Landing Ship Medium advanced procurement $160 million Funds advanced procurement for Landing Ship Medium
Landing Ship Medium procurement $1.803941 billion Funds procurement of Landing Ship Medium
Landing Craft Utility $295 million Develops a second Landing Craft Utility shipyard and produces additional Landing Craft Utility
Light replenishment oiler advanced procurement $100 million Funds advanced procurement for the light replenishment oiler program
National Defense Sealift Fund $600 million Funds lease or purchase of new ships through the National Defense Sealift Fund
T-AO oilers $2.725 billion Funds procurement of T-AO oilers
Rescue and salvage ships $500 million Funds cost-to-complete needs for rescue and salvage ships
Ship-to-shore connectors $300 million Funds production of ship-to-shore connectors
Amphibious warship contract $1.47 billion Funds implementation of a multi-ship amphibious warship contract
Vertical launch system reloading at sea $80 million Accelerates development of at-sea reloading capability
Navy corrosion control $250 million Expands Navy corrosion control programs
Marine Corps ship leasing $159 million Funds leasing of ships for Marine Corps operations
Small unmanned surface vessels $1.534 billion Expands small unmanned surface vessel production
Medium unmanned surface vessels $2.1 billion Funds development, procurement, and integration of purpose-built medium unmanned surface vessels
Unmanned underwater vehicles $1.3 billion Expands unmanned underwater vehicle production
Maritime robotic autonomous systems $188.36 million Funds development and testing of maritime robotic autonomous systems and enabling technologies
Robotic autonomous systems proving ground $174 million Develops a Test Resource Management Center proving ground
Wave-powered unmanned underwater vehicles $250 million Funds development, production, and integration of wave-powered unmanned underwater vehicles
Inactive reserve fleet ships $150 million Supports retention of inactive reserve fleet ships

The practical effect is to inject a large, time-limited funding stream into the Navy and broader maritime industrial base. Some lines buy specific ships or maritime systems. Other lines attempt to solve production bottlenecks: workforce shortages, supplier capacity, steel and machining constraints, dry-dock limitations, corrosion-control needs, repair technology, and advanced manufacturing gaps.

Legislative Mechanism

Section 20002 uses a direct appropriation mechanism. It says that, “in addition to amounts otherwise available,” funds are appropriated to the Secretary of Defense for fiscal year 2025, out of money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, and remain available until September 30, 2029.[1]

That mechanism matters for four reasons.

First, the section provides budget authority directly; it is not merely an authorization for Congress to appropriate money later. Second, the funding supplements other defense funding rather than replacing existing Navy or DoD accounts. Third, the September 30, 2029 availability date gives DoD a multi-year obligation window for complex procurement and industrial-base investments. Fourth, the section does not itself rewrite procurement law, environmental law, labor law, competition rules, or acquisition oversight requirements. Those ordinary execution rules still apply.

The section also does not create a dedicated public reporting portal for Section 20002 spending. That means public visibility will depend on ordinary federal budget execution, contract reporting, agency financial reporting, congressional oversight, Inspector General work, GAO reviews, USAspending.gov, and SAM.gov contract data.

Expenditure Tracking and Reporting Protocol

Section 20002 involves direct appropriations, major ship procurement, contract awards, supplier-base investments, workforce development, dry-dock capacity, ship leasing, and unmanned maritime systems. Spending is therefore likely to be tracked through multiple federal systems rather than one clean section-specific public ledger.

Likely tracking sources include Treasury account data, OMB apportionment, DoD Comptroller funds distribution, Navy budget execution, Navy and DoD financial statements, USAspending.gov award data, SAM.gov contract data, procurement announcements, Inspector General reviews, GAO audits, and congressional oversight. DoD financial management rules describe the budget execution process as moving from congressional appropriations to OMB apportionment and DoD funds distribution.[3] USAspending.gov is the official open-data source for federal spending information, including award-level contract and assistance data.[4] SAM.gov provides federal contract award data reported by agencies.[5]

Likely relevant accounts or execution channels may include Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy; Research, Development, Test and Evaluation accounts; Other Procurement, Navy; the National Defense Sealift Fund; Navy industrial-base investment activities; DoD industrial-base or technology programs; and Navy or DoD program offices. The precise account mapping may depend on DoD spend plans, apportionment decisions, Navy budget execution, and how each line item is converted into awards or contract modifications.

flowchart TD
A[Section 20002 funds] --> B[Treasury]
A --> C[OMB apportionment]
C --> D[DoD Comptroller]
D --> E[Navy offices]
D --> F[DoD offices]

E --> G[Ship procurement]
E --> H[Shipyard capacity]
E --> I[Supplier development]
E --> J[Workforce programs]
F --> K[Robotics autonomy]

G --> L[Prime contracts]
H --> M[Facility awards]
I --> N[Supplier awards]
J --> O[Training awards]
K --> P[Research procurement]

L --> Q[USAspending]
M --> Q
N --> Q
O --> Q
P --> Q

Q --> R[Public award data]
D --> S[Financial reports]
S --> T[Aggregated visibility]
R --> U[Oversight review]
T --> U
Spending stream Likely reporting pathway Visibility assessment
Major ship procurement Navy procurement accounts, contract awards, USAspending.gov, SAM.gov, congressional budget materials Often visible at award level, but not always labeled as Section 20002
Shipyard and dry-dock capacity Navy budget execution, contracts, facility awards, Inspector General or GAO review May be visible when award-based; internal planning may be delayed or aggregated
Supplier development Contract awards, possible industrial-base program execution, USAspending.gov, SAM.gov Mixed visibility; supplier-specific awards may be visible, but program-level outcomes may be hard to isolate
Workforce development Training contracts, workforce partnerships, agency reports, award data Likely fragmented across contracts, grants, agreements, or internal programs
Unmanned maritime systems Research, development, procurement, testing, and contract award systems Award-level visibility may be available, but technical details may be limited
Sealift and ship leasing National Defense Sealift Fund execution, contracts, lease records, budget documents May be visible in budget and contract data, but details can be aggregated
Oversight DoD Inspector General, GAO, congressional committees, DoD financial statements Periodic and delayed

The key limitation is traceability. Section 20002 creates many line-specific funding purposes, but it does not require every downstream award or outlay to carry a public “Section 20002” tag. Public datasets may show the recipient, agency, award description, and amount, but users may need to search across Navy accounts, award descriptions, program names, ship classes, contractor names, and budget documents to reconstruct how the money moved.

Day-to-Day Government Process Changes

Section 20002 would change day-to-day government processes by adding a large workload to Navy acquisition, DoD budget execution, contracting, industrial-base management, program oversight, and audit functions.

Government function Day-to-day change
Budget execution DoD must apportion, allot, distribute, obligate, and monitor $29.176301 billion in multi-year funds
Navy acquisition Program offices must turn funding lines into acquisition strategies, solicitations, contract awards, and contract modifications
Ship procurement Navy officials must sequence procurement for submarines, destroyers, Landing Ship Medium, T-AO oilers, amphibious ships, ship-to-shore connectors, and unmanned vessels
Industrial-base management DoD must identify and manage bottlenecks in suppliers, steel, turbine generators, machining, dry docks, corrosion control, cold spray repair, and advanced manufacturing
Workforce development Navy and contractor partners must expand training programs, apprenticeships, recruitment, and retention pipelines
Oversight DoD Inspector General, GAO, congressional committees, auditors, and program managers must monitor obligation rates, delivery schedules, cost growth, and performance outcomes

This section also increases pressure on DoD to coordinate shipbuilding investments. GAO reported in 2025 that DoD had spent more than $5.8 billion on the shipbuilding industrial base from fiscal years 2014 through 2023 and planned to spend an additional $12.6 billion through fiscal year 2028, but had not fully determined the effectiveness of that support.[6] GAO also found that the Navy and the Office of the Secretary of Defense were not fully coordinating shipbuilding investments and lacked performance metrics needed to evaluate whether investments were effective.[6]

CBO’s 2026 testimony underscores why day-to-day execution will matter. CBO stated that the Navy has sought a larger fleet for more than 20 years but has not increased the fleet as much as envisioned, and that in recent years the Navy and shipbuilding industrial base have had resources but have been unable to deliver ordered ships on time.[7] CBO also reported substantial cost growth in major shipbuilding programs and identified workforce, inflation, design, and feasibility problems as common causes of price increases.[7]

Effects on Consumers

Section 20002 does not directly create consumer benefits. It does not provide household payments, consumer rebates, health benefits, food assistance, utility assistance, education benefits, or tax credits.

The consumer effects are indirect:

Consumer group Possible effect
Taxpayers Federal resources are committed to defense shipbuilding and maritime industrial-base expansion
Residents near shipyards Shipyard and supplier expansion may bring jobs and local income, but may also increase traffic, housing demand, port activity, and pressure on local services
Workers Skilled trades, engineers, technicians, software workers, and production workers may see more demand for labor
Military families Readiness may improve if ships and support systems are delivered successfully, but benefits depend on execution timelines
Consumers in industrial markets Defense demand for steel, machining, electronics, power systems, and skilled labor may compete with private-sector demand

For most households, the impact will not appear as a direct program change. It will show up through taxes, local employment, regional economic activity, industrial demand, and the broader national-security posture. Communities near major shipyards and maritime suppliers are most likely to experience visible effects.

Effects on Businesses

Section 20002 has substantial business implications. It creates demand for shipbuilders, ship repair firms, dry-dock operators, steel producers, turbine-generator manufacturers, machining firms, welding and fabrication shops, software companies, robotics firms, unmanned systems vendors, training providers, and specialized maritime suppliers.

Business type Likely effect
Prime shipbuilders More procurement and contract opportunities for submarines, destroyers, oilers, landing ships, amphibious ships, and unmanned systems
Subcontractors and suppliers More demand for components, steel, propulsion systems, machining, fabrication, electronics, coatings, and repair technology
Workforce and training providers More demand for maritime industrial training and defense manufacturing programs
Advanced manufacturing firms More opportunities in additive manufacturing, cold spray repair, production automation, and next-generation shipbuilding techniques
Artificial intelligence and autonomy companies More opportunities to support naval shipbuilding, unmanned vessels, robotics, testing, and integration
Small and mid-sized suppliers Potential growth, but also compliance burdens, cybersecurity requirements, cash-flow risk, and scaling pressure

The business upside is large, but not evenly distributed. Firms already positioned in the Navy shipbuilding supply chain may benefit first. New entrants may face barriers such as defense contracting rules, facility requirements, security requirements, technical qualification standards, and long payment cycles.

The section also raises execution risk. More money can increase demand, but it does not automatically create enough skilled workers, dry docks, specialized suppliers, or production discipline. GAO’s finding that DoD has not fully assessed the return on prior shipbuilding industrial-base investments is especially relevant because Section 20002 greatly expands the pool of money that must be coordinated and measured.[6]

Environmental and Climate Impact

Section 20002 is not a climate program. It does not establish emissions-reduction targets, clean-energy standards, environmental justice grants, renewable-energy incentives, or climate-resilience requirements.

Its environmental and climate impacts come from the funded activities themselves: ship construction, dry-dock expansion, steel production, machining, welding, coating, corrosion control, ship repair, shipyard modernization, waterfront industrial activity, testing, and fleet operations.

Impact area Likely environmental or climate concern
Air emissions Shipbuilding and ship repair coating operations can involve hazardous air pollutants regulated by EPA under shipbuilding and ship repair surface-coating standards.[8]
Water quality Dry docks, shipyards, waterfront construction, stormwater, dredging, and industrial runoff can affect nearby waterways
Hazardous materials Coatings, solvents, oils, fuels, blasting residues, metals, and industrial wastes require management and disposal controls
Energy use Expanded heavy manufacturing and ship production may increase electricity, fuel, and industrial energy demand
Greenhouse gas emissions Additional heavy manufacturing and eventual ship operations may increase emissions unless offset by efficiency improvements
Local environmental review Shipyard modernization and infrastructure work may require environmental review, permitting, and mitigation depending on project type and location

Some funded activities could have environmental benefits inside the defense production system. For example, corrosion control can extend service life, cold spray repair can reduce replacement needs, and advanced manufacturing may reduce waste in some production steps. However, the overall direction of the section is to expand shipbuilding and maritime industrial activity, which is generally material-intensive, energy-intensive, and locally significant for waterfront communities.

NAVSEA’s Shipyard Infrastructure Optimization Program materials indicate that shipyard modernization planning can involve environmental considerations such as natural resources, cultural resources, air quality, water quality, and regulatory compliance.[9] That type of review will matter if Section 20002 funds support physical shipyard expansion, dry-dock work, waterfront construction, or industrial facility upgrades.

Impact Summary

Section 20002 is a major defense-industrial funding section. It provides $29.176301 billion for shipbuilding, naval procurement, unmanned maritime systems, supplier development, workforce expansion, dry-dock capacity, advanced manufacturing, shipyard modernization, sealift, and related maritime industrial-base needs.[1]

Its strongest effects will be on the Department of Defense, the Navy, shipyards, maritime suppliers, defense contractors, training providers, and communities tied to the shipbuilding industrial base. It may support jobs, procurement demand, supplier growth, and naval readiness. It may also intensify local housing, labor, infrastructure, and environmental pressures in shipbuilding regions.

The central policy question is whether DoD can turn the money into measurable shipbuilding capacity and delivered ships. GAO has warned that DoD has not fully coordinated or measured prior shipbuilding industrial-base investments.[6] CBO has warned that the Navy has struggled to deliver ordered ships on time and that cost growth and construction delays remain major challenges.[7] Section 20002 gives DoD substantial resources to address those problems, but the outcome will depend on execution, contract discipline, workforce growth, supplier capacity, oversight, and transparent tracking.

Key References and Sourcing

Source Relevance
Public Law 119-21, GovInfo PDF Primary enacted statutory text for Section 20002 funding amounts, purposes, and availability period.
Congressional Research Service, Defense Funding in the 2025 Reconciliation Law Summarizes enacted Title II defense funding, including the Section 20002 enacted total.
DoD Financial Management Regulation, Volume 3, Chapter 2 Explains DoD apportionment, reapportionment, and funds distribution processes.
USAspending.gov Official federal open-data source for spending and award information.
SAM.gov Contract Data Public source for federal contract award data.
Government Accountability Office, Shipbuilding and Repair Documents Navy shipbuilding and repair industrial-base challenges and oversight concerns.
Congressional Budget Office, Testimony on Navy and Coast Guard Shipbuilding Provides current testimony on shipbuilding goals, delays, cost growth, and industrial-base pressure.
Environmental Protection Agency, Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Surface Coating NESHAP Supports environmental analysis of shipbuilding and repair coating emissions.
Naval Sea Systems Command, Shipyards and Shipyard Infrastructure Optimization Program Supports discussion of shipyard modernization and environmental-review considerations.

[1] Public Law 119-21, “Section 20002. Enhancement of Department of Defense resources for shipbuilding,” enacted July 4, 2025, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/PLAW-119publ21/pdf/PLAW-119publ21.pdf.

[2] Congressional Research Service, “Defense Funding in the 2025 Reconciliation Law (H.R. 1; P.L. 119-21, Title II),” July 24, 2025, https://www.everycrsreport.com/reports/IN12580.html.

[3] Department of Defense Comptroller, “DoD Financial Management Regulation, Volume 3, Chapter 2: Apportionment/Reapportionment and Funds Distribution,” https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/documents/fmr/current/03/03_02.pdf.

[4] USAspending.gov, “Government Spending Open Data,” https://www.usaspending.gov/.

[5] SAM.gov, “Contract Data,” https://sam.gov/contract-data.

[6] Government Accountability Office, “Shipbuilding and Repair: Navy Needs a Strategic Approach for Private Sector Industrial Base Investments,” GAO-25-106286, February 27, 2025, https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-25-106286.

[7] Congressional Budget Office, “Testimony on Challenges Facing the Navy’s and Coast Guard’s Shipbuilding Programs and the Shipbuilding Industrial Base,” April 22, 2026, https://www.cbo.gov/publication/62375.

[8] Environmental Protection Agency, “Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Surface Coating National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants,” https://www.epa.gov/stationary-sources-air-pollution/shipbuilding-and-ship-repair-surface-coating-national-emission.

[9] Naval Sea Systems Command, “Shipyards and Shipyard Infrastructure Optimization Program,” https://www.navsea.navy.mil/Home/Shipyards/.


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