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Chinese Asphalt Tanker Completes Second Jones Act Waiver Voyage, Raising Fresh Questions Over Emergency Exemption

By MGN EditorialJune 30, 2026 at 06:00 AM

A Chinese-owned asphalt tanker has completed a second coastwise voyage between U.S. ports under a Trump administration Jones Act waiver, intensifying scrutiny over the ongoing use of a national security exemption amid shifting geopolitical conditions.

A Chinese-owned asphalt tanker has conducted its second voyage between U.S. ports under an emergency Jones Act waiver granted by the Trump administration, according to gCaptain, reigniting debate over the appropriateness and duration of the exemption. The Jones Act — formally the Merchant Marine Act of 1920 — requires that cargo transported between U.S. domestic ports be carried aboard vessels that are U.S.-built, U.S.-flagged, and crewed by U.S. citizens or permanent residents. Waivers to the law are granted sparingly and typically reserved for situations where no qualified U.S.-flag vessel is available and a national security or emergency need exists. The tanker's repeat use of the waiver has drawn renewed attention from industry observers and domestic shipping advocates, who argue that successive voyages by the same foreign vessel undermine the spirit of the protectionist legislation. Critics contend that the waiver, originally justified on emergency grounds, is being applied in a manner that effectively opens a recurring commercial lane to foreign-flag tonnage. The timing has added further complexity to the debate. The vessel's second voyage comes in the wake of a Memorandum of Understanding signed this month between the United States and Iran aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz — a development that some analysts suggest reduces the urgency of the supply disruption rationale that may have underpinned the original waiver approval. The Jones Act has long been a flashpoint in U.S. maritime policy, with domestic shipowners and maritime labor unions defending it as essential to maintaining a viable U.S. merchant fleet and shipbuilding industrial base, while critics — including some energy sector stakeholders — argue it inflates domestic freight costs and limits supply chain flexibility during periods of market stress. Asphalt, a refined petroleum product critical to road construction and infrastructure maintenance, has limited U.S.-flag tanker capacity dedicated to its transport, which proponents of the waiver argue justifies the continued exemption. The Maritime Administration (MARAD) and the Department of Transportation have not publicly commented on the criteria governing the waiver's renewal or its anticipated duration, according to gCaptain's reporting. The episode is likely to intensify calls from domestic maritime industry stakeholders for greater transparency around the waiver approval process and clearer standards for when emergency exemptions may be extended beyond a single voyage.

Source: gCaptain

#Jones Act#Jones Act Waiver#Asphalt Tanker#Coastwise Trade#U.S. Maritime Policy#MARAD#Merchant Marine#Cabotage

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