US House passes Save Our Shrimpers Act

US House passes Save Our Shrimpers Act

Spread the love

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed legislation aimed at stopping American taxpayer dollars from helping finance foreign shrimp operations that Gulf Coast lawmakers say have undercut domestic shrimpers for decades.

The Save Our Shrimpers Act, sponsored by U.S. Rep. Troy Nehls, R-Texas, would require U.S. representatives at international financial institutions to oppose financial assistance for projects supporting shrimp farming, shrimp processing or shrimp exports in borrowing countries.

The bill passed the House 391-18, sending the measure to the Senate.

“By passing my bill, we are standing up for American shrimpers who wake up before dawn to help feed our country and the world,” Nehls told The Center Square in a statement. “This is a huge win for our Gulf Coast and coastal communities that depend on shrimping to survive, and I urge the Senate to take up my bill and pass it as soon as possible.”

The legislation targets institutions such as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, where U.S. officials exercise voting power through executive directors. The Congressional Budget Office said the bill would require those officials to oppose assistance for shrimp-related projects, with the requirement expiring seven years after enactment.

The issue is especially significant in Gulf Coast states including Louisiana, Texas and Alabama, where shrimpers have struggled with low dockside prices, rising fuel and labor costs, and competition from cheaper imported shrimp. Industry groups say imports account for more than 90% of shrimp consumed in the United States, much of it produced through aquaculture in countries such as In

In February 2025, The Center Square reported that nearly half a billion U.S. dollars had gone to shrimp-related projects overseas through international development financing, including projects in countries that compete directly with U.S. shrimpers. One project in India, the largest shrimp supplier to the U.S. market, totaled about $200 million.

Existing federal law already gives U.S. officials some authority to oppose international financial institution assistance for foreign commodity projects. Under 22 U.S.C. § 262h, the Treasury secretary must instruct U.S. executive directors at several international financial institutions to use the U.S. “voice and vote” to oppose assistance for production or extraction of an export commodity if the commodity is in surplus on world markets and if the export would cause substantial injury to U.S. producers.

But that protection is conditional. To block assistance for a foreign shrimp project under current law, federal officials would first have to treat shrimp as a surplus commodity and determine that the exports would substantially injure U.S. producers.

The Save Our Shrimpers Act removes that extra step for shrimp. The bill would create a categorical instruction: U.S. executive directors at international financial institutions must oppose financial assistance for any project supporting shrimp farming, shrimp processing or shrimp exports in a borrowing country.

That distinction makes the bill narrower but stronger than current law. It does not rewrite trade law, impose tariffs or ban shrimp imports. Instead, it targets development financing, ensuring U.S. representatives oppose international loans, grants or other assistance that could expand foreign shrimp production.

The bill has bipartisan support from Gulf Coast and seafood-state lawmakers. Its original cosponsors included U.S. Reps. Clay Higgins, R-La., Troy Carter, D-La., Julia Letlow, R-La., Vicente Gonzalez, D-Texas, and several members from Texas, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia and the Carolinas. The House Financial Services Committee reported the bill in March after approving it 42-1.

Tthe legislation was first introduced in the previous Congress and reintroduced in March 2025. Nehls said U.S. officials voted against an international financial institution shrimp aquaculture project for the first time in April 2025, but supporters say the bill is needed to make that posture permanent rather than discretionary.

Shrimp industry advocates have backed the measure as part of a broader push against foreign seafood imports, which they say are produced under looser standards and sold at prices domestic boats cannot match. Separate seafood legislation has focused on import inspections, country-of-origin labeling and food safety.

“Today’s vote is a great moment for the American shrimp industry,” said Blake Price, director of the Southern Shrimp Alliance. “When these multinational producers are held to the same standards as our Mom-and-Pop shrimping businesses, Americans will enjoy more sustainable, fresher, wild-caught shrimp from our highly regulated waters, and our coastal economies will thrive.”

The Save Our Shrimpers Act would not immediately raise shrimp prices or provide direct aid to shrimpers. Its impact would depend on whether international financial institutions are considering future shrimp projects, how often Treasury uses the waiver and whether the Senate takes up the bill.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

ELECTION DAY 2025: NYC elects Mamdani, Democrats sweep VA, NJ governors' races

ELECTION DAY 2025: NYC elects Mamdani, Democrats sweep VA, NJ governors’ races

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square Self-proclaimed democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani will be the next mayor of New York City after taking down the former Democrat New York governor for a...
Madison clerk to use coroner’s death records to fix voter rolls

Madison clerk to use coroner’s death records to fix voter rolls

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Madison County will now use reports of deaths from the county coroner to more quickly and efficiently remove those who have died...
Trump plans breakfast meeting with all GOP senators

Trump plans breakfast meeting with all GOP senators

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square President Donald Trump has invited every Republican U.S. senator to breakfast at the White House on Wednesday morning, following the president's urging of the senators...
Teacher unions sue to protect student loan forgiveness

Teacher unions sue to protect student loan forgiveness

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square A coalition of teacher unions and nonprofits sued the U.S. Department of Education this week over its new rule limiting Public Service Loan Forgiveness for...

WATCH: Trump confident ahead of tariff challenge with other tariffs as Plan B

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump insisted Tuesday that he needs a tool that no other president has used to save the nation from disaster. The comments came...
Illinois quick hits: Raoul touts grand funding injunction; trooper's vehicle struck

Illinois quick hits: Raoul touts grand funding injunction; trooper’s vehicle struck

By The Center SquareThe Center Square Raoul touts grand funding injunction Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul is touting a permanent injunction from a Rhode Island federal district judge against the...
Report: Colorado gains millennials, loses older residents

Report: Colorado gains millennials, loses older residents

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Colorado saw nearly 450,000 moves over the past year, but more residents left the state than arrived. In total, Colorado saw a net population loss...
Workers report benefits of mail scanning at Illinois prisons as state faces rules deadline

Workers report benefits of mail scanning at Illinois prisons as state faces rules deadline

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – As Illinois prison workers testify about the benefits of electronic mail scanning, Illinois Department of Corrections officials...
Govt shutdown crippling U.S. airports; thousands of flights delayed, cancelled

Govt shutdown crippling U.S. airports; thousands of flights delayed, cancelled

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Americans traveling by plane are facing thousands of flight delays and hundreds of cancellations each day due to the ongoing government shutdown – and the...

WATCH: Former DOJ’s seizure of Trump phone records an ‘egregious overreach’

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi posted on X Tuesday that the FBI’s investigation into whether President Donald Trump tried to overturn the 2020 election included...
Bessent to attend Supreme Court hearing in tariff challenge

Bessent to attend Supreme Court hearing in tariff challenge

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent plans to attend oral arguments Wednesday in a case challenging President Donald Trump's authority to use tariffs without Congressional approval....
ELECTION DAY 2025: Virginia, NJ governor, NYC mayor, more at stake

ELECTION DAY 2025: Virginia, NJ governor, NYC mayor, more at stake

By Dan McCaleb and Andrew RiceThe Center Square Voters in several states and cities across the U.S. will decide key races for governor, mayor and other positions Tuesday as voting...

WATCH: Illinois House rejects home insurance bill GOP says would raise rates

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Republicans say a state Senate proposal to regulate homeowners insurance rates failed to address the reasons...
Government shutdown to surpass 35 days, breaking all records

Government shutdown to surpass 35 days, breaking all records

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square For the 14th time, U.S. Senate Democrats on Tuesday filibustered Republicans’ funding bill to reopen the government, guaranteeing that the ongoing shutdown, now on its...
Kansas advocates look to past legal immigration pathways

Kansas advocates look to past legal immigration pathways

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The Trump administration’s deportation agenda has caused a wide variety of responses across the country. Protests in Portland, Los Angeles and Chicago have prompted calls...