According to www.dcvelocity.com, the Trump Administration is requesting congressional authorization for the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) to establish a national supply chain visibility portal.
Legislative Pathway and Strategic Timing
The DOT has formally asked Congress to embed enabling legislation into the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), according to a statement from DOT Secretary Sean Duffy. This legislative vehicle is considered the most viable route to grant the agency statutory authority required to develop and operate the platform. Without explicit congressional approval, the DOT lacks jurisdiction to mandate data-sharing across private-sector logistics entities — including ocean carriers, railroads, trucking firms, and retailers. The initiative falls under the DOT’s broader American Supply Chain Sovereignty Initiative, which aims to consolidate fragmented visibility across domestic freight infrastructure.
The timing aligns with ongoing federal efforts to modernize the nation’s nearly seven-million-mile freight network. That figure — cited by the DOT in its public strategy documents — underscores the scale of physical infrastructure the portal must integrate. The NDAA deadline creates a hard fiscal-year window: if omitted from the 2026 bill, implementation would likely be delayed by at least 12 months.
Technical Architecture and Operational Scope
The proposed portal would feature role-based access controls, allowing distinct permissions for ports, carriers, shippers, and government agencies. A core design objective is direct interoperability between major nodes — notably the Port of Los Angeles, which handled 9.3 million TEUs in 2025 — and participating ocean carriers, Class I railroads, national trucking fleets, and retail giants such as Walmart. According to the source, this connectivity is intended to accelerate cargo processing times, reduce dwell time at intermodal facilities, and lower overall logistics costs through predictive congestion modeling.
The system builds directly on the Freight Logistics Optimization Works (FLOW) program, a public-private partnership launched in 2023. FLOW currently serves over 42 member organizations, including the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, Maersk, and Target. Unlike FLOW — which operates as a voluntary data consortium — the new portal would carry regulatory weight, mandating standardized API integrations for federally funded infrastructure recipients.
Industry Context and Precedent
This move follows parallel digitization mandates elsewhere: the European Union’s EU Digital Transport and Logistics Forum (DTLF) requires real-time shipment data sharing among members effective January 2025, while Canada’s Trade Chain Visibility Initiative launched in Q2 2024 with participation from CPKC and Canadian Pacific. In the U.S., the Port of Los Angeles forecasts a 7% slowdown in container volumes next year — a trend that heightens pressure for granular, cross-modal visibility. Supply chain professionals report that manual status updates still consume 18–22 hours per week per planner across Tier 1 shippers, according to 2025 benchmarking data from the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP).
For practitioners, the portal’s success hinges on three operational criteria: mandatory inclusion of ISO 28000-compliant security protocols, alignment with existing GS1 standards for container event messaging, and enforcement mechanisms for non-compliant data feeds — particularly from non-U.S.-flagged ocean carriers operating in American ports.
Source: DC Velocity
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










