2000
H.R.4950
One Hundred Third Congress
of the
United States of America
AT THE SECOND SESSION
Begun and held at the City of Washington on Tuesday,
the twenty-fifth day of January, one thousand nine hundred and ninety-
four
An Act
To extend the authorities of the Overseas Private Investment
Corporation, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Jobs Through Trade Expansion Act of
1994''.
TITLE I--OVERSEAS PRIVATE INVESTMENT CORPORATION
SEC. 101. RAISING CEILING ON INSURANCE.
Section 235(a)(1) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C.
2195(a)(1)) is amended by striking ``$9,000,000,000'' and inserting
``$13,500,000,000''.
SEC. 102. RAISING CEILING ON FINANCING.
Section 235(a)(2) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C.
2195(a)(2)) is amended to read as follows:
``(2) Financing.--(A) The maximum contingent liability
outstanding at any one time pursuant to financing issued under
subsections (b) and (c) of section 234 shall not exceed in the
aggregate $9,500,000,000.
``(B) Subject to spending authority provided in appropriations
Acts pursuant to section 504(b) of the Federal Credit Reform Act of
1990, the Corporation is authorized to transfer such sums as are
necessary from its noncredit activities to pay for the subsidy cost
of the investment guaranties and direct loan programs under
subsections (b) and (c) of section 234.''.
SEC. 103. EXTENDING ISSUING AUTHORITY.
Section 235(a)(3) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C.
2195(a)(3)) is amended by striking ``1994'' and inserting ``1996''.
SEC. 104. ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES.
Section 235 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2195)
is amended by striking subsection (g).
SEC. 105. EXEMPTIONS FOR CERTAIN COUNTRIES.
Paragraph (2) of the second undesignated paragraph of section 231
of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2191) is amended by
inserting after ``Recovery Act (19 U.S.C. 2702)'' the following: ``,
Ireland, and Northern Ireland''.
TITLE II--TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
SEC. 201. TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT AGENCY.
Section 661(f)(1) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C.
2421(f)(1)) is amended--
(1) by striking ``There are authorized'' and inserting ``(A)
There are authorized'';
(2) by striking ``$55,000,000'' and all that follows and
inserting ``$77,000,000 for fiscal year 1995 and such sums as are
necessary for fiscal year 1996.''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(B) Amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations under subparagraph (A) are authorized to remain
available until expended.''.
TITLE III--EXPORT PROMOTION PROGRAMS WITHIN THE INTERNATIONAL TRADE
ADMINISTRATION
SEC. 301. EXPORT PROMOTION AUTHORIZATION.
Section 202 of the Export Administration Amendments Act of 1985 (15
U.S.C. 4052) is amended to read as follows:
``SEC. 202. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
``There are authorized to be appropriated to the Department of
Commerce to carry out export promotion programs such sums as are
necessary for fiscal years 1995 and 1996.''.
TITLE IV--PROMOTION OF UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL EXPORTS
SEC. 401. SHORT TITLE.
This title may be cited as the ``Environmental Export Promotion Act
of 1994''.
SEC. 402. PROMOTION OF ENVIRONMENTAL EXPORTS.
(a) Environmental Technologies Trade Advisory Committee.--Section
2313 of the Export Enhancement Act of 1988 (15 U.S.C. 4728) is
amended--
(1) by striking subsection (d);
(2) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (e); and
(3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following:
``(c) Environmental Technologies Trade Advisory Committee.--
``(1) Establishment and purpose.--The Secretary, in carrying
out the duties of the chairperson of the TPCC, shall establish the
Environmental Technologies Trade Advisory Committee (hereafter in
this section referred to as the `Committee'). The purpose of the
Committee shall be to provide advice and guidance to the Working
Group in the development and administration of programs to expand
United States exports of environmental technologies, goods, and
services and products that comply with United States environmental,
safety, and related requirements.
``(2) Membership.--The members of the Committee shall be drawn
from representatives of--
``(A) environmental businesses, including small businesses;
``(B) trade associations in the environmental sector;
``(C) private sector organizations involved in the
promotion of environmental exports, including products that
comply with United States environmental, safety, and related
requirements;
``(D) States (as defined in section 2301(i)(5)) and
associations representing the States; and
``(E) other appropriate interested members of the public,
including labor representatives.
The Secretary shall appoint as members of the Committee at least 1
individual under each of subparagraphs (A) through (E).
``(d) Export Plans for Priority Countries.--
``(1) Priority country identification.--The Working Group, in
consultation with the Committee, shall annually assess which
foreign countries have markets with the greatest potential for the
export of United States environmental technologies, goods, and
services. Of these countries the Working Group shall select as
priority countries 5 with the greatest potential for the
application of United States Government export promotion resources
related to environmental exports.
``(2) Export plans.--The Working Group, in consultation with
the Committee, shall annually create a plan for each priority
country selected under paragraph (1), setting forth in detail ways
to increase United States environmental exports to such country.
Each such plan shall--
``(A) identify the primary public and private sector
opportunities for United States exporters of environmental
technologies, goods, and services in the priority country;
``(B) analyze the financing and other requirements for
major projects in the priority country which will use
environmental technologies, goods, and services, and analyze
whether such projects are dependent upon financial assistance
from foreign countries or multilateral institutions; and
``(C) list specific actions to be taken by the member
agencies of the Working Group to increase United States exports
to the priority country.''.
(b) Additional Mechanisms To Promote Environmental Exports.--
Section 2313 of the Export Enhancement Act of 1988 is further amended
by adding at the end the following:
``(f) Environmental Technologies Specialists in the United States
and Foreign Commercial Service.--
``(1) Assignment of environmental technologies specialists.--
The Secretary shall assign a specialist in environmental
technologies to the office of the United States and Foreign
Commercial Service in each of the 5 priority countries selected
under subsection (d)(1), and the Secretary is authorized to assign
such a specialist to the office of the United States and Foreign
Commercial Service in any country that is a promising market for
United States exports of environmental technologies, goods, and
services. Such specialist may be an employee of the Department, an
employee of any relevant Unit
2000
ed States Government department or
agency assigned on a temporary or limited term basis to the
Commerce Department, or a representative of the private sector
assigned to the Department of Commerce.
``(2) Duties of environmental technologies specialists.--Each
specialist assigned under paragraph (1) shall provide export
promotion assistance to United States environmental businesses,
including, but not limited to--
``(A) identifying factors in the country to which the
specialist is assigned that affect the United States share of
the domestic market for environmental technologies, goods, and
services, including market barriers, standards-setting
activities, and financing issues;
``(B) providing assessments of assistance by foreign
governments that is provided to producers of environmental
technologies, goods, and services in such countries in order to
enhance exports to the country to which the specialist is
assigned, the effectiveness of such assistance on the
competitiveness of United States products, and whether
comparable United States assistance exists;
``(C) training Foreign Commercial Service Officers in the
country to which the specialist is assigned, other countries in
the region, and United States and Foreign Commercial Service
offices in the United States, in environmental technologies and
the international environmental market;
``(D) providing assistance in identifying potential
customers and market opportunities in the country to which the
specialist is assigned;
``(E) providing assistance in obtaining necessary business
services in the country to which the specialist is assigned;
``(F) providing information on environmental standards and
regulations in the country to which the specialist is assigned;
``(G) providing information on all United States Government
programs that could assist the promotion, financing, and sale
of United States environmental technologies, goods, and
services in the country to which the specialist is assigned;
and
``(H) promoting the equal treatment of United States
environmental, safety, and related requirements, with those of
other exporting countries, in order to promote exports of
United States-made products.
``(g) Environmental Training in One-Stop Shops.--In addition to the
training provided under subsection (f)(2)(C), the Secretary shall
establish a mechanism to train--
``(1) Commercial Service Officers assigned to the one-stop
shops provided for in section 2301(b)(8), and
``(2) Commercial Service Officers assigned to district offices
in districts having large numbers of environmental businesses,
in environmental technologies and in the international environmental
marketplace, and ensure that such officers receive appropriate training
under such mechanism. Such training may be provided by officers or
employees of the Department of Commerce, and other United States
Government departments and agencies, with appropriate expertise in
environmental technologies and the international environmental
workplace, and by appropriate representatives of the private sector.
``(h) International Regional Environmental Initiatives.--
``(1) Establishment of initiatives.--The TPCC may establish one
or more international regional environmental initiatives the
purpose of which shall be to coordinate the activities of Federal
departments and agencies in order to build environmental
partnerships between the United States and the geographic region
outside the United States for which such initiative is established.
Such partnerships shall enhance environmental protection and
promote sustainable development by using in the region technical
expertise and financial resources of United States departments and
agencies that provide foreign assistance and by expanding United
States exports of environmental technologies, goods, and services
to that region.
``(2) Activities.--In carrying out each international regional
environmental initiative, the TPCC shall--
``(A) support, through the provision of foreign assistance,
the development of sound environmental policies and practices
in countries in the geographic region for which the initiative
is established, including the development of environmentally
sound regulatory regimes and enforcement mechanisms;
``(B) identify and disseminate to United States
environmental businesses information regarding specific
environmental business opportunities in that geographic region;
``(C) coordinate existing Federal efforts to promote
environmental exports to that geographic region, and ensure
that such efforts are fully coordinated with environmental
export promotion efforts undertaken by the States and the
private sector;
``(D) increase assistance provided by the Federal
Government to promote exports from the United States of
environmental technologies, goods, and services to that
geographic region, such as trade missions, reverse trade
missions, trade fairs, and programs in the United States to
train foreign nationals in United States environmental
technologies; and
``(E) increase high-level advocacy by United States
Government officials (including the United States ambassadors
to the countries in that geographic region) for United States
environmental businesses seeking market opportunities in that
geographic region.
``(i) Environmental Technologies Project Advocacy Calendar and
Information Dissemination Program.--The Working Group shall--
``(1) maintain a calendar, updated at the end of each calendar
quarter, of significant opportunities for United States
environmental businesses in foreign markets and trade promotion
events, which shall--
``(A) be made available to the public;
``(B) identify the 50 to 100 environmental infrastructure
and procurement projects in foreign markets that have the
greatest potential in the calendar quarter for United States
exports of environmental technologies, goods, and services; and
``(C) include trade promotion events, such as trade
missions and trade fairs, in the environmental sector; and
``(2) provide, through the National Trade Data Bank and other
information dissemination channels, information on opportunities
for environmental businesses in foreign markets and information on
Federal export promotion programs.
``(j) Environmental Technology Export Alliances.--Subject to the
availability of appropriations for such purpose, the Secretary is
authorized to use the Market Development Cooperator Program to support
the creation on a regional basis of alliances of private sector
entities, nonprofit organizations, and universities, that support the
export of environmental technologies, goods, and services and promote
the export of products complying with United States environmental,
safety, and related requirements.
``(k) Definition.--For purposes of this section, the term
`environmental business' means a business that produces environmental
technologies, goods, or services.''.
TITLE V--INTERNATIONAL PROTECTION OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
SEC. 501. ESTABLISHMENT OF PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--In carrying out part I of the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961 and other relevant foreign assistance laws, the President,
acting through the Administrator of the United States Agency for
International Development, shall establish a program of training and
other technical assistance to assist foreign countries in--
4f5
(1) developing and strengthening laws and regulations to
protect intellectual property; and
(2) developing the infrastructure necessary to implement and
enforce such laws and regulations.
(b) Participation of Other Agencies.--The Administrator of the
United States Agency for International Development--
(1) shall utilize the expertise of the Patent and Trademark
Office and other agencies of the United States Government in
designing and implementing the program of assistance provided for
in this section;
(2) shall coordinate assistance under this section with efforts
of other agencies of the United States Government to increase
international protection of intellectual property, including
implementation of international agreements containing high levels
of protection of intellectual property; and
(3) shall consult with the heads of such other agencies in
determining which foreign countries will receive assistance under
this section.
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Vice President of the United States and
President of the Senate.
0