Chemistry Creates,
America Competes.
Unless the White House takes a different approach to how it creates and implements regulations, the availability of critical chemistries will dwindle—and the country’s climate, infrastructure and supply chain priorities will suffer as well. It’s quite simple - America’s success depends on American chemistry.
Chemistry Lessons for the Next Administration & Congress
The American Chemistry Council is committed to working with the Trump Administration and Congress to champion science-based policy solutions across all levels of government.
Learn moreLearn How Chemistry Creates, America Competes.
American Success Relies on American Chemistry
From supply chain, climate, and sustainability challenges to energy efficiency, power delivery, national security, and infrastructure needs, our nation depends on the products and innovations made by America’s chemical industry.
Chemistry enables affordable housing, reliable infrastructure, and effective, modern healthcare technologies. It is the driving force behind everyday products like smartphones and computers. And it is essential to transformative products like electrical vehicles and solar panels which are driving the future.
Chemical manufacturing is responsible for more than $600 billion in economic impact in the United States, providing good-paying jobs to over half a million Americans and supporting 25% of our GDP.
Overregulation Weakens Global Competitiveness
Unfortunately, our nation’s success is being threatened by a growing problem. While chemical demand is expected to increase both at home and abroad, the United States is at risk of falling further behind China when it comes to increasing its capacity to develop and produce chemicals.
A surge in new restrictions and lack of coordination between the White House and its agencies is handicapping the chemical industry’s ability to create products.
New proposed restrictions could limit access to and increase the cost of essential products, harming the U.S. economy, jeopardizing American competitiveness in the global market, and delaying progress for industries and sectors with urgent and growing needs.
This jeopardizes our national priorities, our economy, and America’s ability to compete with countries like China.
Economic Impacts and Slowed Progress
We support responsible regulation that puts science first, promotes innovation and supports supply chain resiliency.
The ballooning number of restrictions on the chemical industry is increasing operating and compliance costs, discouraging job creation and investment. Some aim to outright ban certain chemistries. Others may regulate chemistries to levels where manufacturing becomes unviable or impossible. If enacted, these restrictions have the potential for a detrimental impact on the supply chains for vital technologies, including semiconductors, clean energy solutions like electric vehicles, and many modern healthcare applications.
What’s more, these restrictions contradict policy priorities set forth by laws like the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), and CHIPS and Science Act.
Support for Innovation
For chemical manufacturers, the situation must change. Together, we can address these flawed restrictions.
Without appropriate oversight and the use of sound science to drive regulation, critical chemistries have the potential to suffer, along with the innovations and jobs that rely on them.
We want the White House and regulators to work with us not against us. We must find a better and more thoughtful way to regulate our industry that does not sacrifice America’s future. We are better together, and bringing people together and innovating is what chemistry is all about. It’s in our DNA. It’s in our products. And it should be in our policies.
We call on the White House, Federal agencies, and Congress, to support frameworks that celebrate innovation and accelerate progress.
Let's Work Together
Tell Congress to support policies that empower chemistry, promote American innovation and strengthen U.S. competitiveness.
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*The data is supported by a survey conducted by Morning Consult on behalf of ACC.