USDOT Launches US Supply Chain Visibility Platform
USDOT launched a freight data platform, seeking a 2026 NDAA mandate to share real-time operational data among all U.S. ports, rail, trucking and logistics firms.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced the American Supply Chain Sovereignty Initiative at the Port of Los Angeles last week, calling on Congress to embed authorization language into the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act. The initiative will expand the existing FLOW program into a high-visibility dashboard connecting ocean carriers, railroads, trucking firms, and major retailers to accelerate cargo processing and lower logistics costs.
What Does This Regulation Cover?
The American Supply Chain Sovereignty Initiative mandates the creation of a centralized, role-based freight data platform that provides real-time visibility across all major U.S. freight corridors. It will require participating railroads, port terminals, and drayage providers to share operational metrics—such as container dwell times, chassis availability, and train slot capacity—through a single government-coordinated dashboard. The measure builds on the Freight Logistics Optimization Works (FLOW) program, established in 2022, and aligns with the May-launched 2026 National Freight Strategic Plan, which prioritizes multimodal connectivity and data-driven infrastructure investment.
Key Regulatory Data
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Regulation / Policy Name | American Supply Chain Sovereignty Initiative |
| Total Value | Not disclosed |
| Parties Involved | USDOT, Congress, ocean carriers, Class I railroads, trucking firms, major retailers, port authorities |
| Timeline / Completion | Legislative authorization sought in FY2026 NDAA; dashboard deployment timeline not disclosed |
| Country / Corridor | United States, all major maritime and rail freight corridors |
How Does This Compare to Global Standards?
National freight visibility platforms are not without precedent. The European Union’s electronic Freight Transport Information (eFTI) regulation, adopted in 2020 and entering full enforcement by 2025, mandates digital data sharing across all modes but leaves implementation to member states rather than creating a single EU dashboard. Singapore’s TradeXchange platform, launched in 2007, integrated customs, port, and logistics data for trade facilitation, yet does not encompass domestic rail-first supply chains. The U.S. initiative differs by seeking a single federally mandated dashboard with granular, railroad- and port-level operational data, a scope not matched by any other national program. (Source: European Commission, 2020; GovTech Singapore, 2019)
Meanwhile, recent U.S. rail freight trends reinforce the economic logic. U.S. third-party logistics (3PL) gross revenues grew 5.0% year-on-year to $323.4 billion in 2025, with Domestic Transportation Management—dominated by rail intermodal—recording steady net revenue increases, confirming the end of the freight recession that began in late 2022. (Source: Armstrong & Associates, 2025)
Editor’s Analysis
The initiative’s explicit inclusion of railroads as mandatory data partners signals that the federal government is treating rail intermodal velocity as a national economic security variable. This comes as a continuing rail-ferry agreement in the Great Lakes region demonstrated that dedicated rail marine links remain critical for certain supply chains—a reality a national dashboard would make visible for the first time. (Source: MarineLink, 2025) With the freight recession definitively over and rail volumes climbing, Class I carriers may find that data-sharing requirements, while operationally sensitive, become a prerequisite for accessing public infrastructure funds tied to the 2026 National Freight Strategic Plan. The absence of a disclosed implementation budget, however, raises questions about how quickly the necessary IT integration across dozens of private-sector systems can occur.
FAQ
Q: How will the American Supply Chain Sovereignty Initiative affect rail shippers?
A: Rail shippers will gain near-real-time visibility into container dwell times at major ports and terminals, allowing more precise scheduling of intermodal handoffs. This could reduce demurrage charges and improve carload planning for bulk and intermodal cargo.
Q: When will the supply chain dashboard be fully operational?
A: No official launch date has been announced. The USDOT is first seeking legislative authority through the 2026 NDAA; full implementation will depend on system development and onboarding of private-sector partners, likely taking 18–24 months after authorization.
Q: Does this program replace the existing FLOW initiative?
A: No. The initiative builds on FLOW’s data architecture and lessons learned since 2022, expanding its scope and moving from voluntary industry participation toward a role-based, potentially mandatory data-sharing framework.






