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The Defense Production Act

Overview, Key Definitions, and DPA-related Executive Orders

The Defense Production Act (DPA) of 1950 is the primary source of Presidential authorities to expedite and expand the supply of materials and services from the U.S. industrial base needed to promote the national defense.

Since 1950, the DPA has been reauthorized more than 50 times, with Congress subsequently expanding the term national defense, as defined by the DPA, to include emergency preparedness activities conducted pursuant to title VI of the Stafford Act and critical infrastructure protection and restoration. The most recent reauthorization of the DPA extended the non-permanent provision of the act by six years, from September 30, 2019, to September 30, 2025 (Section 1791 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019).

Defense Production Act Authorities

Current DPA authorities include:

  • Title I (Priorities and Allocations) allows the President to require businesses, corporations, and individuals to accept and prioritize contracts for materials and services necessary to promote the national defense and to allocate materials, services, and facilities necessary to promote the national defense.
  • Title III (Expansion of Productive Capacity and Supply) allows the President to incentivize the domestic industrial base expansion for the production and supply of critical materials and goods with specific limitations and requirements.
  • Title VII (General Provisions) includes key definitions for the DPA and authorities to:
    • Establish voluntary agreements with private industry,
    • Obtain information from businesses for industry studies,
    • Review proposed or pending foreign corporate mergers, acquisitions, or takeovers that threaten national security, and
    • Employ persons with recognized experience and establish a volunteer pool of industry executives who could be called to government service in the interest of the national defense.

Key Definitions

National defense: Programs for military and energy production or construction, military or critical infrastructure assistance to any foreign nation, homeland security, stockpiling, space, and any directly related activity. Such term includes emergency preparedness activities conducted pursuant to title VI of The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act and critical infrastructure protection and restoration (DPA Sec. 702).

Emergency preparedness: All those activities and measures designed or undertaken to prepare for or minimize the effects of a hazard upon the civilian population, to deal with the immediate emergency conditions which would be created by the hazard, and to effectuate emergency repairs to, or the emergency restoration of, vital utilities and facilities destroyed or damaged by the hazard (full definition can be found in the Stafford Act Sec. 602).

Health resources: Drugs, biological products, medical devices, materials, facilities, health supplies, services, and equipment required to diagnose, mitigate or prevent the impairment of, improve, treat, cure, or restore the physical or mental health conditions of the population (EO 13603).

Critical infrastructure: Any systems and assets, whether physical or cyber-based, so vital to the United States that the degradation or destruction of such systems and assets would have a debilitating impact on national security, including, but not limited to, national economic security and national public health or safety (DPA Sec. 702).

DPA-Related Executive Orders

Contact Us

For more information about the Defense Production Act (DPA), please contact the HHS ASPR DPA Mailbox at aspr.dpa@hhs.gov