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2022 Supply Chain Ministerial 

The Supply Chain Ministerial, hosted by Secretary of State Blinken and Secretary of Commerce Raimondo, was held virtually on July 19-20, 2022. Since July 2022, the following countries have joined the original 18 signatories:  Slovakia, Costa Rica, Czech Republic, Ecuador, Estonia, Norway, Panama, Serbia, Uruguay, Israel, Switzerland and now Latvia, for a total of 30 economies. 

In October 2021, President Biden hosted a supply chain summit with 14 countries and the European Union to discuss how we collectively tackle the immediate supply chain challenges. He announced that Secretaries Blinken and Raimondo would hold a follow-up Summit to keep making progress on the work to build long-term supply chain reliance for the future.

On July 19-20, 2022, Secretary of State Blinken and Secretary of Commerce Raimondo hosted the Supply Chain Ministerial to advance work to reduce and end near-term supply chain disruptions and collaborate to build supply chain resiliency to avoid future disruptions.  Supply chain diplomacy also continues through bilateral and regional mechanisms including through the U.S.- E.U. Trade and Technology Council, the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, and Americas Partnership for Economic Prosperity.  

The Departments of State and Commerce are delivering solutions for the American people by working to alleviate supply chain disruptions and shaping policies that support transparent and resilient global supply chains.  The Departments are also working to mitigate future disruptions that could contribute to inflation and/or threaten the competitive system of global trade and U.S. businesses from growing.  By working aggressively with foreign partners, U.S. businesses, and stakeholders we can improve our supply chain resiliency and build more diverse sourcing networks.  We welcome this opportunity to hear from all our partners on solutions for an improved world. 

The Biden Administration believes inclusive economic growth is essential to making supply chains strong and resilient.  President Biden and Secretaries Blinken and Raimondo have prioritized ensuring not only business, but local officials, labor, civil society, and historically underrepresented voices are at the table as the global community charts a path forward on supply chain resilience.  This ensures that all stakeholders, including women, minority, and indigenous entrepreneurs and small business owners, as well as labor representatives are at the center of the solution.  By also including local officials, we seek to ensure solutions are tailored to the specific needs and strengths of each community. 

Signatory Partners

Australia, Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, Czech Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ecuador, Estonia, the European Union, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Mexico, the Netherlands, Norway, Panama, the Republic of Korea, Serbia, Singapore, Slovakia, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States and Uruguay.

Get Involved

Join us for keynote remarks, which will be livestreamed to the public on  www.state.gov and www.YouTube.com/statedept.  

Starting July 19, you are welcome to engage with us – Department of State, participants, and stakeholders – in real-time on social media during the Ministerial by using the hashtag:  #SupplyChain. 

Join the Department of State and partner country representatives from across the globe alongside key industry, labor, civil society stakeholders, and participants at the Ministerial – to start an important conversation surrounding the challenges we face today in supply chains. Please bring your successes and best practices to share.  We are stronger together. 

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Join the Conversation!   

This Ministerial is about solutions, about working together to reduce the complex, inter-related supply chain disruptions we have all felt. We want to engage in meaningful discussion about the challenges facing us all, the sticking points and your perspective on the way forward. The Ministerial is about inclusive economic growth and ensuring that everybody is part of the discussion. The State Department is your partner in solving supply chain disruptions and we need you to join us! 

Share Your Story

We want to hear about your experience and collect suggestions! Starting on July 19, the Department of State will be highlighting key messages from the Ministerial and engaging in conversation online.  

Use this hashtag on social media: #SupplyChain to join the conversation, share your story, experiences, and perspective with the world. Other industry and government leaders will be watching and looking for your best practices.  

Joint Statement on Cooperation on Global Supply Chains

The text of the following statement was released by the Governments of the United States of America and the 18 partner economies on the occasion of the Supply Chain Ministerial Forum. In addition to the participants who joined the joint statement during the Supply Chain Ministerial, the following economies have agreed to join the Joint Statement on Cooperation on Global Supply Chains and pursue the principles of Transparency, Diversification, Security, and Sustainability in their efforts to enhance the resiliency of supply chains:  Czech Republic, Ecuador, Estonia, Israel, Latvia, Norway, Panama, Serbia, Slovakia, Switzerland, and Uruguay.

Begin text:

The shocks to global supply chains from pandemics, wars and conflicts, extreme climate impacts, and natural disasters have put in stark relief the urgent need to further strengthen supply chains, to work to reduce and end near-term disruptions, and to build long-term resilience.  This is a global challenge we intend to approach resolutely and cooperatively.

Australia, Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the European Union, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States (hereinafter the “Participants”), following engagement at the 2022 Supply Chain Ministerial Forum, intend to work together on crisis response in an effort to alleviate near-term transportation, logistics, and supply chain disruptions and bottlenecks as well as the long-term resilience challenges that make our supply chains vulnerable and cause spillover effects for consumers, large and small businesses, workers, and families.  To ensure this effort is effective and reaches those most in need, we intend to engage on this work with businesses, workers, academia, labor and civil society, including women, representatives from local and other communities, consistent with Participants’ domestic laws and international obligations, and different levels of government.

Building collective, long-term resilient supply chains based on international partnerships is critical to the success of this effort.  To achieve this, we aim to follow these global supply chain principles:

Transparency:  We intend to promote transparency in consultation with the private sector, civil society, different levels of government, and other relevant stakeholders, consistent with Participants’ domestic laws and international obligations, in order to strengthen the resilience of supply chains.  Civil society consultations, consistent with Participants’ domestic laws and international obligations, are an important part of transparency.  We intend to advance information sharing, and to the extent possible common approaches and early warning systems, about potential, emerging, and systematic supply challenges.  We intend to undertake this cooperation consistent with Participants’ domestic laws and international obligations and with utmost care to protect non-public information, including information necessary for the protection of essential security interests.

Diversification:  We aim to promote diversification and increase global capacities for multiple, reliable, and sustainable sources of materials and inputs, intermediate goods, and finished goods in priority sectors, along with logistics infrastructure capacities, increasing resilience of supply chains to make our economies less vulnerable to disruptions and shocks.  We intend to explore opportunities to promote public and private investment into supply chains in priority sectors and to encourage partnerships and co-investment for access to and development of environmentally and socially responsibly sourced materials and inputs.

We aim to promote the involvement of small and medium sized businesses in priority supply chains.  We aim to promote the adoption of digital technologies by micro-, small, and medium sized companies. To advance the principles of equity and inclusion, we aim and strive to ensure investments are made into a broad range of communities, consistent with Participants’ domestic laws and international obligations, throughout our economies.

Predictability is important to resilient supply chains, and we will aim to work together to promote predictability, openness, fairness, and nondiscrimination in our economic relations as they impact our supply chains.  We will aim to reinforce and foster our longstanding, rules-based economic partnerships and supply chain relationships.

Security:  To promote supply chain security, we intend to deepen our consultations to identify and address risks arising from supply dependencies and potential vulnerabilities in critical infrastructure.  We intend to work together to address our mutual vulnerabilities and work to eliminate corruption in support of supply chain security.  We encourage Participants to undertake this cooperation in partnership with industry, labor and civil society, and other relevant stakeholders, pursuant to domestic laws, to better understand and manage security risks to supply chains.

Sustainability:  We intend to encourage global sustainability and responsible business conduct across supply chains, as well as objectives set out in relevant multilateral environmental agreements to which we are parties, including the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Paris Agreement.  We encourage the adoption of responsible business practices and recognize the importance of implementing our respective obligations under international labor conventions ratified by respective countries along the entire value chain to ensure that opening up new sourcing or supply chain options does not shortcut existing commitments to uphold human rights.  This includes our intent to cooperate to eradicate the use of forced labor in global supply chains.  We aim to foster the increased use of recycled materials and product components.  We also aim to foster and support the fair and sustainable manufacturing and trade of products, consistent with Participants’ domestic laws and international obligations, including through circular economy, the bioeconomy, and other approaches, that advance the fight against climate change, biodiversity loss, pollution, and which advance the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

We welcome all economies and invite all industries, businesses, women, workers, officials from different levels of government, labor and civil society, and other stakeholders to join us in pursuit of resilient supply chains, guided by these principles.  We acknowledge the key to resolving the next global supply chain crisis is to prevent it from happening in the first place.

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U.S. Department of State

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