American AI Exports Program Pre-Set Consortia Proposal Solicitation
Summary
The Department of Commerce, through ITA, invites proposals from industry-led pre-set AI consortia for designation under the American AI Exports Program established by Executive Order 14320. Designated consortia may receive priority government advocacy, export licensing review, interagency coordination, and financing referrals. The proposal filing window opens April 1, 2026 and closes June 30, 2026, with ITA intending to issue designation decisions within 60 calendar days of completeness review.
What changed
ITA published a notice establishing the American AI Exports Program under Executive Order 14320, which directs the Department of Commerce to promote the export of full-stack American AI technology packages to preserve U.S. leadership in AI. Pre-set consortia consisting of organized teams of AI companies may apply for designation, which would allow their export packages to be presented by U.S. Government representatives as vetted, standing full-stack American AI export packages for foreign buyers.
AI companies and consortia considering participation should evaluate the program's potential benefits including priority government advocacy, expedited export licensing review, interagency coordination, and financing referrals. The program distinguishes between pre-set consortia (standing teams offering ongoing export packages) and future on-demand consortia (formed for specific foreign opportunities). Companies should prepare comprehensive proposals demonstrating a complete American AI technology stack and file before the June 30, 2026 deadline.
What to do next
- AI companies should form or join pre-set consortia and submit proposals through the portal at https://aiexports.gov/consortia/apply
- Submit proposals before the June 30, 2026 deadline at 5:00 p.m. EDT
- Monitor updates at https://aiexports.gov/ai-consortia for program guidance
Archived snapshot
Apr 13, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Content
ACTION:
Notice of call for proposals.
SUMMARY:
The Department of Commerce (the Department), through the International Trade Administration (ITA), invites proposals for full-stack
American AI export packages from industry-led `pre-set' consortia for designation under the American Artificial Intelligence
(AI) Exports Program (the Program) established pursuant to Executive Order 14320, “Promoting the Export of the American AI
Technology Stack.” A designated package will be presented by U.S. Government representatives as a standing, full-stack American
AI export package and may receive priority government advocacy, export licensing review and processing, interagency coordination,
and financing referrals, subject to applicable law. Designation does not guarantee any particular form of federal assistance,
financing, license approval, advocacy outcomes, or a contract award.
DATES:
Proposal filing window: This call for proposals opens on April 1, 2026 and proposals will be accepted until 5:00 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time on June
30, 2026. The Department will consider proposals on a rolling basis for inclusion in the Program. For all proposals, the Department
intends to complete an initial completeness review
within 14 business days of receipt. Once a proposal is deemed complete, the Department intends to issue a designation decision
within 60 calendar days.
Question and answer period: See Section XI of this notice.
ADDRESSES:
Submit proposals electronically through the American AI Exports Program submission portal at https://aiexports.gov/consortia/apply. The portal will include filing instructions, including instructions for submitting confidential commercial information through
the portal. The Department will post program updates and public question-and-answer materials at https://aiexports.gov/ai-consortia. Email or paper delivery will not substitute for formal submission through the portal.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brandon Remington, AI Exports Team, International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1401 Constitution Ave
NW, Washington, DC 20230; telephone: 202-839-0393; email: brandon.remington@trade.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background and Purpose
Executive Order 14320 directs the Department of Commerce to promote the export of full-stack American AI technology packages
to preserve and extend American leadership in AI and decrease international dependence on AI technologies developed by our
adversaries. The Secretary of Commerce was tasked, in consultation with the Secretaries of State, War, and Energy, and the
Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, to evaluate and select industry-led proposals for designation under
the American AI Exports Program. This notice implements that directive and enables the creation of a menu of priority AI export
packages that the U.S. Government will promote to allies and partners around the world.
`Pre-set' consortia are standing teams of AI companies organized to offer a complete American AI technology stack to foreign
markets on an ongoing basis. A pre-set consortium is not required to identify a single opportunity or a named foreign buyer
in applying. Rather, a pre-set consortium is applying for its full-stack export package to be available for presentation by
the United States as part of its menu of vetted, full-stack AI export packages for foreign public- and private-sector buyers
in global, regional, or country-specific markets.
The Department expects future
Federal Register
notices, program guidance, or both to address `on-demand' consortia formed for specific foreign opportunities. Further information
will be provided as those opportunities arise.
II. Scope of Eligible Pre-Set Consortia
An eligible pre-set consortium must be able to deliver a full-stack AI technology package, as defined in Section III, to one
or more foreign markets. A consortium does not require any particular legal structure, and there is no minimum or maximum
number of consortium members. For each layer of the full stack AI technology package described in Section III, the entity
providing the greatest share of the package's products and services by value for that layer (1) must be a member of the consortium. A consortium member can provide products or services across more than one layer.
For the purposes of this proposal, subcontractors and local implementation partners (i.e., entities located in the intended export market and providing local deployment, integration, training, maintenance, or similar
support) that are not consortium members do not need to be identified except to the extent that their identification is necessary
to calculate U.S. hardware content, as outlined in Section IV.
Each consortium must identify a single “anchor member.” The anchor member is the lead entity for the consortium, will be responsible
for submitting the proposal, and will be the single point of contact for the Program. To qualify as an anchor member, an entity
must:
Affirm it has experience providing products or services internationally and the organizational capacity to manage multi-country
delivery for that layer;Be organized under the laws of the United States or a State thereof, with its principal place of business in the United
States. Any subsidiary, affiliate, or branch whose ultimate parent entity is organized under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction
or has its principal place of business outside the United States is ineligible to be an anchor member; andNot be (1) incorporated or have its principal place of business in a country of concern, as defined in Sec. 8521 of the
2026 National Defense Authorization Act (Pub. L. 119-60); or (2) owned or controlled through a majority voting or equity interest
by a country of concern or by an entity or national of a country of concern.
An entity may participate in more than one consortium simultaneously and need not serve the same role in all consortia.
A. National Champion Enterprises
Foreign entities may be members of a consortium, subject to the limitations in Section IV. In exceptional cases, the Department
may, in consultation with the Departments of Energy, State, War, and the Office of Science and Technology Policy, on a case-by-case
basis, designate a package for inclusion in the Program in which a foreign enterprise is the provider of the highest value
of products and services for the functions described in Layer 1, as described in Section III, and/or provides the AI models
and systems in Layer 3. The Department may make such designations where the Secretary of Commerce determines, in consultation
with the Departments of Energy, State, War, and the Office of Science and Technology Policy, that designation of the package,
including the participation of the foreign enterprise(s), advances the national interest of the United States. The foreign
enterprises providing the highest value products and services for Layers 1 and 3 as described in these packages will be known
as “National Champion Enterprises”(NCEs).Section IX.
Consortia with foreign firms may only be designated as NCEs for packages for their home country and may not be designated
as NCEs for packages intended for other countries.
Each proposal should identify whether it wishes to have foreign firms included as NCEs for a package. If so, the proposal
should identify those firms it wishes to be considered NCEs, and the national interest statement described in section VI(6)
should explicitly outline why inclusion of the NCE advances the national interest.
III. Full-Stack AI Technology Package
For purposes of this notice, a full-stack AI technology package is an integrated offering that provides products or services
for the functions described in each layer of the AI stack for one or more target foreign markets. The five layers required
are:
AI-optimized hardware and related infrastructure, including chips, servers, accelerators, data center storage, cloud services,
networking;Data pipelines and labeling systems;
AI models and systems;
Security and cybersecurity measures for AI models and systems; and
AI applications for sector-specific or functional use cases (e.g., software engineering, education, healthcare, agriculture, finance, law, defense, government administration, or transportation).
A pre-set consortium must provide products or services for the functions described across all five layers, even if any individual
transaction later uses only a subset of those layers. The Department will interpret the definition of these layers expansively
to enable proposals to represent practically deployable AI products and services.
IV. Content and Ownership
Proposals are designated based on a national interest determination by the Secretary of Commerce, in consultation with the
Secretaries of State, War, and Energy, and the Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy. A proposal is eligible
for a national interest analysis if it meets the requirements under subsections (B) and (D) below. Subsections (A) and (C)
are also required unless a national interest determination provides for an exception on a case-by-case basis, as described
in Section II.A (National Champion Enterprises).
A. Hardware
A proposal will be presumed to satisfy the U.S. content component of the national interest determination under Section IX
if, through reasonable efforts, it demonstrates that U.S. content (2) comprises at least 51 percent of the aggregate value of the hardware portion of the proposal (Layer 1 identified in Section
III). If the Department of Commerce learns that the hardware portion of the proposal is not at least 51 percent U.S. content,
the Department may contact the proposer to request adjustments.
Products and services included in the package for functions under Layer 1 must be specifically disclosed if provided by an
entity, whether a consortium member or not, that is (1) incorporated or have its principal place of business in a country
of concern, as defined in Sec. 8521 of the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (Pub. L. 119-60); or (2) owned or controlled
through a majority voting or equity interest by a country of concern or by an entity or national of a country of concern.
B. Data, Software, Cybersecurity, and Application-layers Control and Standards Test
Each consortium member that provides products or services for the functions described in layers 2, 4 and 5 must:
Not be (1) incorporated or have its principal place of business in a country of concern, as defined in Sec. 8521 of the 2026
National Defense Authorization Act (Pub. L. 119-60); or (2) owned or controlled through a majority voting or equity interest
by a country of concern or by an entity or national of a country of concern.
As part of the proposal, the consortium's anchor member must also describe the privacy and security measures that the consortium
will include as part of the export package to secure the provided software and AI systems.
C. AI Model Ownership and Control
For AI models and systems, any entity that owns the intellectual property for the model (1) must not be owned or controlled
through a voting or ownership interest by a country of concern or by an entity or national of a country of concern and (2)
must be at least 51 percent owned and controlled by U.S. persons or entities. For open-weight models, requirement (2) may
instead be satisfied if an entity meeting requirements (1) and (2) provides the deployment, integration, fine-tuning, security,
and support functions necessary to make the model part of the package. The Department will not designate any consortium with
open-weight models developed by entities that are (1) incorporated or have its principal place of business in a country of
concern, as defined in Sec. 8521 of the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (Pub. L. 119-60); or (2) owned or controlled
through a majority voting or equity interest by a country of concern or by an entity or national of a country of concern.
D. No Country of Concern
A consortium may not include members, subcontractors, or local implementation partners that are (1) incorporated or have their
principal place of business in a country of concern, as defined in Sec. 8521 of the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act
(Pub. L. 119-60); or (2) owned or controlled through a majority voting or equity interest by a country of concern or by an
entity or national of a country of concern.
V. Target Markets and Market Positioning
Each proposal must identify at least one target country or regional bloc for which its package is intended—its “target markets.”
Each proposal much identify relevant foreign competition in the target markets, and why the proposed offering would advance
U.S. national interests in those markets, but identifying current foreign buyers is not required. Proposals identifying markets
with demonstrated demand, and in which U.S. engagement can materially influence decisions when a procuring entity is choosing
between American and foreign technology originating in a country of concern, will generally present a stronger national interest
case, but the Department, in consultation with the Departments of State, War, and Energy, and the Office of Science and Technology
Policy, may designate proposals for any foreign market where designation would advance the national interest.
VI. Proposal Contents and Formatting
All proposal materials should be submitted electronically through the AI Exports Program submission portal at https://aiexports.gov/consortia/apply. The Proposal application must include, at a minimum, the following:
Consortium overview. The consortium name; identification of the anchor member and attestations that the anchor member has
the qualifications outlined under Section II; and a listing of all consortium members, their roles, the stack layers in which
they provide products or services, and whether the consortium wishes to designate any members as NCEs. This should include
relevant ownership and control information sufficient to determine compliance with Section IV;Full-stack package description. A concise narrative describing the integrated technology offering across all required five
layers, addressing how products and services pertaining to functions described in the technology stack layers will be provided,
down to the two highest-value providers of products and services in each layer after the listed consortia members in Layers
1, 2, and 5. This should include a description, valuation, and percentage of U.S. hardware content. It should also include
a description of the privacy and security measures that the consortium will include as part of the export package, and the
American cybersecurity standards, or comparable frameworks appropriate to the targetmarket, that those measures would comply with;
Target markets. The global, regional, or country markets for which the offering is intended;
Business and operational model. A high-level explanation of which entities will build, own, operate, deliver, and support
the package, including any relevant infrastructure, cloud, or managed-service arrangements;Requested Federal support. Identification of the types of Federal support that would be most useful if the proposal is
designated, which may include export-control engagement, financing referrals, government-to-government engagement, technical
assistance, direct loans or loan guarantees, equity investments, co-financing, political risk insurance, credit guarantees,
feasibility studies, or other forms of assistance;National interest statement. A description of how the proposal advances the policy objectives of Executive Order 14320;
Country of concern disclosures. A description of specific products or services for functions under Layer 1 if provided
by an entity that is (1) incorporated or has its principal place of business in a country of concern, as defined in Sec. 8521
of the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (Pub. L. 119-60); or (2) owned or controlled through a majority voting or equity
interest by a country of concern or by an entity or national of a country of concern.Export-control compliance and national security information. Identification of items, destinations, end uses, end users,
or technical features that may implicate the Export Administration Regulations (EAR), the International Traffic in Arms Regulations
(ITAR), U.S. outbound investment regulations, end-user restrictions, or other national security controls; and a description
of the consortium's compliance program. Recognizing that proposers may not yet know the end users, preliminary information
other than the end user will suffice to make the anticipated license review process more efficient.
In addition, as part of the Proposal Narrative, proposers may submit the following optional items:
Letters of intent or other evidence of buyer interest;
Descriptions of local implementation partners;
Workforce-training or capacity-building components; and
Energy, telecommunications, fiber, or other enabling-infrastructure considerations.
VII. Submission Instructions and Public-Docket Procedures
Formal submission must occur through the AI Exports Program submission portal at https://aiexports.gov/consortia/apply. The Department intends to protect properly submitted confidential commercial information and export-control-sensitive information
to the extent permitted by law, including applicable FOIA exemptions and other lawful protections. Proposers are responsible
for properly identifying such information at the time of submission.
The Department may disregard confidentiality claims that are not properly supported. The Department may share proposals, including
nonpublic material, with other Federal agencies and contractors involved in reviewing or supporting the Program, subject to
applicable confidentiality protections.
VIII. Benefits of Designation
Designation under the Program is intended to place a package on the United States Government-supported menu of standing American
AI packages that may be promoted to foreign buyers and visible to the public. If designated, a package will receive one or
more of the following, when in the U.S. interest as determined by U.S. government officials:
Priority government-to-government engagement, including introductions to foreign counterparts and support for appropriate
advocacy in connection with specific opportunities;Opportunities to be presented at or through Program activities and events;
Priority consideration for transaction-specific export-control engagement, including prioritized review processes for linked
license applications as permitted by law and agency procedure; andPriority routing for available Federal financing referrals and interagency coordination, where requested, subject to each
agency's independent statutory authorities, underwriting standards, and Program requirements.
Designation does not:
Guarantee the approval of an export license or other authorization;
Guarantee financing, insurance, technical assistance, or any other Federal support;
Guarantee that the United States will advocate for a consortium in any specific manner or engagement;
Guarantee that a foreign buyer will select the designated consortium; or
Limit the Department's discretion to support another designated consortium or other U.S. companies seeking specific opportunities
outside of the Program when doing so is in the national interest.
IX. National Interest Assessment and Designation Determination
For eligible proposals, the Department, in consultation with the Departments of State, War, and Energy, and the Office of
Science and Technology Policy, will make designation decisions through a national interest determination that considers whether
a proposal will advance the objectives outlined in Executive Order 14320. The Department will not rank proposals under a fixed
scoring formula, and no single factor is necessarily dispositive. Any proposal determined to be in the national interest will
be designated. A proposal that undertakes reasonable efforts to satisfy the 51 percent hardware U.S.-content presumption is
not automatically entitled to designation, and a proposal that does not satisfy that presumption is not automatically disqualified.
In making designation decisions, the Department will consider:
Compliance with Program requirements;
Potential to advance the policy goals of Executive Order 14320;
National security posture, including export-control, end-use, end-user, cybersecurity, and other risk-mitigation considerations;
andCybersecurity architecture and standards alignment, including whether the proposal addresses the cybersecurity layer and
advances outcomes consistent with American standards, including the NIST Cybersecurity Framework, NIST Special Publication
800-53B, or comparable frameworks appropriate to the target markets.
The relative weight given to these considerations may vary depending on the proposal, the target market, and the national
interest as determined by the Department, in consultation with the Departments of State, War, and Energy, and the Office of
Science and Technology Policy.
X. Review Process, Notification, and Resubmission
The National AI Center will serve as the initial intake and coordination point for proposals filed under this notice.
A. Completeness Review
Within 14 days of receipt, the Department will determine whether a submission meets the minimum requirements set out in this
notice. The Department may request clarifying
information before determining that a submission is complete.
B. Substantive Review
After a proposal is determined to be complete, the Department will conduct a substantive review in consultation with the Departments
of State, War, and Energy, and the Office of Science and Technology Policy, as appropriate to the issues presented.
C. Decision Timing
The Department intends to issue a designation decision within 60 calendar days.
D. Notification
Proposers of selected packages will receive written notice of designation and next-step guidance on engaging with the Department
of Commerce. Proposers of packages that are not selected will receive notice of non-selection and may resubmit revised proposals
with a concise explanation of material changes.
E. No Fixed Cap
There is no numerical cap on the number of packages that may be designated under this notice.
XI. Public Questions and Answers
Beginning April 1, 2026, and through the application period, the Department will accept public questions regarding this notice.
The Department intends to publish responses, as appropriate, on a rolling basis at https://aiexports.gov/faq. The Department may decline to answer questions that request confidential treatment, seek transaction-specific legal advice,
or would materially prejudice a fair and orderly proposal process.
XII. Export Controls, Outbound Investment, Antitrust, FOIA, and Other Legal Terms
A. Export Controls and National Security
All proposal-related activities and any resulting transactions must comply with all applicable U.S. national security laws
and regulations, including the EAR, the ITAR, U.S. outbound investment regulations, end-user requirements, and export license
conditions.
B. Antitrust
Formation of, participation in, or designation of a consortium under this notice does not confer antitrust immunity or any
exemption from other applicable laws. Members remain responsible for compliance with antitrust and competition law.
C. Confidentiality and FOIA
Information submitted under this notice may be subject to disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) (FOIA).
The Department intends to protect properly submitted confidential commercial information, export-control-sensitive information,
or other non-public information to the extent permitted by law, including applicable FOIA exemptions and other lawful protections.
Proposers are responsible for properly identifying such information at the time of submission.
D. No Obligation
This notice does not obligate the United States Government to designate any proposal, to provide any specific form of support,
or to enter into any contract, financing arrangement, or other transaction.
E. Costs
The United States Government will not reimburse any costs incurred in preparing, submitting, supplementing, or revising a
proposal.
F. Modifications
The Department may modify, suspend, or terminate this call for proposals by subsequent notice in the
Federal Register
or by other public Program guidance, as appropriate.
William Kimmitt, Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade, U.S. Department of Commerce. [FR Doc. 2026-06952 Filed 4-9-26; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 3510-DR-P
Footnotes
(1) For purposes of this measurement, proposals should use the ex-factory prices of goods and contract value of services, as
discussed at https://www.trade.gov/determine-cs-eligibility?anchor=content-node-t14-field-lp-region-2-2 under “Fee-Based Export Promotion Assistance,”
(2) U.S. content is the percentage of value originating from U.S.-based manufacturing, which includes costs associated with U.S.
inputs, U.S. assembly, and U.S. services associated with the manufacturing, as defined at https://www.trade.gov/determine-cs-eligibility?anchor=content-node-t14-field-lp-region-2-2 under “Fee-Based Export Promotion Assistance.”
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