[Federal Register Volume 91, Number 84 (Friday, May 1, 2026)]
[Notices]
[Pages 23523-23525]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2026-08554]


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SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION


Scaling Critical Suppliers in Domestic Supply Chains

AGENCY: U.S. Small Business Administration.

ACTION: Request for information.

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SUMMARY: The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) requests public 
input to inform the design of near-term initiatives intended to 
strengthen domestic manufacturing capacity for critical components, 
subcomponents, materials, tooling, and specialized capabilities 
essential to economic resilience and national security. This request 
focuses on identifying opportunities to rapidly scale existing domestic 
supplier capacity in areas characterized by supply chain constraints or 
choke points. SBA is particularly interested in gaps where qualifying 
domestic small businesses have a demonstrated operating history but are 
unable to reach a specific near-term milestone due to a capital 
shortfall. Information received in response to this Request for 
information (RFI) will inform the development of SBA innovation 
programs and initiatives, including potential prize competitions 
designed to deliver measurable increases in production capacity, 
supplier participation, and supply chain resilience within a compressed 
execution window.

DATES: Submit comments on or before May 18, 2026.

ADDRESSES: You may send comments, identified by subject line ``RFI 
Response: Strengthening Domestic Supply Chains and Critical Supplier 
Competition'' to [email protected].
    Instructions: Please include the subject line, ``RFI Response: 
Strengthening Domestic Supply Chains and Critical Supplier 
Competition''. Your response should include a cover sheet with the 
following:

     Individual or Organization Name
     (If applicable) Organization/Individual Point of Contact
     (If applicable) Organization UEI
    Comments are strictly voluntary.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rikki Jones, Program Analyst, Office 
of Investment and Innovation, U.S. Small Business Administration, 
[email protected], 202-205-6156. This phone number may also be 
reached by individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing, or who have 
speech disabilities, through the Federal Communications Commission's 
TTY-Based Telecommunications Relay Service Teletype service at 711.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background

    SBA administers programs to support small business development, 
access to capital, and innovation pursuant to the Small Business Act, 
as amended (15 U.S.C. 631, et seq.), the Small Business Investment Act 
of 1958, as amended (15 U.S.C. 662, et seq.), and the America COMPETES 
Act, as amended (15 U.S.C. 3719), including:
 15 U.S.C. 634(b) (General Powers of the Administrator);
 15 U.S.C. 662-697g (Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) 
program);
 15 U.S.C. 638 (Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and 
Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) programs); and
 15 U.S.C. 3719 (prize competitions).
    SBA's investment and innovation programs are implemented in part 
through regulations at 13 CFR parts 107 and 121, as well as through 
sub-regulatory guidance, including Standard Operating Procedures and 
program notices. The Office of Investment and Innovation (OII) 
administers SBA's Innovation Network Programs, including the Growth 
Accelerator Fund Competition, the Regional Innovation Cluster Program, 
and the Federal and State Technology Partnership Program. These 
programs support the development of regional and sector-

[[Page 23524]]

based networks that help small businesses and technology firms scale.
    Consistent with SBA's statutory authorities, SBA is seeking input 
to inform the design of future initiatives, including potential prize 
competitions authorized under the America COMPETES Act, 15. U.S.C. 
3719.

II. Purpose and Scope

    SBA seeks input on how to most effectively accelerate the immediate 
scaling of existing domestic small business suppliers and proven 
solution providers that support expanded production capacity, and 
address supply chain choke points through the achievement of measurable 
near-term milestones.
    SBA is also interested in understanding how targeted actions 
described in this RFI can improve supplier coordination and 
participation across industries and through vertical integration, 
particularly where such improvements would enable rapid expansion of 
domestic production by small business participants in the U.S. 
industrial base.

III. Key Areas of Interest

    This RFI focuses on the following key areas:
     Supply chain gaps where an infusion of capital could 
measurably scale production capacity or rapidly implement a new 
technology solution that supports this scaled production;
     Identification of suppliers and solution providers that 
are ready to execute a near-term milestone (approximately 1-3 months);
     The required incremental capital investment to achieve the 
stated near-term milestone, including description of the full capital 
stack required that could include a combination of federal funding and 
expected non-federal cost share (equity, debt and cashflow from 
operations, etc.); and
     Non-capital related support and actions that could 
mitigate execution risk and deliver measurable, near-term improvements 
in output, cost, lead time, and domestic small business supplier 
participation.

IV. Information Requested

    SBA invites responses from entrepreneurs, small and large 
businesses, suppliers, manufacturers, entrepreneur support 
organizations, investors, and other industry stakeholders. Respondents 
are encouraged to provide concise, operational, and time-bound 
responses, include quantitative estimates and near-term projections, 
and identify assumptions and execution risks.
    1. Supply Chain Gaps and Choke Points. What supply chain gaps or 
choke points and/or applicable solutions relating to manufacturing and/
or production processes most constrain domestic production or U.S. 
economic resilience?
    a. Respondents may address:
    i. Industry, sector, or application (including defense, commercial 
or dual-use relevance);
    ii. The subject component, material, or solution and its position 
and/or impact in the supply chain or;
    iii. An assessment or quantification of the impact of such supply 
chain gap or lacking solution on cost, lead time, or dependency;
    iv. Whether the constraint is driven by insufficient production 
capacity, outdated production processes or increased cost or lack of 
supply of upstream components;
    v. Any single points of failure or highly concentrated supply 
segments that could be effectively addressed by U.S. small businesses; 
and
    vi. Whether such domestic firms could achieve a near-term milestone 
(1-3 months) with targeted support (financial and non-financial).
    2. Supplier Readiness to Scale. What suppliers and/or solution 
providers are currently positioned in the near term to scale, address a 
vital supply chain choke point, or facilitate advanced and more 
efficient production processes?
    a. Respondents may address:
    i. Evidence of existing production capability and/or tested or 
proven solutions;
    ii. Current utilization and surge capacity, as applicable;
    iii. Customer demand, contracts, or near-term pipeline; and
    iv. Ability to address supply chain chokepoint or implement 
solution(s) within a compressed timeframe (1-3 months).
    3. Constraints to Near-Term Scaling. What factors are preventing 
capable suppliers and solution providers from expanding production in 
the near-term?
    a. Respondents may address:
    i. Capital requirements (equipment, materials, working capital);
    ii. Workforce availability and training;
    iii. Certification or qualification requirements for both 
commercial and government contracts;
    iv. Demand uncertainty;
    v. Infrastructure or equipment limitations;
    vi. Price fluctuations and availability of upstream inputs; and
    vii. Other risks that could adversely affect near-term execution.
    4. Effective Interventions for Rapid Scaling. What types of actions 
most effectively enable rapid near-term supplier scaling?
    a. Respondents may address:
    i. Financial support mechanisms that can be deployed quickly;
    ii. Demand commitments or procurement alignment;
    iii. Technical assistance or validation support;
    iv. Innovations and solutions that facilitate near-term growth and/
or efficiencies;
    v. Partnerships or coordinated actions; and
    vi. Role of service providers or intermediaries in removing 
bottleneck.
    5. Investment, Milestones, and Expected Outcomes. What level of 
capital infusion would be required to achieve measurable increases in 
production capacity within a short timeframe?
    a. Respondents may address:
    i. Estimated level of funding required;
    ii. Expected non-federal cost share or private investment;
    iii. Specific milestones achievable within 1-3 months;
    iv. Anticipated increases in output and throughput; and
    v. Expected improvements in cost, lead time, or supplier 
participation.
    6. Data and Measurement. What data sources and metrics should SBA 
use to assess impact?
    a. Respondents may address:
    i. Methods for estimating current and near-term production capacity 
growth;
    ii. Metrics for tracking short-term output increases;
    iii. Indicators of reduced lead times, or cost performance;
    iv. Metrics for measuring a specific supply chain's resilience or 
vulnerability; and
    v. Metrics or indicators relating to improving national or economic 
security through the implementation of the applicable solution or 
scaled production.

V. Potential Program Design Considerations

    SBA is considering approaches that may include:
     Direct support to small businesses to scale production 
capacity and/or implement solutions that serve supply chain resiliency;
     Support to entities that enable supplier scaling by 
addressing bottlenecks;
     Milestone-based funding structures tied to measurable, 
near-term outcomes;
     Requirements for demonstrated production capability and/or 
solution implementation and readiness to execute; and
     Consideration of creditworthiness, sources of capital 
(other than the

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government), ability to deploy funds rapidly, likelihood of achievement 
of stated milestones (execution risk), management team qualifications 
and track record demonstrating success, overall impact applicable to an 
award of incremental capital towards economic and national security 
priorities.
    This section is provided to inform responses and does not represent 
final program design.

VI. Use of Information

    Responses to this RFI will inform the development of SBA 
initiatives, including SBA's Innovation Network Programs and potential 
prize competitions designed to deliver rapid, measurable increases in 
domestic production capacity through solutions that improve 
efficiencies and through scale and strengthened resiliency with respect 
to critical supply chains.

VII. Disclaimer

    No reimbursement will be made for any costs associated with 
providing information in response to this RFI or any follow-up 
information requests. Moreover, any and all information shared in 
response to this RFI is protected by SBA's deliberative process and 
will not be associated with any single entity, person, and/or 
organization.

VIII. Authority

    This request is issued pursuant to:
     15 U.S.C. 631 et seq. (Small Business Act);
     15 U.S.C. 634(b) (General Powers of the Administrator);
     15 U.S.C. 662-697g (Small Business Investment Company 
(SBIC) program);
     15 U.S.C. 638 (Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) 
and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) programs);
     15 U.S.C. 3719 (Prize Competitions); and
     Implementing regulations at 13 CFR parts 107 and 121 and 
related authorities.

Joshua Carter,
Associate Administrator for the Office of Investment and Innovation.
[FR Doc. 2026-08554 Filed 4-30-26; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8026-09-P