KEY POINTS
  • The White House is studying whether supply chains should undergo "stress tests" of hypothetical scenarios and whether to suggest stockpiling certain critical items, sources say.
  • The administration is conducting a broader review into critical supply chains amid a global semiconductor shortage that has impacted the auto industry.
  • Government agencies meet weekly to discuss the issue and have not reached any final conclusions about which recommendations to issue.
  • Any effort to mandate stress testing could run into legal hurdles, since Congress has given government agencies varying authority to regulate industries.
President Joe Biden holds a chip as he speaks prior to signing an executive order aimed at addressing a global semiconductor shortage, in the State Dining Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., February 24, 2021.

As part of an ongoing review into critical supply chains, the Biden administration is considering requesting that supply chains undergo "stress tests" of hypothetical scenarios and suggesting that companies stockpile certain critical inventory, according to two senior administration officials and two people familiar with the review.

"The idea of making sure that companies have a better sense of their own supply chain vulnerabilities is clearly one of the things involved in the process," said a senior administration official who declined to be identified because the review was neither complete nor public.

Government agencies meet weekly to discuss the issue and have not reached any final conclusions about which recommendations to issue. A first report focused on semiconductors, critical minerals, high capacity batteries and active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) is due June 4; a broader-based review will be conducted in the year to follow.