The Commerce Department, on Wednesday, initiated a call for proposals to assist American companies to “deliver full-stack AI technology packages to international partners”. The submission window for applications is open until June 30.

Companies are expected to collaborate and present proposals for a bundled AI system that covers all key layers of the AI ecosystem—hardware and infrastructure, data pipelines, AI models, security, and end-use applications—delivered together for specific markets or industries.

The Departments of State, Defense, Energy, and the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) will assist in evaluating the proposals. Selected proposals will receive benefits such as advocacy engagement, federal promotion, and federal financing tools.

The Commerce Department told Axios that it won’t use a standard scoring system or checklist to evaluate the proposals. Instead, it would require companies to include a statement  “describing how the proposal advances U.S. national interests.”

AI Exports To Shape Sovereignty

The AI exports program is being framed as a way to advance "AI sovereignty" on U.S. terms, as countries seek greater control over how AI is developed, deployed, and regulated. It builds on President Donald Trump's July executive order directing the government to promote AI exports by aligning diplomacy with key markets and partnerships.

The order also mandates that companies disclose where hardware is manufactured, who will build and operate infrastructure such as data centers, detail cybersecurity safeguards for AI models, and identify their intended export destinations.

The Commerce Department began implementation of the order in October.

US-China AI Race Intensifies

This move comes amid a global race for AI supremacy, particularly between the U.S. and China. Last year, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) argued that the U.S. can lead the global AI race, but only if the government avoids heavy-handed regulation and private industry steps up as a “patriotic partner.”

At the same time, Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), said China is likely to win the AI race, citing lower costs driven by subsidies and simpler regulations, while arguing that the U.S. and UK are being slowed by skepticism and increasing AI rules.

However, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (NYSE:BABA) Chairman Joe Tsai suggested that the U.S. should adopt a more strategic and long-term approach to AI, rather than viewing it as a race that can be won.

Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.

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