252.225-7000 Buy American Act--Balance of Payments Program
Certificate.
252.225-7001 Buy American Act and Balance of Payments
Program.
252.225-7002 Qualifying Country Sources as Subcontractors.
252.225-7003 Report of Intended Performance Outside the United States and Canada—Submission with Offer.
252.225-7004 Report of Intended Performance Outside the United States and Canada—Submission after Award.
252.225-7005 Identification of Expenditures in the United States.
252.225-7006 Quarterly Reporting of Actual Contract Performance Outside the United States.
252.225-7007 Prohibition on Acquisition of United States Munitions List Items from Communist Chinese
Military Companies.
252.225-7008 Restriction on Acquisition of Specialty
Metals.
252.225-7009 Restriction on Acquisition of Certain
Articles Containing Specialty Metals.
252.225-7010 Commercial Derivative Military
Article—Specialty Metals Compliance Certificate.
252.225-7011 Restriction on Acquisition of Supercomputers.
252.225-7012 Preference for Certain Domestic Commodities.
252.225-7013 Duty-Free Entry.
252.225-7014 Reserved.
252.225-7015 Restriction on Acquisition of Hand or
Measuring Tools.
252.225-7016 Restriction on Acquisition of Ball and Roller
Bearings.
252.225-7017 Reserved.
252.225-7018 Reserved.
252.225-7019 Restriction on Acquisition of Anchor and
Mooring Chain.
252.225-7020 Trade Agreements Certificate.
252.225-7021 Trade Agreements.
252.225-7022 Trade Agreements Certificate—Inclusion of
Iraqi End Products.
252.225-7023 Preference for Products or Services from Iraq or Afghanistan.
252.225-7024 Requirement for Products or Services from Iraq or Afghanistan.
252.225-7025 Restriction on Acquisition of Forgings.
252.225-7026 Acquisition Restricted to Products or Services from Iraq or Afghanistan.
252.225-7027 Restriction on Contingent Fees for Foreign
Military Sales.
252.225-7028 Exclusionary Policies and Practices of
Foreign Governments.
252.225-7029 Reporting of
Commercially Available Off-the-Shelf Items that Contain Specialty
Metals and
are Incorporated into Noncommercial End Items.
252.225-7030 Restriction on Acquisition of Carbon, Alloy,
and Armor Steel Plate.
252.225-7031 Secondary Arab Boycott of Israel.
252.225-7032 Waiver of United Kingdom Levies—Evaluation of Offers.
252.225-7033 Waiver of United Kingdom Levies.
252.225-7034 Reserved.
252.225-7035 Buy American Act--Free Trade Agreements--Balance of Payments Program
Certificate.
252.225-7036 Buy American Act--Free Trade Agreements--Balance of Payments Program.
252.225-7037 Evaluation of Offers for Air Circuit Breakers.
252.225-7038 Restriction on Acquisition of Air Circuit Breakers.
252.225-7039 Reserved.
252.225-7040 Contractor Personnel Authorized to Accompany U.S. Armed Forces Deployed Outside the
United States.
252.225-7041 Correspondence in English.
252.225-7042 Authorization to Perform.
252.225-7043 Antiterrorism/Force Protection for Defense Contractors Outside the United States.
252.225-7044 Balance of Payments Program--Construction Material.
252.225-7045 Balance of Payments Program--Construction Material Under Trade
Agreements.
252.225-7000 Buy American Act--Balance of Payments Program
Certificate.
As prescribed in 225.1101(1)(i), use the
following provision:
BUY
AMERICAN ACT--BALANCE OF PAYMENTS PROGRAM CERTIFICATE
(DEC 2009)
(a) Definitions. “Commercially available off-the-shelf (COTS) item,” “component,” “domestic end product,” “foreign end product,” “qualifying country,” “qualifying country end product,” and “United States” have the meanings given in the Buy American Act and Balance of Payments Program clause of this solicitation.
(b) Evaluation. The Government—
(1) Will evaluate offers in accordance with the
policies and procedures of Part 225 of the Defense Federal Acquisition
Regulation Supplement; and
(2) Will evaluate offers of qualifying country
end products without regard to the restrictions of the Buy American Act or the
Balance of Payments Program.
(c) Certifications
and identification of country of origin.
(1) For all line items subject to the Buy
American Act and Balance of Payments Program clause of this solicitation, the offeror
certifies that—
(i) Each end product, except those listed in
paragraphs (c)(2) or (3) of this provision, is a domestic end product; and
(ii) For end products other than COTS items, components
of unknown origin are considered to have been mined, produced, or manufactured
outside the
(2) The offeror certifies that the following end
products are qualifying country end products:
Line
Item Number |
|
Country
of Origin |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(3) The following end products are other foreign
end products,
including end products manufactured in the United States that do not qualify as
domestic end products, i.e., an end product that is not a COTS item and does
not meet the component test in paragraph (ii) of the definition of “domestic
end product”:
Line
Item Number |
|
Country
of Origin (If known) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(End of
provision)
ALTERNATE I (DEC 2010)
As prescribed in 225.1101(1)(ii), add the terms “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state” and “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state end product” in paragraph (a) and replace the phrase “qualifying country end products” in paragraphs (b)(2) and (c)(2) with the phrase “qualifying country end products or SC/CASA state end products.”
252.225-7001 Buy American Act and Balance of Payments
Program.
As prescribed in 225.1101(2)(i), use the
following clause:
BUY
AMERICAN ACT AND BALANCE OF PAYMENTS PROGRAM (JAN 2009)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause¾
(1) “Commercially available off-the-shelf (COTS)
item”—
(i) Means any item of supply (including
construction material) that is—
(A) A commercial item (as defined in paragraph
(1) of the definition of “commercial item” in section 2.101 of the Federal
Acquisition Regulation);
(B) Sold in substantial quantities in the
commercial marketplace; and
(C) Offered to the Government, under a contract
or subcontract at any tier, without modification, in the same form in which it
is sold in the commercial marketplace; and
(ii) Does not include bulk cargo, as defined in
section 3 of the Shipping Act of 1984 (46 U.S.C. 40102), such as agricultural
products and petroleum products.
(2) “Component” means an article, material, or
supply incorporated directly into an end product.
(3) “Domestic end product” means—
(i) An unmanufactured end product that has been
mined or produced in the
(ii) An end product manufactured in the
(A) The cost of its qualifying country components
and its components that are mined, produced, or manufactured in the
(1) Sufficient and reasonably available
commercial quantities of a satisfactory quality are not mined, produced, or
manufactured in the
(2)
It is inconsistent with the public interest to apply the restrictions of
the Buy American Act; or
(B) The end product is a COTS item.
(4) “End product” means those articles,
materials, and supplies to be acquired under this contract for public use.
(5) “Foreign end product” means an end product
other than a domestic end product.
(6) “Qualifying country” means any country set
forth in subsection 225.872-1 of the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation
Supplement (DFARS).
(7) “Qualifying country component” means a
component mined, produced, or manufactured in a qualifying country.
(8) “Qualifying country end product” means—
(i) An unmanufactured end product mined or
produced in a qualifying country; or
(ii) An end product manufactured in a qualifying
country if the cost of the following types of components exceeds 50 percent of
the cost of all its components:
(A) Components mined, produced, or manufactured
in a qualifying country.
(B) Components mined, produced, or manufactured
in the
(C) Components of foreign origin of a class or
kind for which the Government has determined that sufficient and reasonably
available commercial quantities of a satisfactory quality are not mined,
produced, or manufactured in the
(9) “
(b) This clause implements the Buy American Act
(41 U.S.C. Section 10a-d). In accordance with 41 U.S.C. 431, the
component test of the Buy American Act is waived for an end product that is a
COTS item (see section 12.505(a)(1) of the Federal Acquisition
Regulation). Unless
otherwise specified, this clause applies to all line items in the contract.
(c) The Contractor shall deliver only domestic
end products unless, in its offer, it specified delivery of other end products
in the Buy American Act¾Balance
of Payments Program Certificate provision of the solicitation. If the Contractor certified in its offer that
it will deliver a qualifying country end product, the Contractor shall deliver
a qualifying country end product or, at the Contractor’s option, a domestic end
product.
(d) The contract price does not include duty for
end products or components for which the Contractor will claim duty-free entry.
(End of
clause)
ALTERNATE I (DEC 2010)
As prescribed in 225.1101(2)(ii), add the following definitions to paragraph (a) and substitute the following paragraphs (b) and (c) for paragraphs (b) and (c) of the basic clause:
(a)(10) “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state” means Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, or Uzbekistan.
(11) “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state end product” means an article that-
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of an SC/CASA state; or
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially transformed in an SC/CASA state into a new and different article of commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or articles from which it was transformed. The term refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes services (except transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the value of the product itself.
(b) This clause implements the Balance of Payments Program. Unless otherwise specified, this clause applies to all line items in the contract.
(c) The Contractor shall deliver only domestic end products unless, in its offer, it specified delivery of other end products in the Buy American Act Balance of Payments Program Certificate provision of the solicitation. If the Contractor certified in its offer that it will deliver a qualifying country end product or an SC/CASA state end product, the Contractor shall deliver a qualifying country end product an SC/CASA state end product, or, at the Contractor’s option, a domestic end product.
252.225-7002 Qualifying Country Sources as Subcontractors.
As prescribed in 225.1101(3), use the
following clause:
QUALIFYING
COUNTRY SOURCES AS SUBCONTRACTORS (APR 2003)
(a) Definition. “Qualifying country,” as used in this clause,
means any country set forth in subsection 225.872-1 of the Defense Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR) Supplement.
(b) Subject to the restrictions in section
225.872 of the Defense FAR Supplement, the Contractor shall not preclude
qualifying country sources or
(End of
clause)
252.225-7003
Report of Intended Performance Outside the
As prescribed
in 225.7204(a), use the following provision:
REPORT OF INTENDED PERFORMANCE OUTSIDE THE
UNITED STATES AND
(a) Definition. “
(b)
The offeror shall submit, with its offer, a report of intended performance
outside the
(1) The offer exceeds $12.5 million in value; and
(2) The offeror is aware that the offeror or a
first-tier subcontractor intends to perform any part of the contract outside
the
(i) Exceeds $650,000 in value; and
(ii) Could be performed inside the
(c)
Information to be reported includes that for—
(1) Subcontracts;
(2) Purchases; and
(3) Intracompany transfers when transfers
originate in a foreign location.
(d)
The offeror shall submit the report using—
(1) DD Form 2139, Report of Contract Performance
Outside the
(2) A computer-generated report that contains all
information required by DD Form 2139.
(e)
The offeror may obtain a copy of DD Form 2139 from the Contracting
Officer or via the
Internet at http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/infomgt/forms/formsprogram.htm.
(End of provision)
252.225-7004 Report of Intended Performance Outside the
As prescribed in 225.7204(b), use the
following clause:
REPORT OF
INTENDED PERFORMANCE OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES AND
(a) Definition. “
(b) Reporting
requirement. The Contractor shall
submit a report in accordance with this clause, if the Contractor or a
first-tier subcontractor will perform any part of this contract outside the
(1) Exceeds $650,000 in value; and
(2) Could be performed inside the
(c) Submission
of reports. The Contractor—
(1) Shall submit a report as soon as practical
after the information is known;
(2) To the maximum extent practicable, shall
submit a report regarding a first-tier subcontractor at least 30 days before
award of the subcontract;
(3) Need not resubmit information submitted with
its offer, unless the information changes;
(4) Shall submit all reports to the Contracting
Officer; and
(5) Shall submit a copy of each report to: Deputy Director of Defense Procurement and
Acquisition Policy (Contract Policy and International Contracting),
OUSD(AT&L)DPAP(CPIC),
(d) Report
format. The Contractor—
(1) Shall submit reports using—
(i) DD Form 2139, Report of Contract Performance
Outside the
(ii) A computer-generated report that contains all
information required by DD Form 2139; and
(2)
May obtain copies of DD Form 2139 from the Contracting Officer or via
the Internet at http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/infomgt/forms/formsprogram.htm.
(End of
clause)
252.225-7005 Identification of Expenditures in the
As prescribed in 225.1103(1), use the
following clause:
IDENTIFICATION
OF EXPENDITURES IN THE UNITED STATES (JUN 2005)
(a) Definition. “
(b) This clause applies only if the Contractor
is--
(1) A concern incorporated in the United States
(including a subsidiary that is incorporated in the United States, even if the
parent corporation is not incorporated in the United States); or
(2) An unincorporated concern having its
principal place of business in the
(c) On each invoice, voucher, or other request
for payment under this contract, the Contractor shall identify that part of the
requested payment that represents estimated expenditures in the
(1) May be expressed either as dollar amounts or
as percentages of the total amount of the request for payment;
(2) Should be based on reasonable estimates; and
(3) Shall state the full amount of the payment
requested, subdivided into the following categories:
(i)
(ii)
(iii) Transportation on
(iv) Expenditures not identified under paragraphs
(c)(3)(i) through (iii) of this clause.
(d) Nothing in this clause requires the
establishment or maintenance of detailed accounting records or gives the U.S.
Government any right to audit the Contractor's books or records.
(End of
clause)
252.225-7006 Quarterly Reporting of Actual Contract
Performance Outside the
As prescribed in 225.7204(c), use the
following clause:
QUARTERLY
REPORTING OF ACTUAL CONTRACT PERFORMANCE OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES (OCT 2010)
(a) Definition. “
(b) Reporting
requirement. Except as provided in
paragraph (c) of this clause, within 10 days after the end of each quarter of
the Government’s fiscal year, the Contractor shall report any subcontract,
purchase, or intracompany transfer that—
(1) Will be or has been performed outside the
(2) Exceeds the simplified acquisition threshold
in Part 2 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation; and
(3) Has not been identified in a report for a
previous quarter.
(c) Exception. Reporting under this clause is not required
if—
(1) A foreign place of performance is the
principal place of performance of the contract; and
(2) The Contractor specified the foreign place of
performance in its offer.
(d) Submission
of reports. The Contractor shall
submit the reports required by this clause to:
Deputy Director of Defense Procurement and Acquisition Policy (Contract
Policy and International Contracting),
OUSD(AT&L)DPAP(CPIC),
(e) Report
format. The Contractor—
(1) Shall submit reports using—
(i) DD Form 2139, Report of Contract Performance
Outside the
(ii) A computer-generated report that contains all
information required by DD Form 2139; and
(2)
May obtain copies of DD Form 2139 from the Contracting Officer or via
the Internet at http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/infomgt/forms/formsprogram.htm.
(f) Subcontracts. The Contractor—
(1) Shall include the substance of this clause in
all first-tier subcontracts exceeding $650,000, except those for commercial
items, construction, ores, natural gases, utilities, petroleum products and
crudes, timber (logs), or subsistence;
(2) Shall provide the number of this contract to
its subcontractors required to submit reports under this clause; and
(3) Shall require the subcontractor, with respect
to performance of its subcontract, to comply with the requirements directed to
the Contractor in paragraphs (b) through (e) of this clause.
(End of
clause)
252.225-7007 Prohibition on Acquisition of
As prescribed in 225.1103(4), use the
following clause:
PROHIBITION
ON ACQUISITION OF UNITED STATES MUNITIONS LIST ITEMS FROM COMMUNIST CHINESE
MILITARY COMPANIES (SEP 2006)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause—
“Communist
Chinese military company” means any entity that is—
(1) A part of the commercial or defense
industrial base of the People’s Republic of
(2) Owned or controlled by, or affiliated with,
an element of the Government or armed forces of the People’s Republic of
“United
States Munitions List” means the munitions list of the International Traffic in
Arms Regulation in 22 CFR Part 121.
(b) Any supplies or services covered by the
United States Munitions List that are delivered under this contract may not be
acquired, directly or indirectly, from a Communist Chinese military company.
(c) The Contractor shall insert the substance of
this clause, including this paragraph (c), in all subcontracts for items
covered by the United States Munitions List.
(End of
clause)
252.225-7008 Restriction on Acquisition of Specialty
Metals.
As prescribed in 225.7003-5(a)(1), use the
following clause:
RESTRICTION ON ACQUISITION OF SPECIALTY
METALS (JUL 2009)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause—
(1) “Alloy” means a metal consisting of a mixture
of a basic metallic element and one or more metallic, or non-metallic, alloying
elements.
(i) For alloys named by a single metallic element
(e.g., titanium alloy), it means that the alloy contains 50 percent or more of
the named metal (by mass).
(ii) If two metals are specified in the name (e.g,
nickel-iron alloy), those metals are the two predominant elements in the alloy,
and together they constitute 50 percent or more of the alloy (by mass).
(2)
“Produce” means the application of forces or processes to a specialty
metal to create the desired physical properties through quenching or tempering
of steel plate, gas atomization or sputtering of titanium, or final
consolidation of non-melt derived titanium powder or titanium alloy powder.
(3) “Specialty metal” means—
(i) Steel—
(A) With a maximum alloy content exceeding one or
more of the following limits: manganese,
1.65 percent; silicon, 0.60 percent; or copper, 0.60 percent; or
(B) Containing more than 0.25 percent of any of
the following elements: aluminum,
chromium, cobalt, molybdenum, nickel, niobium (columbium), titanium, tungsten,
or vanadium;
(ii) Metal alloys consisting of—
(A) Nickel or iron-nickel alloys that contain a
total of alloying metals other than nickel and iron in excess of 10 percent; or
(B) Cobalt alloys that contain a total of
alloying metals other than cobalt and iron in excess of 10 percent;
(iii) Titanium and titanium alloys; or
(iv) Zirconium and zirconium alloys.
(4) “Steel” means an iron alloy that includes
between .02 and 2 percent carbon and may include other elements.
(b) Any specialty metal delivered under this
contract shall be melted or produced in the
(End of clause)
252.225-7009 Restriction on Acquisition of Certain
Articles Containing Specialty Metals.
As prescribed in 225.7003-5(a)(2), use the
following clause:
RESTRICTION ON ACQUISITION OF CERTAIN
ARTICLES CONTAINING SPECIALTY METALS
(JAN 2011)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause—
(1) “Alloy” means a metal consisting of a mixture
of a basic metallic element and one or more metallic, or non-metallic, alloying
elements.
(i) For alloys named by a single metallic element
(e.g., titanium alloy), it means that the alloy contains 50 percent or more of
the named metal (by mass).
(ii) If two metals are specified in the name (e.g,
nickel-iron alloy), those metals are the two predominant elements in the alloy,
and together they constitute 50 percent or more of the alloy (by mass).
(2) “Assembly” means an item forming a portion of
a system or subsystem that—
(i) Can be provisioned and replaced as an entity;
and
(ii) Incorporates multiple, replaceable parts.
(3) “Commercial derivative military article”
means an item acquired by the Department of Defense that is or will be produced
using the same production facilities, a common supply chain, and the same or
similar production processes that are used for the production of articles
predominantly used by the general public or by nongovernmental entities for
purposes other than governmental purposes.
(4) “Commercially available off-the-shelf item”—
(i) Means any item of supply that is—
(A) A commercial item (as defined in paragraph
(1) of the definition of “commercial item” in section 2.101 of the Federal
Acquisition Regulation);
(B) Sold in substantial quantities in the
commercial marketplace; and
(C) Offered to the Government, under this
contract or a subcontract at any tier, without modification, in the same form
in which it is sold in the commercial marketplace; and
(ii) Does not include bulk cargo, as defined in
section 3 of the Shipping Act of 1984 (46 U.S.C. App 1702), such as
agricultural products and petroleum products.
(5) “Component” means any item supplied to the
Government as part of an end item or of another component.
(6) “Electronic component” means an item that
operates by controlling the flow of electrons or other electrically charged
particles in circuits, using interconnections of electrical devices such as
resistors, inductors, capacitors, diodes, switches, transistors, or integrated
circuits. The term does not include
structural or mechanical parts of an assembly containing an electronic
component, and does not include any high performance magnets that may be used
in the electronic component.
(7) “End item” means the final production product
when assembled or completed and ready for delivery under a line item of this
contract.
(8) “High performance magnet” means a permanent
magnet that obtains a majority of its magnetic properties from rare earth
metals (such as samarium).
(9) “Produce” means the application of forces or
processes to a specialty metal to create the desired physical properties
through quenching or tempering of steel plate, gas atomization or sputtering of
titanium, or final consolidation of non-melt derived titanium powder or
titanium alloy powder.
(10) “Qualifying country” means any country listed in the definition of
“Qualifying country” at
225.003of the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation
Supplement (DFARS).
(11) “Required form” means in the form of mill
product, such as bar, billet, wire, slab, plate, or sheet, and in the grade
appropriate for the production of—
(i) A finished end item to be delivered to the
Government under this contract; or
(ii) A finished component assembled into an end
item to be delivered to the Government under this contract.
(12) “Specialty metal” means—
(i) Steel—
(A) With a maximum alloy content exceeding one or
more of the following limits: manganese,
1.65 percent; silicon, 0.60 percent; or copper, 0.60 percent; or
(B) Containing more than 0.25 percent of any of
the following elements: aluminum,
chromium, cobalt, molybdenum, nickel, niobium (columbium), titanium, tungsten,
or vanadium;
(ii) Metal alloys consisting of—
(A) Nickel or iron-nickel alloys that contain a
total of alloying metals other than nickel and iron in excess of 10 percent; or
(B) Cobalt alloys that contain a total of
alloying metals other than cobalt and iron in excess of 10 percent;
(iii) Titanium and titanium alloys; or
(iv) Zirconium and zirconium alloys.
(13) “Steel” means an iron alloy that includes
between .02 and 2 percent carbon and may include other elements.
(14) “Subsystem” means a functional grouping of
items that combine to perform a major function within an end item, such as
electrical power, attitude control, and propulsion.
(b) Restriction.
Except as provided in paragraph (c)
of this clause, any specialty metals incorporated in items delivered under this
contract shall be melted or produced in the
(c) Exceptions. The restriction in paragraph (b) of this
clause does not apply to—
(1) Electronic components.
(2)(i) Commercially available off-the-shelf (COTS)
items, other than—
(A) Specialty metal mill products, such as bar,
billet, slab, wire, plate, or sheet, that have not been incorporated into COTS end items, subsystems,
assemblies, or components;
(B) Forgings or castings of specialty metals,
unless the forgings or castings are incorporated into COTS end items,
subsystems, or assemblies;
(C) Commercially available high performance
magnets that contain specialty metal, unless such high performance magnets are
incorporated into COTS end items or subsystems; and
(D) COTS fasteners, unless—
(1)
The fasteners are incorporated into COTS end items, subsystems,
assemblies, or components; or
(2)
The fasteners qualify for the commercial item exception in paragraph
(c)(3) of this clause.
(ii) A COTS item is considered to be “without
modification” if it is not modified prior to contractual acceptance by the next
higher tier in the supply chain.
(A) Specialty metals in a COTS item that was
accepted without modification by the next higher tier are excepted from the
restriction in paragraph (b) of this clause, and remain excepted, even if a
piece of the COTS item subsequently is removed (e.g., the end is removed from a
COTS screw or an extra hole is drilled in a COTS bracket).
(B) Specialty metals that were not contained in a
COTS item upon acceptance, but are added to the COTS item after acceptance, are
subject to the restriction in paragraph (b) of this clause (e.g., a special
reinforced handle made of specialty metal is added to a COTS item).
(C) If two or more COTS items are combined in
such a way that the resultant item is not a COTS item, only the specialty
metals involved in joining the COTS items together are subject to the
restriction in paragraph (b) of this clause (e.g., a COTS aircraft is outfitted
with a COTS engine that is not the COTS engine normally provided with the
aircraft).
(D) For COTS items that are normally sold in the
commercial marketplace with various options, items that include such options
are also COTS items. However, if a COTS
item is offered to the Government with an option that is not normally offered
in the commercial marketplace, that option is subject to the restriction in
paragraph (b) of this clause (e.g. - An aircraft is normally sold to the public
with an option for installation kits.
The Department of Defense requests a military-unique kit. The aircraft is still a COTS item, but the
military-unique kit is not a COTS item and must comply with the restriction in
paragraph (b) of this clause unless another exception applies).
(3) Fasteners that are commercial items, if the
manufacturer of the fasteners certifies it will purchase, during the relevant
calendar year, an amount of domestically melted or produced specialty metal, in
the required form, for use in the production of fasteners for sale to the
Department of Defense and other customers, that is not less than 50 percent of
the total amount of the specialty metal that it will purchase to carry out the
production of such fasteners for all customers.
(4) Items manufactured in a qualifying
country.
(5) Specialty metals for which the Government has
determined in accordance with DFARS 225.7003-3 that specialty metal melted or
produced in the
(i) A satisfactory quality;
(ii) A sufficient quantity; and
(iii) The required form.
(6) End items containing a minimal amount of
otherwise noncompliant specialty metals (i.e., specialty metals not melted or
produced in the United States, an outlying area, or a qualifying country, that
are not covered by one of the other exceptions in this paragraph (c)), if the
total weight of such noncompliant metals does not exceed 2 percent of the total
weight of all specialty metals in the end item, as estimated in good faith by
the Contractor. This exception does not
apply to high performance magnets containing specialty metals.
(d) Compliance for commercial derivative military articles.
(1) As an alternative to the compliance required
in paragraph (b) of this clause, the Contractor may purchase an amount of
domestically melted or produced specialty metals in the required form, for use
during the period of contract performance in the production of the commercial
derivative military article and the related commercial article, if—
(i) The Contracting Officer has notified the
Contractor of the items to be delivered under this contract that have been
determined by the Government to meet the definition of “commercial derivative
military article”; and
(ii) For each item that has been determined by the
Government to meet the definition of “commercial derivative military article,”
the Contractor has certified, as specified in the provision of the solicitation
entitled “Commercial Derivative Military Article—Specialty Metals Compliance
Certificate” (DFARS 252.225-7010), that the Contractor and its subcontractor(s)
will enter into a contractual agreement or agreements to purchase an amount of
domestically melted or produced specialty metal in the required form, for use
during the period of contract performance in the production of each commercial
derivative military article and the related commercial article, that is not
less than the Contractor’s good faith estimate of the greater of—
(A) An amount equivalent to 120 percent of the
amount of specialty metal that is required to carry out the production of the
commercial derivative military article (including the work performed under each
subcontract); or
(B) An amount equivalent to 50 percent of the
amount of specialty metal that will be purchased by the Contractor and its
subcontractors for use during such period in the production of the commercial
derivative military article and the related commercial article.
(2) For the purposes of this alternative, the amount
of specialty metal that is required to carry out production of the commercial
derivative military article includes specialty metal contained in any item,
including COTS items.
(e) Subcontracts. The Contractor shall insert the substance of
this clause in subcontracts for items containing specialty metals, to the
extent necessary to ensure compliance of the end products that the Contractor
will deliver to the Government. When
inserting the substance of this clause in subcontracts, the Contractor shall—
(1) Modify paragraph (c)(6) of this clause as
necessary to facilitate management of the minimal content exception;
(2) Exclude paragraph (d) of this clause; and
(3) Include this paragraph (e).
(End of clause)
252.225-7010 Commercial Derivative Military
Article—Specialty Metals Compliance Certificate.
As prescribed in 225.7003-5(b), use the
following provision:
COMMERCIAL DERIVATIVE MILITARY
ARTICLE—SPECIALTY METALS COMPLIANCE CERTIFICATE (JUL 2009)
(a) Definitions. “Commercial derivative military article,”
“commercially available off-the-shelf item,” “produce,” “required form,” and
“specialty metal,” as used in this provision, have the meanings given in the
clause of this solicitation entitled “Restriction on Acquisition of Certain
Articles Containing Specialty Metals” (DFARS 252.225-7009).
(b) The offeror shall list in this paragraph any
commercial derivative military articles it intends to deliver under any
contract resulting from this solicitation using the alternative compliance for
commercial derivative military articles, as specified in paragraph (d) of the
clause of this solicitation entitled “Restriction on Acquisition of Certain
Articles Containing Specialty Metals” (DFARS 252.225-7009). The offeror’s designation of an item as a
“commercial derivative military article” will be subject to Government review
and approval.
____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________.
(c) If the offeror has listed any commercial
derivative military articles in paragraph (b) of this provision, the offeror
certifies that, if awarded a contract as a result of this solicitation, and if
the Government approves the designation of the listed item(s) as commercial derivative
military articles, the offeror and its subcontractor(s) will demonstrate that
individually or collectively they have entered into a contractual agreement or
agreements to purchase an amount of domestically melted or produced specialty
metal in the required form, for use during the period of contract performance
in the production of each commercial derivative military article and the
related commercial article, that is not less than the Contractor’s good faith
estimate of the greater of—
(1) An amount equivalent to 120 percent of the
amount of specialty metal that is required to carry out the production of the
commercial derivative military article (including the work performed under each
subcontract); or
(2) An amount equivalent to 50 percent of the
amount of specialty metal that will be purchased by the Contractor and its
subcontractors for use during such period in the production of the commercial
derivative military article and the related commercial article.
(d) For the purposes of this provision, the
amount of specialty metal that is required to carry out the production of the
commercial derivative military article includes specialty metal contained in
any item, including commercially available off-the-shelf items, incorporated
into such commercial derivative military articles.
(End of provision)
252.225-7011 Restriction on Acquisition of Supercomputers.
As prescribed in 225.7012-3, use the
following clause:
RESTRICTION
ON ACQUISITION OF SUPERCOMPUTERS (JUN 2005)
Supercomputers delivered under this contract
shall be manufactured in the
(End of
clause)
252.225-7012 Preference for Certain Domestic Commodities.
As prescribed in 225.7002-3(a), use the
following clause:
PREFERENCE
FOR CERTAIN DOMESTIC COMMODITIES (JUN 2010)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause—
(1) “Component” means any item supplied to the
Government as part of an end product or of another component.
(2) “End product” means supplies delivered under
a line item of this contract.
(3) "Qualifying country" means a country with a reciprocal defense procurement memorandum of understanding or international agreement with the United States in which both countries agree to remove barriers to purchases of supplies produced in the other country or services performed by sources of the other country, and the memorandum or agreement complies, where applicable, with the requirements of section 36 of the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2776) and with 10 U.S.C. 2457. Accordingly, the following are qualifying countries:
United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
(4) “
(5) “U.S.-flag vessel” means a vessel of the
(b) The Contractor shall deliver under this
contract only such of the following items, either as end products or
components, that have been grown, reprocessed, reused, or produced in the
(1) Food.
(2) Clothing and the materials and components thereof,
other than sensors, electronics, or other items added to, and not normally
associated with, clothing and the materials components thereof. Clothing includes items such as outerwear,
headwear, underwear, nightwear. footwear, hosiery, handwear, belts, badges, and
insignia.
(3) Tents, tarpaulins, or covers.
(4) Cotton and other natural fiber products.
(5) Woven silk or woven silk blends.
(6) Spun silk yarn for cartridge cloth.
(7) Synthetic fabric, and coated synthetic
fabric, including all textile fibers and yarns that are for use in such
fabrics.
(8) Canvas products.
(9) Wool (whether in the form of fiber or yarn or
contained in fabrics, materials, or manufactured articles).
(10) Any item of individual equipment (Federal
Supply Class 8465) manufactured from or containing fibers, yarns, fabrics, or
materials listed in this paragraph (b).
(c) This clause does not apply—
(1) To items listed in section 25.104(a) of the
Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR), or other items for which the Government
has determined that a satisfactory quality and sufficient quantity cannot be
acquired as and when needed at U.S. market prices;
(2) To incidental amounts of cotton, other
natural fibers, or wool incorporated in an end product, for which the estimated
value of the cotton, other natural fibers, or wool—
(i) Is not more than 10 percent of the total
price of the end product; and
(ii) Does not exceed the simplified acquisition
threshold in FAR Part 2;
(3) To waste and byproducts of cotton or wool
fiber for use in the production of propellants and explosives;
(4) To foods, other than fish, shellfish, or
seafood, that have been manufactured or processed in the
(5) To chemical warfare protective clothing
produced in a qualifying country; or
(6) To fibers and yarns that are for use in
synthetic fabric or coated synthetic fabric (but does apply to the synthetic or
coated synthetic fabric itself), if—
(i) The fabric is to be used as a component of an
end product that is not a textile product.
Examples of textile products, made in whole or in part of fabric,
include¾
(A) Draperies, floor coverings, furnishings, and bedding
(Federal Supply Group 72, Household and Commercial Furnishings and Appliances);
(B) Items made in whole or in part of fabric in
Federal Supply Group 83,
Textile/leather/furs/apparel/findings/tents/flags, or Federal Supply
Group 84, Clothing, Individual Equipment
and Insignia;
(C) Upholstered seats (whether for household,
office, or other use); and
(D) Parachutes (Federal Supply Class 1670); or
(ii) The fibers and yarns are para-aramid fibers and continuous filament para-aramid yarns manufactured in a qualifying country.
(d)(1) Fish, shellfish, and seafood delivered under
this contract, or contained in foods delivered under this contract—
(i) Shall be taken from the sea by U.S.-flag
vessels; or
(ii) If not taken from the sea, shall be obtained
from fishing within the
(2) Any processing or manufacturing of the fish,
shellfish, or seafood shall be performed on a U.S.-flag vessel or in the
(End of
clause)
252.225-7013
Duty-Free Entry.
As
prescribed in 225.1101(4), use the following clause:
DUTY-FREE ENTRY (DEC 2009)
(a)
Definitions. As used in this clause—
(1) “Component,” means any item supplied to the Government as part of an end product or of another component.
(2) “Customs territory of the United States” means the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.
(3) “Eligible product” means—
(i) “Designated country end product” as defined
in the Trade Agreements clause of this contract;
(ii) “Free Trade Agreement country end product,”
other than a “Bahrainian end product” or a “Moroccan end product,” as defined
in the Buy American Act—Free Trade Agreements—Balance of Payments Program
clause of this contract; or
(iii) “Canadian end product” as defined in
Alternate I of the Buy American Act—Free Trade Agreements—Balance of Payments
Program clause of this contract.
(4) “Qualifying country” and “qualifying country end product” have the meanings given in the Trade Agreements clause, the Buy American Act and Balance of Payments Program clause, or the Buy American Act--Free Trade Agreements--Balance of Payments Program clause of this contract.
(b)
Except as provided in paragraph (i) of this clause, or unless supplies
were imported into the customs territory of the
(1) End items that are eligible products or
qualifying country end products;
(2) Components (including, without limitation,
raw materials and intermediate assemblies) produced or made in qualifying
countries, that are to be incorporated in U.S.- made end products to be
delivered under this contract; or
(3) Other supplies for which the Contractor
estimates that duty will exceed $200 per shipment into the customs territory of
the
(c)
The Contractor shall--
(1) Claim duty-free entry only for supplies that
the Contractor intends to deliver to the Government under this contract, either
as end items or components of end items; and
(2) Pay duty on supplies, or any portion thereof,
that are diverted to nongovernmental use, other than—
(i) Scrap or salvage; or
(ii) Competitive sale made, directed, or
authorized by the Contracting Officer.
(d)
Except as the Contractor may otherwise agree, the Government will
execute duty-free entry certificates and will afford such assistance as
appropriate to obtain the duty-free entry of supplies—
(1) For which no duty is included in the contract
price in accordance with paragraph (b) of this clause; and
(2) For which shipping documents bear the notation
specified in paragraph (e) of this clause.
(e)
For foreign supplies for which the Government will issue duty-free entry
certificates in accordance with this clause, shipping documents submitted to
Customs shall—
(1) Consign the shipments to the appropriate—
(i) Military department in care of the
Contractor, including the Contractor's delivery address; or
(ii) Military installation; and
(2) Include the following information:
(i) Prime contract number and, if applicable,
delivery order number.
(ii) Number of the subcontract for foreign
supplies, if applicable.
(iii) Identification of the carrier.
(iv)(A) For direct shipments to a U.S. military
installation, the notation: “UNITED
STATES GOVERNMENT, DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE Duty-Free Entry to be claimed pursuant
to Section XXII, Chapter 98, Subchapter VIII, Item 9808.00.30 of the Harmonized
Tariff Schedule of the United States.
Upon arrival of shipment at the appropriate port of entry, District
Director of Customs, please release shipment under 19 CFR Part 142 and notify
Commander, Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA) New York, ATTN: Customs Team, DCMAE-GNTF, 207 New York
Avenue, Staten Island, New York, 10305-5013, for execution of Customs Form
7501, 7501A, or 7506 and any required duty-free entry certificates.”
(B) If the shipment will be consigned to other
than a military installation, e.g., a domestic contractor's plant, the shipping
document notation shall be altered to include the name and address of the
contractor, agent, or broker who will notify Commander, DCMA New York, for
execution of the duty-free entry certificate.
(If the shipment will be consigned to a contractor’s plant and no
duty-free entry certificate is required due to a trade agreement, the
Contractor shall claim duty-free entry under the applicable trade agreement and
shall comply with the U.S. Customs Service requirements. No notification to Commander, DCMA New York,
is required.)
(v) Gross weight in pounds (if freight is based
on space tonnage, state cubic feet in addition to gross shipping weight).
(vi) Estimated value in U.S. dollars.
(vii) Activity address number of the contract
administration office administering the prime contract, e.g., for DCMA Dayton,
S3605A.
(f)
Preparation of customs forms.
(1)(i) Except for shipments consigned to a military
installation, the Contractor shall—
(A) Prepare any customs forms required for the
entry of foreign supplies into the customs territory of the
(B) Submit the completed customs forms to the
District Director of Customs, with a copy to
(ii) Shipments consigned directly to a military installation
will be released in accordance with sections 10.101 and 10.102 of the U.S.
Customs regulations.
(2) For shipments containing both supplies that
are to be accorded duty-free entry and supplies that are not, the Contractor
shall identify on the customs forms those items that are eligible for duty-free
entry.
(g)
The Contractor shall—
(1) Prepare (if the Contractor is a foreign
supplier), or shall instruct the foreign supplier to prepare, a sufficient
number of copies of the bill of lading (or other shipping document) so that at
least two of the copies accompanying the shipment will be available for use by
the District Director of Customs at the port of entry;
(2) Consign the shipment as specified in
paragraph (e) of this clause; and
(3) Mark on the exterior of all packages--
(i) “UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT, DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE”; and
(ii) The activity address number of the contract
administration office administering the prime contract.
(h)
The Contractor shall notify the Administrative Contracting Officer (ACO)
in writing of any purchase of eligible products or qualifying country supplies
to be accorded duty-free entry, that are to be imported into the customs
territory of the United States for delivery to the Government or for
incorporation in end items to be delivered to the Government. The Contractor shall furnish the notice to
the ACO immediately upon award to the supplier and shall include in the notice—
(1) The Contractor’s name, address, and
Commercial and Government Entity (CAGE) code;
(2) Prime contract number and, if applicable,
delivery order number;
(3) Total dollar value of the prime contract or
delivery order;
(4) Date of the last scheduled delivery under the
prime contract or delivery order;
(5) Foreign supplier's name and address;
(6) Number of the subcontract for foreign
supplies;
(7) Total dollar value of the subcontract for
foreign supplies;
(8) Date of the last scheduled delivery under the
subcontract for foreign supplies;
(9) List of items purchased;
(10) An agreement that the Contractor will pay
duty on supplies, or any portion thereof, that are diverted to nongovernmental
use other than—
(i) Scrap or salvage; or
(ii) Competitive sale made, directed, or
authorized by the Contracting Officer;
(11) Country of origin; and
(12) Scheduled delivery date(s).
(i)
This clause does not apply to purchases of eligible products or
qualifying country supplies in connection with this contract if—
(1) The supplies are identical in nature to
supplies purchased by the Contractor or any subcontractor in connection with
its commercial business; and
(2) It is not economical or feasible to account
for such supplies so as to ensure that the amount of the supplies for which
duty-free entry is claimed does not exceed the amount purchased in connection
with this contract.
(j)
The Contractor shall—
(1) Insert the substance of this clause,
including this paragraph (j), in all subcontracts for—
(i) Qualifying country components; or
(ii) Nonqualifying country components for which
the Contractor estimates that duty will exceed $200 per unit;
(2) Require subcontractors to include the number
of this contract on all shipping documents submitted to Customs for supplies
for which duty-free entry is claimed pursuant to this clause; and
(3) Include in applicable subcontracts—
(i) The name and address of the ACO for this
contract;
(ii) The name, address, and activity address
number of the contract administration office specified in this contract; and
(iii) The information required by paragraphs
(h)(1), (2), and (3) of this clause.
(End of clause)
252.225-7014
Reserved.
252.225-7015 Restriction on Acquisition of Hand or
Measuring Tools.
As
prescribed in 225.7002-3(b), use the following clause:
RESTRICTION
ON ACQUISITION OF HAND OR MEASURING TOOLS (JUN 2005)
Hand or measuring tools delivered under this
contract shall be produced in the
(End of
clause)
252.225-7016 Restriction on Acquisition of Ball and Roller
Bearings.
As prescribed in 225.7009-5, use the
following clause:
RESTRICTION
ON ACQUISITION OF BALL AND ROLLER BEARINGS (JUN 2011)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause¾
(1) “Bearing components” means the bearing
element, retainer, inner race, or outer race.
(2) “Component,” other than a bearing component, means any item supplied to the Government as part of an end product or of another component.
(3) “End product” means supplies delivered under
a line item of this contract.
(b) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this clause—
(1) Each ball and roller bearing delivered under this contract shall be manufactured in the United States, its outlying areas, or Canada; and
(2) For each ball or roller bearing, the cost of the bearing components manufactured in the United States, its outlying areas, or Canada shall exceed 50
percent of the total cost of the bearing components of that ball or roller bearing.
(c) The restriction in paragraph (b) of this
clause does not apply to ball or roller bearings that are acquired as—
(1) Commercial components of a noncommercial end
product; or
(2) Commercial or noncommercial components of a
commercial component of a noncommercial end product.
(d) The restriction in paragraph (b) of this
clause may be waived upon request from the Contractor in accordance with
subsection 225.7009-4 of the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation
Supplement.
(e) If this contract includes DFARS clause 252.225-7009, Restriction on Acquisition of Certain Articles Containing Specialty Metals, all bearings that contain specialty metals, as defined in that clause, must meet the requirements of that clause.
(f) The Contractor shall insert the substance of this clause, including this paragraph (f), in all subcontracts, except those for—
(1) Commercial items; or
(2) Items that do not contain ball or roller
bearings.
(End of
clause)
252.225-7017 Reserved.
252.225-7018
Reserved.
252.225-7019 Restriction on Acquisition of Anchor and
Mooring Chain.
As prescribed in 225.7007-3, use the following
clause:
RESTRICTION
ON ACQUISITION OF ANCHOR AND MOORING CHAIN
(DEC 2009)
(a) “Component,” as used in this clause, means an article, material, or supply incorporated directly into an end product.
(b) Welded shipboard anchor and mooring chain, four inches or less in diameter, delivered under this contract—
(1) Shall be manufactured in the United States or
its outlying areas, including cutting, heat treating, quality control, testing,
and welding (both forging and shot blasting process); and
(2) The cost of the components manufactured in
the
(c) The Contractor may request a waiver of this
restriction if adequate domestic supplies meeting the requirements in paragraph
(a) of this clause are not available to meet the contract delivery schedule.
(d) The Contractor shall insert the substance of
this clause, including this paragraph (d), in all subcontracts for items
containing welded shipboard anchor and mooring chain, four inches or less in
diameter.
(End of
clause)
252.225-7020 Trade Agreements Certificate.
As prescribed in 225.1101(5)(i), use the
following provision:
TRADE AGREEMENTS
CERTIFICATE (JAN 2005)
(a) Definitions. “Designated country end product,” “nondesignated
country end product,” “qualifying country end product,” and “U.S.-made end
product” have the meanings given in the Trade Agreements clause of this
solicitation.
(b) Evaluation. The Government—
(1) Will evaluate offers in accordance with the
policies and procedures of Part 225 of the Defense Federal Acquisition
Regulation Supplement; and
(2) Will consider only offers of end products
that are U.S.-made, qualifying country, or designated country end products
unless—
(i) There are no offers of such end products;
(ii) The offers of such end products are
insufficient to fulfill the Government’s requirements; or
(iii) A national interest waiver has been granted.
(c) Certification
and identification of country of origin.
(1) For all line items subject to the Trade
Agreements clause of this solicitation, the offeror certifies that each end
product to be delivered under this contract, except those listed in paragraph
(c)(2) of this provision, is a U.S.-made, qualifying country, or designated
country end product.
(2) The following supplies are other
nondesignated country end products:
(Line
Item Number) |
|
(Country
of Origin) |
(End of
provision)
ALTERNATE I (DEC 2010)
As prescribed in 225.1101(5)(ii), substitute the following paragraphs (a), (b)(2), and (c) for paragraph (a), (b)(2), and (c) of the basic clause:
(a) Definitions. “Designated country end product,” “nondesignated country end product,” “qualifying country end product,” “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state,” “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state end product,” and “U.S.-made end product” have the meanings given in the Trade Agreements clause of this solicitation.
(b)(2) Will consider only offers of end products that are U.S.-made, qualifying country, SC/CASA state, or designated country end products unless—
(c) Certification and identification of country of origin.
(1) “For all line items subject to the Trade Agreement clause of this solicitation, the offeror certifies that each end product to be delivered under this contract, except those listed in paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this provision, is a U.S.-made, qualifying country, SC/CASA state, or designated country end product.
(2)(i) The following supplies are SC/CASA state end products:
(Line
Item Number) |
|
(Country
of Origin) |
(ii) The following are other nondesignated country end products:
(Line
Item Number) |
|
(Country
of Origin) |
252.225-7021 Trade Agreements.
As prescribed in 225.1101(6)(i), use the
following clause:
TRADE
AGREEMENTS (NOV 2009)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause¾
(1) “
(i) Means an article that¾
(A) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of a
(B) In the case of an article that consists in
whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially
transformed in a Caribbean Basin country into a new and different article of
commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or
articles from which it was transformed.
The term refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply
contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes
services (except transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided
that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the value of the
product itself; and
(ii) Excludes products, other than petroleum and
any product derived from petroleum, that are not granted duty-free treatment
under the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (19 U.S.C. 2703(b)). These exclusions presently consist of¾
(A) Textiles, apparel articles, footwear,
handbags, luggage, flat goods, work gloves, leather wearing apparel, and
handloomed, handmade, or folklore articles that are not granted duty-free
status in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS);
(B) Tuna, prepared or preserved in any manner in
airtight containers; and
(C) Watches and watch parts (including cases,
bracelets, and straps) of whatever type, including, but not limited to,
mechanical, quartz digital, or quartz analog, if such watches or watch parts
contain any material that is the product of any country to which the HTSUS
column 2 rates of duty (HTSUS General Note 3(b)) apply.
(2) “Component” means an article, material, or
supply incorporated directly into an end product.
(3) “Designated country” means—
(i) A World Trade Organization Government Procurement Agreement (WTO GPA) country (Aruba, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea (Republic of), Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Singapore, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan (known in the World Trade Organization as “the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, and Matsu” (Chinese Taipei)), or the United Kingdom);
(ii) A Free Trade Agreement country (Australia,
Bahrain, Canada, Chile, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Mexico, Morocco, Nicaragua, Peru, or Singapore);
(iii)
A least developed country (Afghanistan, Angola, Bangladesh, Benin, Bhutan, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cambodia, Central African Republic,
Chad,
Comoros,
Democratic Republic
of Congo, Djibouti, East Timor, Equatorial Guinea,
Eritrea,
Ethiopia,
Gambia,
Guinea,
Guinea-Bissau,
Haiti,
Kiribati, Laos, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar,
Malawi, Maldives, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Nepal, Niger, Rwanda, Samoa,
Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Solomon Islands, Somalia,
Tanzania, Togo, Tuvalu, Uganda, Vanuatu, Yemen, or Zambia); or
(iv) A Caribbean Basin country (Antigua and
Barbuda, Aruba, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, British Virgin Islands, Dominica,
Grenada, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Montserrat, Netherlands Antilles, St. Kitts
and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, or Trinidad and Tobago).
(4) “Designated country end product” means a WTO
GPA country end product, a Free Trade Agreement country end product, a least
developed country end product, or a
(5)
“End product” means those articles, materials, and supplies to be
acquired under this contract for public use.
(6) “Free Trade Agreement country end product”
means an article that¾
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of a Free Trade Agreement country; or
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in
whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially
transformed in a Free Trade Agreement country into a new and different article
of commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or
articles from which it was transformed.
The term refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply
contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes
services (except transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided
that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the value of the
product itself.
(7) “Least developed country end product” means
an article that—
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of a least developed country; or
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in
whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially
transformed in a least developed country into a new and different article of
commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or
articles from which it was transformed.
The term refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply
contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes
services (except transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided
that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the value of the
product itself.
(8) “Nondesignated country end product” means any
end product that is not a U.S.-made end product or a designated country end
product.
(9) “Qualifying country” means any country set
forth in subsection 225.872-1 of the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation
Supplement.
(10) “Qualifying country end product” means¾
(i) An unmanufactured end product mined or
produced in a qualifying country; or
(ii) An end product manufactured in a qualifying
country if the cost of the following types of components exceeds 50 percent of
the cost of all its components:
(A) Components mined, produced, or manufactured
in a qualifying country.
(B) Components mined, produced, or manufactured
in the
(C) Components of foreign origin of a class or
kind for which the Government has determined that sufficient and reasonably
available commercial quantities of a satisfactory quality are not mined,
produced, or manufactured in the
(11) “
(12) “U.S.-made end product” means an article that¾
(i) Is mined, produced, or manufactured in the
(ii) Is substantially transformed in the
(13) “WTO GPA country end product” means an
article that¾
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of a WTO GPA country; or
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in
whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially
transformed in a WTO GPA country into a new and different article of commerce
with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or articles
from which it was transformed. The term
refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply contract, but for
purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes services (except
transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided that the value of
those incidental services does not exceed the value of the product itself.
(b) Unless otherwise specified, this clause
applies to all items in the Schedule.
(c) The Contractor shall deliver under this
contract only U.S.-made, qualifying country, or designated country end products
unless—
(1) In its offer, the Contractor specified
delivery of other nondesignated country end products in the Trade Agreements
Certificate provision of the solicitation; and
(2)(i) Offers of U.S.-made, qualifying country, or
designated country end products from responsive, responsible offerors are
either not received or are insufficient to fill the Government’s requirements;
or
(ii) A national interest waiver has been granted.
(d) The contract price does not include duty for
end products or components for which the Contractor will claim duty-free entry.
(e) The HTSUS is available on the Internet at http://www.usitc.gov/tata/hts/bychapter/index.htm. The
following sections of the HTSUS provide information regarding duty-free status
of articles specified in paragraph (a)(2)(ii)(A) of this clause:
(1) General Note 3(c), Products Eligible for
Special Tariff Treatment.
(2) General Note 17, Products of Countries
Designated as Beneficiary Countries Under the
(3) Section XXII, Chapter 98, Subchapter II,
Articles Exported and Returned, Advanced or Improved Abroad,
(4) Section XXII, Chapter 98, Subchapter XX,
Goods Eligible for Special Tariff Benefits Under the United States--Caribbean
Basin Trade Partnership Act.
(End of
clause)
ALTERNATE
I (SEP 2008)
As
prescribed in 225.1101(6)(ii), add the following paragraph (a)(14) to the basic
clause and substitute the following paragraph (c) for paragraph (c) of the
basic clause:
(a)(14)
“Iraqi end product” means an article that—
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in
whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially
transformed in Iraq into a new and different article of commerce with a name,
character, or use distinct from that of the article or articles from which it was
transformed. The term refers to a
product offered for purchase under a supply contract, but for purposes of
calculating the value of the end product includes services (except
transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided that the value of those
incidental services does not exceed the value of the product itself.
(c)
The Contractor shall deliver under this contract only U.S.-made,
qualifying country, Iraqi, or designated country end products unless—
(1) In its offer, the Contractor specified
delivery of other nondesignated country end products in the Trade Agreements
Certificate provision of the solicitation; and
(2)(i) Offers of U.S.-made, qualifying country,
Iraqi, or designated country end products from responsive, responsible offerors
are either not received or are insufficient to fill the Government’s
requirements; or
(ii) A national interest waiver has been granted.
ALTERNATE
II (DEC 2010)
As
prescribed in 225.1101(6)(iii), add the following new definitions to paragraph (a), substitute the following paragraph (c) for paragraph (c) of the basic clause, and add the following paragraph (d):
(a)(14)
“South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state” means Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, or Uzbekistan.
(15)
“South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state end product” means an article that-
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of an SC/CASA state; or
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially transformed in an SC/CASA state into a new and different article of commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or articles from which it was transformed. The term refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes services (except transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the value of the product itself.
(c)
The Contractor shall deliver under this contract only U.S.-made, qualifying country, SC/CASA state, or designated country end products unless—
(1) In its offer, the Contractor specified
delivery of other nondesignated country end products in the Trade Agreements
Certificate provision of the solicitation; and
(2)(i) Offers of U.S.-made, qualifying country, SC/CASA state, or designated country end products from responsive, responsible offerors are either not received or are insufficient to fill the Government’s requirements; or
(ii) A national interest waiver has been granted.
(d)
If the Contractor is from an SC/CASA state, the Contractor shall inform its government of its participation in this acquisition and that it generally will not have such opportunity in the future unless its government provides reciprocal procurement opportunities to U.S. products and services and suppliers of such products and services.
252.225-7022 Trade Agreements Certificate – Inclusion of
Iraqi End Products.
As
prescribed in 225.1101(7), use the following provision:
TRADE AGREEMENTS CERTIFICATE – INCLUSION OF
IRAQI END PRODUCTS
(SEP 2008)
(a)
Definitions. “Designated country end product,” “Iraqi
end product,” “nondesignated country end product,” “qualifying country end
product,” and “U.S.-made end product” have the meanings given in the Trade
Agreements clause of this solicitation.
(b) Evaluation. The Government—
(1) Will evaluate offers in accordance with the
policies and procedures of Part 225 of the Defense Federal Acquisition
Regulation Supplement; and
(2) Will consider only offers of end products
that are U.S.-made, qualifying country, Iraqi, or designated country end
products unless—
(i) There are no offers of such end products;
(ii) The offers of such end products are
insufficient to fulfill the Government’s requirements; or
(iii) A national interest waiver has been granted.
(c)
Certification and identification
of country of origin.
(1) For all line items subject to the Trade
Agreements clause of this solicitation, the offeror certifies that each end
product to be delivered under a contract resulting from this solicitation,
except those listed in paragraph (c)(2) of this provision, is a U.S.-made,
qualifying country, Iraqi, or designated country end product.
(2) The following supplies are other
nondesignated country end products:
(Line Item Number) (Country of Origin)
(End of provision)
252.225-7023 Preference for Products or Services from
As
prescribed in 225.7703-5(a), use the following provision:
PREFERENCE FOR PRODUCTS OR SERVICES FROM
(SEP 2008)
(a)
Definitions. “Product from
(b)
Representation. The offeror represents that all products or
services to be delivered under a contract resulting from this solicitation are
products from
(1) Paragraph (c) of this provision; or
(2) Paragraph (c)(2) of the provision entitled “Trade Agreements Certificate,” or “Trade Agreements Certificate – Inclusion of Iraqi End Products,” if included in this solicitation.
(2) Paragraph (c)(2) of the provision entitled
“Trade Agreements Certificate – Inclusion of Iraqi End Products,” if included
in this solicitation.
(c)
Other products or services. The following offered products or services
are not products from
(Line Item Number) (Country of Origin)
(d)
Evaluation. For the purpose of evaluating competitive
offers, the Contracting Officer will increase by 50 percent the prices of
offers of products or services that are not products or services from
(End of provision)
252.225-7024 Requirement for Products or Services from
As
prescribed in 225.7703-5(b), use the following clause:
REQUIREMENT FOR PRODUCTS OR SERVICES FROM
(APR 2010)
(a)
Definitions. As used in this clause—
(1) “Product from
(2) “Service from
(b)
The Contractor shall provide only products from
(End of clause)
252.225-7025 Restriction on Acquisition of Forgings.
As prescribed in 225.7102-4, use the
following clause:
RESTRICTION
ON ACQUISITION OF FORGINGS (DEC 2009)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause¾
(1) “Component” means any item supplied to the Government as part of an end product or of another component.
(2) “Domestic manufacture” means manufactured in the United States, its outlying areas; or Canada.
(3) “Forging items” means—
ITEMS Ship
propulsion shafts Periscope
tubes Ring
forgings for bull gears |
CATEGORIES Excludes
service and landing craft shafts All All
greater than 120 inches in diameter |
(b) End products and their components delivered under this contract shall contain forging items that are of domestic manufacture only.
(c) The restriction in paragraph (b) of this
clause may be waived upon request from the Contractor in accordance with
subsection 225.7102-3 of the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement.
(d) The Contractor shall retain records showing
compliance with the restriction in paragraph (b) of this clause until 3 years
after final payment and shall make the records available upon request of the
Contracting Officer.
(e) The Contractor shall insert the substance of this
clause, including this paragraph (e), in subcontracts for forging items or for
other items that contain forging items.
(End of
clause)
252.225-7026 Acquisition Restricted to Products or
Services from
As
prescribed in 225.7703-5(c), use the following clause:
ACQUISITION RESTRICTED TO PRODUCTS OR
SERVICES FROM
(a)
Definitions. As used in this clause—
(1) “Product from
(2) “Service from
(b)
The Contractor shall provide only products from
(End of clause)
252.225-7027 Restriction on Contingent Fees for Foreign
Military Sales.
As prescribed in 225.7307(a), use the
following clause.
RESTRICTION ON CONTINGENT FEES FOR FOREIGN
MILITARY SALES
(APR 2003)
(a)
Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this clause, contingent fees, as
defined in the Covenant Against Contingent Fees clause of this contract, are
generally an allowable cost, provided the fees are paid to—
(1) A bona fide employee of the Contractor;
or
(2) A bona fide established commercial or selling
agency maintained by the Contractor for the purpose of securing business.
(b)
For foreign military sales, unless the contingent fees have been
identified and payment approved in writing by the foreign customer before
contract award, the following contingent fees are unallowable under this
contract:
(1) For sales to the Government(s) of __________,
contingent fees in any amount.
(2) For sales to Governments not listed in
paragraph (b)(1) of this clause, contingent fees exceeding $50,000 per foreign
military sale case.
(End of clause)
252.225-7028 Exclusionary Policies and Practices of
Foreign Governments.
As prescribed in 225.7307(b), use the
following clause:
EXCLUSIONARY
POLICIES AND PRACTICES OF FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS
(APR 2003)
The
Contractor and its subcontractors shall not take into account the exclusionary
policies or practices of any foreign government in employing or assigning
personnel, if—
(a)
The personnel will perform functions required by this contract, either
in the
(b)
The exclusionary policies or practices of the foreign government are
based on race, religion, national origin, or sex.
(End of
clause)
252.225-7029 Reporting of
Commercially Available Off-the-Shelf Items that Contain Specialty Metals and
are Incorporated into Noncommercial End Items.
As
prescribed in 225.7003-5(c), use the following clause:
REPORTING OF COMMERCIALLY AVAILABLE OFF-THE-SHELF ITEMS THAT
CONTAIN SPECIALTY METALS AND ARE INCORPORATED INTO NONCOMMERCIAL END ITEMS (JUL
2009)
(a) Definitions. “Commercially available off-the-shelf item,”
and “specialty metal,” as used in this clause, have the meanings given in the
clause of this solicitation entitled “Restriction on Acquisition of Certain
Articles Containing Specialty Metals” (DFARS 252.225-7009).
(b) If the exception in paragraph (c)(2) of the
clause at DFARS 252.225-7009, Restriction on Acquisition of Certain Articles
Containing Specialty Metals, is used for a commercially available off-the-shelf
(COTS) item, valued at more than $100 per item, to be incorporated into a
noncommercial end item to be delivered under this contract, the Contractor
shall—
(1) Follow the instructions on the Defense
Procurement and Acquisition Policy website at http://www.acq.osd.mil/dpap/cpic/ic/restrictions_on_specialty_metals_10_usc_2533b.html to report
information required by the contract as follows:
Contract Awarded: |
Report by: |
|
|
Before July 31, 2009 |
August 31, 2009 |
August 1 - 31, 2009 |
September 30, 2009 |
September 1 - 30, 2009 |
October 31, 2009 |
(2) In
accordance with the procedures specified at the website, provide the following
information:
(i)
Company Name.
(ii)
Product category of acquisition (i.e., Aircraft, Missiles and Space
Systems, Ships, Tank–Automotive, Weapon Systems, or Ammunition).
(iii) The 6-digit North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) code of the COTS item, contained in the
non-commercial deliverable item, to which the exception applies.
(c) The Contractor shall not report COTS items
that are incorporated into the end product under an exception other than
paragraph (c)(2) of the clause at DFARS 252.225-7009, such as electronic
components, commercial item fasteners, qualifying country, non-availability, or
minimal amounts of specialty metal.
(End
of clause)
252.225-7030 Restriction on Acquisition of Carbon, Alloy,
and Armor Steel Plate.
As
prescribed in 225.7011-3, use the following clause:
RESTRICTION ON ACQUISITION OF CARBON, ALLOY,
AND ARMOR
STEEL PLATE (DEC 2006)
(a)
Carbon, alloy, and armor steel plate shall be melted and rolled in the
(1) Is in Federal Supply Class 9515 or is
described by specifications of the American Society for Testing Materials or
the American Iron and Steel Institute; and
(2)(i) Will be delivered to the Government for use
in a Government-owned facility or a facility under the control of the
Department of Defense; or
(ii) Will be purchased by the Contractor for use
in a Government-owned facility or a facility under the control of the
Department of Defense.
(b) This restriction—
(1) Applies to the acquisition of carbon, alloy,
or armor steel plate as a finished steel mill product that may be used “as is”
or may be used as an intermediate material for the fabrication of an end
product; and
(2)
Does not apply to the acquisition of an
end product (e.g., a machine tool), to be used in the facility, that contains
carbon, alloy, or armor steel plate as a component.
(End of
clause)
252.225-7031 Secondary Arab Boycott of
As
prescribed in 225.7605, use the following provision:
SECONDARY ARAB BOYCOTT OF
(a)
Definitions. As used in this provision—
(1) “Foreign person” means any person (including
any individual, partnership, corporation, or other form of association) other
than a
(2) “
(3) “
(i) Any
(ii) Any domestic concern (including any permanent
domestic establishment of any foreign concern); and
(iii) Any foreign subsidiary or affiliate
(including any permanent foreign establishment) of any domestic concern that is
controlled in fact by such domestic concern.
(b)
Certification. If the offeror is a foreign person, the
offeror certifies, by submission of an offer, that it—
(1) Does not comply with the Secondary Arab
Boycott of Israel; and
(2) Is not taking or knowingly agreeing to take
any action, with respect to the Secondary Boycott of Israel by Arab countries,
which 50 U.S.C. App. 2407(a) prohibits a United States person from taking.
(End of provision)
252.225-7032 Waiver of
As
prescribed in 225.1101(8), use the following provision:
WAIVER OF
(APR 2003)
(a)
Offered prices for contracts or subcontracts with United Kingdom (U.K.)
firms may contain commercial exploitation levies assessed by the Government of
the
(1) The name of the
(2) The item to which the levy applies and the
item quantity; and
(3) The amount of levy plus any associated
indirect costs and profit or fee.
(b)
In the event of difficulty in identifying levies included in a price
from a prospective subcontractor, the offeror may seek advice through the
Director of Procurement, United Kingdom Defence Procurement Office, British
Embassy,
(c)
The U.S. Government may attempt to obtain a waiver of levies pursuant to
the U.S./U.K. reciprocal waiver agreement of July 1987.
(1) If the
(2) If levies are identified but not waived
before award of a contract, the Contracting Officer will evaluate the offer
inclusive of the levies.
(3) If the
(End of provision)
252.225-7033
Waiver of
As
prescribed in 225.1101(9), use the following clause:
WAIVER OF
(a)
The U.S. Government may attempt to obtain a waiver of any commercial
exploitation levies included in the price of this contract, pursuant to the
U.S./United Kingdom (U.K.) reciprocal waiver agreement of July 1987. If the
(b)
If the Contractor contemplates award of a subcontract exceeding
$1
million to a
(1) Name of the
(2) Prime contract number.
(3) Description of item to which the levy
applies.
(4) Quantity being acquired.
(5) Amount of levy plus any associated indirect
costs and profit or fee.
(c)
In the event of difficulty in identifying levies included in a price
from a prospective subcontractor, the Contractor may seek advice through the
Director of Procurement, United Kingdom Defence Procurement Office, British
Embassy,
(d)
The Contractor shall insert the substance of this clause, including this
paragraph (d), in any subcontract for supplies where a lower-tier subcontract
exceeding $1 million with a
(End of clause)
252.225-7034 Reserved.
252.225-7035
Buy American Act--Free Trade Agreements--Balance of Payments Program
Certificate.
As
prescribed in 225.1101(10)(i), use the following provision:
BUY AMERICAN ACT—FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS—BALANCE OF PAYMENTS PROGRAM CERTIFICATE (DEC 2010)
(a) Definitions. “Bahrainian end product,” “commercially available off-the-shelf (COTS) item,” “component,” “domestic end product,” “Free Trade Agreement country,” “Free Trade Agreement country end product,” “foreign end product,” “Moroccan end product,” Peruvian end product,” “qualifying country end product,” and “United States,” as used in this provision, have the meanings given in the Buy American Act—Free Trade Agreements—Balance of Payments Program clause of this solicitation.
(b)
Evaluation. The Government—
(1) Will evaluate offers in accordance with the
policies and procedures of Part 225 of the Defense Federal Acquisition
Regulation Supplement; and
(2) For line items subject to Free Trade Agreements, will evaluate offers of qualifying country end products or Free Trade Agreement country end products other than Bahrainian end products, Moroccan end products, or Peruvian end products without regard to the restrictions of the Buy American Act or the Balance of Payments Program.
(c)
Certifications and identification
of country of origin.
(1) For all line items subject to the Buy
American Act—Free Trade Agreements—Balance of Payments Program clause of this
solicitation, the offeror certifies that—
(i) Each end product, except the end products
listed in paragraph (c)(2) of this provision, is a domestic end product; and
(ii) Components of unknown origin are considered
to have been mined, produced, or manufactured outside the
(2) The offeror shall identify all end products
that are not domestic end products.
(i) The offeror certifies that the following
supplies are qualifying country (except Australian or Canadian) end products:
(Line Item Number) (Country of Origin)
(ii) The offeror certifies that the following supplies are Free Trade Agreement country end products other than Bahrainian end products, Moroccan end products, or Peruvian end products:
(Line Item Number) (Country of Origin)
(iii) The following supplies are other foreign end
products, including end products manufactured in the United States that do not
qualify as domestic end products, i.e., an
end product that is not a COTS item and does not meet the component test in
paragraph (ii) of the definition of “domestic end product”:
(Line Item Number) (Country of Origin (If known))
(End of provision)
As prescribed in 225.1101(10)(ii), substitute the phrase “Canadian end product” for the phrases “Bahrainian end product,” “Free Trade Agreement country,” “Free Trade Agreement country end product,” “Moroccan end product,” and “Peruvian end products” in paragraph (a) of the basic provision; substitute the phrase “Canadian end products” for the phrase “Free Trade Agreement country end products other than Bahrainian end products, Moroccan end products, or Peruvian end products” in paragraphs (b)(2) and (c)(2)(ii) of the basic provision; and delete the phrase “Australian or” from paragraph (c)(2)(i) of the basic provision.
ALTERNATE II (DEC 2010)
As prescribed in 225.1101(10)(iii), add the terms “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state” and “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state end product” in paragraph (a) and substitute the following paragraphs (b)(2) and (c)(2)(i) for paragraphs (b)(2) and (c)(2)(i) of the basic clause.
(b)(2)
For line items subject to Free Trade Agreements, will evaluate offers of qualifying country end products, SC/CASA state end products, or Free Trade Agreement country end products other than Bahrainian end products, Moroccan end products, or Peruvian end products without regard to the restrictions of the Buy American Act or the Balance of Payments Program.
(c)(2)(i)
The offeror certifies that the following supplies are qualifying country (except Australian or Canadian) or SC/CASA state end products:
(Line Item Number) (Country of Origin)
(End of provision)
ALTERNATE III (DEC 2010)
As prescribed in 225.1101(10)(iv), substitute the following paragraphs (a), (b)(2), (c)(2)(i), and (c)(2)(ii) for paragraphs (a), (b)(2), (c)(2)(i), and (c)(2)(ii) of the basic clause:
(a)
Definitions. “Canadian end product,” “commercially available off-the-shelf (COTS) item,” “domestic end product,” “foreign end product,” “qualifying country end product,” “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state end product,” and “United States” have the meanings given in the Buy American Act—Free Trade Agreements—Balance of Payments Program clause of this solicitation.
(b)(2)
For line items subject to Free Trade Agreements, will evaluate offers of qualifying country end products, SC/CASA state end products, or Canadian end products without regard to the restrictions of the Buy American Act or the Balance of Payments Program.
(c)(2)(i)
The offeror certifies that the following supplies are qualifying country (except Canadian) or SC/CASA state end products:
(Line Item Number) (Country of Origin)
(ii) The offeror certifies that the following supplies are Canadian end products:
(Line Item Number) (Country of Origin)
252.225-7036
Buy American Act--Free Trade Agreements--Balance of Payments Program.
As
prescribed in 225.1101(11)(i)(A), use the following clause:
BUY AMERICAN ACT—FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS—BALANCE OF PAYMENTS PROGRAM (DEC 2010)
(a)
Definitions. As used in this clause—
(1) “Bahrainian end product” means an article
that—
(i)
Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of
(ii)
In the case of an article that consists in whole or in part of materials
from another country, has been substantially transformed in Bahrain into a new
and different article of commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from
that of the article or articles from which it was transformed. The term refers to a product offered for
purchase under a supply contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of
the end product includes services (except transportation services) incidental
to its supply, provided that the value of those incidental services does not
exceed the value of the product itself.
(2) “Commercially available off-the-shelf (COTS)
item”—
(i) Means any item of supply (including
construction material) that is—
(A) A commercial item (as defined in paragraph
(1) of the definition of “commercial item” in section 2.101 of the Federal
Acquisition Regulation);
(B) Sold in substantial quantities in the
commercial marketplace; and
(C) Offered to the Government, under a contract
or subcontract at any tier, without modification, in the same form in which it
is sold in the commercial marketplace; and
(ii) Does not include bulk cargo, as defined in
section 3 of the Shipping Act of 1984 (46 U.S.C. 40102), such as agricultural
products and petroleum products.
(3) “Component” means an article, material, or
supply incorporated directly into an end product.
(4) “Domestic end product” means—
(i) An unmanufactured end product that has been
mined or produced in the
(ii) An end product manufactured in the
(A) The cost of its qualifying country components
and its components that are mined, produced, or manufactured in the
(1) Sufficient and reasonably available
commercial quantities of a satisfactory quality are not mined, produced, or
manufactured in the
(2) It is inconsistent with the public interest
to apply the restrictions of the Buy American Act; or
(B) The end product is a COTS item.
(5) “End product” means those articles,
materials, and supplies to be acquired under this contract for public use.
(6) “Foreign end product” means an end product
other than a domestic end product.
(7) “Free Trade Agreement country” means Australia,
Bahrain, Canada, Chile, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Mexico, Morocco, Nicaragua, Peru, or Singapore;
(8) “Free Trade Agreement country end product”
means an article that—
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of a Free
Trade Agreement country; or
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in whole or in
part of materials from another country, has been substantially transformed in a
Free Trade Agreement country into a new and different article of commerce with
a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or articles from
which it was transformed. The term
refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply contract, but for
purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes services (except
transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided that the value of
those incidental services does not exceed the value of the product itself.
(9) “Moroccan end product” means an article that—
(i) Is wholly the
growth, product, or manufacture of
(ii) In the case of
an article that consists in whole or in part of materials from another country,
has been substantially transformed in Morocco into a new and different article
of commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or
articles from which it was transformed.
The term refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply
contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes
services (except transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided
that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the value of the
product itself.
(10) “Peruvian end product” means an article that—
(i) Is wholly the
growth, product, or manufacture of Peru
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially transformed in Peru into a new and different article of commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or articles from which it was transformed. The term refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes services (except transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the value of the product itself.
(11) “Qualifying country” means any country set forth in the definition of “qualifying country” in Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement 225.003.
(12) “Qualifying country component” means a component mined, produced, or manufactured in a qualifying country.
(13) “Qualifying country end product” means-
(i) An unmanufactured end product mined or
produced in a qualifying country; or
(ii) An end product manufactured in a qualifying country if the cost of
the following types of components exceeds 50 percent of the cost of all its
components:
(A) Components mined, produced, or manufactured
in a qualifying country.
(B) Components mined, produced, or manufactured
in the
(C) Components of foreign origin of a class or
kind for which the Government has determined that sufficient and reasonably
available commercial quantities of a satisfactory quality are not mined,
produced, or manufactured in the
(14)
(b)
Unless otherwise specified, this clause applies to all items in the
Schedule.
(c)
The Contractor shall deliver under this contract only domestic end
products unless, in its offer, it specified delivery of qualifying country end
products, Free Trade Agreement country end products other than Bahrainian end
products or Moroccan end products, or other foreign end products in the Buy
American Act--Free Trade Agreements--Balance of Payments Program Certificate
provision of the solicitation. If the
Contractor certified in its offer that it will deliver a qualifying country end
product or a Free Trade Agreement country end product other than a Bahrainian
end product or a Moroccan end product, the Contractor shall deliver a
qualifying country end product, a Free Trade Agreement country end product
other than a Bahrainian end product or a Moroccan end product, or, at the
Contractor’s option, a domestic end product.
(d)
The contract price does not include duty for end products or components
for which the Contractor will claim duty-free entry.
(End of clause)
ALTERNATE
I (JUL 2009)
As
prescribed in 225.1101(11)(i)(B), substitute the following paragraphs (a)(8) and
(c) for paragraphs (a)(8) and (c) of the basic clause:
(a)(8)
“Canadian end product,” means an article that—
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in
whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially
transformed in Canada into a new and different article of commerce with a name,
character, or use distinct from that of the article or articles from which it
was transformed. The term refers to a
product offered for purchase under a supply contract, but for purposes of
calculating the value of the end product includes services (except
transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the
value of the product itself.
(c)
The Contractor shall deliver under this contract only domestic end
products unless, in its offer, it specified delivery of qualifying country,
Canadian, or other foreign end products in the Buy American Act--Free Trade
Agreements--Balance of Payments Program Certificate provision of the
solicitation. If the Contractor
certified in its offer that it will deliver a qualifying country end product or
a Canadian end product, the Contractor shall deliver a qualifying country end
product, a Canadian end product, or, at the Contractor’s option, a domestic end
product.
ALTERNATE II (DEC 2010)
As
prescribed in 225.1101(11)(i)(A), add the following new definitions to paragraph (a) and substitute the following paragraph (c) for paragraph (c) of the basic clause:
(a)(14) “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state” means Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, or Uzbekistan.
(15) “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state end product” means an article that -
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of an SC/CASA state; or
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially transformed in an SC/CASA state into a new and different article of commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or articles from which it was transformed. The term refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes services (except transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the value of the product itself.
(c)
The Contractor shall deliver under this contract only domestic end products unless, in its offer, it specified delivery of qualifying country end products, SC/CASA state end products, Free Trade Agreement country end products other than Bahrainian end products, Moroccan end products, or Peruvian end products, or other foreign end products in the Buy American Act—Free Trade Agreements—Balance of Payments Program Certificate provision of the solicitation. If the Contractor certified in its offer that it will deliver a qualifying country end product, SC/CASA state end products, or a Free Trade Agreement country end product other than a Bahrainian end product, a Moroccan end product, or a Peruvian end product, the Contractor shall deliver a qualifying country end product, an SC/CASA state end product, a Free Trade Agreement country end product other than a Bahrainian end product, a Moroccan end product, or a Peruvian end product or, at the Contractor’s option, a domestic end product.
ALTERNATE III (DEC 2010)
As
prescribed in 225.1101(11)(i)(B), add the following definitions to paragraph (a) and substitute the following paragraph (c) for paragraph (c) of the basic clause:
(a)(14) “Canadian end product,” means an article that—
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of Canada; or
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially transformed in Canada into a new and different article of commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or articles from which it was transformed. The term refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes services (except transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the value of the product itself.;
(15) “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state” means Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, or Uzbekistan.
(16) “South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state end product” means an article that-
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of an SC/CASA state; or
(ii) In the case of an article that consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially transformed in an SC/CASA state into a new and different article of commerce with a name, character, or use distinct from that of the article or articles from which it was transformed. The term refers to a product offered for purchase under a supply contract, but for purposes of calculating the value of the end product includes services (except transportation services) incidental to its supply, provided that the value of those incidental services does not exceed the value of the product itself.
(c)
The Contractor shall deliver under this contract only domestic end products unless, in its offer, it specified delivery of qualifying country end products, SC/CASA state end products, Canadian end products, or other foreign end products in the Buy American Act—Free Trade Agreements—Balance of Payments Program Certificate provision of the solicitation. If the Contractor certified in its offer that it will deliver a qualifying country end product, SC/CASA state end products, or a Canadian end product, the Contractor shall deliver a qualifying country end product, an SC/CASA state end product, a Canadian end product or, at the Contractor’s option, a domestic end product.
252.225-7037
Evaluation of Offers for Air Circuit Breakers.
As
prescribed in 225.7006-4(a), use the following provision:
EVALUATION OF OFFERS FOR AIR CIRCUIT BREAKERS
(JUN 2005)
(a)
The offeror shall specify, in its offer, any intent to furnish air
circuit breakers that are not manufactured in the
(b)
The Contracting Officer will evaluate offers by adding a factor of 50
percent to the offered price of air circuit breakers that are not manufactured
in the
(End of provision)
252.225-7038
Restriction on Acquisition of Air Circuit Breakers.
As
prescribed in 225.7006-4(b), use the following clause:
RESTRICTION ON ACQUISITION OF AIR CIRCUIT
BREAKERS (JUN 2005)
Unless otherwise
specified in its offer, the Contractor shall deliver under this contract air
circuit breakers manufactured in the
(End of clause)
252.225-7039 Reserved.
252.225-7040 Contractor Personnel Authorized to Accompany
As
prescribed in 225.7402-5(a), use the following clause:
CONTRACTOR PERSONNEL AUTHORIZED TO ACCOMPANY
OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES (JUN 2011)
(a)
Definitions. As used in this clause—
“Combatant Commander” means the commander
of a unified or specified combatant command established in accordance with 10
U.S.C. 161.
“Designated
operational area” means a geographic area designated by the combatant commander
or subordinate joint force commander for the conduct or support of specified
military operations.
“Law of war” means that part of
international law that regulates the conduct of armed hostilities. The law of war encompasses all international
law for the conduct of hostilities binding on the
“Subordinate joint force commander” means a
sub-unified commander or joint task force commander.
(b)
General.
(1) This clause applies when Contractor personnel
are authorized to accompany U.S. Armed Forces deployed outside the
(i) Contingency operations;
(ii) Humanitarian or peacekeeping operations; or
(iii) Other military operations or military
exercises, when designated by the Combatant Commander.
(2) Contract performance in support of U.S. Armed
Forces deployed outside the
(3) Contractor personnel are civilians
accompanying the U.S. Armed Forces.
(i) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of
this clause, Contractor personnel are only authorized to use deadly force in
self-defense.
(ii) Contractor personnel performing security
functions are also authorized to use deadly force when such force reasonably
appears necessary to execute their security mission to protect assets/persons,
consistent with the terms and conditions contained in their contract or with
their job description and terms of employment.
(iii) Unless immune from host nation jurisdiction
by virtue of an international agreement or international law, inappropriate use
of force by contractor personnel authorized to accompany the U.S. Armed Forces
can subject such personnel to United States or host nation prosecution and
civil liability (see paragraphs (d) and (j)(3) of this clause).
(4) Service performed by Contractor personnel
subject to this clause is not active duty or service under 38 U.S.C. 106 note.
(c)
Support.
(1)(i) The Combatant Commander will develop a
security plan for protection of Contractor personnel in locations where there
is not sufficient or legitimate civil authority, when the Combatant Commander
decides it is in the interests of the Government to provide security because—
(A) The Contractor cannot obtain effective
security services;
(B) Effective security services are unavailable
at a reasonable cost; or
(C) Threat conditions necessitate security
through military means.
(ii) The Contracting Officer shall include in the
contract the level of protection to be provided to Contractor personnel.
(iii) In appropriate cases, the Combatant Commander
may provide security through military means, commensurate with the level of
security provided DoD civilians.
(2)(i) Generally, all Contractor personnel
authorized to accompany the U.S. Armed Forces in the designated operational
area are authorized to receive resuscitative care, stabilization,
hospitalization at level III military treatment facilities, and assistance with
patient movement in emergencies where loss of life, limb, or eyesight could
occur. Hospitalization will be limited
to stabilization and short-term medical treatment with an emphasis on return to
duty or placement in the patient movement system.
(ii) When the Government provides medical
treatment or transportation of Contractor personnel to a selected civilian
facility, the Contractor shall ensure that the Government is reimbursed for any
costs associated with such treatment or transportation.
(iii) Medical or dental care beyond this standard
is not authorized unless specified elsewhere in this contract.
(3) Unless specified elsewhere in this contract,
the Contractor is responsible for all other support required for its personnel
engaged in the designated operational area under this contract.
(4) Contractor personnel must have a Synchronized Predeployment and Operational Tracker (SPOT)-generated letter of authorization signed by the Contracting Officer in order to process through a deployment center or to travel to,
from, or within the designated operational area. The letter of authorization also will
identify any additional authorizations, privileges, or Government support that Contractor personnel are entitled to under this contract.
(d)
Compliance with laws and regulations.
(1) The Contractor shall comply with, and shall
ensure that its personnel authorized to accompany U.S. Armed Forces deployed outside the United States as
specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this clause are familiar with and comply with,
all applicable—
(i)
(ii) Provisions of the law of war, as well as any
other applicable treaties and international agreements;
(iii)
(iv) Orders, directives, and instructions issued
by the Combatant Commander, including those relating to force protection,
security, health, safety, or relations and interaction with local nationals.
(2) The Contractor shall institute and implement
an effective program to prevent violations of the law of war by its employees
and subcontractors, including law of war training in accordance with paragraph
(e)(1)(vii) of this clause.
(e)
Pre-deployment requirements.
(1) The Contractor shall ensure that the
following requirements are met prior to deploying personnel authorized to
accompany U.S. Armed Forces. Specific
requirements for each category may be specified in the statement of work or
elsewhere in the contract.
(i) All required security and background checks
are complete and acceptable.
(ii) All deploying personnel meet the minimum
medical screening requirements and have received all required immunizations as
specified in the contract. The Government
will provide, at no cost to the Contractor, any theater-specific immunizations
and/or medications not available to the general public.
(iii) Deploying personnel have all necessary
passports, visas, and other documents required to enter and exit a designated
operational area and have a Geneva Conventions identification card, or other
appropriate DoD identity credential, from the deployment center. Any Common Access Card issued to deploying
personnel shall contain the access permissions allowed by the letter of
authorization issued in accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this clause.
(iv) Special area, country, and theater clearance
is obtained for personnel. Clearance
requirements are in DoD Directive 4500.54, Official Temporary Duty Abroad, and
DoD 4500.54-G, DoD Foreign Clearance Guide.
Contractor personnel are considered non-DoD personnel traveling under
DoD sponsorship.
(v) All personnel have received personal security
training. At a minimum, the training
shall—
(A) Cover safety and security issues facing
employees overseas;
(B) Identify safety and security contingency
planning activities; and
(C) Identify ways to utilize safety and security
personnel and other resources appropriately.
(vi) All personnel have received isolated
personnel training, if specified in the contract, in accordance with DoD
Instruction 1300.23, Isolated Personnel Training for DoD Civilian and
Contractors.
(vii) Personnel have received law of war training
as follows:
(A) Basic training is required for all Contractor
personnel authorized to accompany U.S. Armed Forces deployed outside the
(1)
A military-run training center; or
(2)
A web-based source, if specified in the contract or approved by the
Contracting Officer.
(B) Advanced training, commensurate with their
duties and responsibilities, may be required for some Contractor personnel as
specified in the contract.
(2) The Contractor shall notify all personnel who
are not a host country national, or who are not ordinarily resident in the host
country, that—
(i) Such employees, and dependents residing with
such employees, who engage in conduct outside the United States that would constitute
an offense punishable by imprisonment for more than one year if the conduct had
been engaged in within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the
United States, may potentially be subject to the criminal jurisdiction of the
United States in accordance with the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act
of 2000 (18 U.S.C. 3621, et seq.);
(ii) Pursuant to the War Crimes Act (18 U.S.C. 2441),
Federal criminal jurisdiction also extends to conduct that is determined to
constitute a war crime when committed by a civilian national of the
(iii) Other laws may provide for prosecution of U.S.
nationals who commit offenses on the premises of U.S. diplomatic, consular, military or
other U.S. Government missions outside the United States (18 U.S.C. 7(9));
and
(iv) In time of declared war or a contingency
operation, Contractor personnel authorized to accompany U.S. Armed Forces in
the field are subject to the jurisdiction of the Uniform Code of Military Justice
under 10 U.S.C. 802(a)(10).
(f)
Processing and departure points. Deployed Contractor personnel shall—
(1) Process through the deployment center
designated in the contract, or as otherwise directed by the Contracting
Officer, prior to deploying. The
deployment center will conduct deployment processing to ensure visibility and
accountability of Contractor personnel and to ensure that all deployment
requirements are met, including the requirements specified in paragraph (e)(1)
of this clause;
(2) Use the point of departure and transportation
mode directed by the Contracting Officer; and
(3) Process through a Joint Reception Center
(JRC) upon arrival at the deployed location.
The JRC will validate personnel accountability, ensure that specific designated
operational area entrance requirements are met, and brief Contractor personnel
on theater-specific policies and procedures.
(g)
Personnel data.
(1) The Contractor shall enter before deployment
and maintain data for all Contractor personnel that are authorized to accompany
U.S. Armed Forces deployed outside the United States as specified in paragraph
(b)(1) of this clause. The Contractor
shall use the Synchronized Predeployment and Operational Tracker (SPOT)
web-based system, at http://www.dod.mil/bta/products/spot.html,
to enter and maintain the data.
(2) The Contractor shall ensure that all
employees in the database have a current DD Form 93, Record of Emergency Data
Card, on file with both the Contractor and the designated Government
official. The Contracting Officer will
inform the Contractor of the Government official designated to receive this
data card.
(h)
Contractor personnel.
(1) The Contracting Officer may direct the
Contractor, at its own expense, to remove and replace any Contractor personnel
who jeopardize or interfere with mission accomplishment or who fail to comply
with or violate applicable requirements of this contract. Such action may be taken at the Government’s
discretion without prejudice to its rights under any other provision of this
contract, including the Termination for Default clause.
(2) The Contractor shall have a plan on file
showing how the Contractor would replace employees who are unavailable for
deployment or who need to be replaced during deployment. The Contractor shall keep this plan current
and shall provide a copy to the Contracting Officer upon request. The plan shall—
(i) Identify all personnel who are subject to
military mobilization;
(ii) Detail how the position would be filled if
the individual were mobilized; and
(iii) Identify all personnel who occupy a position
that the Contracting Officer has designated as mission essential.
(3) Contractor personnel shall report to the
Combatant Commander or a designee, or through other channels such as the
military police, a judge advocate, or an inspector general, any suspected or
alleged conduct for which there is credible information that such conduct—
(i) Constitutes violation of the law of war; or
(ii) Occurred during any other military operations
and would constitute a violation of the law of war if it occurred during an
armed conflict.
(i)
Military clothing and protective
equipment.
(1) Contractor personnel are prohibited from
wearing military clothing unless specifically authorized in writing by the
Combatant Commander. If authorized to
wear military clothing, Contractor personnel must—
(i) Wear distinctive patches, arm bands, nametags,
or headgear, in order to be distinguishable from military personnel, consistent
with force protection measures; and
(ii) Carry the written authorization with them at
all times.
(2) Contractor personnel may wear military-unique
organizational clothing and individual equipment (OCIE) required for safety and
security, such as ballistic, nuclear, biological, or chemical protective
equipment.
(3) The deployment center, or the Combatant
Commander, shall issue OCIE and shall provide training, if necessary, to ensure
the safety and security of Contractor personnel.
(4) The Contractor shall ensure that all issued
OCIE is returned to the point of issue, unless otherwise directed by the
Contracting Officer.
(j)
Weapons.
(1) If the Contractor requests that its personnel
performing in the designated operational area be authorized to carry weapons,
the request shall be made through the Contracting Officer to the Combatant
Commander, in accordance with DoD Instruction 3020.41, paragraph 6.3.4.1 or, if
the contract is for security services, paragraph 6.3.5.3. The Combatant Commander will determine
whether to authorize in-theater Contractor personnel to carry weapons and what
weapons and ammunition will be allowed.
(2) If the Contracting Officer, subject to the
approval of the Combatant Commander, authorizes the carrying of weapons—
(i) The Contracting Officer may authorize the
Contractor to issue Contractor-owned weapons and ammunition to specified
employees; or
(ii) The [Contracting
Officer to specify the appropriate individual, e.g., Contracting Officer’s
Representative, Regional Security Officer] may issue Government-furnished
weapons and ammunition to the Contractor for issuance to specified Contractor
employees.
(3) The Contractor shall ensure that its
personnel who are authorized to carry weapons—
(i) Are adequately trained to carry and use them—
(A) Safely;
(B) With full understanding of, and adherence to,
the rules of the use of force issued by the Combatant Commander; and
(C) In compliance with applicable agency
policies, agreements, rules, regulations, and other applicable law;
(ii) Are not barred from possession of a firearm
by 18 U.S.C. 922; and
(iii) Adhere to all guidance and orders issued by
the Combatant Commander regarding possession, use, safety, and accountability
of weapons and ammunition.
(4) Whether or not weapons are
Government-furnished, all liability for the use of any weapon by Contractor
personnel rests solely with the Contractor and the Contractor employee using
such weapon.
(5) Upon redeployment or revocation by the
Combatant Commander of the Contractor’s authorization to issue firearms, the
Contractor shall ensure that all Government-issued weapons and unexpended
ammunition are returned as directed by the Contracting Officer.
(k)
Vehicle or equipment licenses. Contractor personnel shall possess the
required licenses to operate all vehicles or equipment necessary to perform the
contract in the designated operational area.
(l)
Purchase of scarce goods and
services. If the Combatant Commander
has established an organization for the designated operational area whose
function is to determine that certain items are scarce goods or services, the
Contractor shall coordinate with that organization local purchases of goods and
services designated as scarce, in accordance with instructions provided by the
Contracting Officer.
(m)
Evacuation.
(1) If the Combatant Commander orders a mandatory
evacuation of some or all personnel, the Government will provide assistance, to
the extent available, to
(2) In the event of a non-mandatory evacuation
order, unless authorized in writing by the Contracting Officer, the Contractor
shall maintain personnel on location sufficient to meet obligations under this
contract.
(n)
Next of kin notification and
personnel recovery.
(1) The Contractor shall be responsible for
notification of the employee-designated next of kin in the event an employee
dies, requires evacuation due to an injury, or is isolated, missing, detained,
captured, or abducted.
(2) In the case of isolated, missing, detained,
captured, or abducted Contractor personnel, the Government will assist in
personnel recovery actions in accordance with DoD Directive 3002.01E, Personnel
Recovery in the Department of Defense.
(o)
Mortuary affairs. Mortuary affairs for Contractor personnel who
die while accompanying the U.S. Armed Forces will be handled in accordance with
DoD Directive 1300.22, Mortuary Affairs Policy.
(p)
Changes. In addition to the changes otherwise
authorized by the Changes clause of this contract, the Contracting Officer may,
at any time, by written order identified as a change order, make changes in the
place of performance or Government-furnished facilities, equipment, material,
services, or site. Any change order
issued in accordance with this paragraph (p) shall be subject to the provisions
of the Changes clause of this contract.
(q)
Subcontracts. The Contractor shall incorporate the
substance of this clause, including this paragraph (q), in all subcontracts
when subcontractor personnel are authorized to accompany U.S. Armed Forces
deployed outside the
(1) Contingency operations;
(2) Humanitarian or peacekeeping operations; or
(3) Other military operations or military
exercises, when designated by the Combatant Commander.
(End of clause)
252.225-7041
Correspondence in English.
As prescribed
in 225.1103(2), use the following clause:
CORRESPONDENCE IN ENGLISH (JUN 1997)
The
Contractor shall ensure that all contract correspondence that is addressed to
the United States Government is submitted in English or with an English
translation.
(End of clause)
252.225-7042
Authorization to Perform.
As prescribed
in 225.1103(3), use the following provision:
AUTHORIZATION TO PERFORM (APR 2003)
The
offeror represents that it has been duly authorized to operate and to do
business in the country or countries in which the contract is to be performed.
(End of provision)
252.225-7043
Antiterrorism/Force Protection for Defense Contractors Outside the
As
prescribed in 225.7403-2, use the following clause:
ANTITERRORISM/FORCE PROTECTION POLICY FOR
DEFENSE CONTRACTORS OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES (MAR 2006)
(a)
Definition. “
(b)
Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this clause, the Contractor and
its subcontractors, if performing or traveling outside the
(1) Affiliate with the Overseas Security Advisory
Council, if the Contractor or subcontractor is a
(2) Ensure that Contractor and subcontractor
personnel who are U.S. nationals and are in-country on a non-transitory basis,
register with the U.S. Embassy, and that Contractor and subcontractor personnel
who are third country nationals comply with any security related requirements
of the Embassy of their nationality;
(3) Provide, to Contractor and subcontractor
personnel, antiterrorism/force protection awareness information commensurate
with that which the Department of Defense (DoD) provides to its military and civilian
personnel and their families, to the extent such information can be made
available prior to travel outside the United States; and
(4) Obtain and comply with the most current
antiterrorism/force protection guidance for Contractor and subcontractor
personnel.
(c)
The requirements of this clause do not apply to any subcontractor that
is¾
(1) A foreign government;
(2) A representative of a foreign government; or
(3) A foreign corporation wholly owned by a
foreign government.
(d)
Information and guidance pertaining to DoD antiterrorism/force
protection can be obtained from (Contracting
Officer to insert applicable information cited in PGI 225.7403-1 (Pop-Up Window or PGI Viewer Mode)).
(End of clause)
252.225-7044
Balance of Payments Program--Construction Material.
As
prescribed in 225.7503(a)(1), use the following clause:
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS PROGRAM--CONSTRUCTION
MATERIAL (OCT 2010)
(a)
Definitions. As used in this clause--
“Commercially available off-the-shelf
(COTS) item”--
(1) Means any item of supply (including
construction material) that is--
(i) A commercial item (as defined in paragraph
(1) of the definition of “commercial item” in section 2.101 of the Federal
Acquisition Regulation);
(ii) Sold in substantial quantities in the
commercial marketplace; and
(iii) Offered to the Government, under a contract
or subcontract at any tier, without modification, in the same form in which it
is sold in the commercial marketplace; and
(2) Does not include bulk cargo, as defined in
section 3 of the Shipping Act of 1984 (46 U.S.C. 40102), such as agricultural
products and petroleum products.
“Component” means any article, material, or
supply incorporated directly into construction material.
“Construction
material” means an article, material, or supply brought to the construction
site by the Contractor or a subcontractor for incorporation into the building
or work. The term also includes an item
brought to the site preassembled from articles, materials, or supplies. However, emergency life safety systems, such
as emergency lighting, fire alarm, and audio evacuation systems, that are
discrete systems incorporated into a public building or work and that are
produced as complete systems, are evaluated as a single and distinct
construction material regardless of when or how the individual parts or
components of those systems are delivered to the construction site. Materials purchased directly by the
Government are supplies, not construction material.
“Cost
of components” means--
(1) For components purchased by the Contractor,
the acquisition cost, including transportation costs to the place of
incorporation into the end product (whether or not such costs are paid to a
domestic firm), and any applicable duty (whether or not a duty-free entry
certificate is issued); or
(2) For components manufactured by the
Contractor, all costs associated with the manufacture of the component,
including transportation costs as described in paragraph (1) of this
definition, plus allocable overhead costs, but excluding profit. Cost of components does not include any costs
associated with the manufacture of the construction material.
“Domestic
construction material” means--
(1) An unmanufactured construction material mined
or produced in the
(2) A construction material manufactured in the
(i) The cost of its components mined, produced,
or manufactured in the
(ii) The construction material is a COTS item.
“
(b)
Domestic preference. This clause implements the Balance of
Payments Program by providing a preference for domestic construction
material. The Contractor shall use only
domestic construction material in performing this contract, except for--
(1) Construction material valued at or below the simplified acquisition
threshold in part 2 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation;
(2) Information technology that is a commercial item; or
(3) The construction material or components listed by the Government as
follows:
_________________________________________________________________________________
[Contracting Officer to list applicable
excepted materials or indicate “none”]
(End of clause)
ALTERNATE I (DEC 2010) As prescribed in 225.7503(a)(2), add the following definitions to paragraph (a) and replace the phrase “domestic construction material” in the second sentence of paragraph (b) with the phrase “domestic construction material or SC/CASA state construction material.”
“South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state” means Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, or Uzbekistan.
“SC/CASA state construction material” means construction material that-
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of an SC/CASA state; or
(ii) In the case of a construction material that consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially transformed in an SC/CASA state into a new and different construction material distinct from the material from which it was transformed.
252.225-7045
Balance of Payments Program--Construction Material Under Trade
Agreements.
As
prescribed in 225.7503(b)(1), use the following clause:
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS PROGRAM--CONSTRUCTION MATERIAL UNDER TRADE AGREEMENTS (OCT 2010)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause--
“
(1) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of a
(2) In the case of a construction material that
consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been
substantially transformed in a
“Commercially available off-the-shelf
(COTS) item”--
(1) Means any item of supply (including
construction material) that is--
(i) A commercial item (as defined in paragraph
(1) of the definition of “commercial item” in section 2.101 of the Federal
Acquisition Regulation);
(ii) Sold in substantial quantities in the
commercial marketplace; and
(iii) Offered to the Government, under a contract
or subcontract at any tier, without modification, in the same form in which it
is sold in the commercial marketplace; and
(2) Does not include bulk cargo, as defined in
section 3 of the Shipping Act of 1984 (46 U.S.C. 40102), such as agricultural
products and petroleum products.
“Component”
means any article, material, or supply incorporated directly into construction
material.
“Construction
material” means an article, material, or supply brought to the construction
site by the Contractor or a subcontractor for incorporation into the building
or work. The term also includes an item
brought to the site preassembled from articles, materials, or supplies. However, emergency life safety systems, such
as emergency lighting, fire alarm, and audio evacuation systems, that are
discrete systems incorporated into a public building or work and that are
produced as complete systems, are evaluated as a single and distinct
construction material regardless of when or how the individual parts or
components of those systems are delivered to the construction site. Materials purchased directly by the
Government are supplies, not construction material.
“Cost
of components” means--
(1) For components purchased by the Contractor,
the acquisition cost, including transportation costs to the place of
incorporation into the end product (whether or not such costs are paid to a
domestic firm), and any applicable duty (whether or not a duty-free entry
certificate is issued); or
(2) For components manufactured by the
Contractor, all costs associated with the manufacture of the component,
including transportation costs as described in paragraph (1) of this
definition, plus allocable overhead costs, but excluding profit. Cost of components does not include any costs
associated with the manufacture of the construction material.
“Designated country” means--
(1) A World Trade Organization Government Procurement Agreement (WTO GPA) country (Aruba, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea (Republic of), Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Singapore, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan (known in the World Trade Organization as “the Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, and Matsu” (Chinese Taipei)), or the United Kingdom);
(2)
A Free Trade Agreement country (Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Chile, Costa
Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Morocco,
Nicaragua, Peru, or Singapore);
(3) A least developed country (Afghanistan, Angola, Bangladesh, Benin, Bhutan, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cambodia, Central African
Republic, Chad, Comoros, Democratic Republic
of Congo, Djibouti, East Timor, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Haiti, Kiribati, Laos, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Maldives, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique,
Nepal, Niger, Rwanda, Samoa, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Sierra Leone,
Solomon Islands, Somalia, Tanzania, Togo, Tuvalu, Uganda, Vanuatu, Yemen, or
Zambia); or
(4)
A Caribbean Basin country (Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Bahamas,
Barbados, Belize, British Virgin Islands, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Haiti,
Jamaica, Montserrat, Netherlands Antilles, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St.
Vincent and the Grenadines, or Trinidad and Tobago).
“Designated
country construction material” means a construction material that is a WTO GPA
country construction material, a Free Trade Agreement country construction
material, a least developed country construction material, or a
“Domestic
construction material” means--
(1) An unmanufactured construction material mined
or produced in the
(2) A construction material manufactured in the
(i) The cost of its components mined, produced,
or manufactured in the
(ii) The construction material is a COTS item.
“Free Trade Agreement country construction
material” means a construction material that--
(1) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of a Free Trade Agreement country; or
(2) In the case of a construction material that
consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been
substantially transformed in a Free Trade Agreement country into a new and
different construction material distinct from the material from which it was
transformed.
“Least
developed country construction material” means a construction material that--
(1) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of a least developed country; or
(2) In the case of a construction material that
consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been
substantially transformed in a least developed country into a new and different
construction material distinct from the materials from which it was
transformed.
“
“WTO
GPA country construction material” means a construction material that—
(1) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of a WTO GPA country; or
(2) In the case of a construction material that
consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been
substantially transformed in a WTO GPA country into a new and different
construction material distinct from the materials from which it was transformed.
(b)
This clause implements the Balance of Payments Program by providing a
preference for domestic construction material.
In addition, the Contracting Officer has determined that the WTO GPA and
Free Trade Agreements apply to this acquisition. Therefore, the Balance of Payments Program
restrictions are waived for designated country construction materials.
(c)
The Contractor shall use only domestic or designated country
construction material in performing this contract, except for--
(1) Construction material valued at or below the simplified acquisition
threshold in part 2 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation;
(2) Information technology that is a commercial item; or
(3) The construction material or components listed by the Government as
follows:
_________________________________________________________________________________
[Contracting Officer to list applicable
excepted materials or indicate “none”]
(End of clause)
ALTERNATE I (DEC 2010).
As prescribed in 225.7503(b)(2), add the following definition of “Bahrainian or Mexican construction material” to paragraph (a) of the basic clause, and substitute the following paragraphs (b) and (c) for paragraphs (b) and (c) of the basic clause:
“Bahrainian
or Mexican construction material” means a construction material that--
(1) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture
of
(2) In the case of a construction material that
consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been
substantially transformed in
(b)
This clause implements the Balance of Payments Program by providing a preference for domestic construction material. In addition, the Contracting Officer has determined that the WTO GPA and all Free Trade Agreements except NAFTA and the Bahrain Free Trade Agreement apply to this acquisition. Therefore, the Balance of Payments Program restrictions are waived for designated country construction material other than Bahrainian or Mexican construction material.
(c)
The Contractor shall use only domestic or designated country
construction material other than Bahrainian or Mexican construction material in
performing this contract, except for--
(1) Construction material valued at or below the simplified acquisition
threshold in part 2 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation;
(2) Information technology that is a commercial item; or
(3) The construction material or components listed by the Government as
follows:
_________________________________________________________________________________
[Contracting Officer to list applicable
excepted materials or indicate “none”].
ALTERNATE II (JUN 2011).
As prescribed in 225.7503(b)(3), add the following definitions to paragraph (a); substitute the following paragraph (b) and the introductory text of paragraph (c) for paragraph (b) and the introductory text of paragraph (c) of the basic clause; and add the following paragraph (d):
“South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state” means Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, or Uzbekistan.
“SC/CASA state construction material” means construction material that-
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of an SC/CASA state; or
(ii) In the case of a construction material that consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially transformed in an SC/CASA state into a new and different construction material distinct from the material from which it was transformed.
(b)
This clause implements the Balance of Payments Program by providing a preference for domestic construction material. In addition, the Contracting Officer has determined that the WTO GPA, Free Trade Agreements, and other waivers relating to acquisitions in support of operations in Afghanistan apply to this acquisition. Therefore, the Balance of Payments Program restrictions are waived for SC/CASA state and designated country construction materials.
(c)
The Contractor shall use only domestic, SC/CASA state. or designated country construction material in performing this contract, except for—
(d)
If the Contractor is from an SC/CASA state, the Contractor shall inform its
government of its participation in this acquisition and that it generally will not have
such opportunity in the future unless its government provides reciprocal procurement opportunities to U.S. products and services and suppliers of such products and services.
ALTERNATE III (JUN 2011).
As prescribed in 225.7503(b)(4), add the following definitions to paragraph(a); substitute the following paragraph (b) and the introductory text of paragraph (c) for paragraph (b) and the introductory text of paragraph (c) of the basic clause; and add the following paragraph (d):
“South Caucasus/Central and South Asian (SC/CASA) state” means Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, or Uzbekistan.
“SC/CASA state construction material” means construction material that—
(i) Is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of an SC/CASA state; or
(ii) In the case of a construction material that consists in whole or in part of materials from another country, has been substantially transformed in an SC/CASA state into a new and different construction material distinct from the material from which it was transformed.
(b)
This clause implements the Balance of Payments Program by providing a preference for domestic construction material. In addition, the Contracting Officer has determined that the WTO GPA, all Free Trade Agreements except NAFTA and the Bahrain Free Trade Agreement, and other waivers relating to acquisitions in support of operations in Afghanistan apply to this acquisition. Therefore, the Balance of Payments Program restrictions are waived for SC/CASA state and designated country construction material other than Bahrainian or Mexican construction material.
(c)
The Contractor shall use only domestic, SC/CASA state, or designated country construction material other than Bahrainian or Mexican construction material in performing this contract, except for—
(d)
If the Contractor is from an SC/CASA state, the Contractor shall inform its
government of its participation in this acquisition and that it generally will not have
such opportunity in the future unless its government provides reciprocal procurement opportunities to U.S. products and services and suppliers of such products and services.