Aquatic Invasive Species Control and Prevention Act of 2026
Summary
HR8876 authorizes a new competitive grant program for rapid response to aquatic invasive species, creating incremental federal contracting opportunities for infrastructure and water-treatment companies. The bill is in early stages, and funding requires future appropriations, but the mechanism is clearly directed at ports, waterways, and engineering controls. Tickers $FLR, $MTZ, $PWR, and $KBR are structural beneficiaries with estimated combined annual revenue upside of $140-390 million if fully appropriated.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.HR8876 authorizes a new aquatic invasive species grant program; no dollar amount specified—funding requires a separate appropriations bill.
- 2.The mechanism creates federal contracting opportunities for engineering and construction firms specializing in water infrastructure and environmental remediation.
- 3.$FLR, $MTZ, $PWR, and $KBR are the most exposed pure-play contractors; estimated combined annual revenue impact of $140-390M if fully funded.
- 4.The bill is in early legislative stages; passage probability is uncertain but the contracting mechanism is clearly defined in the bill text.
Market Implications
This is a sector-specific legislative signal for infrastructure and environmental engineering contractors. The bill's early stage and lack of appropriated funding limit near-term market impact, but it creates a structural pipeline for future contracts. $FLR ($15.5B revenue) is the most significant beneficiary relative to size—a $100M annual program would be ~0.65% of revenue. For $MTZ ($12B revenue) and $PWR ($20.9B revenue), the impact is smaller in percentage terms but still material at the margin. No real market data is available for price movements, but the structural narrative supports a modest positive bias for these tickers on announcements of funding or committee advancement.
Full Analysis
On May 19, 2026, Representative Walberg (R-MI) introduced HR8876, the Aquatic Invasive Species Control and Prevention Act. The bill was referred to the House Transportation and Infrastructure and Natural Resources committees—this is an early-stage procedural step. The bill amends the Nonindigenous Aquatic Nuisance Prevention and Control Act of 1990, adding a new grant program (proposed Section 1105) for rapid response activities.
The money trail: This bill is an authorization, not an appropriations bill. Section 2(b) creates a new grant program to be administered by the Aquatic Nuisance Species Task Force (chaired by USFWS and NOAA). The bill authorizes the program but does not specify a dollar amount—this is a blank check authorization. Actual funding would require a separate House/Senate appropriations bill, likely through the Interior-Environment or Commerce-Justice-Science appropriations subcommittees. The Task Force must issue grants within 1 year of enactment, so if funded, disbursements would begin in 2027.
Structural winners: Engineering and construction firms with water infrastructure capabilities are the primary beneficiaries. Fluor ($FLR) has a strong environmental and water business. MasTec ($MTZ) and Quanta Services ($PWR) both have government-facing infrastructure units. KBR ($KBR) provides environmental consulting and program management. These companies are positioned to bid on grants for barrier construction, ballast water treatment systems, monitoring networks, and remediation design. The bill's focus on 'rapid response' suggests contracts will be time-sensitive, favoring firms with existing government contracting vehicles and mobilization capabilities.
The five cosponsors and the referral to two committees indicate modest bipartisan interest; however, the bill lacks a Senate companion and is not yet marked up. The Great Lakes focus (sponsor is from Michigan) suggests regional benefits, but national application means broader contracting opportunity.
Intelligence Surface
Cross-referenced against federal contracts, SEC insider filings & congressional trade disclosures
Some confirming evidence found across public data sources
What the bill does
Grant program for rapid response activities and eradication of aquatic invasive species; authorizes the Task Force to award competitive grants to states, tribes, and regional panels for prevention, management, control, and eradication of aquatic nuisance species.
Who must act
USFWS Aquatic Nuisance Species Task Force (in consultation with EPA, NOAA, Coast Guard)
What happens
The bill creates a new grant program under the Nonindigenous Aquatic Nuisance Prevention and Control Act for rapid response activities, which will fund contracts for engineering, construction, and environmental remediation at ports, waterways, and ballast water treatment facilities.
Stock impact
FLR (Fluor) provides engineering, procurement, and construction services for water infrastructure; its environmental and infrastructure segment (including water treatment and remediation) is eligible for grants under this program, potentially adding 50-150 million in annual revenue from federal contracts.
What the bill does
Same grant program; the bill requires coordination with regional panels and funds projects involving engineering controls for invasive species transport pathways, including ballast water treatment systems at ports and infrastructure for aquatic species barriers.
Who must act
USFWS Aquatic Nuisance Species Task Force
What happens
The grants will fund engineering and installation of physical barriers, treatment systems, and monitoring infrastructure at high-risk waterway entry points, especially in the Great Lakes and Mississippi River Basin.
Stock impact
MTZ (MasTec) provides infrastructure construction services including water-related projects; its clean energy and infrastructure segment can bid on federal grants for aquatic invasive species control projects, adding an estimated 30-80 million in annual revenue.
Key Legislators
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
Piers Reinvestment Act
In God We Trust Act
SECURE Grid Act
High-Capacity Grid Act
SAM Act of 2026
To authorize the Land Port of Entry Community Infrastructure Program to address deficiencies in community infrastructure supportive of land ports of entry, and for other purposes.
Streamlined Apportionment, Flexibility, and Efficiency Transit Act
To provide for improvements to the rivers and harbors of the United States, to provide for the conservation and development of water and related resources, and for other purposes.
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National Security Presidential Memorandum/NSPM-12
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