The European Commission will hold its annual export control forum Dec. 8, the commission announced Sept. 2, providing European Union member states, industry, academia and others an opportunity to discuss export control policies. The forum will include a discussion on the EU’s new dual-use control regulations (see 2105100013) and other export control developments globally.
After several Republican lawmakers criticized the Biden administration for reportedly approving hundreds of millions of dollars worth of license applications for auto chips exports to Huawei (see 2108260014), the Commerce Department stressed that the Chinese technology company remains subject to strict licensing policies. A Commerce spokesperson said the administration hasn’t changed any of the regulatory restrictions imposed against Huawei or the policies “for implementing those restrictions” introduced under the Trump administration. “The policy has not been eased or amended,” the person said last week. The spokesperson also said all license applications are reviewed by the Defense, Energy and State departments.
The State Department will extend a “temporary modification” to the U.S. Munitions List that is intended to provide clarity to U.S. exporters about certain language in the USML, the agency said in a final rule released Aug. 26. The modification, which was scheduled to expire Aug. 30 but will now remain through Aug. 30, 2026, revised USML Category XI to clarify that “certain intelligence-analytics software” is controlled under the USML. Although the State Department said it “continues to develop a long-term solution” to address the language, that solution “will not be in place when the current temporary modification expires.” Extending the expiration date for five years is in the “best interest” of the U.S. defense industry so that the language can be revised as part of a “wholesale revision” of USML Category XI, the agency said.
The State Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls said Aug. 18 it is reviewing all relevant pending and issued export licenses, as well as “other approvals,” in light of the Taliban’s actions in Afghanistan. The agency is determining their “suitability in furthering world peace, national security, and the foreign policy of the United States,” and said industry should expect “additional updates in the near future.”
The Bureau of Industry and Security recently withdrew a proposed rule that would have imposed export controls on certain additive manufacturing equipment used to print “energetic materials” and related software and technology. BIS sent the rule for interagency review last month and was expected to propose the equipment for control at the Wassenaar Arrangement (see 2107270004). A BIS spokesperson declined to comment.
The Bureau of Industry and Security on Aug. 10 completed its interagency review of a proposed rule that would impose export controls on certain additive manufacturing equipment used to print “energetic materials” and related software and technology (see 2107270004). The rule, first received by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs July 23, would classify the equipment as an emerging technology and would likely be proposed for multilateral control at the Wassenaar Arrangement. BIS plans to request public comments on the rule before the controls are finalized.
The Bureau of Industry and Security Aug. 10 completed its interagency review of a final rule concerning firearms and other related articles that no longer warrant control on the U.S. Munitions List. The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs received the rule July 13 (see 2107150006).
President Joe Biden extended for one year a national emergency that authorizes certain U.S. export control authorities, the White House said Aug. 6. The authorization allows the U.S. to continue to carry out provisions in the Export Control Reform Act, along with other regulations. The emergency would have ended Aug. 17.
The U.S. should pursue more cooperation around multilateral export controls to address the supply chain risks within the semiconductor industry, Bureau of Industry and Security Senior Adviser Sahar Hafeez told the Information Technology Industry Council. Hafeez, speaking to ITI along with technology policy officials from the European Union and South Korea during a virtual panel last week, also stressed the importance of domestic chip investment.
The Bureau of Industry and Security sent a proposed rule for interagency review that would impose export controls on certain additive manufacturing equipment used to “print energetic materials and related software and technology.” The rule, received by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs July 23, would revise the Commerce Control List to classify the equipment as an emerging technology as BIS seeks to propose the equipment for multilateral control at the Wassenaar Arrangement. BIS said Export Administration Regulations define energetic materials as “substances or mixtures that react chemically to release the energy required for their intended application,” and subclasses include explosives, pyrotechnics and propellants. The rule will request public comments so the scope of the proposed controls “will be effective and appropriate,” BIS said.