The Treasury Department is putting eight more military bases under the jurisdiction of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. after proposing the additions in May (see 2305040052). The expansion, effective Sept. 22, includes the Grand Forks Air Force Base in North Dakota that was the subject of a controversial CFIUS decision last year (see 2212150035, 2212290023 and 2208310066) as well as bases in Texas, California, South Dakota, Iowa and Arizona. CFIUS will be able to intervene in certain land purchases by foreign buyers if they are near any of those sensitive military bases.
The Bureau of Industry and Security this week removed 33 entities from its Unverified List -- including Chinese technology companies and universities -- after it was able to successfully complete end-use checks. The entities include 27 based in China, two in Pakistan and one each in Indonesia, Singapore, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates. The agency also removed two Russian entities from the UVL because it placed both on the more restrictive Entity List last year.
The U.S., Japan and South Korea last week agreed to boost export control cooperation -- including enforcement -- to prevent technologies with military or dual-use applications from being “illegally exported or stolen abroad.” The commitment was one of several made after Aug. 18 meetings at Camp David -- the first stand-alone summit among the three nation’s leaders -- and “signifies a new era of trilateral cooperation," National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said.
Republicans last week urged the Biden administration against meeting with Beijing to discuss semiconductor export controls, saying the U.S. should not negotiate its policies with China and should instead enact tougher restrictions. They specifically asked Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, who is considering a trip to China, to pledge that the U.S. plans to increase its export restrictions against the country.
The Bureau of Industry and Security made several changes to the Export Administration Regulations this week to align its controls with decisions made at the multilateral Nuclear Suppliers Group in 2019 and 2022. The amendments, outlined in a final rule effective Aug. 18, revised five existing Export Control Classification Numbers under the Commerce Control List to alter or clarify the scope of certain controls and make technical fixes to other ECCNs.
New Indian import restrictions on computers and other electronics could “significantly disrupt” trade, including U.S. exports, eight industry groups wrote in a letter this week to U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo. The groups -- representing the American semiconductor, electronics, manufacturing and retail industries -- asked the Biden administration to raise the issue with the Indian government “as a matter of urgency.”
The European Commission this week officially adoptedrules covering the transitional phase for its carbon border adjustment mechanism, which will eventually set new requirements on imports of electricity, fertilizers, hydrogen, steel, aluminum, cement and other items, including from the U.S. (see 2212130056). During the transition period, which launches Oct. 1 and runs through 2025, traders will be required to report on the emissions “embedded in their imports” that are covered by the mechanism, but they won’t have to pay any taxes.
American building materials supplier Construction Specialties Inc. (CS) reached a $660,594 settlement with the Office of Foreign Assets Control this week for allegedly violating sanctions against Iran. OFAC said the company’s United Arab Emirates subsidiary, Construction Specialties Middle East (CSME), illegally reexported more than $1 million worth of construction materials to Iran and falsified trade documents to hide their destination.
The Bureau of Industry and Security clarified rules surrounding two deemed export scenarios in a new advisory opinion issued in June and released publicly this week. The opinion said U.S.-based subsidiaries are allowed to release certain controlled technologies to their foreign parent companies’ employees -- when they are on temporary assignment in the U.S. -- if the American subsidiary already has an export license to ship the item to its parent company. BIS also said the U.S. subsidiary can use its export license to ship covered items to its parent company if the items were developed by employees on temporary assignment in the U.S.
Compliance departments need to be increasingly “creative” to catch goods or transactions that may be tied to Russian sanctions evasion, an industry official and former Treasury Department official said this week, especially as the U.S. and its allies ramp up enforcement. They also said compliance is growing more complex, particularly for financial institutions, which must meet expanding government expectations outlined in joint alerts recently published by the Commerce and Treasury departments.