The Bureau of Industry and Security is working to issue a final rule for a set of regulations that in January placed new export controls on certain lab equipment that can be misused by "countries of concern" for military purposes (see 2501150020). The rulemaking, sent for interagency review Sept. 23, will finalize those revisions to "address the accelerating development and deployment of advanced biotechnology tools contrary to U.S. national security and foreign policy interests," BIS said.
Planet Labs, a California-based Earth imaging company, disclosed this month that it has submitted a voluntary self-disclosure to the Bureau of Industry and Security about potential export control violations.
The increasing trend by Wassenaar Arrangement members, including those in the EU, of adopting export controls outside the regime reflects a shift away from multilateral bodies and “increases the risk of a patchwork of controls within the EU single market,” Akin said in a client alert.
China's Ministry of Commerce is asking for public comments on a revised draft of its administrative measures governing dual-use export licenses, according to an unofficial translation. Comments can be submitted to fg_agj@mofcom.gov.cn by Oct. 16.
A new State Department export license exemption for underwater drones provides “new flexibility” for companies using those drones for certain commercial and scientific operations, but companies still need to set “careful compliance guardrails” to make sure they’re using the exemption correctly, K&L Gates said in a client alert.
The State Department began an interagency review Sept. 11 for a final rule involving an exemption within the International Traffic in Arms Regulations for defense trade between the AUKUS nations of Australia, U.K. and the U.S. The rule could build on the agency's August 2024 interim final rule that created the exemption and aimed to remove certain export control barriers for a range of items that had previously faced strict license requirements under the ITAR (see 2408160019).
Former U.S. trade representative Michael Froman, at an event hosted by the centrist think tank Brookings Institution, said deciding how to apply export controls is "really difficult," and quite technical, as technologies evolve.
The Bureau of Industry and Security has completed a round of interagency review that would revise Biden-era regulations that increased restrictions on firearms exports. The rule, sent for a review Aug. 4 and completed Sept. 10, is expected to reverse some of those restrictions amid lobbying from gun industry advocates (see 2505290012 and 2506050050).
The State Department this week issued a minor correction to last month's final rule that will add and remove items on the U.S. Munitions List and clarify the control scope of others (see 2508260011). The agency said “an asterisk was inadvertently omitted from the amendatory text.”
The State Department's Directorate of Defense Trade Controls will again renew relaxed export restrictions for certain defense goods and services involving Cyprus, it said in a final rule released this week and effective Oct. 1. The agency has issued the renewal each year since 2020 (see 2309130028), suspending its policy of denial for exports, reexports and transfers of defense articles on the U.S. Munitions List to Cyprus. The move also suspends the policy of denial for retransfers and temporary imports destined for or originating in Cyprus and brokering activities involving Cyprus. The latest renewal expires Sept. 30, 2026.