The U.K. released new data on Israel-related export licenses this week, about three months after the U.K. suspended a range of licenses for Israel over concerns they were being used to ship items for the Israeli military in Gaza (see 2409030023).
The Bureau of Industry and Security is crafting a new interim final rule titled “Export Control Framework for Artificial Intelligence Diffusion.” BIS sent the rule for interagency review on Dec. 9. The agency didn’t release more information.
The U.S. and Latvian governments last week gathered officials from the U.K., Canada, the EU and Ukraine to discuss export controls and sanctions in Latvia, including how those measures are affecting Russia, the Latvian government said in a news release.
The Biden administration, which in January paused pending decisions on liquefied natural gas exports to allow it to review criteria for approving LNG export applications, plans to release the results of its study in “mid-December,” an Energy Department official said Dec. 4.
U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan this week called for a rethink of strategic technology controls and suggested that the incoming Trump administration look to build on the Biden administration's export control modernization efforts.
One day after the U.S. published a new set of semiconductor-related export controls aimed at China (see 2412020016), Beijing announced a ban on certain key critical minerals and other dual-use items being shipped to the U.S. for military uses.
The Bureau of Industry and Security will hold a virtual public briefing 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. EST on Dec. 5 about its new export controls on semiconductor manufacturing equipment (see 2412020016). Registration closes at 1 p.m. EST on Dec. 5.
A new Bureau of Industry and Security license exception that could allow U.S. exporters to continue shipping certain advanced technologies to a list of close American allies is promising, but it presents some “limitations” if not implemented correctly, the Center for Strategic and International studies said this week.
No policy option available to the U.S. government, including lifting export controls, will persuade China to stop trying to de-Americanize and decouple its semiconductor equipment sector, the Center for Strategic and International Studies argued in a new report this week.
Recently issued Bureau of Industry and Security guidance that outlined the agency’s due diligence expectations for banks (see 2411010030) was a “warning shot” to financial institutions that they must take export compliance seriously, Meshkat Law said in a November client alert. The firm said the new guidance dispelled “any notions that compliance with the [Export Administration Regulations] is just for exporters.”