Export Compliance Daily is providing readers with the top stories from last week in case you missed them. You can find any article by searching for the title or by clicking on the hyperlinked reference number.
The leaders of the House Select Committee on China said Feb. 25 that Congress should pass legislation restricting U.S. outbound investment in China despite a recent move by the Trump administration to address the issue.
The U.S. government is considering requiring a small proportion of exported goods, both containerized and not, and including liquified natural gas, to be carried on U.S.-flagged ships by U.S. operators, with the proportion climbing over time, and, eventually, with U.S.-built ships also required.
The EU unveiled its latest Russia sanctions package this week, including an import ban on primary aluminum; new export controls on dual-use items used by Russia’s military; more restrictions against Russia's energy sector; new sanctions against companies, people and vessels helping Moscow evade trade restrictions; and more.
Senate Banking Committee ranking member Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., urged her fellow lawmakers Feb. 24 to oppose attempts to unwind measures that are designed to pressure Russia to seek peace with Ukraine. Following Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, the U.S. imposed sanctions and export controls on Russia and provided arms to Ukraine, noted Warren, who said in a statement that she’s concerned President Donald Trump will make unwarranted concessions to Russian President Vladimir Putin in a bid to end the war. Instead of easing up on Moscow, the Trump administration should be heading off Russia’s attempts to evade U.S. sanctions with the help of China, Iran and North Korea, she said.
The Council of the European Union on Feb. 24 suspended various sanctions on Syria to support an "inclusive political transition" there, the council said.
The U.K. added 34 people and 33 entries to its Russia sanctions list on Feb. 24, the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation announced. In addition to listing Russian companies, OFSI sanctioned companies based in Hong Kong, China, Germany, Thailand, India, Ukraine, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and Kyrgyzstan for contributing to Russia's economy or war effort, along with businesspeople and military figures from Russia, Turkey, Kazakhstan, North Korea and Israel for contributing to the destabilization of Ukraine or operating in a sector of strategic significance to Russia.
The U.S. this week sanctioned more than 30 people, entities and ships helping to sell and move Iranian petroleum products, including oil brokers in the United Arab Emirates and Hong Kong, tanker managers in India and China, and Iranian oil officials. The Treasury Department said the newly designated tankers have helped ship tens of millions of barrels of Iranian crude oil worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
Matt Borman, a longtime senior career official overseeing export control regulations at the Bureau of Industry and Security, is expected to leave BIS soon, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Senate Banking Committee ranking member Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., urged the Commerce Department this week to decline to give the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) access to confidential business data, including information disclosed in export license applications filed with the Bureau of Industry and Security.