The National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of America recently published two export compliance documents to help guide freight forwarders involved in exporting, the group said in a Jan. 11 email to industry. The U.S. Principal Party in Interest export responsibility information sheet provides guidance on the responsibilities of an export customer in an export transaction, and the Shipper’s Letter of Instruction model is intended to help forwarders as they gather required export control information and create a company-specific SLI.
The Commerce Department is adjusting its civil monetary penalties for inflation for 2021, the agency said in a Jan. 11 notice. The inflation adjustments apply only to penalties “with a dollar amount,” not those “written as functions of violations,” Commerce said. The rule is effective Jan. 15, it said.
The Bureau of Industry and Security removed three entities from its Unverified List after completing successful end-use checks, the agency said in a notice released Jan. 8. The notice removes Germany-based DMA Logistics GmbH and Halm Elektronik GmbH and Mexico-based Integrated Production and Test Engineering from the list after BIS verified their bona fides. The changes take effect Jan. 11.
U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer called others to join him in condemning of the Jan. 6 violence at the Capitol. Lighthizer, in a signed tweet Jan. 6, said: “All patriotic Americans should condemn the violence we saw at our Capitol today. This is inconsistent with our democracy and our most cherished values.”
The Commerce Department extended a public comment period to receive feedback on an information collection related to U.S. foreign direct investment, the agency said in a Jan. 8 notice. The collection includes a quarterly survey on FDI that asks industry for information on “transactions and positions” between foreign-owned U.S. businesses and their “affiliated foreign groups.” The survey feedback is used to “derive universe estimates of direct investment transactions, positions, and income in non-benchmark years,” which helps the U.S. measure “the size and economic significance of foreign direct investment.” Commerce previously asked for feedback in October and allowed for a 60-day comment period, but now is extending the period for 30 days following publication of the notice.
President-elect Joe Biden is expected to choose Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo to serve as secretary of the Commerce Department, multiple outlets reported Jan. 7. Raimondo, governor since 2015, is viewed as a moderate Democrat and has an extensive background in the financial sector, including co-founding a venture capital firm, according to The New York Times. Raimondo will take over an agency that is in the process of pursuing export controls over a range of emerging and foundational technologies (see 2011250054 and 2009170040), and that frequently has been used by the Trump administration to blacklist Chinese state-owned entities (see 2012180039). A spokesperson for the Biden transition team didn’t comment.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo approved the creation of the Bureau of Cyberspace Security and Emerging Technologies (CSET), an agency that will “reorganize” the U.S.’s cyberspace and emerging technology security policy, according to a Jan. 7 notice. The agency said CSET will address national security challenges presented by China, Russia, Iran, North Korea and “other cyber and emerging technology competitors and adversaries,” and will lead U.S. efforts “on a wide range of international cyberspace security and emerging technology policy issues.”
President Donald Trump issued an executive order Jan. 5 to ban certain transactions with Chinese apps Alipay, CamScanner, QQ Wallet, SHAREit, Tencent QQ, VMate, WeChat Pay and WPS Office. The restrictions, effective 45 days after the order was issued, will block transactions between any person or company subject to U.S. jurisdiction with people or companies that “develop or control” the apps. It also directs the Commerce Department to recommend measures to prevent exports of U.S. user data to “foreign adversaries” and to establish a licensing regime for those data exports.
The State Department approved five potential military sales to Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait worth about $4.66 billion combined, the Defense Security Cooperation Agency said Dec. 29.
China's implementation of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership agreement likely will have a “minor impact” on U.S. agricultural exports to China in the “near future,” the U.S. Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service reported Dec. 23. For goods that receive preferential treatment under RCEP, such as soybeans, “no Asia-Pacific economies compete with the” U.S. exports to China, FAS said. In addition, FAS said other products such as corn, wheat, rice and cotton fall under China’s tariff-rate quota regime, which “supersedes any RCEP tariff reductions.” FAS said RCEP is also “unlikely to change” China’s agricultural trade in the Asia-Pacific region, mostly because China has already secured bilateral trade deals with major trading partners such as New Zealand, Australia, South Korea and the members states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Also, the USDA earlier this month said it doesn't expect RCEP to heavily impact U.S. agricultural exports to Thailand (see 2012040022).