U.K.-based biotechnology company F-star Therapeutics and invoX Pharma, a subsidiary of China-based Sino Biopharmaceutical, are working with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. on a potential mitigation agreement for their proposed combination. In a Feb. 1 SEC filing, the parties said they voluntarily withdrew and “immediately refiled” a voluntary notice on Jan. 30 at the request of CFIUS to give them more time to “negotiate the terms of a mitigation agreement and continue discussions” with the committee.
The Census Bureau on Feb. 7 officially deployed a new informational message in the Automated Export System to alert exporters when the U.S. Principal Party in Interest address state field and state of origin field don’t match, CBP said in a CSMS message. The message, previewed by the agency last year (see 2212220023), will appear as response code 26C and “will allow the filer to take notice of the USPPI Address and State of Origin fields being reported on the [Electronic Export Information] in the AES when the data elements do not match and make changes.”
The Census Bureau is extending by 30 days the comment period for an information collection related to its Automated Export System, the agency said in a notice. The information collection mentions the agency’s 2021 proposed rule that could require exporters to declare the country of origin for their items through a new “conditional” data element in AES (see 2112140033), a proposal that has been met with strong pushback from industry (see 2301230008 and see 2203160026). Comments were previously due Jan. 20 (see 2211180006).
New U.S. chip export controls are among the most complex export regulatory provisions ever published and have caused significant uncertainty in the semiconductor industry, trade groups and technology firms told the Bureau of Industry and Security in comments that were due this week. More than 40 companies, trade associations, law firms and others asked BIS to revise parts of the regulations or offer more guidance to avoid hurting U.S. competitiveness, with some saying the new controls may force foreign companies to stop using U.S.-origin items altogether rather than deal with the added compliance obligations.
The Bureau of Industry and Security's top export enforcement official is in Canada this week to discuss improving U.S.-Canadian enforcement efforts. Matthew Axelrod, BIS assistant secretary for export enforcement, said he’s meeting with the Canada Border Services Agency and the Global Affairs Canada Royal Canadian Mounted Police to share information on Russian “diversion actors,” coordinate the “targeting and conduct of pre- and post-shipment verifications and audits,” upgrade efforts to “inspect, detain, and seize illicit shipments,” and work to “reduce threats through coordinated outreach, investigations, and enforcement actions.”
The Bureau of Industry and Security added seven Iranian entities to the Entity List this week for their involvement in drone transfers to Russia, the agency said in a final rule. The entities are Iranian producers of unmanned aerial vehicles, top BIS export enforcement official, Matthew Axelrod, said during a Toronto conference this week, adding that Russia is using the drones to “attack civilian infrastructure” in Ukraine.
The U.S. will appeal a World Trade Organization dispute panel ruling that found its origin marking requirement for goods from Hong Kong violated global trade rules. Submitting its notification of appeal during the Jan. 27 meeting of the WTO's Dispute Settlement Body, the U.S. said it was taking the matter to the defunct Appellate Body concurrent with separate panel rulings that said the Section 232 national security tariffs also violated WTO commitments.
In a joint statement after the second annual deputies' meeting for the NAFTA successor, U.S., Mexican and Canadian officials said they talked about the concrete steps needed to ensure that goods made with forced labor cannot be imported into Mexico, Canada or the U.S.
The Bureau of Industry and Security last week renewed its temporary denial order for a Venezuela-based cargo airline after saying it continues to try to violate U.S. export restrictions (see 2208030014). BIS said Empresa de Transporte Aereocargo del Sur, also known as Aerocargo del Sur Transportation or Emtrasur, has shown a “blatant disregard for U.S. export controls and the terms of a preexisting TDO.”
The Bureau of Industry and Security has drafted new guidance for its October rule that expanded certain China-related chip controls (see 2210070049) and hopes to release it soon, said Thea Kendler, the agency’s assistant secretary for export administration. Kendler, speaking during a virtual conference hosted by the Massachusetts Export Center last week, also touched on the rule’s expiring temporary general license and urged industry to submit feedback on the new restrictions before the deadline this week.