Implementation of the February 2020 Australia Group Intersessional Decisions: Addition of Certain Rigid-Walled, Single-Use Cultivation Chambers and Precursor Chemicals to the Commerce Control List, 36483-36492 [2020-11625]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 117 / Wednesday, June 17, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
other person (except an airman serving
as an airman) not operating an aircraft
for the transportation of passengers or
property for compensation. For
violations that occurred after November
2, 2015, $13,910 per violation, up to a
total of $556,419 per civil penalty
action, in the case of any other person
(except an airman serving as an airman)
not operating an aircraft for the
transportation of passengers or property
for compensation.
(3) For violations that occurred on or
before November 2, 2015, $25,000 per
violation, up to a total of $400,000 per
civil penalty action, in the case of a
person operating an aircraft for the
transportation of passengers or property
for compensation (except an individual
serving as an airman). For violations
that occurred after November 2, 2015,
$34,777 per violation, up to a total of
$556,419 per civil penalty action, in the
case of a person (except an individual
serving as an airman) operating an
aircraft for the transportation of
passengers or property for
compensation.
Chad R. Mizelle,
Senior Official Performing the Duties of the
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2020–11124 Filed 6–16–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–9–P, 9111–14–P, 9111–28–P, 9110–
04–P, 9110–05–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Industry and Security
15 CFR Parts 748 and 774
[Docket No. 200521–0143]
RIN 0694–AH60
Implementation of the February 2020
Australia Group Intersessional
Decisions: Addition of Certain RigidWalled, Single-Use Cultivation
Chambers and Precursor Chemicals to
the Commerce Control List
Bureau of Industry and
Security, Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Industry and
Security (BIS) publishes this final rule
to amend the Export Administration
Regulations (EAR) to implement the
decisions made at the February 2020
Australia Group (AG) Intersessional
Implementation Meeting, and those later
adopted pursuant to the AG’s silence
procedure. Specifically, this rule
amends Export Control Classification
Numbers (ECCNs) 1C350, 1C351 and
2B352 on the Commerce Control List
(CCL) to reflect these AG changes. ECCN
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SUMMARY:
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1C350 is amended by adding twentyfour precursor chemicals, as well as
mixtures in which at least one of these
chemicals constitutes 30 percent or
more of the weight of the mixture, to
ECCN 1C350.d. ECCN 1C351 is
amended to add Middle East respiratory
syndrome-related coronavirus (MERSrelated coronavirus). ECCN 2B352 is
amended by adding a Technical Note to
indicate that cultivation chamber
holding devices controlled in
2B352.b.2.b include single-use
cultivation chambers with rigid walls.
The items addressed by this final rule
were not previously listed on the CCL
or controlled multilaterally. BIS,
consistent with the interagency process
described in the Export Control Reform
Act of 2018 (ECRA), identified the
precursor chemicals and single-use
cultivation chambers addressed by this
final rule as emerging technologies that
are essential to U.S. national security
and for which effective controls can be
implemented. The inclusion of such
items in this final rule is consistent with
the requirements of ECRA and the
decision of the AG to add such items to
its common control lists, thereby
making exports of such items subject to
multilateral control (following the
implementation of these changes by
individual AG participating countries,
including the United States).
DATES: This rule is effective June 17,
2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr.
Wesley Johnson, Chemical and
Biological Controls Division, Office of
Nonproliferation and Treaty
Compliance, Bureau of Industry and
Security, Telephone: (202) 482–0091,
Email: Wesley.Johnson@bis.doc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) is
amending the Export Administration
Regulations (EAR) to implement the
decisions made at the Australia Group
(AG) Intersessional Implementation
Meeting held in Bratislava, Slovak
Republic, on February 5 through 6,
2020, and those subsequently made
pursuant to the AG silence procedure
which ended on February 28, 2020 (the
AG silence procedure provides for the
adoption of a measure, subsequent to its
provisional acceptance at an AG plenary
or intersessional meeting, provided that
no participating country submits an
objection on or before a specified date).
The AG is a multilateral forum
consisting of 42 participating countries
and the European Union that maintain
export controls on a list of chemicals,
biological agents, and related equipment
and technology that could be used in a
chemical or biological weapons
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36483
program. The AG periodically reviews
items on its control list to enhance the
effectiveness of participating
governments’ national controls and to
achieve greater harmonization among
these controls.
Amendments to the CCL Based on the
February 2020 AG Intersessional
Recommendations
ECCN 1C350 (Chemical Weapons
Precursors)
This final rule amends Export Control
Classification Number (ECCN) 1C350 on
the Commerce Control List (CCL)
(Supplement No. 1 to part 774 of the
EAR) to reflect changes to the AG
‘‘Chemical Weapons Precursors’’
common control list based on the
February 2020 Intersessional
Implementation Meeting
recommendations that were approved
by the AG pursuant to a silence
procedure which ended on February 28,
2020. Specifically, this rule amends
ECCN 1C350 by adding the following
twenty-four precursor chemicals under
ECCN 1C350.d:
(C.A.S. #589–57–1) Diethyl
chlorophosphite;
(C.A.S. #762–77–6) Ethyl
chlorofluorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #1498–51–7) Ethyl
dichlorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #460–52–6) Ethyl
difluorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #754–01–8) Methyl
chlorofluorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #677–24–7) Methyl
dichlorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #22382–13–4) Methyl
difluorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #14277–06–6) N,NDiethylacetamidine;
(C.A.S. #53510–30–8) N,NDiethylbutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #90324–67–7) N,NDiethylformamidine;
(C.A.S. #1342789–47–2) N,NDiethylisobutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #84764–73–8) N,NDiethylpropanamidine;
(C.A.S. #1315467–17–4) N,NDiisopropylbutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #857522–08–8) N,NDiisopropylformamidine;
(C.A.S. #2909–14–0) N,NDimethylacetamidine;
(C.A.S. #1340437–35–5) N,NDimethylbutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #44205–42–7) N,NDimethylformamidine;
(C.A.S. #321881–25–8) N,NDimethylisobutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #56776–14–8) N,NDimethylpropanamidine;
(C.A.S. #1339586–99–0) N,NDipropylacetamidine;
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(C.A.S. #1342422–35–8) N,NDipropylbutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #48044–20–8) N,NDipropylformamidine;
(C.A.S. #1342700–45–1) N,NDipropylisobutanamidine; and
(C.A.S. #1341496–89–6) N,NDipropylpropanamidine.
Note that mixtures in which at least
one of the chemicals listed in ECCN
1C350.d (which now includes the
twenty-four precursor chemicals listed
above) constitutes 30 percent or more of
the weight of the mixture are also
controlled under this ECCN.
In addition, although this rule does
not amend ECCN 1D390 (‘‘software’’ for
chemical production process control),
ECCN 1E001 (‘‘technology’’ for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of,
inter alia, precursor chemicals
controlled by ECCN 1C350), ECCN
1E350 (‘‘technology’’ for chemical
production facilities) or ECCN 1E351
(‘‘technology’’ for the disposal of, inter
alia, precursor chemicals), these ECCNs
cross-reference items controlled by
ECCN 1C350 and, consequently,
‘‘software’’ or ‘‘technology’’ that is
related to any of the twenty-four
precursor chemicals added by this rule
to ECCN 1C350.d is now subject to
control under ECCN 1D390, 1E001,
1E350 or 1E351 if such ‘‘software’’ or
‘‘technology’’ falls within the
parameters of the controls described
therein.
Prior to the addition of these twentyfour precursor chemicals to the AG
chemical weapons precursors common
control list, BIS, consistent with the
interagency process described in the
Export Control Reform Act of 2018
(ECRA) (50 U.S.C. 4801–4852) under
Section 1758 (codified at 50 U.S.C.
4817), identified these items as
emerging technologies that are essential
to U.S. national security and for which
effective controls can be implemented.
This interagency process resulted in a
finding that the absence of export
controls on these precursor chemicals
could be exploited for chemical
weapons purposes. The inclusion of
these precursor chemicals in this final
rule is consistent with the requirements
of ECRA and the decision of the AG to
add these items to their common control
lists, thereby making exports of such
items subject to multilateral control.
This rule alphabetically reorders the
precursor chemicals listed in ECCN
1C350.d to reflect the addition of the
twenty-four precursor chemicals
identified above. To assist in identifying
the precursor chemicals that are now
controlled under ECCN 1C350.d, the
following table lists each chemical now
found in ECCN 1C350.d, as well as the
previous ECCN 1C350.d listing (if any)
for these chemicals.
AG-controlled precursor chemicals
Previous CCL
designation
(C.A.S. #1341–49–7) Ammonium hydrogen fluoride ...................................................................
(C.A.S. #107–07–3) 2-Chloroethanol ...........................................................................................
(C.A.S. #109–89–7) Diethylamine ................................................................................................
(C.A.S. #100–37–8) N,N-Diethylaminoethanol .............................................................................
(C.A.S. #589–57–1) Diethyl chlorophosphite ...............................................................................
(C.A.S. #298–06–6) O,O-Diethyl phosphorodithioate ..................................................................
(C.A.S. #2465–65–8) O,O-Diethyl phosphorothioate ...................................................................
(C.A.S. #108–18–9) Di-isopropylamine ........................................................................................
(C.A.S. #124–40–3) Dimethylamine .............................................................................................
(C.A.S. #506–59–2) Dimethylamine hydrochloride ......................................................................
(C.A.S. #762–77–6) Ethyl chlorofluorophosphate ........................................................................
(C.A.S. #1498–51–7) Ethyl dichlorophosphate ............................................................................
(C.A.S. #460–52–6) Ethyl difluorophosphate ...............................................................................
(C.A.S. #7664–39–3) Hydrogen fluoride ......................................................................................
(C.A.S. #3554–74–3) 3-Hydroxyl-1-methylpiperidine ...................................................................
(C.A.S. #76–89–1) Methyl benzilate ............................................................................................
(C.A.S. #754–01–8) Methyl chlorofluorophosphate .....................................................................
(C.A.S. #677–24–7) Methyl dichlorophosphate ...........................................................................
(C.A.S. #22382–13–4) Methyl difluorophosphate ........................................................................
(C.A.S. #14277–06–6) N,N Diethylacetamidine ...........................................................................
(C.A.S. #53510–30–8) N,N-Diethylbutanamidine .........................................................................
(C.A.S. #90324–67–7) N,N-Diethylformamidine ...........................................................................
(C.A.S. #1342789–47–2) N,N Diethylisobutanamidine ................................................................
(C.A.S. #84764–73–8) N,N-Diethylpropanamidine .......................................................................
(C.A.S. #1315467–17–4) N,N-Diisopropylbutanamidine ..............................................................
(C.A.S. #857522–08–8) N,N-Diisopropylformamidine ..................................................................
(C.A.S. #2909–14–0) N,N-Dimethylacetamidine ..........................................................................
(C.A.S. #1340437–35–5) N,N-Dimethylbutanamidine ..................................................................
(C.A.S. #44205–42–7) N,N-Dimethylformamidine ........................................................................
(C.A.S. #321881–25–8) N,N-Dimethylisobutanamidine ...............................................................
(C.A.S. #56776–14–8) N,N-Dimethylpropanamidine ....................................................................
(C.A.S. #1339586–99–0) N,N-Dipropylacetamidine .....................................................................
C.A.S. #1342422–35–8) N,N-Dipropylbutanamidine ....................................................................
(C.A.S. #48044–20–8) N,N-Dipropylformamidine ........................................................................
(C.A.S. #1342700–45–1) N,N-Dipropylisobutanamidine ..............................................................
(C.A.S. #1341496–89–6) N,N-Dipropylpropanamidine ................................................................
(C.A.S. #1314–80–3) Phosphorus pentasulfide ...........................................................................
(C.A.S. #75–97–8) Pinacolone .....................................................................................................
(C.A.S. #7789–29–9) Potassium bifluoride ..................................................................................
(C.A.S. #151–50–8) Potassium cyanide ......................................................................................
(C.A.S. #7789–23–3) Potassium fluoride .....................................................................................
(C.A.S. #3731–38–2) 3-Quinuclidone ..........................................................................................
(C.A.S. #1333–83–1) Sodium bifluoride .......................................................................................
(C.A.S. #143–33–9) Sodium cyanide ...........................................................................................
(C.A.S. #7681–49–4) Sodium fluoride .........................................................................................
(C.A.S. #16893–85–9) Sodium hexafluorosilicate .......................................................................
ECCN 1C350.d.1 ........
ECCN 1C350.d.2 ........
ECCN 1C350.d.3 ........
ECCN 1C350.d.4 ........
Not listed .....................
ECCN 1C350.d.5 ........
ECCN 1C350.d.6 ........
ECCN 1C350.d.7 ........
ECCN 1C350.d.8 ........
ECCN 1C350.d.9 ........
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
ECCN 1C350.d.10 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.11 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.12 ......
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
Not listed .....................
ECCN 1C350.d.13 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.14 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.15 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.16 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.17 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.18 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.19 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.20 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.21 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.22 ......
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Current CCL
designation
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
ECCN
1C350.d.1.
1C350.d.2.
1C350.d.3.
1C350.d.4.
1C350.d.5.
1C350.d.6.
1C350.d.7.
1C350.d.8.
1C350.d.9.
1C350.d.10.
1C350.d.11.
1C350.d.12.
1C350.d.13.
1C350.d.14.
1C350.d.15.
1C350.d.16.
1C350.d.17.
1C350.d.18.
1C350.d.19.
1C350.d.20.
1C350.d.21.
1C350.d.22.
1C350.d.23.
1C350.d.24.
1C350.d.25.
1C350.d.26.
1C350.d.27.
1C350.d.28.
1C350.d.29.
1C350.d.30.
1C350.d.31.
1C350.d.32.
1C350.d.33.
1C350.d.34.
1C350.d.35.
1C350.d.36.
1C350.d.37.
1C350.d.38.
1C350.d.39.
1C350.d.40.
1C350.d.41.
1C350.d.42.
1C350.d.43.
1C350.d.44.
1C350.d.45.
1C350.d.46.
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 117 / Wednesday, June 17, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
AG-controlled precursor chemicals
Previous CCL
designation
(C.A.S. #1313–82–2) Sodium sulfide ...........................................................................................
(C.A.S. #637–39–8) Triethanolamine hydrochloride ....................................................................
(C.A.S. #116–17–6) Tri-isopropyl phosphite ................................................................................
ECCN 1C350.d.23 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.24 ......
ECCN 1C350.d.25 ......
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Note that all items controlled under
ECCN 1C350.d, including the newly
added precursor chemicals described
above, are controlled for chemical/
biological (CB) reasons and antiterrorism (AT) reasons (see CB Column
2 of the Commerce Country Chart in
Supplement No. 1 to part 738 of the
EAR and the AT license requirements
described in part 742 of the EAR that
apply to Iran, North Korea, Sudan and
Syria). A license also is required to
certain destinations in accordance with
the embargoes and other special
controls described in part 746 of the
EAR.
ECCN 1C351 (Human and Animal
Pathogen and Toxins)
This final rule amends ECCN 1C351
on the CCL to reflect changes to the AG
‘‘Control List of Human and Animal
Pathogens and Toxins’’ based on the
February 2020 Intersessional
Implementation Meeting
recommendations that were adopted by
AG. Specifically, this rule adds the
Middle East respiratory syndromerelated coronavirus (MERS-related
coronavirus) to ECCN 1C351.a.30 due to
its homology with severe acute
respiratory syndrome-related
coronavirus (SARS-related coronavirus)
and its potential use in biological
weapons activities. The viruses in ECCN
1C351.a that were previously numbered,
in alphabetical order, as .a.30 through
.a.57 have been renumbered as .a.31
through .a.58, respectively, and relevant
cross-references adjusted as necessary.
In addition, although this rule does
not amend ECCN 1E001 (‘‘technology’’
for the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’
of, inter alia, pathogens or ‘‘toxins’’
controlled by ECCN 1C351) or ECCN
1E351 (‘‘technology’’ for the disposal of,
inter alia, microbiological materials),
these ECCNs cross-reference items
controlled by ECCN 1C351 and,
consequently, ‘‘technology’’ that is
related to the MERS-related coronavirus
added by this rule to ECCN 1C351.a.30
is now subject to control under ECCN
1E001 or 1E351 if such ‘‘technology’’
falls within the parameters of the
controls described therein.
Note that all items controlled under
ECCN 1C351.d, including the newly
added MERS-related coronavirus,
require a license for CB reasons and AT
reasons to the destinations indicated
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under CB Column 1 and AT Column 1,
respectively, on the Commerce Country
Chart in Supplement No. 1 to part 738
of the EAR (also see the AT license
requirements described in part 742 of
the EAR that apply to Iran, North Korea,
Sudan and Syria). In addition, a license
is required to certain destinations in
accordance with the embargoes and
other special controls described in part
746 of the EAR. Also note that, in
addition to the license requirements
described above, items controlled under
ECCN 1C351.d.11 or .d.12 require a
license to certain destinations for
chemical weapons (CW) reasons, as
described in the License Requirements
section of ECCN 1C351 and in Section
742.18 of the EAR.
ECCN 2B352 (Equipment Capable of
Use in Handling Biological Materials)
This final rule amends ECCN 2B352
on the CCL to reflect changes to the AG
‘‘Control List of Dual-Use Biological
Equipment and Related Technology and
Software’’ based on the February 2020
Intersessional Implementation Meeting
recommendations that were adopted by
the AG. Specifically, this rule adds a
Technical Note to ECCN 2B352.b to
indicate that cultivation chamber
holding devices controlled in
2B352.b.2.b include single-use
cultivation chambers with rigid walls.
Consequently, such single-use
cultivation chambers require a license
for CB reasons and AT reasons to the
destinations indicated under CB
Column 2 and AT Column 1,
respectively, on the Commerce Country
Chart in Supplement No. 1 to part 738
of the EAR (also see the AT license
requirements described in part 742 that
apply to Iran, North Korea, Sudan and
Syria). A license also is required to
certain destinations in accordance with
the embargoes and other special
controls described in part 746 of the
EAR.
In addition, although this rule does
not amend ECCNs 2E001, 2E002 and
2E301 (which control, respectively,
‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘development,’’
‘‘production’’ or ‘‘use’’ of, inter alia,
ECCN 2B352 equipment), these ECCNs
cross-reference items controlled by
ECCN 2B352 and, consequently,
‘‘technology’’ that is related to rigidwalled, single-use cultivation chambers
added by this rule to ECCN 2B352.b.2.b
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Current CCL
designation
ECCN 1C350.d.47.
ECCN 1C350.d.48.
ECCN 1C350.d.49.
is now subject to control under ECCN
2E001, 2E002 or 2E301 if such
‘‘technology’’ falls within the
parameters of the controls described
therein.
Prior to the addition of these
cultivation chambers to the AG
biological equipment common control
list, BIS, consistent with the interagency
process described in Section 1758 of
ECRA, identified these items as
emerging technologies that are essential
to U.S. national security and for which
effective controls can be implemented.
This interagency process resulted in a
finding that disposable cultivation
chambers that do not require the use of
a holding device have recently gained
significant market share in the singleuse biological equipment market (both
within and outside the United States)
and, furthermore, that they are capable
of functioning as cultivation chamber
holding devices controlled under ECCN
2B352.b.2.b. Consequently, the absence
of export controls on these single-use
cultivation chambers could be exploited
for chemical and biological weapons
(CBW) purposes. Among the items of
concern, in this regard, are impellermixed liquid culture chambers, as well
as novel packed-bed and hollow-fiber
models. The inclusion of these
cultivation chambers in this final rule is
consistent with the requirements of
ECRA and the decision of the AG to add
these items to their common control
lists, thereby making exports of such
items subject to multilateral control.
Conforming Changes to Supplement No.
7 to Part 748
This final rule also amends
Supplement No. 7 to part 748 to update
the ECCN reference to hydrogen fluoride
(C.A.S. #7664–39–3) in the eligible item
descriptions for the following validated
end-users: (1) ‘‘Samsung China
Semiconductor Co. Ltd.’’ and (2)
‘‘Shanghai Huahong Grace
Semiconductor Manufacturing
Corporation.’’ As described above,
hydrogen fluoride was previously
classified under ECCN 1C350.d.10, but
is now classified under ECCN
1C350.d.14 with the publication of this
rule. These conforming amendments do
not change the scope of eligible items
for either of the two validated end-users
indicated above—they merely update
the ECCN references in Supplement No.
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7 to part 748 to correctly identify which
ECCN 1C350.d items are eligible for
each of these validated end-users.
Because this rule does not add or
remove any validated end-users or
revise the scope of eligible items, the
citation for this rule is not indicated in
the ‘‘Federal Register Citation’’ column
of Supplement No. 7.
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Saving Clause
Shipments of items removed from
eligibility for export, reexport or transfer
(in-country) under a license exception
or without a license (i.e., under the
designator ‘‘NLR’’) as a result of this
regulatory action that were on dock for
loading, on lighter, laden aboard an
exporting carrier, or en route aboard a
carrier to a port of export, on June 17,
2020, pursuant to actual orders for
export, reexport or transfer (in-country)
to a foreign destination, may proceed to
that destination under the previously
applicable license exception or without
a license (NLR) so long as they are
exported, reexported or transferred (incountry) before August 17, 2020. Any
such items not actually exported,
reexported or transferred (in-country)
before midnight, on August 17, 2020,
require a license in accordance with this
regulation.
‘‘Deemed’’ exports of ‘‘technology’’
and ‘‘source code’’ removed from
eligibility for export under a license
exception or without a license (under
the designator ‘‘NLR’’) as a result of this
regulatory action may continue to be
made under the previously available
license exception or without a license
(NLR) before August 17, 2020.
Beginning at midnight on August 17,
2020, such ‘‘technology’’ and ‘‘source
code’’ may no longer be released,
without a license, to a foreign national
subject to the ‘‘deemed’’ export controls
in the EAR when a license would be
required to the home country of the
foreign national in accordance with this
regulation.
Export Control Reform Act of 2018
On August 13, 2018, the President
signed into law the John S. McCain
National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2019, which included the
Export Control Reform Act of 2018
(ECRA), 50 U.S.C. Sections 4801–4852.
ECRA provides the legal basis for BIS’s
principal authorities and serves as the
authority under which BIS issues this
rule. As set forth in section 1768 of
ECRA, all delegations, rules,
regulations, orders, determinations,
licenses, or other forms of
administrative action that were made,
issued, conducted, or allowed to
become effective under the Export
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Administration Act of 1979 (previously,
50 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.) (as in effect prior
to August 13, 2018, and as continued in
effect pursuant to the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.)) or the Export
Administration Regulations, and were
in effect as of August 13, 2018, shall
continue in effect according to their
terms until modified, superseded, set
aside, or revoked under the authority of
ECRA.
Rulemaking Requirements
1. Executive Orders 13563 and 12866
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including: Potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects; distributive impacts; and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits and
of reducing costs, harmonizing rules,
and promoting flexibility. This rule has
been designated a ‘‘significant
regulatory action,’’ although not
economically significant, under section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866.
Accordingly, the rule has been reviewed
by the Office of Management and
Budget.
The cost-benefit analysis required
pursuant to Executive Orders 13563 and
12866 indicates that this rule is
intended to improve national security as
its primary direct benefit. Specifically,
implementation, in a timely manner, of
the Australia Group (AG) agreements
described herein will enhance the
national security of the United States by
reducing the risk that global
international trade involving dual-use
chemical and biological items would
contribute to the proliferation of
chemical and biological weapons of
mass destruction. The principal
objective of AG participating countries
is to use licensing measures to ensure
that exports of certain chemicals,
biological agents, and dual-use chemical
and biological manufacturing facilities
and equipment, do not contribute to the
proliferation of chemical and biological
weapons of mass destruction, which has
been identified as a threat to domestic
and international peace and security.
The AG achieves this objective by
harmonizing participating countries’
national export licensing measures.
These controls are essential given that
the international chemical and
biotechnology industries are a target for
proliferators as a source of materials for
chemical and biological weapons
programs.
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In calculating the costs that will be
imposed by this rule, BIS estimates that
no more than 25 additional license
applications will have to be submitted
to BIS, annually, as a result of the
implementation of the amendments
described in this rule (see Rulemaking
Requirements #2, below). Application of
the cost-benefit analysis required under
Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 to
this rule, as described above, indicates
that this rule is intended to improve the
national security of the United States as
its primary direct benefit. Accordingly,
consistent with the stated purpose of the
proposed amendments to ECCNs 1C350,
1C351 and 2B352, this rule meets the
requirements set forth in the April 5,
2017, OMB guidance implementing
Executive Order 13771 (82 FR 9339,
February 3, 2017), regarding what
constitutes a regulation issued ‘‘with
respect to a national security function of
the United States,’’ and it is, therefore,
exempt from the requirements of E.O.
13771.
2. Notwithstanding any other
provision of law, no person is required
to respond to, nor shall any person be
subject to a penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.) (PRA), unless that collection of
information displays a currently valid
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) Control Number. This rule
contains the following collections of
information subject to the requirements
of the PRA. These collections have been
approved by OMB under control
numbers 0694–0088 (Simplified
Network Application Processing
System) and 0694–0096 (Five Year
Records Retention Period). The
approved information collection under
OMB control number 0694–0088
includes license applications, among
other things, and carries a burden
estimate of 29.6 minutes per manual or
electronic submission for a total burden
estimate of 31,833 hours. The approved
information collection under OMB
control number 0694–0096 includes
recordkeeping requirements and carries
a burden estimate of less than 1 minute
per response for a total burden estimate
of 248 hours.
Although this rule contains important
changes to the EAR for items controlled
for chemical/biological (CB) reasons,
BIS believes the overall increase in costs
and burdens due to the implementation
of these changes will be minimal.
Specifically, BIS expects the burden
hours associated with these collections
will increase, slightly, by 12 hours and
45 minutes (i.e., 25 applications × 30.6
minutes per response) for a total
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estimated cost increase of $382.50 (i.e.,
12 hours and 45 minutes × $30 per
hour). The $30 per hour cost estimate
for OMB control numbers 0694–0088
and 0694–0096 is consistent with the
salary data for export compliance
specialists currently available through
glassdoor.com (glassdoor.com estimates
that an export compliance specialist
makes $55,280 annually, which
computes to roughly $26.58 per hour).
This increase is not expected to exceed
the existing estimates currently
associated with OMB control numbers
0694–0088 and 0694–0096. Send
comments regarding this burden
estimate or any other aspect of this
collection of information, including
suggestions for reducing the burden, to
Jasmeet Seehra, Office of Management
and Budget, by email to Jasmeet_K._
Seehra@omb.eop.gov or by fax to (202)
395–7285; and to the Regulatory Policy
Division, Bureau of Industry and
Security, Department of Commerce,
14th Street & Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
Room 2705, Washington, DC 20230 or
by email to RPD2@bis.doc.gov.
3. This rule does not contain policies
with Federalism implications as that
term is defined in Executive Order
13132.
4. Pursuant to Section 1762 of the
Export Control Reform Act of 2018 (50
U.S.C. Sec. 4821), this action is exempt
from the Administrative Procedure Act
(APA) (5 U.S.C. 553) requirements for
notice of proposed rulemaking,
opportunity for public participation and
delay in effective date.
Because a notice of proposed
rulemaking and an opportunity for
public comment are not required to be
given for this rule by the APA or any
other law, the analytical requirements of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
601 et seq.) are not applicable.
Accordingly, no regulatory flexibility
analysis is required, and none has been
prepared.
List of Subjects
15 CFR Part 748
Administrative practice and
procedure, Exports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
15 CFR Part 774
Exports, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, parts 748 and 774 of the
Export Administration Regulations (15
CFR parts 730–774) are amended as
follows:
PART 748—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for 15 CFR
part 748 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 50 U.S.C. 4801–4582; 50 U.S.C.
4601 et seq.; 50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.; E.O.
13026, 61 FR 58767, 3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p.
228; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001
Comp., p. 783; Notice of August 14, 2019, 84
FR 41881 (August 15, 2019).
2. Supplement 7 to part 748 is
amended by revising the validated enduser entries for ‘‘Samsung China
Semiconductor Co. Ltd.’’ and ‘‘Shanghai
Huahong Grace Semiconductor
Manufacturing Corporation,’’ listed
under the country ‘‘China (People’s
Republic of)’’ to read as follows:
■
SUPPLEMENT NO. 7 TO PART 748—AUTHORIZATION VALIDATED END-USER (VEU): LIST OF VALIDATED END-USERS,
RESPECTIVE ITEMS ELIGIBLE FOR EXPORT, REEXPORT AND TRANSFER, AND ELIGIBLE DESTINATIONS
Country
Validated end-user
Eligible items (by ECCN)
Eligible destination
Federal Register citation
Nothing in this Supplement shall be deemed to supersede other provisions in the EAR, including but not limited to § 748.15(c).
China (People’s
Republic of)
*
*
*
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Samsung China Semiconductor Co. Ltd
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1C350.c.4, 1C350.d.14,
2B006.a, 2B006.b.1.d,
2B230, 2B350.d.2,
2B350.g.3, 2B350.i.3,
3A233, 3B001.a.1,
3B001.b, 3B001.e,
3B001.f, 3B001.h,
3C002, 3C004, 3D002,
and 3E001 (limited to
‘‘technology’’ for items
classified under 3C002
and 3C004 and ‘‘technology’’ for use consistent with the International Technology
Roadmap for Semiconductors process for
items classified under
ECCNs 3B001 and
3B002).
Frm 00019
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*
Samsung China Semiconductor Co., Ltd., No.
1999, North Xiaohe
Road, Xi’an, China
710119.
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78 FR 41291, 7/10/13. 78
FR 69535, 11/20/13. 79
FR 30713, 5/29/14. 80
FR 11863, 3/5/15.
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SUPPLEMENT NO. 7 TO PART 748—AUTHORIZATION VALIDATED END-USER (VEU): LIST OF VALIDATED END-USERS,
RESPECTIVE ITEMS ELIGIBLE FOR EXPORT, REEXPORT AND TRANSFER, AND ELIGIBLE DESTINATIONS—Continued
Country
Validated end-user
Eligible items (by ECCN)
Eligible destination
Shanghai Huahong Grace Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation.
1C350.c.4, 1C350.d.14,
2B230, 2B350.d.2,
2B350.g.3, 2B350.i.4,
3B001.a.1, 3B001.b,
3B001.e, 3B001.f,
3B001.h, 3C002,
3C004, 5B002, and
5E002 (controlled by
ECCNs 5A002, 5A004,
or 5A992 that have
been successfully reviewed under the
encryption review process specified in Sections 740.17(b)(2) or
740.17(b)(3) of the
EAR).
Shanghai Huahong Grace
Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation—
HFab 2, 668
Guoshoujing Road,
Zhangjiang Hi-Tech
Park, Shanghai 201203
China.
Shanghai Huahong Grace
Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation—
HFab 1, 1188
Chuanqiao Road,
Pudong, Shanghai
201206 China.
Shanghai Huahong Grace
Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation—
GFab1, 1399
Zuchongzhi Road,
Zhangjiang Hi-Tech
Park, Shanghai 201203
China.
*
*
*
PART 774—[AMENDED]
3. The authority citation for 15 CFR
part 774 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 50 U.S.C. 4801–4852; 50 U.S.C.
4601 et seq.; 50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.; 10 U.S.C.
8720; 10 U.S.C. 8730(e); 22 U.S.C. 287c, 22
U.S.C. 3201 et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 6004; 42 U.S.C.
2139a; 15 U.S.C. 1824; 50 U.S.C. 4305; 22
U.S.C. 7201 et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 7210; E.O.
13026, 61 FR 58767, 3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p.
228; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001
Comp., p. 783.
4. Supplement 1 to part 774 is
amended in category 1 by revising
ECCN 1C350 and ECCN 1C351 and in
category 2 by revising ECCN 2B352 to
read as follows:
■
Supplement No. 1 to Part 774—The
Commerce Control List
*
*
*
*
*
Category 1—Special Materials and Related
Equipment, Chemicals, ‘‘Microorganisms,’’
and ‘‘Toxins’’
*
*
*
*
*
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1C350 Chemicals that may be used as
precursors for toxic chemical agents (see
List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: CB, CW, AT
Control(s)
CB applies to entire
entry.
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(see supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
CB Column 2.
17:27 Jun 16, 2020
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*
*
CW applies to 1C350.b, and .c. The
Commerce Country Chart is not designed to
determine licensing requirements for items
controlled for CW reasons. A license is
required, for CW reasons, to export or
reexport Schedule 2 chemicals and mixtures
identified in 1C350.b to States not Party to
the CWC (destinations not listed in
Supplement No. 2 to part 745 of the EAR).
A license is required, for CW reasons, to
export Schedule 3 chemicals and mixtures
identified in 1C350.c to States not Party to
the CWC, unless an End-Use Certificate
issued by the government of the importing
country has been obtained by the exporter
prior to export. A license is required, for CW
reasons, to reexport Schedule 3 chemicals
and mixtures identified in 1C350.c from a
State not Party to the CWC to any other State
not Party to the CWC. (See § 742.18 of the
EAR for license requirements and policies for
toxic and precursor chemicals controlled for
CW reasons. See § 745.2 of the EAR for EndUse Certificate requirements that apply to
exports of Schedule 3 chemicals to countries
not listed in Supplement No. 2 to part 745
of the EAR.)
AT applies to entire entry. The Commerce
Country Chart is not designed to determine
licensing requirements for items controlled
for AT reasons in 1C350. A license is
required, for AT reasons, to export or
reexport items controlled by 1C350 to a
country in Country Group E:1 of Supplement
No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR. (See part 742
of the EAR for additional information on the
AT controls that apply to Iran, North Korea,
Sudan, and Syria. See part 746 of the EAR
for additional information on sanctions that
apply to Iran, North Korea, and Syria.)
License Requirement Notes: 1. Sample
Shipments: Subject to the following
requirements and restrictions, a license is not
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*
78 FR 32981, 6/3/13.
*
required for sample shipments when the
cumulative total of these shipments does not
exceed a 55-gallon container or 200 kg of a
single chemical to any one consignee during
a calendar year. A consignee that receives a
sample shipment under this exclusion may
not resell, transfer, or reexport the sample
shipment, but may use the sample shipment
for any other legal purpose unrelated to
chemical weapons.
a. Chemicals Not Eligible:
A. [Reserved]
B. CWC Schedule 2 chemicals (States not
Party to the CWC). No CWC Schedule 2
chemical or mixture identified in 1C350.b is
eligible for sample shipment to States not
Party to the CWC (destinations not listed in
Supplement No. 2 to part 745 of the EAR)
without a license.
b. Countries Not Eligible: Countries in
Country Group E:1 of Supplement No. 1 to
part 740 of the EAR are not eligible to receive
sample shipments of any chemicals
controlled by this ECCN without a license.
c. Sample shipments that require an EndUse Certificate for CW reasons: No CWC
Schedule 3 chemical or mixture identified in
1C350.c is eligible for sample shipment to
States not Party to the CWC (destinations not
listed in Supplement No. 2 to part 745 of the
EAR) without a license, unless an End-Use
Certificate issued by the government of the
importing country is obtained by the exporter
prior to export (see § 745.2 of the EAR for
End-Use Certificate requirements).
d. Sample shipments that require a license
for reasons set forth elsewhere in the EAR:
Sample shipments, as described in this Note
1, may require a license for reasons set forth
elsewhere in the EAR. See, in particular, the
end-use/end-user restrictions in part 744 of
the EAR, and the restrictions that apply to
embargoed countries in part 746 of the EAR.
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e. Annual report requirement. The exporter
is required to submit an annual written
report for shipments of samples made under
this Note 1. The report must be on company
letterhead stationery (titled ‘‘Report of
Sample Shipments of Chemical Precursors’’
at the top of the first page) and identify the
chemical(s), Chemical Abstract Service
Registry (C.A.S.) number(s), quantity(ies), the
ultimate consignee’s name and address, and
the date of export for all sample shipments
that were made during the previous calendar
year. The report must be submitted no later
than February 28 of the year following the
calendar year in which the sample shipments
were made, to: U.S. Department of
Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security,
14th Street and Pennsylvania Ave. NW,
Room 2099B, Washington, DC 20230, Attn:
‘‘Report of Sample Shipments of Chemical
Precursors.’’
2. Mixtures:
a. Mixtures that contain precursor
chemicals identified in ECCN 1C350, in
concentrations that are below the levels
indicated in 1C350.b through .d, are
controlled by ECCN 1C395 or 1C995 and are
subject to the licensing requirements
specified in those ECCNs.
b. A license is not required under this
ECCN for a mixture, when the controlled
chemical in the mixture is a normal
ingredient in consumer goods packaged for
retail sale for personal use. Such consumer
goods are designated EAR99. However, a
license may be required for reasons set forth
elsewhere in the EAR.
Note to mixtures: Calculation of
concentrations of AG-controlled chemicals:
a. Exclusion. No chemical may be added to
the mixture (solution) for the sole purpose of
circumventing the Export Administration
Regulations;
b. Percent Weight Calculation. When
calculating the percentage, by weight, of
ingredients in a chemical mixture, include all
ingredients of the mixture, including those
that act as solvents.
3. Compounds. Compounds created with
any chemicals identified in this ECCN 1C350
may be shipped NLR (No License Required),
without obtaining an End-Use Certificate,
unless those compounds are also identified
in this entry or require a license for reasons
set forth elsewhere in the EAR.
4. Testing Kits: Certain medical, analytical,
diagnostic, and food testing kits containing
small quantities of chemicals identified in
this ECCN 1C350, are excluded from the
scope of this ECCN and are controlled under
ECCN 1C395 or 1C995. (Note that
replacement reagents for such kits are
controlled by this ECCN 1C350 if the reagents
contain one or more of the precursor
chemicals identified in 1C350 in
concentrations equal to or greater than the
control levels for mixtures indicated in
1C350.)
Technical Notes: 1. For purposes of this
entry, a ‘‘mixture’’ is defined as a solid,
liquid or gaseous product made up of two or
more ingredients that do not react together
under normal storage conditions.
2. The scope of this control applicable to
Hydrogen Fluoride (see 1C350.d.14 in the
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17:27 Jun 16, 2020
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List of Items Controlled) includes its liquid,
gaseous, and aqueous phases, and hydrates.
3. Precursor chemicals in ECCN 1C350 are
listed by name, Chemical Abstract Service
(CAS) number and CWC Schedule (where
applicable). Precursor chemicals of the same
structural formula (e.g., hydrates) are
controlled by ECCN 1C350, regardless of
name or CAS number. CAS numbers are
shown to assist in identifying whether a
particular precursor chemical or mixture is
controlled under ECCN 1C350, irrespective of
nomenclature. However, CAS numbers
cannot be used as unique identifiers in all
situations because some forms of the listed
precursor chemical have different CAS
numbers, and mixtures containing a
precursor chemical listed in ECCN 1C350
may also have different CAS numbers.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
CIV: N/A
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: See USML Category XIV(c)
for related chemicals ‘‘subject to the ITAR’’
(see 22 CFR parts 120 through 130).
Related Definitions: See § 770.2(k) of the EAR
for synonyms for the chemicals listed in
this entry.
Items:
a. [Reserved]
b. Australia Group-controlled precursor
chemicals also identified as Schedule 2
chemicals under the CWC, as follows, and
mixtures in which at least one of the
following chemicals constitutes 30 percent or
more of the weight of the mixture:
b.1. (C.A.S. #7784–34–1) Arsenic
trichloride;
b.2. (C.A.S. #76–93–7) Benzilic acid;
b.3. (C.A.S. #78–38–6) Diethyl
ethylphosphonate;
b.4. (C.A.S. #683–08–9) Diethyl
methylphosphonate;
b.5. (C.A.S. #15715–41–0) Diethyl
methylphosphonite;
b.6. (C.A.S. #2404–03–7) Diethyl-N,Ndimethylphosphoroamidate;
b.7. (C.A.S. #41480–75–5) N,NDiisopropylaminoethanethiol hydrochloride;
b.8. (C.A.S. #5842–07–9) N,N-Diisopropylbeta-aminoethane thiol;
b.9. (C.A.S. #96–80–0) N,N-Diisopropylbeta-aminoethanol;
b.10. (C.A.S. #96–79–7), N,N-Diisopropylbeta-aminoethyl chloride;
b.11. (C.A.S. #4261–68–1) N,NDiisopropyl-beta-aminoethyl chloride
hydrochloride;
b.12. (C.A.S. #6163–75–3) Dimethyl
ethylphosphonate;
b.13. (C.A.S. #756–79–6) Dimethyl
methylphosphonate;
b.14. (C.A.S. #677–43–0) N,NDimethylamino-phosphoryl dichloride;
b.15. (C.A.S. #1498–40–4) Ethyl
phosphonous dichloride [Ethyl phosphinyl
dichloride];
b.16. (C.A.S. #430–78–4) Ethyl phosphonus
difluoride [Ethyl phosphinyl difluoride];
b.17. (C.A.S. #1066–50–8) Ethyl
phosphonyl dichloride;
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b.18. (C.A.S. #993–13–5)
Methylphosphonic acid;
b.19. (C.A.S. #676–98–2) Methylphosphonothioic dichloride;
b.20. (C.A.S. #464–07–3) Pinacolyl alcohol;
b.21. (C.A.S. #1619–34–7) 3-Quinuclidinol;
b.22. (C.A.S. #111–48–8) Thiodiglycol.
c. Australia Group-controlled precursor
chemicals also identified as Schedule 3
chemicals under the CWC, as follows, and
mixtures in which at least one of the
following chemicals constitutes 30 percent or
more of the weight of the mixture:
c.1. (C.A.S. #762–04–9) Diethyl phosphite;
c.2. (C.A.S. #868–85–9) Dimethyl
phosphite (dimethyl hydrogen phosphite);
c.3. (C.A.S. #139–87–7)
Ethyldiethanolamine;
c.4. (C.A.S. #10025–87–3) Phosphorus
oxychloride;
c.5. (C.A.S. #10026–13–8) Phosphorus
pentachloride;
c.6. (C.A.S. #7719–12–2) Phosphorus
trichloride;
c.7. (C.A.S. #10545–99–0) Sulfur
dichloride;
c.8. (C.A.S. #10025–67–9) Sulfur
monochloride;
c.9. (C.A.S. #7719–09–7) Thionyl chloride;
c.10. (C.A.S. #102–71–6) Triethanolamine;
c.11. (C.A.S. #122–52–1) Triethyl
phosphite;
c.12. (C.A.S. #121–45–9) Trimethyl
phosphite.
d. Other Australia Group-controlled
precursor chemicals not also identified as
Schedule 1, 2, or 3 chemicals under the
CWC, as follows, and mixtures in which at
least one of the following chemicals
constitutes 30 percent or more of the weight
of the mixture:
d.1. (C.A.S. #1341–49–7) Ammonium
hydrogen fluoride;
d.2. (C.A.S. #107–07–3) 2-Chloroethanol;
d.3. (C.A.S. #109–89–7) Diethylamine;
d.4. (C.A.S. #100–37–8) N,NDiethylaminoethanol;
d.5. (C.A.S. #589–57–1) Diethyl
chlorophosphite;
d.6. (C.A.S. #298–06–6) O,O-Diethyl
phosphorodithioate;
d.7. (C.A.S. #2465–65–8) O,O-Diethyl
phosphorothioate;
d.8. (C.A.S. #108–18–9) Di-isopropylamine;
d.9. (C.A.S. #124–40–3) Dimethylamine;
d.10. (C.A.S. #506–59–2) Dimethylamine
hydrochloride;
d.11. (C.A.S. #762–77–6) Ethyl
chlorofluorophosphate;
d.12. (C.A.S. #1498–51–7) Ethyl
dichlorophosphate;
d.13. (C.A.S. #460–52–6) Ethyl
difluorophosphate;
d.14. (C.A.S. #7664–39–3) Hydrogen
fluoride;
d.15. (C.A.S. #3554–74–3) 3-Hydroxyl-1methylpiperidine;
d.16. (C.A.S. #76–89–1) Methyl benzilate;
d.17. (C.A.S. #754–01–8) Methyl
chlorofluorophosphate;
d.18. (C.A.S. #677–24–7) Methyl
dichlorophosphate;
d.19. (C.A.S. #22382–13–4) Methyl
difluorophosphate;
d.20. (C.A.S. #14277–06–6) N,N
Diethylacetamidine;
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d.21. (C.A.S. #53510–30–8) N,NDiethylbutanamidine;
d.22. (C.A.S. #90324–67–7) N,NDiethylformamidine;
d.23. (C.A.S. #1342789–47–2) N,N
Diethylisobutanamidine;
d.24. (C.A.S. #84764–73–8) N,NDiethylpropanamidine;
d.25. (C.A.S. #1315467–17–4) N,NDiisopropylbutanamidine;
d.26. (C.A.S. #857522–08–8) N,NDiisopropylformamidine;
d.27. (C.A.S. #2909–14–0) N,NDimethylacetamidine;
d.28. (C.A.S. #1340437–35–5) N,NDimethylbutanamidine;
d.29. (C.A.S. #44205–42–7) N,NDimethylformamidine;
d.30. (C.A.S. #321881–25–8) N,NDimethylisobutanamidine;
d.31. (C.A.S. #56776–14–8) N,NDimethylpropanamidine;
d.32. (C.A.S. #1339586–99–0) N,NDipropylacetamidine;
d.33. (C.A.S. #1342422–35–8) N,NDipropylbutanamidine;
d.34. (C.A.S. #48044–20–8) N,NDipropylformamidine;
d.35. (C.A.S. #1342700–45–1) N,NDipropylisobutanamidine;
d.36. (C.A.S. #1341496–89–6) N,NDipropylpropanamidine;
d.37. (C.A.S. #1314–80–3) Phosphorus
pentasulfide;
d.38. (C.A.S. #75–97–8) Pinacolone;
d.39. (C.A.S. #7789–29–9) Potassium
bifluoride;
d.40. (C.A.S. #151–50–8) Potassium
cyanide;
d.41. (C.A.S. #7789–23–3) Potassium
fluoride;
d.42. (C.A.S. #3731–38–2) 3-Quinuclidone;
d.43. (C.A.S. #1333–83–1) Sodium
bifluoride;
d.44. (C.A.S. #143–33–9) Sodium cyanide;
d.45. (C.A.S. #7681–49–4) Sodium
fluoride;
d.46. (C.A.S. #16893–85–9) Sodium
hexafluorosilicate;
d.47. (C.A.S. #1313–82–2) Sodium sulfide;
d.48. (C.A.S. #637–39–8) Triethanolamine
hydrochloride;
d.49. (C.A.S. #116–17–6) Tri-isopropyl
phosphite.
1C351 Human and Animal Pathogens and
‘‘Toxins’’, as Follows (See List of Items
Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: CB, CW, AT.
Control(s)
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CB applies to entire
entry.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
CB Column 1.
CW applies to 1C351.d.11 and d.12 and a
license is required for CW reasons for all
destinations, including Canada, as follows:
CW applies to 1C351.d.11 for ricin in the
form of (1) Ricinus Communis AgglutininII
(RCAII), also known as ricin D or Ricinus
Communis LectinIII (RCLIII) and (2) Ricinus
Communis LectinIV (RCLIV), also known as
ricin E. CW applies to 1C351.d.12 for
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saxitoxin identified by C.A.S. #35523–89–8.
See § 742.18 of the EAR for licensing
information pertaining to chemicals subject
to restriction pursuant to the Chemical
Weapons Convention (CWC). The Commerce
Country Chart is not designed to determine
licensing requirements for items controlled
for CW reasons.
Control(s)
AT applies to entire
entry.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
AT Column 1.
License Requirement Notes: 1. All vaccines
and ‘‘immunotoxins’’ are excluded from the
scope of this entry. Certain medical products
and diagnostic and food testing kits that
contain biological toxins controlled under
paragraph (d) of this entry, with the
exception of toxins controlled for CW reasons
under d.11 and d.12, are excluded from the
scope of this entry. Vaccines,
‘‘immunotoxins’’, certain medical products,
and diagnostic and food testing kits excluded
from the scope of this entry are controlled
under ECCN 1C991.
2. For the purposes of this entry, only
saxitoxin is controlled under paragraph d.12;
other members of the paralytic shellfish
poison family (e.g., neosaxitoxin) are
designated EAR99.
3. Clostridium perfringens strains, other
than the epsilon toxin-producing strains of
Clostridium perfringens described in c.12,
are excluded from the scope of this entry,
since they may be used as positive control
cultures for food testing and quality control.
4. Unless specified elsewhere in this ECCN
1C351 (e.g., in License Requirement Notes 1–
3), this ECCN controls all biological agents
and ‘‘toxins,’’ regardless of quantity or
attenuation, that are identified in the List of
Items Controlled for this ECCN, including
small quantities or attenuated strains of
select biological agents or ‘‘toxins’’ that are
excluded from the lists of select biological
agents or ‘‘toxins’’ by the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service (APHIS), U.S.
Department of Agriculture, or the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services,
in accordance with their regulations in 9 CFR
part 121 and 42 CFR part 73, respectively.
5. Biological agents and pathogens are
controlled under this ECCN 1C351 when they
are an isolated live culture of a pathogen
agent, or a preparation of a toxin agent that
has been isolated or extracted from any
source or material, including living material
that has been deliberately inoculated or
contaminated with the agent. Isolated live
cultures of a pathogen agent include live
cultures in dormant form or in dried
preparations, whether the agent is natural,
enhanced or modified.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
CIV: N/A
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Special Conditions for STA
STA: (1) Paragraph (c)(1) of License
Exception STA (§ 740.20(c)(1)) may be used
for items in 1C351.d.1 through 1C351.d.10
and 1C351.d.13 through 1C351.d.19. See
§ 740.20(b)(2)(vi) for restrictions on the
quantity of any one toxin that may be
exported in a single shipment and the
number of shipments that may be made to
any one end user in a single calendar year.
Also see the Automated Export System (AES)
requirements in § 758.1(b)(4) of the EAR. (2)
Paragraph (c)(2) of License Exception STA
(§ 740.20(c)(2) of the EAR) may not be used
for any items in 1C351.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) Certain forms of ricin
and saxitoxin in 1C351.d.11. and d.12 are
CWC Schedule 1 chemicals (see § 742.18 of
the EAR). The U.S. Government must provide
advance notification and annual reports to
the OPCW of all exports of Schedule 1
chemicals. See § 745.1 of the EAR for
notification procedures. See 22 CFR part 121,
Category XIV and § 121.7 for CWC Schedule
1 chemicals that are ‘‘subject to the ITAR.’’
(2) The Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service (APHIS), U.S. Department of
Agriculture, and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC), U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services,
maintain controls on the possession, use, and
transfer within the United States of certain
items controlled by this ECCN (for APHIS,
see 7 CFR 331.3(b), 9 CFR 121.3(b), and 9
CFR 121.4(b); for CDC, see 42 CFR 73.3(b)
and 42 CFR 73.4(b)). (3) See 22 CFR part 121,
Category XIV(b), for modified biological
agents and biologically derived substances
that are ‘‘subject to the ITAR.’’
Related Definitions: (1) For the purposes of
this entry ‘‘immunotoxin’’ is defined as an
antibody-toxin conjugate intended to destroy
specific target cells (e.g., tumor cells) that
bear antigens homologous to the antibody. (2)
For the purposes of this entry ‘‘subunit’’ is
defined as a portion of the ‘‘toxin’’.
Items:
a. Viruses identified on the Australia
Group (AG) ‘‘List of Human and Animal
Pathogens and Toxins for Export Control,’’ as
follows:
a.1. African horse sickness virus;
a.2. African swine fever virus;
a.3. Andes virus;
a.4. Avian influenza (AI) viruses identified
as having high pathogenicity (HP), as follows:
a.4.a. AI viruses that have an intravenous
pathogenicity index (IVPI) in 6-week-old
chickens greater than 1.2; or
a.4.b. AI viruses that cause at least 75%
mortality in 4- to 8-week-old chickens
infected intravenously.
Note: Avian influenza (AI) viruses of the
H5 or H7 subtype that do not have either of
the characteristics described in 1C351.a.4
(specifically, 1C351.a.4.a or a.4.b) should be
sequenced to determine whether multiple
basic amino acids are present at the cleavage
site of the haemagglutinin molecule (HA0). If
the amino acid motif is similar to that
observed for other HPAI isolates, then the
isolate being tested should be considered as
HPAI and the virus is controlled under
1C351.a.4.
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a.5. Bluetongue virus;
a.6. Chapare virus;
a.7. Chikungunya virus;
a.8. Choclo virus;
a.9. Classical swine fever virus (Hog
cholera virus);
a.10. Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever
virus;
a.11. Dobrava-Belgrade virus;
a.12. Eastern equine encephalitis virus;
a.13. Ebolavirus (includes all members of
the Ebolavirus genus);
a.14. Foot-and-mouth disease virus;
a.15. Goatpox virus;
a.16. Guanarito virus;
a.17. Hantaan virus;
a.18. Hendra virus (Equine morbillivirus);
a.19. Japanese encephalitis virus;
a.20. Junin virus;
a.21. Kyasanur Forest disease virus;
a.22. Laguna Negra virus;
a.23. Lassa virus;
a.24. Louping ill virus;
a.25. Lujo virus;
a.26. Lumpy skin disease virus;
a.27. Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus;
a.28. Machupo virus;
a.29. Marburgvirus (includes all members
of the Marburgvirus genus);
a.30. Middle East respiratory syndromerelated coronavirus (MERS-related
coronavirus);
a.31. Monkeypox virus;
a.32. Murray Valley encephalitis virus;
a.33. Newcastle disease virus;
a.34. Nipah virus;
a.35. Omsk hemorrhagic fever virus;
a.36. Oropouche virus;
a.37. Peste-des-petits ruminants virus;
a.38. Porcine Teschovirus;
a.39. Powassan virus;
a.40. Rabies virus and all other members of
the Lyssavirus genus;
a.41. Reconstructed 1918 influenza virus;
Technical Note: 1C351.a.41 includes
reconstructed replication competent forms of
the 1918 pandemic influenza virus
containing any portion of the coding regions
of all eight gene segments.
a.42. Rift Valley fever virus;
a.43. Rinderpest virus;
a.44. Rocio virus;
a.45. Sabia virus;
a.46. Seoul virus;
a.47. Severe acute respiratory syndromerelated coronavirus (SARS-related
coronavirus);
a.48. Sheeppox virus;
a.49. Sin Nombre virus;
a.50. St. Louis encephalitis virus;
a.51. Suid herpesvirus 1 (Pseudorabies
virus; Aujeszky’s disease);
a.52. Swine vesicular disease virus;
a.53. Tick-borne encephalitis virus (Far
Eastern subtype, formerly known as Russian
Spring-Summer encephalitis virus—see
1C351.b.3 for Siberian subtype);
a.54. Variola virus;
a.55. Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus;
a.56. Vesicular stomatitis virus;
a.57. Western equine encephalitis virus; or
a.58. Yellow fever virus.
b. Viruses identified on the APHIS/CDC
‘‘select agents’’ lists (see Related Controls
paragraph #2 for this ECCN), but not
identified on the Australia Group (AG) ‘‘List
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of Human and Animal Pathogens and Toxins
for Export Control,’’ as follows:
b.1. [Reserved];
b.2. [Reserved]; or
b.3. Tick-borne encephalitis virus (Siberian
subtype, formerly West Siberian virus—see
1C351.a.53 for Far Eastern subtype).
c. Bacteria identified on the Australia
Group (AG) ‘‘List of Human and Animal
Pathogens and Toxins for Export Control,’’ as
follows:
c.1. Bacillus anthracis;
c.2. Brucella abortus;
c.3. Brucella melitensis;
c.4. Brucella suis;
c.5. Burkholderia mallei (Pseudomonas
mallei);
c.6. Burkholderia pseudomallei
(Pseudomonas pseudomallei);
c.7. Chlamydia psittaci (Chlamydophila
psittaci);
c.8. Clostriduim argentinense (formerly
known as Clostridium botulinum Type G),
botulinum neurotoxin producing strains;
c.9. Clostridium baratii, botulinum
neurotoxin producing strains;
c.10. Clostridium botulinum;
c.11. Clostridium butyricum, botulinum
neurotoxin producing strains;
c.12. Clostridium perfringens, epsilon
toxin producing types;
c.13. Coxiella burnetii;
c.14. Francisella tularensis;
c.15. Mycoplasma capricolum subspecies
capripneumoniae (‘‘strain F38’’);
c.16. Mycoplasma mycoides subspecies
mycoides SC (small colony) (a.k.a. contagious
bovine pleuropneumonia);
c.17. Rickettsia prowazekii;
c.18. Salmonella enterica subspecies
enterica serovar Typhi (Salmonella typhi);
c.19. Shiga toxin producing Escherichia
coli (STEC) of serogroups O26, O45, O103,
O104, O111, O121, O145, O157, and other
shiga toxin producing serogroups;
Note: Shiga toxin producing Escherichia
coli (STEC) includes, inter alia,
enterohaemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC), verotoxin
producing E. coli (VTEC) or verocytotoxin
producing E. coli (VTEC).
c.20. Shigella dysenteriae;
c.21. Vibrio cholerae; or
c.22. Yersinia pestis.
d. ‘‘Toxins’’ identified on the Australia
Group (AG) ‘‘List of Human and Animal
Pathogens and Toxins for Export Control,’’ as
follows, and ‘‘subunits’’ thereof:
d.1. Abrin;
d.2. Aflatoxins;
d.3. Botulinum toxins;
d.4. Cholera toxin;
d.5. Clostridium perfringens alpha, beta 1,
beta 2, epsilon and iota toxins;
d.6. Conotoxins;
d.7. Diacetoxyscirpenol;
d.8. HT–2 toxin;
d.9. Microcystins (Cyanginosins);
d.10. Modeccin;
d.11. Ricin;
d.12. Saxitoxin;
d.13. Shiga toxins (shiga-like toxins,
verotoxins, and verocytotoxins);
d.14. Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxins,
hemolysin alpha toxin, and toxic shock
syndrome toxin (formerly known as
Staphylococcus enterotoxin F);
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d.15. T–2 toxin;
d.16. Tetrodotoxin;
d.17. Viscumin (Viscum album lectin 1); or
d.18. Volkensin.
e. ‘‘Fungi’’, as follows:
e.1. Coccidioides immitis; or
e.2. Coccidioides posadasii.
*
*
*
*
*
Category 2—Materials Processing
*
*
*
*
*
2B352 Equipment Capable of Use in
Handling Biological Materials, as
Follows (See List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: CB, AT.
Control(s)
CB applies to entire
entry.
AT applies to entire
entry.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
CB Column 2.
AT Column 1.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
CIV: N/A
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: See ECCNs 1A004 and
1A995 for protective equipment that is not
covered by this entry. Also see ECCN
9A120 for controls on certain ‘‘UAV’’
systems designed or modified to dispense
an aerosol and capable of carrying
elements of a payload in the form of a
particulate or liquid, other than fuel
‘‘parts’’ or ‘‘components’’ of such vehicles,
of a volume greater than 20 liters.
Related Definitions: (1) ‘‘Lighter than air
vehicles’’—balloons and airships that rely
on hot air or on lighter-than-air gases, such
as helium or hydrogen, for their lift. (2)
‘‘UAVs’’—Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. (3)
‘‘VMD’’—Volume Median Diameter.
Items:
a. Containment facilities and related
equipment, as follows:
a.1. Complete containment facilities at P3
or P4 containment level.
Technical Note to 2B352.a.1: P3 or P4
(BL3, BL4, L3, L4) containment levels are as
specified in the WHO Laboratory Biosafety
Manual (3rd edition, Geneva, 2004).
a.2. Equipment designed for fixed
installation in containment facilities
specified in paragraph a.1 of this ECCN, as
follows:
a.2.a. Double-door pass-through
decontamination autoclaves;
a.2.b. Breathing air suit decontamination
showers;
a.2.c. Mechanical-seal or inflatable-seal
walkthrough doors.
b. Fermenters and components as follows:
b.1. Fermenters capable of cultivation of
micro-organisms or of live cells for the
production of viruses or toxins, without the
propagation of aerosols, having a total
internal volume of 20 liters or greater.
b.2. Components designed for such
fermenters, as follows:
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b.2.a. Cultivation chambers designed to be
sterilized or disinfected in situ;
b.2.b. Cultivation chamber holding devices;
or
b.2.c. Process control units capable of
simultaneously monitoring and controlling
two or more fermentation system parameters
(e.g., temperature, pH, nutrients, agitation,
dissolved oxygen, air flow, foam control).
Technical Notes to 2B352.b: 1. Fermenters
include bioreactors (including single-use
(disposable) bioreactors), chemostats and
continuous-flow systems.
2. Cultivation chamber holding devices
controlled by 2B352.b.2.b include single-use
cultivation chambers with rigid walls.
c. Centrifugal separators capable of the
continuous separation of pathogenic
microorganisms, without the propagation of
aerosols, and having all of the following
characteristics:
c.1. One or more sealing joints within the
steam containment area;
c.2. A flow rate greater than 100 liters per
hour;
c.3. ‘‘Parts’’ or ‘‘components’’ of polished
stainless steel or titanium; and
c.4. Capable of in-situ steam sterilization in
a closed state.
Technical Note to 2B352.c: Centrifugal
separators include decanters.
d. Cross (tangential) flow filtration
equipment and ‘‘accessories’’, as follows:
d.1. Cross (tangential) flow filtration
equipment capable of separation of
microorganisms, viruses, toxins or cell
cultures having all of the following
characteristics:
d.1.a. A total filtration area equal to or
greater than 1 square meter (1 m2); and
d.1.b. Having any of the following
characteristics:
d.1.b.1. Capable of being sterilized or
disinfected in-situ; or
d.1.b.2. Using disposable or single-use
filtration ‘‘parts’’ or ‘‘components’’.
N.B.: 2B352.d.1 does not control reverse
osmosis and hemodialysis equipment, as
specified by the manufacturer.
d.2. Cross (tangential) flow filtration
‘‘parts’’ or ‘‘components’’ (e.g., modules,
elements, cassettes, cartridges, units or
plates) with filtration area equal to or greater
than 0.2 square meters (0.2 m2) for each
‘‘part’’ or ‘‘component’’ and designed for use
in cross (tangential) flow filtration equipment
controlled by 2B352.d.1.
Technical Note: In this ECCN, ‘‘sterilized’’
denotes the elimination of all viable microbes
from the equipment through the use of either
physical (e.g., steam) or chemical agents.
‘‘Disinfected’’ denotes the destruction of
potential microbial infectivity in the
equipment through the use of chemical
agents with a germicidal effect.
‘‘Disinfection’’ and ‘‘sterilization’’ are
distinct from ‘‘sanitization’’, the latter
referring to cleaning procedures designed to
lower the microbial content of equipment
without necessarily achieving elimination of
all microbial infectivity or viability.
e. Steam, gas or vapor sterilizable freezedrying equipment with a condenser capacity
of 10 kg of ice or greater in 24 hours (10 liters
of water or greater in 24 hours) and less than
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1000 kg of ice in 24 hours (less than 1,000
liters of water in 24 hours).
f. Spray-drying equipment capable of
drying toxins or pathogenic microorganisms
having all of the following characteristics:
f.1. A water evaporation capacity of ≥0.4
kg/h and ≤400 kg/h;
f.2. The ability to generate a typical mean
product particle size of ≤10 micrometers with
existing fittings or by minimal modification
of the spray-dryer with atomization nozzles
enabling generation of the required particle
size; and
f.3. Capable of being sterilized or
disinfected in situ.
g. Protective and containment equipment,
as follows:
g.1. Protective full or half suits, or hoods
dependent upon a tethered external air
supply and operating under positive
pressure.
Technical Note to 2B352.g.1: 2B352.g.1
does not control suits designed to be worn
with self-contained breathing apparatus.
g.2. Biocontainment chambers, isolators, or
biological safety cabinets having all of the
following characteristics, for normal
operation:
g.2.a. Fully enclosed workspace where the
operator is separated from the work by a
physical barrier;
g.2.b. Able to operate at negative pressure;
g.2.c. Means to safely manipulate items in
the workspace; and
g.2.d. Supply and exhaust air to and from
the workspace is high-efficiency particulate
air (HEPA) filtered.
Note 1 to 2B352.g.2: 2B352.g.2 controls
class III biosafety cabinets, as specified in the
WHO Laboratory Biosafety Manual (3rd
edition, Geneva, 2004) or constructed in
accordance with national standards,
regulations or guidance.
Note 2 to 2B352.g.2: 2B352.g.2 does not
control isolators ‘‘specially designed’’ for
barrier nursing or transportation of infected
patients.
h. Aerosol inhalation equipment designed
for aerosol challenge testing with
microorganisms, viruses or toxins, as follows:
h.1. Whole-body exposure chambers
having a capacity of 1 cubic meter or greater;
h.2. Nose-only exposure apparatus
utilizing directed aerosol flow and having a
capacity for the exposure of 12 or more
rodents, or two or more animals other than
rodents, and closed animal restraint tubes
designed for use with such apparatus.
i. Spraying or fogging systems and ‘‘parts’’
and ‘‘components’’ therefor, as follows:
i.1. Complete spraying or fogging systems,
‘‘specially designed’’ or modified for fitting
to aircraft, ‘‘lighter than air vehicles,’’ or
‘‘UAVs,’’ capable of delivering, from a liquid
suspension, an initial droplet ‘‘VMD’’ of less
than 50 microns at a flow rate of greater than
2 liters per minute;
i.2. Spray booms or arrays of aerosol
generating units, ‘‘specially designed’’ or
modified for fitting to aircraft, ‘‘lighter than
air vehicles,’’ or ‘‘UAVs,’’ capable of
delivering, from a liquid suspension, an
initial droplet ‘‘VMD’’ of less than 50
microns at a flow rate of greater than 2 liters
per minute;
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i.3. Aerosol generating units ‘‘specially
designed’’ for fitting to the systems as
specified in paragraphs i.1 and i.2 of this
ECCN.
Technical Notes to 2B352.i: 1. Aerosol
generating units are devices ‘‘specially
designed’’ or modified for fitting to aircraft
and include nozzles, rotary drum atomizers
and similar devices.
2. This ECCN does not control spraying or
fogging systems, ‘‘parts’’ and ‘‘components,’’
as specified in 2B352.i, that are demonstrated
not to be capable of delivering biological
agents in the form of infectious aerosols.
3. Droplet size for spray equipment or
nozzles ‘‘specially designed’’ for use on
aircraft or ‘‘UAVs’’ should be measured using
either of the following methods (pending the
adoption of internationally accepted
standards):
a. Doppler laser method,
b. Forward laser diffraction method.
j. Nucleic acid assemblers and synthesizers
that are both:
j.1 Partly or entirely automated; and
j.2. Designed to generate continuous
nucleic acids greater than 1.5 kilobases in
length with error rates less than 5% in a
single run.
*
*
*
*
*
Richard E. Ashooh,
Assistant Secretary for Export
Administration.
[FR Doc. 2020–11625 Filed 6–16–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–33–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 165
[Docket Number USCG–2020–0252]
RIN 1625–AA00
Safety Zone; San Diego Bay, San
Diego, CA
Coast Guard, DHS.
Temporary final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard is
establishing a temporary safety zone for
the navigable waters in the vicinity of
the General Dynamics NASSCO
shipyard in San Diego Bay, San Diego,
CA, during the launch of the M/V
Matsonia. The safety zone is needed to
protect personnel, vessels, and the
marine environment from potential
hazards associated with the launching
and subsequent berthing of the M/V
Matsonia. Entry of vessels or persons
into this zone is prohibited unless
specifically authorized by the Captain of
the Port San Diego.
DATES: This rule is effective from 6 p.m.
through 9 p.m. on July 2, 2020.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\17JNR1.SGM
17JNR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 117 (Wednesday, June 17, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 36483-36492]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-11625]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Industry and Security
15 CFR Parts 748 and 774
[Docket No. 200521-0143]
RIN 0694-AH60
Implementation of the February 2020 Australia Group
Intersessional Decisions: Addition of Certain Rigid-Walled, Single-Use
Cultivation Chambers and Precursor Chemicals to the Commerce Control
List
AGENCY: Bureau of Industry and Security, Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) publishes this final
rule to amend the Export Administration Regulations (EAR) to implement
the decisions made at the February 2020 Australia Group (AG)
Intersessional Implementation Meeting, and those later adopted pursuant
to the AG's silence procedure. Specifically, this rule amends Export
Control Classification Numbers (ECCNs) 1C350, 1C351 and 2B352 on the
Commerce Control List (CCL) to reflect these AG changes. ECCN 1C350 is
amended by adding twenty-four precursor chemicals, as well as mixtures
in which at least one of these chemicals constitutes 30 percent or more
of the weight of the mixture, to ECCN 1C350.d. ECCN 1C351 is amended to
add Middle East respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus (MERS-related
coronavirus). ECCN 2B352 is amended by adding a Technical Note to
indicate that cultivation chamber holding devices controlled in
2B352.b.2.b include single-use cultivation chambers with rigid walls.
The items addressed by this final rule were not previously listed on
the CCL or controlled multilaterally. BIS, consistent with the
interagency process described in the Export Control Reform Act of 2018
(ECRA), identified the precursor chemicals and single-use cultivation
chambers addressed by this final rule as emerging technologies that are
essential to U.S. national security and for which effective controls
can be implemented. The inclusion of such items in this final rule is
consistent with the requirements of ECRA and the decision of the AG to
add such items to its common control lists, thereby making exports of
such items subject to multilateral control (following the
implementation of these changes by individual AG participating
countries, including the United States).
DATES: This rule is effective June 17, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. Wesley Johnson, Chemical and
Biological Controls Division, Office of Nonproliferation and Treaty
Compliance, Bureau of Industry and Security, Telephone: (202) 482-0091,
Email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS)
is amending the Export Administration Regulations (EAR) to implement
the decisions made at the Australia Group (AG) Intersessional
Implementation Meeting held in Bratislava, Slovak Republic, on February
5 through 6, 2020, and those subsequently made pursuant to the AG
silence procedure which ended on February 28, 2020 (the AG silence
procedure provides for the adoption of a measure, subsequent to its
provisional acceptance at an AG plenary or intersessional meeting,
provided that no participating country submits an objection on or
before a specified date). The AG is a multilateral forum consisting of
42 participating countries and the European Union that maintain export
controls on a list of chemicals, biological agents, and related
equipment and technology that could be used in a chemical or biological
weapons program. The AG periodically reviews items on its control list
to enhance the effectiveness of participating governments' national
controls and to achieve greater harmonization among these controls.
Amendments to the CCL Based on the February 2020 AG Intersessional
Recommendations
ECCN 1C350 (Chemical Weapons Precursors)
This final rule amends Export Control Classification Number (ECCN)
1C350 on the Commerce Control List (CCL) (Supplement No. 1 to part 774
of the EAR) to reflect changes to the AG ``Chemical Weapons
Precursors'' common control list based on the February 2020
Intersessional Implementation Meeting recommendations that were
approved by the AG pursuant to a silence procedure which ended on
February 28, 2020. Specifically, this rule amends ECCN 1C350 by adding
the following twenty-four precursor chemicals under ECCN 1C350.d:
(C.A.S. #589-57-1) Diethyl chlorophosphite;
(C.A.S. #762-77-6) Ethyl chlorofluorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #1498-51-7) Ethyl dichlorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #460-52-6) Ethyl difluorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #754-01-8) Methyl chlorofluorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #677-24-7) Methyl dichlorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #22382-13-4) Methyl difluorophosphate;
(C.A.S. #14277-06-6) N,N-Diethylacetamidine;
(C.A.S. #53510-30-8) N,N-Diethylbutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #90324-67-7) N,N-Diethylformamidine;
(C.A.S. #1342789-47-2) N,N-Diethylisobutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #84764-73-8) N,N-Diethylpropanamidine;
(C.A.S. #1315467-17-4) N,N-Diisopropylbutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #857522-08-8) N,N-Diisopropylformamidine;
(C.A.S. #2909-14-0) N,N-Dimethylacetamidine;
(C.A.S. #1340437-35-5) N,N-Dimethylbutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #44205-42-7) N,N-Dimethylformamidine;
(C.A.S. #321881-25-8) N,N-Dimethylisobutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #56776-14-8) N,N-Dimethylpropanamidine;
(C.A.S. #1339586-99-0) N,N-Dipropylacetamidine;
[[Page 36484]]
(C.A.S. #1342422-35-8) N,N-Dipropylbutanamidine;
(C.A.S. #48044-20-8) N,N-Dipropylformamidine;
(C.A.S. #1342700-45-1) N,N-Dipropylisobutanamidine; and
(C.A.S. #1341496-89-6) N,N-Dipropylpropanamidine.
Note that mixtures in which at least one of the chemicals listed in
ECCN 1C350.d (which now includes the twenty-four precursor chemicals
listed above) constitutes 30 percent or more of the weight of the
mixture are also controlled under this ECCN.
In addition, although this rule does not amend ECCN 1D390
(``software'' for chemical production process control), ECCN 1E001
(``technology'' for the ``development'' or ``production'' of, inter
alia, precursor chemicals controlled by ECCN 1C350), ECCN 1E350
(``technology'' for chemical production facilities) or ECCN 1E351
(``technology'' for the disposal of, inter alia, precursor chemicals),
these ECCNs cross-reference items controlled by ECCN 1C350 and,
consequently, ``software'' or ``technology'' that is related to any of
the twenty-four precursor chemicals added by this rule to ECCN 1C350.d
is now subject to control under ECCN 1D390, 1E001, 1E350 or 1E351 if
such ``software'' or ``technology'' falls within the parameters of the
controls described therein.
Prior to the addition of these twenty-four precursor chemicals to
the AG chemical weapons precursors common control list, BIS, consistent
with the interagency process described in the Export Control Reform Act
of 2018 (ECRA) (50 U.S.C. 4801-4852) under Section 1758 (codified at 50
U.S.C. 4817), identified these items as emerging technologies that are
essential to U.S. national security and for which effective controls
can be implemented. This interagency process resulted in a finding that
the absence of export controls on these precursor chemicals could be
exploited for chemical weapons purposes. The inclusion of these
precursor chemicals in this final rule is consistent with the
requirements of ECRA and the decision of the AG to add these items to
their common control lists, thereby making exports of such items
subject to multilateral control.
This rule alphabetically reorders the precursor chemicals listed in
ECCN 1C350.d to reflect the addition of the twenty-four precursor
chemicals identified above. To assist in identifying the precursor
chemicals that are now controlled under ECCN 1C350.d, the following
table lists each chemical now found in ECCN 1C350.d, as well as the
previous ECCN 1C350.d listing (if any) for these chemicals.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AG-controlled precursor Previous CCL Current CCL
chemicals designation designation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(C.A.S. #1341-49-7) Ammonium ECCN 1C350.d.1.... ECCN 1C350.d.1.
hydrogen fluoride.
(C.A.S. #107-07-3) 2- ECCN 1C350.d.2.... ECCN 1C350.d.2.
Chloroethanol.
(C.A.S. #109-89-7) Diethylamine. ECCN 1C350.d.3.... ECCN 1C350.d.3.
(C.A.S. #100-37-8) N,N- ECCN 1C350.d.4.... ECCN 1C350.d.4.
Diethylaminoethanol.
(C.A.S. #589-57-1) Diethyl Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.5.
chlorophosphite.
(C.A.S. #298-06-6) O,O-Diethyl ECCN 1C350.d.5.... ECCN 1C350.d.6.
phosphorodithioate.
(C.A.S. #2465-65-8) O,O-Diethyl ECCN 1C350.d.6.... ECCN 1C350.d.7.
phosphorothioate.
(C.A.S. #108-18-9) Di- ECCN 1C350.d.7.... ECCN 1C350.d.8.
isopropylamine.
(C.A.S. #124-40-3) Dimethylamine ECCN 1C350.d.8.... ECCN 1C350.d.9.
(C.A.S. #506-59-2) Dimethylamine ECCN 1C350.d.9.... ECCN 1C350.d.10.
hydrochloride.
(C.A.S. #762-77-6) Ethyl Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.11.
chlorofluorophosphate.
(C.A.S. #1498-51-7) Ethyl Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.12.
dichlorophosphate.
(C.A.S. #460-52-6) Ethyl Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.13.
difluorophosphate.
(C.A.S. #7664-39-3) Hydrogen ECCN 1C350.d.10... ECCN 1C350.d.14.
fluoride.
(C.A.S. #3554-74-3) 3-Hydroxyl-1- ECCN 1C350.d.11... ECCN 1C350.d.15.
methylpiperidine.
(C.A.S. #76-89-1) Methyl ECCN 1C350.d.12... ECCN 1C350.d.16.
benzilate.
(C.A.S. #754-01-8) Methyl Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.17.
chlorofluorophosphate.
(C.A.S. #677-24-7) Methyl Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.18.
dichlorophosphate.
(C.A.S. #22382-13-4) Methyl Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.19.
difluorophosphate.
(C.A.S. #14277-06-6) N,N Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.20.
Diethylacetamidine.
(C.A.S. #53510-30-8) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.21.
Diethylbutanamidine.
(C.A.S. #90324-67-7) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.22.
Diethylformamidine.
(C.A.S. #1342789-47-2) N,N Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.23.
Diethylisobutanamidine.
(C.A.S. #84764-73-8) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.24.
Diethylpropanamidine.
(C.A.S. #1315467-17-4) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.25.
Diisopropylbutanamidine.
(C.A.S. #857522-08-8) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.26.
Diisopropylformamidine.
(C.A.S. #2909-14-0) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.27.
Dimethylacetamidine.
(C.A.S. #1340437-35-5) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.28.
Dimethylbutanamidine.
(C.A.S. #44205-42-7) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.29.
Dimethylformamidine.
(C.A.S. #321881-25-8) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.30.
Dimethylisobutanamidine.
(C.A.S. #56776-14-8) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.31.
Dimethylpropanamidine.
(C.A.S. #1339586-99-0) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.32.
Dipropylacetamidine.
C.A.S. #1342422-35-8) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.33.
Dipropylbutanamidine.
(C.A.S. #48044-20-8) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.34.
Dipropylformamidine.
(C.A.S. #1342700-45-1) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.35.
Dipropylisobutanamidine.
(C.A.S. #1341496-89-6) N,N- Not listed........ ECCN 1C350.d.36.
Dipropylpropanamidine.
(C.A.S. #1314-80-3) Phosphorus ECCN 1C350.d.13... ECCN 1C350.d.37.
pentasulfide.
(C.A.S. #75-97-8) Pinacolone.... ECCN 1C350.d.14... ECCN 1C350.d.38.
(C.A.S. #7789-29-9) Potassium ECCN 1C350.d.15... ECCN 1C350.d.39.
bifluoride.
(C.A.S. #151-50-8) Potassium ECCN 1C350.d.16... ECCN 1C350.d.40.
cyanide.
(C.A.S. #7789-23-3) Potassium ECCN 1C350.d.17... ECCN 1C350.d.41.
fluoride.
(C.A.S. #3731-38-2) 3- ECCN 1C350.d.18... ECCN 1C350.d.42.
Quinuclidone.
(C.A.S. #1333-83-1) Sodium ECCN 1C350.d.19... ECCN 1C350.d.43.
bifluoride.
(C.A.S. #143-33-9) Sodium ECCN 1C350.d.20... ECCN 1C350.d.44.
cyanide.
(C.A.S. #7681-49-4) Sodium ECCN 1C350.d.21... ECCN 1C350.d.45.
fluoride.
(C.A.S. #16893-85-9) Sodium ECCN 1C350.d.22... ECCN 1C350.d.46.
hexafluorosilicate.
[[Page 36485]]
(C.A.S. #1313-82-2) Sodium ECCN 1C350.d.23... ECCN 1C350.d.47.
sulfide.
(C.A.S. #637-39-8) ECCN 1C350.d.24... ECCN 1C350.d.48.
Triethanolamine hydrochloride.
(C.A.S. #116-17-6) Tri-isopropyl ECCN 1C350.d.25... ECCN 1C350.d.49.
phosphite.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note that all items controlled under ECCN 1C350.d, including the
newly added precursor chemicals described above, are controlled for
chemical/biological (CB) reasons and anti-terrorism (AT) reasons (see
CB Column 2 of the Commerce Country Chart in Supplement No. 1 to part
738 of the EAR and the AT license requirements described in part 742 of
the EAR that apply to Iran, North Korea, Sudan and Syria). A license
also is required to certain destinations in accordance with the
embargoes and other special controls described in part 746 of the EAR.
ECCN 1C351 (Human and Animal Pathogen and Toxins)
This final rule amends ECCN 1C351 on the CCL to reflect changes to
the AG ``Control List of Human and Animal Pathogens and Toxins'' based
on the February 2020 Intersessional Implementation Meeting
recommendations that were adopted by AG. Specifically, this rule adds
the Middle East respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus (MERS-related
coronavirus) to ECCN 1C351.a.30 due to its homology with severe acute
respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus (SARS-related coronavirus) and
its potential use in biological weapons activities. The viruses in ECCN
1C351.a that were previously numbered, in alphabetical order, as .a.30
through .a.57 have been renumbered as .a.31 through .a.58,
respectively, and relevant cross-references adjusted as necessary.
In addition, although this rule does not amend ECCN 1E001
(``technology'' for the ``development'' or ``production'' of, inter
alia, pathogens or ``toxins'' controlled by ECCN 1C351) or ECCN 1E351
(``technology'' for the disposal of, inter alia, microbiological
materials), these ECCNs cross-reference items controlled by ECCN 1C351
and, consequently, ``technology'' that is related to the MERS-related
coronavirus added by this rule to ECCN 1C351.a.30 is now subject to
control under ECCN 1E001 or 1E351 if such ``technology'' falls within
the parameters of the controls described therein.
Note that all items controlled under ECCN 1C351.d, including the
newly added MERS-related coronavirus, require a license for CB reasons
and AT reasons to the destinations indicated under CB Column 1 and AT
Column 1, respectively, on the Commerce Country Chart in Supplement No.
1 to part 738 of the EAR (also see the AT license requirements
described in part 742 of the EAR that apply to Iran, North Korea, Sudan
and Syria). In addition, a license is required to certain destinations
in accordance with the embargoes and other special controls described
in part 746 of the EAR. Also note that, in addition to the license
requirements described above, items controlled under ECCN 1C351.d.11 or
.d.12 require a license to certain destinations for chemical weapons
(CW) reasons, as described in the License Requirements section of ECCN
1C351 and in Section 742.18 of the EAR.
ECCN 2B352 (Equipment Capable of Use in Handling Biological Materials)
This final rule amends ECCN 2B352 on the CCL to reflect changes to
the AG ``Control List of Dual-Use Biological Equipment and Related
Technology and Software'' based on the February 2020 Intersessional
Implementation Meeting recommendations that were adopted by the AG.
Specifically, this rule adds a Technical Note to ECCN 2B352.b to
indicate that cultivation chamber holding devices controlled in
2B352.b.2.b include single-use cultivation chambers with rigid walls.
Consequently, such single-use cultivation chambers require a license
for CB reasons and AT reasons to the destinations indicated under CB
Column 2 and AT Column 1, respectively, on the Commerce Country Chart
in Supplement No. 1 to part 738 of the EAR (also see the AT license
requirements described in part 742 that apply to Iran, North Korea,
Sudan and Syria). A license also is required to certain destinations in
accordance with the embargoes and other special controls described in
part 746 of the EAR.
In addition, although this rule does not amend ECCNs 2E001, 2E002
and 2E301 (which control, respectively, ``technology'' for the
``development,'' ``production'' or ``use'' of, inter alia, ECCN 2B352
equipment), these ECCNs cross-reference items controlled by ECCN 2B352
and, consequently, ``technology'' that is related to rigid-walled,
single-use cultivation chambers added by this rule to ECCN 2B352.b.2.b
is now subject to control under ECCN 2E001, 2E002 or 2E301 if such
``technology'' falls within the parameters of the controls described
therein.
Prior to the addition of these cultivation chambers to the AG
biological equipment common control list, BIS, consistent with the
interagency process described in Section 1758 of ECRA, identified these
items as emerging technologies that are essential to U.S. national
security and for which effective controls can be implemented. This
interagency process resulted in a finding that disposable cultivation
chambers that do not require the use of a holding device have recently
gained significant market share in the single-use biological equipment
market (both within and outside the United States) and, furthermore,
that they are capable of functioning as cultivation chamber holding
devices controlled under ECCN 2B352.b.2.b. Consequently, the absence of
export controls on these single-use cultivation chambers could be
exploited for chemical and biological weapons (CBW) purposes. Among the
items of concern, in this regard, are impeller-mixed liquid culture
chambers, as well as novel packed-bed and hollow-fiber models. The
inclusion of these cultivation chambers in this final rule is
consistent with the requirements of ECRA and the decision of the AG to
add these items to their common control lists, thereby making exports
of such items subject to multilateral control.
Conforming Changes to Supplement No. 7 to Part 748
This final rule also amends Supplement No. 7 to part 748 to update
the ECCN reference to hydrogen fluoride (C.A.S. #7664-39-3) in the
eligible item descriptions for the following validated end-users: (1)
``Samsung China Semiconductor Co. Ltd.'' and (2) ``Shanghai Huahong
Grace Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation.'' As described above,
hydrogen fluoride was previously classified under ECCN 1C350.d.10, but
is now classified under ECCN 1C350.d.14 with the publication of this
rule. These conforming amendments do not change the scope of eligible
items for either of the two validated end-users indicated above--they
merely update the ECCN references in Supplement No.
[[Page 36486]]
7 to part 748 to correctly identify which ECCN 1C350.d items are
eligible for each of these validated end-users. Because this rule does
not add or remove any validated end-users or revise the scope of
eligible items, the citation for this rule is not indicated in the
``Federal Register Citation'' column of Supplement No. 7.
Saving Clause
Shipments of items removed from eligibility for export, reexport or
transfer (in-country) under a license exception or without a license
(i.e., under the designator ``NLR'') as a result of this regulatory
action that were on dock for loading, on lighter, laden aboard an
exporting carrier, or en route aboard a carrier to a port of export, on
June 17, 2020, pursuant to actual orders for export, reexport or
transfer (in-country) to a foreign destination, may proceed to that
destination under the previously applicable license exception or
without a license (NLR) so long as they are exported, reexported or
transferred (in-country) before August 17, 2020. Any such items not
actually exported, reexported or transferred (in-country) before
midnight, on August 17, 2020, require a license in accordance with this
regulation.
``Deemed'' exports of ``technology'' and ``source code'' removed
from eligibility for export under a license exception or without a
license (under the designator ``NLR'') as a result of this regulatory
action may continue to be made under the previously available license
exception or without a license (NLR) before August 17, 2020. Beginning
at midnight on August 17, 2020, such ``technology'' and ``source code''
may no longer be released, without a license, to a foreign national
subject to the ``deemed'' export controls in the EAR when a license
would be required to the home country of the foreign national in
accordance with this regulation.
Export Control Reform Act of 2018
On August 13, 2018, the President signed into law the John S.
McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019, which
included the Export Control Reform Act of 2018 (ECRA), 50 U.S.C.
Sections 4801-4852. ECRA provides the legal basis for BIS's principal
authorities and serves as the authority under which BIS issues this
rule. As set forth in section 1768 of ECRA, all delegations, rules,
regulations, orders, determinations, licenses, or other forms of
administrative action that were made, issued, conducted, or allowed to
become effective under the Export Administration Act of 1979
(previously, 50 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.) (as in effect prior to August 13,
2018, and as continued in effect pursuant to the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.)) or the Export
Administration Regulations, and were in effect as of August 13, 2018,
shall continue in effect according to their terms until modified,
superseded, set aside, or revoked under the authority of ECRA.
Rulemaking Requirements
1. Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including: Potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects; distributive impacts; and equity). Executive
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits and of reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and promoting
flexibility. This rule has been designated a ``significant regulatory
action,'' although not economically significant, under section 3(f) of
Executive Order 12866. Accordingly, the rule has been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget.
The cost-benefit analysis required pursuant to Executive Orders
13563 and 12866 indicates that this rule is intended to improve
national security as its primary direct benefit. Specifically,
implementation, in a timely manner, of the Australia Group (AG)
agreements described herein will enhance the national security of the
United States by reducing the risk that global international trade
involving dual-use chemical and biological items would contribute to
the proliferation of chemical and biological weapons of mass
destruction. The principal objective of AG participating countries is
to use licensing measures to ensure that exports of certain chemicals,
biological agents, and dual-use chemical and biological manufacturing
facilities and equipment, do not contribute to the proliferation of
chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction, which has been
identified as a threat to domestic and international peace and
security. The AG achieves this objective by harmonizing participating
countries' national export licensing measures. These controls are
essential given that the international chemical and biotechnology
industries are a target for proliferators as a source of materials for
chemical and biological weapons programs.
In calculating the costs that will be imposed by this rule, BIS
estimates that no more than 25 additional license applications will
have to be submitted to BIS, annually, as a result of the
implementation of the amendments described in this rule (see Rulemaking
Requirements #2, below). Application of the cost-benefit analysis
required under Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 to this rule, as
described above, indicates that this rule is intended to improve the
national security of the United States as its primary direct benefit.
Accordingly, consistent with the stated purpose of the proposed
amendments to ECCNs 1C350, 1C351 and 2B352, this rule meets the
requirements set forth in the April 5, 2017, OMB guidance implementing
Executive Order 13771 (82 FR 9339, February 3, 2017), regarding what
constitutes a regulation issued ``with respect to a national security
function of the United States,'' and it is, therefore, exempt from the
requirements of E.O. 13771.
2. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person is
required to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to a penalty
for failure to comply with, a collection of information subject to the
requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.) (PRA), unless that collection of information displays a currently
valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Control Number. This rule
contains the following collections of information subject to the
requirements of the PRA. These collections have been approved by OMB
under control numbers 0694-0088 (Simplified Network Application
Processing System) and 0694-0096 (Five Year Records Retention Period).
The approved information collection under OMB control number 0694-0088
includes license applications, among other things, and carries a burden
estimate of 29.6 minutes per manual or electronic submission for a
total burden estimate of 31,833 hours. The approved information
collection under OMB control number 0694-0096 includes recordkeeping
requirements and carries a burden estimate of less than 1 minute per
response for a total burden estimate of 248 hours.
Although this rule contains important changes to the EAR for items
controlled for chemical/biological (CB) reasons, BIS believes the
overall increase in costs and burdens due to the implementation of
these changes will be minimal. Specifically, BIS expects the burden
hours associated with these collections will increase, slightly, by 12
hours and 45 minutes (i.e., 25 applications x 30.6 minutes per
response) for a total
[[Page 36487]]
estimated cost increase of $382.50 (i.e., 12 hours and 45 minutes x $30
per hour). The $30 per hour cost estimate for OMB control numbers 0694-
0088 and 0694-0096 is consistent with the salary data for export
compliance specialists currently available through glassdoor.com
(glassdoor.com estimates that an export compliance specialist makes
$55,280 annually, which computes to roughly $26.58 per hour). This
increase is not expected to exceed the existing estimates currently
associated with OMB control numbers 0694-0088 and 0694-0096. Send
comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this
collection of information, including suggestions for reducing the
burden, to Jasmeet Seehra, Office of Management and Budget, by email to
[email protected] or by fax to (202) 395-7285; and to the
Regulatory Policy Division, Bureau of Industry and Security, Department
of Commerce, 14th Street & Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Room 2705,
Washington, DC 20230 or by email to [email protected].
3. This rule does not contain policies with Federalism implications
as that term is defined in Executive Order 13132.
4. Pursuant to Section 1762 of the Export Control Reform Act of
2018 (50 U.S.C. Sec. 4821), this action is exempt from the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (5 U.S.C. 553) requirements for
notice of proposed rulemaking, opportunity for public participation and
delay in effective date.
Because a notice of proposed rulemaking and an opportunity for
public comment are not required to be given for this rule by the APA or
any other law, the analytical requirements of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) are not applicable. Accordingly,
no regulatory flexibility analysis is required, and none has been
prepared.
List of Subjects
15 CFR Part 748
Administrative practice and procedure, Exports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
15 CFR Part 774
Exports, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, parts 748 and 774 of the
Export Administration Regulations (15 CFR parts 730-774) are amended as
follows:
PART 748--[AMENDED]
0
1. The authority citation for 15 CFR part 748 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 50 U.S.C. 4801-4582; 50 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.; 50
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.; E.O. 13026, 61 FR 58767, 3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p.
228; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 783; Notice of
August 14, 2019, 84 FR 41881 (August 15, 2019).
0
2. Supplement 7 to part 748 is amended by revising the validated end-
user entries for ``Samsung China Semiconductor Co. Ltd.'' and
``Shanghai Huahong Grace Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation,''
listed under the country ``China (People's Republic of)'' to read as
follows:
Supplement No. 7 to Part 748--Authorization Validated End-User (VEU): List of Validated End-Users, Respective
Items Eligible for Export, Reexport and Transfer, and Eligible Destinations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eligible items (by Federal Register
Country Validated end-user ECCN) Eligible destination citation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nothing in this Supplement shall be deemed to supersede other provisions in the EAR, including but not limited
to Sec. 748.15(c).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
China (People's Republic * * * * * *
of)
Samsung China 1C350.c.4, Samsung China 78 FR 41291, 7/10/
Semiconductor Co. 1C350.d.14, Semiconductor Co., 13. 78 FR 69535,
Ltd. 2B006.a, Ltd., No. 1999, 11/20/13. 79 FR
2B006.b.1.d, 2B230, North Xiaohe Road, 30713, 5/29/14. 80
2B350.d.2, Xi'an, China 710119. FR 11863, 3/5/15.
2B350.g.3,
2B350.i.3, 3A233,
3B001.a.1, 3B001.b,
3B001.e, 3B001.f,
3B001.h, 3C002,
3C004, 3D002, and
3E001 (limited to
``technology'' for
items classified
under 3C002 and
3C004 and
``technology'' for
use consistent with
the International
Technology Roadmap
for Semiconductors
process for items
classified under
ECCNs 3B001 and
3B002).
[[Page 36488]]
Shanghai Huahong 1C350.c.4, Shanghai Huahong 78 FR 32981, 6/3/
Grace Semiconductor 1C350.d.14, 2B230, Grace Semiconductor 13.
Manufacturing 2B350.d.2, Manufacturing
Corporation. 2B350.g.3, Corporation--HFab
2B350.i.4, 2, 668 Guoshoujing
3B001.a.1, 3B001.b, Road, Zhangjiang Hi-
3B001.e, 3B001.f, Tech Park, Shanghai
3B001.h, 3C002, 201203 China.
3C004, 5B002, and Shanghai Huahong
5E002 (controlled Grace Semiconductor
by ECCNs 5A002, Manufacturing
5A004, or 5A992 Corporation--HFab
that have been 1, 1188 Chuanqiao
successfully Road, Pudong,
reviewed under the Shanghai 201206
encryption review China.
process specified Shanghai Huahong
in Sections Grace Semiconductor
740.17(b)(2) or Manufacturing
740.17(b)(3) of the Corporation--GFab1,
EAR). 1399 Zuchongzhi
Road, Zhangjiang Hi-
Tech Park, Shanghai
201203 China.
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 774--[AMENDED]
0
3. The authority citation for 15 CFR part 774 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 50 U.S.C. 4801-4852; 50 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.; 50
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.; 10 U.S.C. 8720; 10 U.S.C. 8730(e); 22 U.S.C.
287c, 22 U.S.C. 3201 et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 6004; 42 U.S.C. 2139a; 15
U.S.C. 1824; 50 U.S.C. 4305; 22 U.S.C. 7201 et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 7210;
E.O. 13026, 61 FR 58767, 3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 228; E.O. 13222, 66
FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 783.
0
4. Supplement 1 to part 774 is amended in category 1 by revising ECCN
1C350 and ECCN 1C351 and in category 2 by revising ECCN 2B352 to read
as follows:
Supplement No. 1 to Part 774--The Commerce Control List
* * * * *
Category 1--Special Materials and Related Equipment, Chemicals,
``Microorganisms,'' and ``Toxins''
* * * * *
1C350 Chemicals that may be used as precursors for toxic chemical
agents (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: CB, CW, AT
Country chart (see supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
CB applies to entire entry................ CB Column 2.
CW applies to 1C350.b, and .c. The Commerce Country Chart is not
designed to determine licensing requirements for items controlled
for CW reasons. A license is required, for CW reasons, to export or
reexport Schedule 2 chemicals and mixtures identified in 1C350.b to
States not Party to the CWC (destinations not listed in Supplement
No. 2 to part 745 of the EAR). A license is required, for CW
reasons, to export Schedule 3 chemicals and mixtures identified in
1C350.c to States not Party to the CWC, unless an End-Use
Certificate issued by the government of the importing country has
been obtained by the exporter prior to export. A license is
required, for CW reasons, to reexport Schedule 3 chemicals and
mixtures identified in 1C350.c from a State not Party to the CWC to
any other State not Party to the CWC. (See Sec. 742.18 of the EAR
for license requirements and policies for toxic and precursor
chemicals controlled for CW reasons. See Sec. 745.2 of the EAR for
End-Use Certificate requirements that apply to exports of Schedule 3
chemicals to countries not listed in Supplement No. 2 to part 745 of
the EAR.)
AT applies to entire entry. The Commerce Country Chart is not
designed to determine licensing requirements for items controlled
for AT reasons in 1C350. A license is required, for AT reasons, to
export or reexport items controlled by 1C350 to a country in Country
Group E:1 of Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR. (See part 742
of the EAR for additional information on the AT controls that apply
to Iran, North Korea, Sudan, and Syria. See part 746 of the EAR for
additional information on sanctions that apply to Iran, North Korea,
and Syria.)
License Requirement Notes: 1. Sample Shipments: Subject to the
following requirements and restrictions, a license is not required
for sample shipments when the cumulative total of these shipments
does not exceed a 55-gallon container or 200 kg of a single chemical
to any one consignee during a calendar year. A consignee that
receives a sample shipment under this exclusion may not resell,
transfer, or reexport the sample shipment, but may use the sample
shipment for any other legal purpose unrelated to chemical weapons.
a. Chemicals Not Eligible:
A. [Reserved]
B. CWC Schedule 2 chemicals (States not Party to the CWC). No
CWC Schedule 2 chemical or mixture identified in 1C350.b is eligible
for sample shipment to States not Party to the CWC (destinations not
listed in Supplement No. 2 to part 745 of the EAR) without a
license.
b. Countries Not Eligible: Countries in Country Group E:1 of
Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR are not eligible to receive
sample shipments of any chemicals controlled by this ECCN without a
license.
c. Sample shipments that require an End-Use Certificate for CW
reasons: No CWC Schedule 3 chemical or mixture identified in 1C350.c
is eligible for sample shipment to States not Party to the CWC
(destinations not listed in Supplement No. 2 to part 745 of the EAR)
without a license, unless an End-Use Certificate issued by the
government of the importing country is obtained by the exporter
prior to export (see Sec. 745.2 of the EAR for End-Use Certificate
requirements).
d. Sample shipments that require a license for reasons set forth
elsewhere in the EAR: Sample shipments, as described in this Note 1,
may require a license for reasons set forth elsewhere in the EAR.
See, in particular, the end-use/end-user restrictions in part 744 of
the EAR, and the restrictions that apply to embargoed countries in
part 746 of the EAR.
[[Page 36489]]
e. Annual report requirement. The exporter is required to submit
an annual written report for shipments of samples made under this
Note 1. The report must be on company letterhead stationery (titled
``Report of Sample Shipments of Chemical Precursors'' at the top of
the first page) and identify the chemical(s), Chemical Abstract
Service Registry (C.A.S.) number(s), quantity(ies), the ultimate
consignee's name and address, and the date of export for all sample
shipments that were made during the previous calendar year. The
report must be submitted no later than February 28 of the year
following the calendar year in which the sample shipments were made,
to: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security,
14th Street and Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Room 2099B, Washington, DC
20230, Attn: ``Report of Sample Shipments of Chemical Precursors.''
2. Mixtures:
a. Mixtures that contain precursor chemicals identified in ECCN
1C350, in concentrations that are below the levels indicated in
1C350.b through .d, are controlled by ECCN 1C395 or 1C995 and are
subject to the licensing requirements specified in those ECCNs.
b. A license is not required under this ECCN for a mixture, when
the controlled chemical in the mixture is a normal ingredient in
consumer goods packaged for retail sale for personal use. Such
consumer goods are designated EAR99. However, a license may be
required for reasons set forth elsewhere in the EAR.
Note to mixtures: Calculation of concentrations of AG-controlled
chemicals:
a. Exclusion. No chemical may be added to the mixture (solution)
for the sole purpose of circumventing the Export Administration
Regulations;
b. Percent Weight Calculation. When calculating the percentage,
by weight, of ingredients in a chemical mixture, include all
ingredients of the mixture, including those that act as solvents.
3. Compounds. Compounds created with any chemicals identified in
this ECCN 1C350 may be shipped NLR (No License Required), without
obtaining an End-Use Certificate, unless those compounds are also
identified in this entry or require a license for reasons set forth
elsewhere in the EAR.
4. Testing Kits: Certain medical, analytical, diagnostic, and
food testing kits containing small quantities of chemicals
identified in this ECCN 1C350, are excluded from the scope of this
ECCN and are controlled under ECCN 1C395 or 1C995. (Note that
replacement reagents for such kits are controlled by this ECCN 1C350
if the reagents contain one or more of the precursor chemicals
identified in 1C350 in concentrations equal to or greater than the
control levels for mixtures indicated in 1C350.)
Technical Notes: 1. For purposes of this entry, a ``mixture''
is defined as a solid, liquid or gaseous product made up of two or
more ingredients that do not react together under normal storage
conditions.
2. The scope of this control applicable to Hydrogen Fluoride
(see 1C350.d.14 in the List of Items Controlled) includes its
liquid, gaseous, and aqueous phases, and hydrates.
3. Precursor chemicals in ECCN 1C350 are listed by name,
Chemical Abstract Service (CAS) number and CWC Schedule (where
applicable). Precursor chemicals of the same structural formula
(e.g., hydrates) are controlled by ECCN 1C350, regardless of name or
CAS number. CAS numbers are shown to assist in identifying whether a
particular precursor chemical or mixture is controlled under ECCN
1C350, irrespective of nomenclature. However, CAS numbers cannot be
used as unique identifiers in all situations because some forms of
the listed precursor chemical have different CAS numbers, and
mixtures containing a precursor chemical listed in ECCN 1C350 may
also have different CAS numbers.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
CIV: N/A
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: See USML Category XIV(c) for related chemicals
``subject to the ITAR'' (see 22 CFR parts 120 through 130).
Related Definitions: See Sec. 770.2(k) of the EAR for synonyms for
the chemicals listed in this entry.
Items:
a. [Reserved]
b. Australia Group-controlled precursor chemicals also
identified as Schedule 2 chemicals under the CWC, as follows, and
mixtures in which at least one of the following chemicals
constitutes 30 percent or more of the weight of the mixture:
b.1. (C.A.S. #7784-34-1) Arsenic trichloride;
b.2. (C.A.S. #76-93-7) Benzilic acid;
b.3. (C.A.S. #78-38-6) Diethyl ethylphosphonate;
b.4. (C.A.S. #683-08-9) Diethyl methylphosphonate;
b.5. (C.A.S. #15715-41-0) Diethyl methylphosphonite;
b.6. (C.A.S. #2404-03-7) Diethyl-N,N-dimethylphosphoroamidate;
b.7. (C.A.S. #41480-75-5) N,N-Diisopropylaminoethanethiol
hydrochloride;
b.8. (C.A.S. #5842-07-9) N,N-Diisopropyl-beta-aminoethane thiol;
b.9. (C.A.S. #96-80-0) N,N-Diisopropyl-beta-aminoethanol;
b.10. (C.A.S. #96-79-7), N,N-Diisopropyl-beta-aminoethyl
chloride;
b.11. (C.A.S. #4261-68-1) N,N-Diisopropyl-beta-aminoethyl
chloride hydrochloride;
b.12. (C.A.S. #6163-75-3) Dimethyl ethylphosphonate;
b.13. (C.A.S. #756-79-6) Dimethyl methylphosphonate;
b.14. (C.A.S. #677-43-0) N,N-Dimethylamino-phosphoryl
dichloride;
b.15. (C.A.S. #1498-40-4) Ethyl phosphonous dichloride [Ethyl
phosphinyl dichloride];
b.16. (C.A.S. #430-78-4) Ethyl phosphonus difluoride [Ethyl
phosphinyl difluoride];
b.17. (C.A.S. #1066-50-8) Ethyl phosphonyl dichloride;
b.18. (C.A.S. #993-13-5) Methylphosphonic acid;
b.19. (C.A.S. #676-98-2) Methylphos-phonothioic dichloride;
b.20. (C.A.S. #464-07-3) Pinacolyl alcohol;
b.21. (C.A.S. #1619-34-7) 3-Quinuclidinol;
b.22. (C.A.S. #111-48-8) Thiodiglycol.
c. Australia Group-controlled precursor chemicals also
identified as Schedule 3 chemicals under the CWC, as follows, and
mixtures in which at least one of the following chemicals
constitutes 30 percent or more of the weight of the mixture:
c.1. (C.A.S. #762-04-9) Diethyl phosphite;
c.2. (C.A.S. #868-85-9) Dimethyl phosphite (dimethyl hydrogen
phosphite);
c.3. (C.A.S. #139-87-7) Ethyldiethanolamine;
c.4. (C.A.S. #10025-87-3) Phosphorus oxychloride;
c.5. (C.A.S. #10026-13-8) Phosphorus pentachloride;
c.6. (C.A.S. #7719-12-2) Phosphorus trichloride;
c.7. (C.A.S. #10545-99-0) Sulfur dichloride;
c.8. (C.A.S. #10025-67-9) Sulfur monochloride;
c.9. (C.A.S. #7719-09-7) Thionyl chloride;
c.10. (C.A.S. #102-71-6) Triethanolamine;
c.11. (C.A.S. #122-52-1) Triethyl phosphite;
c.12. (C.A.S. #121-45-9) Trimethyl phosphite.
d. Other Australia Group-controlled precursor chemicals not also
identified as Schedule 1, 2, or 3 chemicals under the CWC, as
follows, and mixtures in which at least one of the following
chemicals constitutes 30 percent or more of the weight of the
mixture:
d.1. (C.A.S. #1341-49-7) Ammonium hydrogen fluoride;
d.2. (C.A.S. #107-07-3) 2-Chloroethanol;
d.3. (C.A.S. #109-89-7) Diethylamine;
d.4. (C.A.S. #100-37-8) N,N-Diethylaminoethanol;
d.5. (C.A.S. #589-57-1) Diethyl chlorophosphite;
d.6. (C.A.S. #298-06-6) O,O-Diethyl phosphorodithioate;
d.7. (C.A.S. #2465-65-8) O,O-Diethyl phosphorothioate;
d.8. (C.A.S. #108-18-9) Di-isopropylamine;
d.9. (C.A.S. #124-40-3) Dimethylamine;
d.10. (C.A.S. #506-59-2) Dimethylamine hydrochloride;
d.11. (C.A.S. #762-77-6) Ethyl chlorofluorophosphate;
d.12. (C.A.S. #1498-51-7) Ethyl dichlorophosphate;
d.13. (C.A.S. #460-52-6) Ethyl difluorophosphate;
d.14. (C.A.S. #7664-39-3) Hydrogen fluoride;
d.15. (C.A.S. #3554-74-3) 3-Hydroxyl-1-methylpiperidine;
d.16. (C.A.S. #76-89-1) Methyl benzilate;
d.17. (C.A.S. #754-01-8) Methyl chlorofluorophosphate;
d.18. (C.A.S. #677-24-7) Methyl dichlorophosphate;
d.19. (C.A.S. #22382-13-4) Methyl difluorophosphate;
d.20. (C.A.S. #14277-06-6) N,N Diethylacetamidine;
[[Page 36490]]
d.21. (C.A.S. #53510-30-8) N,N-Diethylbutanamidine;
d.22. (C.A.S. #90324-67-7) N,N-Diethylformamidine;
d.23. (C.A.S. #1342789-47-2) N,N Diethylisobutanamidine;
d.24. (C.A.S. #84764-73-8) N,N-Diethylpropanamidine;
d.25. (C.A.S. #1315467-17-4) N,N-Diisopropylbutanamidine;
d.26. (C.A.S. #857522-08-8) N,N-Diisopropylformamidine;
d.27. (C.A.S. #2909-14-0) N,N-Dimethylacetamidine;
d.28. (C.A.S. #1340437-35-5) N,N-Dimethylbutanamidine;
d.29. (C.A.S. #44205-42-7) N,N-Dimethylformamidine;
d.30. (C.A.S. #321881-25-8) N,N-Dimethylisobutanamidine;
d.31. (C.A.S. #56776-14-8) N,N-Dimethylpropanamidine;
d.32. (C.A.S. #1339586-99-0) N,N-Dipropylacetamidine;
d.33. (C.A.S. #1342422-35-8) N,N-Dipropylbutanamidine;
d.34. (C.A.S. #48044-20-8) N,N-Dipropylformamidine;
d.35. (C.A.S. #1342700-45-1) N,N-Dipropylisobutanamidine;
d.36. (C.A.S. #1341496-89-6) N,N-Dipropylpropanamidine;
d.37. (C.A.S. #1314-80-3) Phosphorus pentasulfide;
d.38. (C.A.S. #75-97-8) Pinacolone;
d.39. (C.A.S. #7789-29-9) Potassium bifluoride;
d.40. (C.A.S. #151-50-8) Potassium cyanide;
d.41. (C.A.S. #7789-23-3) Potassium fluoride;
d.42. (C.A.S. #3731-38-2) 3-Quinuclidone;
d.43. (C.A.S. #1333-83-1) Sodium bifluoride;
d.44. (C.A.S. #143-33-9) Sodium cyanide;
d.45. (C.A.S. #7681-49-4) Sodium fluoride;
d.46. (C.A.S. #16893-85-9) Sodium hexafluorosilicate;
d.47. (C.A.S. #1313-82-2) Sodium sulfide;
d.48. (C.A.S. #637-39-8) Triethanolamine hydrochloride;
d.49. (C.A.S. #116-17-6) Tri-isopropyl phosphite.
1C351 Human and Animal Pathogens and ``Toxins'', as Follows (See
List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: CB, CW, AT.
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
CB applies to entire entry................ CB Column 1.
CW applies to 1C351.d.11 and d.12 and a license is required for
CW reasons for all destinations, including Canada, as follows: CW
applies to 1C351.d.11 for ricin in the form of (1) Ricinus Communis
AgglutininII (RCAII), also known as ricin D or Ricinus Communis
LectinIII (RCLIII) and (2) Ricinus Communis LectinIV (RCLIV), also
known as ricin E. CW applies to 1C351.d.12 for saxitoxin identified
by C.A.S. #35523-89-8. See Sec. 742.18 of the EAR for licensing
information pertaining to chemicals subject to restriction pursuant
to the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC). The Commerce Country Chart
is not designed to determine licensing requirements for items
controlled for CW reasons.
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
License Requirement Notes: 1. All vaccines and ``immunotoxins''
are excluded from the scope of this entry. Certain medical products
and diagnostic and food testing kits that contain biological toxins
controlled under paragraph (d) of this entry, with the exception of
toxins controlled for CW reasons under d.11 and d.12, are excluded
from the scope of this entry. Vaccines, ``immunotoxins'', certain
medical products, and diagnostic and food testing kits excluded from
the scope of this entry are controlled under ECCN 1C991.
2. For the purposes of this entry, only saxitoxin is controlled
under paragraph d.12; other members of the paralytic shellfish
poison family (e.g., neosaxitoxin) are designated EAR99.
3. Clostridium perfringens strains, other than the epsilon
toxin-producing strains of Clostridium perfringens described in
c.12, are excluded from the scope of this entry, since they may be
used as positive control cultures for food testing and quality
control.
4. Unless specified elsewhere in this ECCN 1C351 (e.g., in
License Requirement Notes 1-3), this ECCN controls all biological
agents and ``toxins,'' regardless of quantity or attenuation, that
are identified in the List of Items Controlled for this ECCN,
including small quantities or attenuated strains of select
biological agents or ``toxins'' that are excluded from the lists of
select biological agents or ``toxins'' by the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service (APHIS), U.S. Department of Agriculture,
or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, in accordance with their
regulations in 9 CFR part 121 and 42 CFR part 73, respectively.
5. Biological agents and pathogens are controlled under this
ECCN 1C351 when they are an isolated live culture of a pathogen
agent, or a preparation of a toxin agent that has been isolated or
extracted from any source or material, including living material
that has been deliberately inoculated or contaminated with the
agent. Isolated live cultures of a pathogen agent include live
cultures in dormant form or in dried preparations, whether the agent
is natural, enhanced or modified.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
CIV: N/A
Special Conditions for STA
STA: (1) Paragraph (c)(1) of License Exception STA (Sec.
740.20(c)(1)) may be used for items in 1C351.d.1 through 1C351.d.10
and 1C351.d.13 through 1C351.d.19. See Sec. 740.20(b)(2)(vi) for
restrictions on the quantity of any one toxin that may be exported
in a single shipment and the number of shipments that may be made to
any one end user in a single calendar year. Also see the Automated
Export System (AES) requirements in Sec. 758.1(b)(4) of the EAR.
(2) Paragraph (c)(2) of License Exception STA (Sec. 740.20(c)(2) of
the EAR) may not be used for any items in 1C351.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) Certain forms of ricin and saxitoxin in
1C351.d.11. and d.12 are CWC Schedule 1 chemicals (see Sec. 742.18
of the EAR). The U.S. Government must provide advance notification
and annual reports to the OPCW of all exports of Schedule 1
chemicals. See Sec. 745.1 of the EAR for notification procedures.
See 22 CFR part 121, Category XIV and Sec. 121.7 for CWC Schedule 1
chemicals that are ``subject to the ITAR.'' (2) The Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service (APHIS), U.S. Department of Agriculture,
and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, maintain controls on the
possession, use, and transfer within the United States of certain
items controlled by this ECCN (for APHIS, see 7 CFR 331.3(b), 9 CFR
121.3(b), and 9 CFR 121.4(b); for CDC, see 42 CFR 73.3(b) and 42 CFR
73.4(b)). (3) See 22 CFR part 121, Category XIV(b), for modified
biological agents and biologically derived substances that are
``subject to the ITAR.''
Related Definitions: (1) For the purposes of this entry
``immunotoxin'' is defined as an antibody-toxin conjugate intended
to destroy specific target cells (e.g., tumor cells) that bear
antigens homologous to the antibody. (2) For the purposes of this
entry ``subunit'' is defined as a portion of the ``toxin''.
Items:
a. Viruses identified on the Australia Group (AG) ``List of
Human and Animal Pathogens and Toxins for Export Control,'' as
follows:
a.1. African horse sickness virus;
a.2. African swine fever virus;
a.3. Andes virus;
a.4. Avian influenza (AI) viruses identified as having high
pathogenicity (HP), as follows:
a.4.a. AI viruses that have an intravenous pathogenicity index
(IVPI) in 6-week-old chickens greater than 1.2; or
a.4.b. AI viruses that cause at least 75% mortality in 4- to 8-
week-old chickens infected intravenously.
Note: Avian influenza (AI) viruses of the H5 or H7 subtype that
do not have either of the characteristics described in 1C351.a.4
(specifically, 1C351.a.4.a or a.4.b) should be sequenced to
determine whether multiple basic amino acids are present at the
cleavage site of the haemagglutinin molecule (HA0). If the amino
acid motif is similar to that observed for other HPAI isolates, then
the isolate being tested should be considered as HPAI and the virus
is controlled under 1C351.a.4.
[[Page 36491]]
a.5. Bluetongue virus;
a.6. Chapare virus;
a.7. Chikungunya virus;
a.8. Choclo virus;
a.9. Classical swine fever virus (Hog cholera virus);
a.10. Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus;
a.11. Dobrava-Belgrade virus;
a.12. Eastern equine encephalitis virus;
a.13. Ebolavirus (includes all members of the Ebolavirus genus);
a.14. Foot-and-mouth disease virus;
a.15. Goatpox virus;
a.16. Guanarito virus;
a.17. Hantaan virus;
a.18. Hendra virus (Equine morbillivirus);
a.19. Japanese encephalitis virus;
a.20. Junin virus;
a.21. Kyasanur Forest disease virus;
a.22. Laguna Negra virus;
a.23. Lassa virus;
a.24. Louping ill virus;
a.25. Lujo virus;
a.26. Lumpy skin disease virus;
a.27. Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus;
a.28. Machupo virus;
a.29. Marburgvirus (includes all members of the Marburgvirus
genus);
a.30. Middle East respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus
(MERS-related coronavirus);
a.31. Monkeypox virus;
a.32. Murray Valley encephalitis virus;
a.33. Newcastle disease virus;
a.34. Nipah virus;
a.35. Omsk hemorrhagic fever virus;
a.36. Oropouche virus;
a.37. Peste-des-petits ruminants virus;
a.38. Porcine Teschovirus;
a.39. Powassan virus;
a.40. Rabies virus and all other members of the Lyssavirus
genus;
a.41. Reconstructed 1918 influenza virus;
Technical Note: 1C351.a.41 includes reconstructed replication
competent forms of the 1918 pandemic influenza virus containing any
portion of the coding regions of all eight gene segments.
a.42. Rift Valley fever virus;
a.43. Rinderpest virus;
a.44. Rocio virus;
a.45. Sabia virus;
a.46. Seoul virus;
a.47. Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus
(SARS-related coronavirus);
a.48. Sheeppox virus;
a.49. Sin Nombre virus;
a.50. St. Louis encephalitis virus;
a.51. Suid herpesvirus 1 (Pseudorabies virus; Aujeszky's
disease);
a.52. Swine vesicular disease virus;
a.53. Tick-borne encephalitis virus (Far Eastern subtype,
formerly known as Russian Spring-Summer encephalitis virus--see
1C351.b.3 for Siberian subtype);
a.54. Variola virus;
a.55. Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus;
a.56. Vesicular stomatitis virus;
a.57. Western equine encephalitis virus; or
a.58. Yellow fever virus.
b. Viruses identified on the APHIS/CDC ``select agents'' lists
(see Related Controls paragraph #2 for this ECCN), but not
identified on the Australia Group (AG) ``List of Human and Animal
Pathogens and Toxins for Export Control,'' as follows:
b.1. [Reserved];
b.2. [Reserved]; or
b.3. Tick-borne encephalitis virus (Siberian subtype, formerly
West Siberian virus--see 1C351.a.53 for Far Eastern subtype).
c. Bacteria identified on the Australia Group (AG) ``List of
Human and Animal Pathogens and Toxins for Export Control,'' as
follows:
c.1. Bacillus anthracis;
c.2. Brucella abortus;
c.3. Brucella melitensis;
c.4. Brucella suis;
c.5. Burkholderia mallei (Pseudomonas mallei);
c.6. Burkholderia pseudomallei (Pseudomonas pseudomallei);
c.7. Chlamydia psittaci (Chlamydophila psittaci);
c.8. Clostriduim argentinense (formerly known as Clostridium
botulinum Type G), botulinum neurotoxin producing strains;
c.9. Clostridium baratii, botulinum neurotoxin producing
strains;
c.10. Clostridium botulinum;
c.11. Clostridium butyricum, botulinum neurotoxin producing
strains;
c.12. Clostridium perfringens, epsilon toxin producing types;
c.13. Coxiella burnetii;
c.14. Francisella tularensis;
c.15. Mycoplasma capricolum subspecies capripneumoniae (``strain
F38'');
c.16. Mycoplasma mycoides subspecies mycoides SC (small colony)
(a.k.a. contagious bovine pleuropneumonia);
c.17. Rickettsia prowazekii;
c.18. Salmonella enterica subspecies enterica serovar Typhi
(Salmonella typhi);
c.19. Shiga toxin producing Escherichia coli (STEC) of
serogroups O26, O45, O103, O104, O111, O121, O145, O157, and other
shiga toxin producing serogroups;
Note: Shiga toxin producing Escherichia coli (STEC) includes,
inter alia, enterohaemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC), verotoxin producing
E. coli (VTEC) or verocytotoxin producing E. coli (VTEC).
c.20. Shigella dysenteriae;
c.21. Vibrio cholerae; or
c.22. Yersinia pestis.
d. ``Toxins'' identified on the Australia Group (AG) ``List of
Human and Animal Pathogens and Toxins for Export Control,'' as
follows, and ``subunits'' thereof:
d.1. Abrin;
d.2. Aflatoxins;
d.3. Botulinum toxins;
d.4. Cholera toxin;
d.5. Clostridium perfringens alpha, beta 1, beta 2, epsilon and
iota toxins;
d.6. Conotoxins;
d.7. Diacetoxyscirpenol;
d.8. HT-2 toxin;
d.9. Microcystins (Cyanginosins);
d.10. Modeccin;
d.11. Ricin;
d.12. Saxitoxin;
d.13. Shiga toxins (shiga-like toxins, verotoxins, and
verocytotoxins);
d.14. Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxins, hemolysin alpha toxin,
and toxic shock syndrome toxin (formerly known as Staphylococcus
enterotoxin F);
d.15. T-2 toxin;
d.16. Tetrodotoxin;
d.17. Viscumin (Viscum album lectin 1); or
d.18. Volkensin.
e. ``Fungi'', as follows:
e.1. Coccidioides immitis; or
e.2. Coccidioides posadasii.
* * * * *
Category 2--Materials Processing
* * * * *
2B352 Equipment Capable of Use in Handling Biological Materials, as
Follows (See List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: CB, AT.
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
CB applies to entire entry................ CB Column 2.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
CIV: N/A
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: See ECCNs 1A004 and 1A995 for protective equipment
that is not covered by this entry. Also see ECCN 9A120 for controls
on certain ``UAV'' systems designed or modified to dispense an
aerosol and capable of carrying elements of a payload in the form of
a particulate or liquid, other than fuel ``parts'' or ``components''
of such vehicles, of a volume greater than 20 liters.
Related Definitions: (1) ``Lighter than air vehicles''--balloons and
airships that rely on hot air or on lighter-than-air gases, such as
helium or hydrogen, for their lift. (2) ``UAVs''--Unmanned Aerial
Vehicles. (3) ``VMD''--Volume Median Diameter.
Items:
a. Containment facilities and related equipment, as follows:
a.1. Complete containment facilities at P3 or P4 containment
level.
Technical Note to 2B352.a.1: P3 or P4 (BL3, BL4, L3, L4)
containment levels are as specified in the WHO Laboratory Biosafety
Manual (3rd edition, Geneva, 2004).
a.2. Equipment designed for fixed installation in containment
facilities specified in paragraph a.1 of this ECCN, as follows:
a.2.a. Double-door pass-through decontamination autoclaves;
a.2.b. Breathing air suit decontamination showers;
a.2.c. Mechanical-seal or inflatable-seal walkthrough doors.
b. Fermenters and components as follows:
b.1. Fermenters capable of cultivation of micro-organisms or of
live cells for the production of viruses or toxins, without the
propagation of aerosols, having a total internal volume of 20 liters
or greater.
b.2. Components designed for such fermenters, as follows:
[[Page 36492]]
b.2.a. Cultivation chambers designed to be sterilized or
disinfected in situ;
b.2.b. Cultivation chamber holding devices; or
b.2.c. Process control units capable of simultaneously
monitoring and controlling two or more fermentation system
parameters (e.g., temperature, pH, nutrients, agitation, dissolved
oxygen, air flow, foam control).
Technical Notes to 2B352.b: 1. Fermenters include bioreactors
(including single-use (disposable) bioreactors), chemostats and
continuous-flow systems.
2. Cultivation chamber holding devices controlled by 2B352.b.2.b
include single-use cultivation chambers with rigid walls.
c. Centrifugal separators capable of the continuous separation
of pathogenic microorganisms, without the propagation of aerosols,
and having all of the following characteristics:
c.1. One or more sealing joints within the steam containment
area;
c.2. A flow rate greater than 100 liters per hour;
c.3. ``Parts'' or ``components'' of polished stainless steel or
titanium; and
c.4. Capable of in-situ steam sterilization in a closed state.
Technical Note to 2B352.c: Centrifugal separators include
decanters.
d. Cross (tangential) flow filtration equipment and
``accessories'', as follows:
d.1. Cross (tangential) flow filtration equipment capable of
separation of microorganisms, viruses, toxins or cell cultures
having all of the following characteristics:
d.1.a. A total filtration area equal to or greater than 1 square
meter (1 m\2\); and
d.1.b. Having any of the following characteristics:
d.1.b.1. Capable of being sterilized or disinfected in-situ; or
d.1.b.2. Using disposable or single-use filtration ``parts'' or
``components''.
N.B.: 2B352.d.1 does not control reverse osmosis and
hemodialysis equipment, as specified by the manufacturer.
d.2. Cross (tangential) flow filtration ``parts'' or
``components'' (e.g., modules, elements, cassettes, cartridges,
units or plates) with filtration area equal to or greater than 0.2
square meters (0.2 m\2\) for each ``part'' or ``component'' and
designed for use in cross (tangential) flow filtration equipment
controlled by 2B352.d.1.
Technical Note: In this ECCN, ``sterilized'' denotes the
elimination of all viable microbes from the equipment through the
use of either physical (e.g., steam) or chemical agents.
``Disinfected'' denotes the destruction of potential microbial
infectivity in the equipment through the use of chemical agents with
a germicidal effect. ``Disinfection'' and ``sterilization'' are
distinct from ``sanitization'', the latter referring to cleaning
procedures designed to lower the microbial content of equipment
without necessarily achieving elimination of all microbial
infectivity or viability.
e. Steam, gas or vapor sterilizable freeze-drying equipment with
a condenser capacity of 10 kg of ice or greater in 24 hours (10
liters of water or greater in 24 hours) and less than 1000 kg of ice
in 24 hours (less than 1,000 liters of water in 24 hours).
f. Spray-drying equipment capable of drying toxins or pathogenic
microorganisms having all of the following characteristics:
f.1. A water evaporation capacity of >=0.4 kg/h and <=400 kg/h;
f.2. The ability to generate a typical mean product particle
size of <=10 micrometers with existing fittings or by minimal
modification of the spray-dryer with atomization nozzles enabling
generation of the required particle size; and
f.3. Capable of being sterilized or disinfected in situ.
g. Protective and containment equipment, as follows:
g.1. Protective full or half suits, or hoods dependent upon a
tethered external air supply and operating under positive pressure.
Technical Note to 2B352.g.1: 2B352.g.1 does not control suits
designed to be worn with self-contained breathing apparatus.
g.2. Biocontainment chambers, isolators, or biological safety
cabinets having all of the following characteristics, for normal
operation:
g.2.a. Fully enclosed workspace where the operator is separated
from the work by a physical barrier;
g.2.b. Able to operate at negative pressure;
g.2.c. Means to safely manipulate items in the workspace; and
g.2.d. Supply and exhaust air to and from the workspace is high-
efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filtered.
Note 1 to 2B352.g.2: 2B352.g.2 controls class III biosafety
cabinets, as specified in the WHO Laboratory Biosafety Manual (3rd
edition, Geneva, 2004) or constructed in accordance with national
standards, regulations or guidance.
Note 2 to 2B352.g.2: 2B352.g.2 does not control isolators
``specially designed'' for barrier nursing or transportation of
infected patients.
h. Aerosol inhalation equipment designed for aerosol challenge
testing with microorganisms, viruses or toxins, as follows:
h.1. Whole-body exposure chambers having a capacity of 1 cubic
meter or greater;
h.2. Nose-only exposure apparatus utilizing directed aerosol
flow and having a capacity for the exposure of 12 or more rodents,
or two or more animals other than rodents, and closed animal
restraint tubes designed for use with such apparatus.
i. Spraying or fogging systems and ``parts'' and ``components''
therefor, as follows:
i.1. Complete spraying or fogging systems, ``specially
designed'' or modified for fitting to aircraft, ``lighter than air
vehicles,'' or ``UAVs,'' capable of delivering, from a liquid
suspension, an initial droplet ``VMD'' of less than 50 microns at a
flow rate of greater than 2 liters per minute;
i.2. Spray booms or arrays of aerosol generating units,
``specially designed'' or modified for fitting to aircraft,
``lighter than air vehicles,'' or ``UAVs,'' capable of delivering,
from a liquid suspension, an initial droplet ``VMD'' of less than 50
microns at a flow rate of greater than 2 liters per minute;
i.3. Aerosol generating units ``specially designed'' for fitting
to the systems as specified in paragraphs i.1 and i.2 of this ECCN.
Technical Notes to 2B352.i: 1. Aerosol generating units are
devices ``specially designed'' or modified for fitting to aircraft
and include nozzles, rotary drum atomizers and similar devices.
2. This ECCN does not control spraying or fogging systems,
``parts'' and ``components,'' as specified in 2B352.i, that are
demonstrated not to be capable of delivering biological agents in
the form of infectious aerosols.
3. Droplet size for spray equipment or nozzles ``specially
designed'' for use on aircraft or ``UAVs'' should be measured using
either of the following methods (pending the adoption of
internationally accepted standards):
a. Doppler laser method,
b. Forward laser diffraction method.
j. Nucleic acid assemblers and synthesizers that are both:
j.1 Partly or entirely automated; and
j.2. Designed to generate continuous nucleic acids greater than
1.5 kilobases in length with error rates less than 5% in a single
run.
* * * * *
Richard E. Ashooh,
Assistant Secretary for Export Administration.
[FR Doc. 2020-11625 Filed 6-16-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-33-P