Implementation of Additional Export Controls: Certain Advanced Computing Items; Supercomputer and Semiconductor End Use; Updates and Corrections, 73458-73517 [2023-23055]
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73458
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Bureau of Industry and Security
15 CFR Parts 732, 734, 736, 740, 742,
744, 746, 748, 758, 770, 772, and 774
[Docket No. 231013–0248]
RIN 0694–AI94
Implementation of Additional Export
Controls: Certain Advanced
Computing Items; Supercomputer and
Semiconductor End Use; Updates and
Corrections
Bureau of Industry and
Security, Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Interim final rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
On October 7, 2022, the
Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS)
released the interim final rule (IFR),
‘‘Implementation of Additional Export
Controls: Certain Advanced Computing
and Semiconductor Manufacturing
Items; Supercomputer and
Semiconductor End Use; Entity List
Modification’’ (October 7 IFR), which
amended the Export Administration
Regulations (EAR) to implement
controls on advanced computing
integrated circuits (ICs), computer
commodities that contain such ICs, and
certain semiconductor manufacturing
items, and to make other EAR changes
to implement appropriate related
controls, including on certain ‘‘U.S.
person’’ activities. This Advanced
Computing/Supercomputing IFR (AC/S
IFR) addresses comments received in
response to only the part of the October
7 IFR that controls advanced computing
ICs and computer commodities that
contain such ICs. This rule also makes
other changes to make the controls more
effective and less burdensome,
including by correcting and clarifying
the controls to more effectively achieve
the policy objectives identified in the
October 7 IFR. This AC/S IFR is
published concurrently with a second
BIS IFR, ‘‘Export Controls on
Semiconductor Manufacturing Items,’’
which addresses public comments
received in response to other portions of
the October 7 IFR. Together, these IFRs
revise the October 7 IFR controls to
more effectively achieve BIS’s focused
national security policy objectives.
These revisions protect U.S. national
security interests by further restricting
China’s ability to obtain critical
technologies to modernize its military
capabilities in ways that threaten the
national security interests of the United
States and its allies.
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SUMMARY:
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This rule is effective November
17, 2023, except for amendatory
instruction 11 amending supplement
no. 1 to part 736 of the EAR, which is
effective from November 17, 2023, to
January 1, 2026.
Comments must be received by BIS no
later than December 18, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments on this rule may
be submitted to the Federal rulemaking
portal (www.regulations.gov). The
regulations.gov ID for this rule is: BIS–
2022–0025. Please refer to RIN 0694–
AI94 in all comments.
All filers using the portal should use
the name of the person or entity
submitting the comments as the name of
their files, in accordance with the
instructions below. Anyone submitting
business confidential information
should clearly identify the business
confidential portion at the time of
submission, file a statement justifying
nondisclosure and referring to the
specific legal authority claimed, and
provide a non-confidential version of
the submission.
For comments submitted
electronically containing business
confidential information, the file name
of the business confidential version
should begin with the characters ‘‘BC.’’
Any page containing business
confidential information must be clearly
marked ‘‘BUSINESS CONFIDENTIAL’’
on the top of that page. The
corresponding non-confidential version
of those comments must be clearly
marked ‘‘PUBLIC.’’ The file name of the
non-confidential version should begin
with the character ‘‘P.’’ Any
submissions with file names that do not
begin with either a ‘‘BC’’ or a ‘‘P’’ will
be assumed to be public and will be
made publicly available through https://
www.regulations.gov. Commenters
submitting business confidential
information are encouraged to scan a
hard copy of the non-confidential
version to create an image of the file,
rather than submitting a digital copy
with redactions applied, to avoid
inadvertent redaction errors which
could enable the public to read business
confidential information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
questions on the license requirements in
the October 7 IFR or the revisions
included in this AC/S IFR, contact
Aaron Amundson, Director, Information
Technology Controls Division, Bureau
of Industry and Security, Department of
Commerce, Phone: (202) 482–5299,
Email: rpd2@bis.doc.gov. For emails,
include ‘‘Advanced computing
controls’’ in the subject line.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
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Background
A. Introduction
On October 7, 2022, BIS released the
interim final rule (IFR),
‘‘Implementation of Additional Export
Controls: Certain Advanced Computing
and Semiconductor Manufacturing
Items; Supercomputer and
Semiconductor End Use; Entity List
Modification,’’ which made critical
changes to the Export Administration
Regulations (15 CFR parts 730–774)
(EAR) in two areas to address U.S.
national security concerns and
requested public comments on the
newly imposed measures. This IFR was
published in the Federal Register on
October 13, 2022 (October 7 IFR) (87 FR
62186). BIS imposed these new controls
to protect U.S. national security
interests by restricting certain exports to
China that would advance China’s
military modernization and surveillance
efforts. With a calibrated approach,
focused on key, cutting-edge
technologies, BIS also sought not to
undercut U.S. technology leadership or
unduly interfere with commercial trade.
As noted in the Export Control Reform
Act of 2018 (50 U.S.C. 4801–4852,
ECRA), the national security of the
United States requires that the United
States maintain its leadership in the
science, technology, engineering, and
manufacturing sectors, including
technology that is essential to
innovation.
The advanced computing ICs and
supercomputing capacity controlled
through the October 7 IFR are critical for
preventing or limiting the further
development of weapons of mass
destruction, advanced weapons systems,
and high-tech surveillance applications
that create national security concerns,
including through their use in exascale
supercomputing, and artificial
intelligence (AI) capabilities. Advanced
AI models, trained on advanced
computing ICs, can be used to improve
the design and use of the items listed
above. The PRC seeks to use advanced
computing ICs and supercomputing
capacity in the development and
deployment of these AI models to
further its goal of surpassing the
military capabilities of the United States
and its allies.
The October 7 IFR imposed controls
on two sets of items and activities. First,
the rule established new Export Control
Classification Numbers (ECCNs) and
end-use controls on certain advanced
computing ICs, computer commodities
that contain such ICs, and
supercomputers. Second, it established
a new ECCN for certain semiconductor
manufacturing equipment (SME) and
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end-use controls related to the
‘‘development’’ and ‘‘production’’ of
three types of ‘‘advanced-node ICs,’’ as
well as end-use controls on the
‘‘development’’ and ‘‘production’’ of
SME.
Today, BIS addresses these two issues
separately through publication of this
AC/S IFR and a second BIS IFR, ‘‘Export
Controls on Semiconductor
Manufacturing Items’’ (SME IFR).
Together, these IFRs further advance the
U.S. national security objectives
identified above and further discussed
in section C of this rule. This AC/S IFR
focuses on the advanced computing
controls and related end use provisions
of the October 7 IFR and amends the
EAR to expand the scope of the October
7 IFR while responding to comments
from stakeholders about the advanced
computing controls and related end use
controls adopted in the October 7 IFR.
This AC/S IFR: (1) revises ECCN 3A090
to remove paragraph a, including
paragraphs a.1 through a.4, and adds in
its place simplified control paragraphs
.a and .b, along with a conforming
change to ECCN 3A991.p; (2) replaces
the criterion ‘‘any other item on CCL
that meet or exceed the performance
parameters of 3A090 or 4A090’’ by
positively identifying those ECCNs in
new .z paragraphs in nine ECCNs, along
with various conforming changes
related to the new .z paragraphs in other
parts of the EAR; (3) clarifies the scope
of ‘‘U.S. person’’ and end-use controls
related to supercomputers and advanced
computing items; (4) makes ECCNs
3A991.p and 4A994.l eligible for
License Exception Consumer
Communication Devices (CCD, 15 CFR
740.19); (5) expands the Regional
Stability (RS) license requirements and
amends the RS licensing policy to adopt
an additional case-by-case license
review policy for certain RS items and
adopts a presumption of approval for
license applications for destinations
other than Macau and Country Group
D:5, except for items destined to an
entity headquartered in or whose
ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5 and with licenses for items destined
to Macau and Country Group D:5 being
reviewed under a presumption of denial
license review policy; (6) broadens the
country scope for these controls, with
respect to the items controlled for RS
reasons as well as the advanced
computing Foreign Direct Product (FDP)
rule and advanced computing
provisions in § 744.23, to destinations
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4,
and D:5 in supplement no. 1 to part 740
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that are not also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6, and with respect to
the supercomputer and advanced-node
integrated circuit § 744.23 provisions,
broadens the country scope from China
and Macau to Macau and destinations in
Country Group D:5; (7) clarifies that the
model certificate published in the
October 7 IFR may be used for all FDP
rules; (8) adds five new red flags to
assist with compliance, including for
recognizing ‘‘direct products’’ under the
FDP rules; (9) adds one new Temporary
General License (TGL); (10) creates a
new license exception for Notified
Advanced Computing (NAC); and (11)
makes other corrections and
clarifications.
B. Public Comments and BIS’s
Responses
BIS received 43 responsive public
comments, covering 78 specific topics,
in response to the October 7 IFR. This
rule summarizes and addresses
comments on the advanced computing
provisions, as well as general comments
applicable to all aspects of the October
7 IFR that are not otherwise addressed
in this SME IFR. BIS appreciates the
many public comments it received, and
encourages continued engagement and
feedback, including comments on the
SME and AC/S IFRs which allow for a
60-day comment period and, for most
provisions, a 30-day delayed effective
date.
Complexity and Compliance Burden
Topic 1: A commenter noted that the
October 7 IFR is so complex that only
a small group of people with significant
expertise in the EAR and
semiconductors can fully understand
the rulemaking. This commenter noted
that many small and medium
enterprises, or even large foreign
multinationals, not highly versed in
these details will either not know if they
are following the rule, or out of an
abundance of caution, ‘‘over-comply’’
by restricting legitimate exports and
trade not otherwise subject to these
rules. Another commenter noted that
ensuring compliance will result in
dramatic increases in compliancerelated costs and associated burdens.
This commenter noted that the number
of specific components, other
commodities, software, and technology
affected by the new rules is in the tens
of millions, and each item requires
marking, analysis, or other handling to
ensure compliance. Another commenter
noted that this complexity may result in
misunderstandings and noncompliance, so simpler controls are
more effective in furthering BIS’s
objectives.
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BIS response: BIS does not agree that
the rules are so complex that only a
handful of people with expertise will be
able to understand the controls.
Nevertheless, BIS is revising the October
7 IFR to facilitate the public’s
understanding of the IFR and to
simplify the provisions, e.g., changing
the text of ECCN 3A090 to simplify the
calculations required. BIS has taken into
account the commenters’ concerns over
increases in compliance-related controls
and associated burdens and made
changes in this AC/S IFR to make the
controls more focused, which should
help reduce these burdens and
compliance costs where possible. In
addition, Section C.10 discusses
changes to enhance compliance,
including the addition of five new red
flags to assist with compliance. BIS has
conducted a robust outreach program
and posted FAQs on the October 7 IFR
to assist public understanding.
Reducing complexity and improving
clarity are also two key objectives of this
AC/S IFR and the SME IFR.
Topic 2: A member of Congress noted
that they had been told by one of their
constituents that the October 7 IFR is
overly broad in its current form and will
damage and disrupt both American
industry and global semiconductor
supply chains by excluding basic U.S.
products that are not subject to specific
export controls. This commenter has
also been assured by their constituent
that the resulting vacuum will be filled
by foreign-produced products, including
those made in China. This member of
Congress shares BIS’s stated goal of
protecting ‘‘critical U.S. national
security and foreign policy interests.’’
However, this member of Congress
believes that we must ensure these
regulations are focused and do not
extend beyond their intended national
security objectives.
BIS response: BIS shares concerns
about imposing unilateral controls that
create an unlevel playing field for U.S.
products and companies. BIS intends
the controls to be as focused as possible,
while at the same time achieving U.S.
national security and foreign policy
objectives. One example is adding .z
paragraphs to nine ECCNs in order to
replace the broad regional stability
control for all items that contain
‘‘advanced-node ICs,’’ see discussion in
Section C.3.A. BIS is adopting
additional changes to better achieve
these objectives in this AC/S IFR and in
the SME IFR.
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Dialogue With Industry for the October
7 IFR, Taking Into Account Potential
Burden to Industry, Unintended
Consequences, and Economic Impacts
Topic 3: Some commenters noted that
taking time to have meaningful
engagement with industry will help
head off unintended consequences.
These commenters noted that while
there will be emergencies that require
swift action without time for industry
consultation, the U.S. government, and
particularly BIS, should endeavor to
conduct meaningful engagement with
industry and relevant Technical
Advisory Committees (TACs) whenever
possible. These commenters
emphasized it is critical that BIS
prioritize and meaningfully leverage
this engagement when a rule of this
breadth and complexity is under
consideration, including prior to
publishing a final rule for the October
7 IFR. These commenters noted that
given the complexity of the October 7
IFR and the global supply chain, BIS
should conduct in-depth consultations
with industry experts—both in
semiconductor companies and more
broadly in industries that incorporate
semiconductors—in advance of
releasing a final rule. Another
commenter noted that the economic
analysis that needs to be done for the
impact of this October 7 IFR and similar
rules requires industry input.
BIS response: BIS agrees that having
meaningful engagement with industry
through the BIS TACs and soliciting
public comments prior to implementing
controls is beneficial for the agency as
well as the private sector and can
reduce unintended consequences. BIS
also agrees that it is important to obtain
input on the economic impact of export
controls. BIS’s primary objective is
protecting U.S. national security and
foreign policy interests, so at times the
agency must act quickly and decisively
to ensure those national security and
foreign policy interests are protected.
For the October 7 IFR, BIS did consult
with its TACs, but the national security
and foreign policy concerns at stake
required that controls be put in place
expeditiously. Because BIS was aware
that there may be some unintended
impacts from the October 7 IFR, BIS
published the October 7 IFR as an
interim final rule with a request for
comments, which allowed for BIS in
this AC/S IFR and SME IFR to make
additional changes to the control
structure and address some of those
unintended consequences. Since the
rule was published, BIS has engaged
extensively with its TACs to revise the
control parameters of ECCN 3A090.
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Topic 4: A commenter noted that
longer delayed effective dates would
ease company confusion and help
improve compliance. This commenter
suggested that BIS consider
implementing such rules in the future
with a delayed implementation period
to allow for industry to study the rules
and implement effective compliance
programs. This approach would have
significantly avoided the unintended
confusion that this new complex rule
created. One commenter noted that BIS
would have benefitted from having
more time to consider the October 7 IFR
prior to publication and noted that
based on this commenter’s interactions
with BIS shortly after the October 7 IFR
was published, BIS did not seem ready
to advise the public on its own rule.
BIS response: In this AC/S IFR and
SME IFR, BIS is adopting a 30-day
delayed effective date, except as noted
in the AC/S IFR and SME IFR where a
sooner effective date is warranted. BIS
agrees that longer delayed effective
dates can ease confusion by companies
and help improve compliance, but BIS
also needs to account for the national
security and foreign policy concerns it
is addressing. An extended delayed
effective date can undermine those
national security and foreign policy
concerns. For example, a six-month
delayed effective date for the October 7
IFR would have provided additional
time for outreach and for companies to
adjust to the controls, but that six month
delay would have also allowed end
users in China substantial time to
acquire key pieces of SME needed to
help them achieve advanced nodes of
semiconductor fabrication and to
stockpile various ‘‘parts’’ and
‘‘components’’ needed for future
development of supercomputers. BIS
acted expeditiously in imposing
controls because of national security
and foreign policy concerns. In
addition, to better enable compliance
and understanding of the rule, the
agency provided FAQs to the public
(which were updated as needed),
conducted a public hour-long briefing
on the rule by BIS leadership the day of
publication, and extended the public
comment period for the October 7 IFR
to enable industry to raise concerns for
the agency’s consideration. To ensure
BIS was providing fulsome public
guidance, the agency also held internal
training for staff responsible for primary
public interactions. BIS takes this type
of deliberative approach to ensure, as
much as possible, that there is
consistency and accuracy in the
responses being given to the public.
Topic 5: A commenter noted that in
the past, BIS had sought industry input
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prior to publishing rules and should
return to that practice. This commenter
noted that until recent years, it had been
the long-standing practice for BIS to
obtain technical and other inputs from
both the public and the TACs before
publishing rules (other than those
implementing new controls agreed to
with the multilateral regimes) given that
there is much about commercial supply
chains, technologies, and economics
that the U.S. Government does not fully
understand.
BIS response: This commenter may be
referring to agency practice during
Export Control Reform (ECR), during
which the Departments of Commerce
and State generally published related
rules on a proposed basis. At that time,
the items that were being proposed to be
moved to the EAR were already
controlled under the ITAR, so there was
not the same urgent national security
imperative as was present with the
October 7 IFR. Before that time, the vast
majority of BIS’s rules were published
as direct final or interim final rules.
Accordingly, the commenter is not
correct that recently BIS has deviated
from past precedent. Since ECR, BIS has
continued to publish notices and
proposed rules, such as with the Section
1758 rules (other than those
implementing multilateral agreements).
When BIS has needed to quickly
implement controls for national security
or foreign policy reasons, BIS has
published interim final rules with
requests for public comment to gain
public input while simultaneously
allowing the agency to impose needed
controls, and if necessary, amend those
controls in response to public comment,
as BIS is doing in this AC/S IFR. The
imposition of controls without first
issuing a proposed rule is consistent
with BIS’s statutory authority in ECRA,
enacted in 2018, and is thus another
distinction from rules promulgated
before 2018.
Other Ways That BIS Can Consult With
Industry To Better Improve the
Effectiveness of Policies in This Area
Topic 6: A commenter requested that
BIS should publish, or at least make
available for TAC review, the policy
justifications for current Category 3 and
4 controls. BIS is increasingly asking
industry for input on significant new
controls related to semiconductors and
associated technology in Categories 3
and 4 and to provide effective feedback
and assessment, and it would be helpful
to understand the specific policy
rationale for new and existing control
classifications. Another commenter
requested if required by Congress or
other parties to publicly release
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licensing data surrounding the October
7 IFR, that BIS should strive to provide
the most complete data possible, while
still protecting confidential business
information. This commenter requested
that the data should include statistics on
licenses that (i) are still pending review,
(ii) received an ‘‘intent to deny’’
response, (iii) were ‘‘returned without
action,’’ and (iv) issued with restrictive
conditions. The data on approvals and
denials should also be connected to
what the licensing policy is for such
items and when those licensing policies
were created.
BIS response: This comment is
somewhat outside the scope of the
October 7 IFR, but BIS is addressing it
given its relevance to overall controls.
BIS understands the commenter’s intent
by asking for this type of engagement
with the TACs. BIS does attempt to
share background information on how
controls developed over the years as
well as the basis and policy goals of
those controls with the BIS TACs,
particularly during closed TAC sessions.
BIS subject matter experts and its TACs
are also encouraged to take a fresh look
at the controls on a regular basis
regardless of what the original rationale
may have been for imposing controls.
Similarly, whether in response to a
proposed rule or IFR, the agency seeks
the public’s input on controls so that the
public can help assess whether policy
goals are being met. BIS has made every
effort to share open source information
related to its policy objectives for this
rule and the SME IFR as part of this
rulemaking.
In response to the comment that the
agency should release specific
information to the public or Congress,
BIS notes that, with limited exceptions
related to requests from Congressional
committees of appropriate jurisdiction,
the agency is required by statute to
withhold from disclosure certain
categories of information absent a
determination that the release is in the
U.S. national interest. That statutory
restriction on release is intended to
protect the business confidential
information noted by the commenter.
BIS agrees that when such licensing
data is released, it will provide an
accurate account of the relevant
licensing information.
Topic 7: A commenter noted that
ECRA section 1765 (50 U.S.C. 4824)
requires BIS to submit to Congress by
the end of the year a report on the
implementation of ECRA during the
previous year. Subsection (a)(2) requires
that the annual report include a
description of ‘‘the impact of [all that
year’s] controls on the scientific and
technological leadership of the United
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States.’’ In addition, ECRA section
1752(1) (50 U.S.C. 4811(1)) states that
the United States should ‘‘use export
controls only after full consideration of
the impact on the economy of the
United States.’’ Similarly, ECRA section
1752(3) states that the impact of the
implementation of new controls on U.S.
leadership and competitiveness ‘‘must
be evaluated on an ongoing basis and
applied in imposing controls . . . to
avoid negatively affecting such
leadership.’’ This commenter believes
that it is important for BIS to obtain
formal industry input on this specific
topic so that its report to Congress is
accurate and complete.
BIS response: BIS agrees that it may
be beneficial to allow for public input
to assist BIS in preparing this annual
report. BIS intends in the next annual
cycle for this report to publish a notice
to solicit comments in the area. BIS will
then evaluate the amount and type of
public input provided to the agency to
determine if continuing to publish this
type of notice is worthwhile in the
future.
Free Trade, Addressing U.S.
Relationship With China, and Benefits
From Trade With China
Topic 8: A commenter requested that
especially at a time when U.S.-China
relations are fraught, we should aim to
strengthen ties and increase cooperation
to reduce the risk of military conflict
and to allow the United States and the
whole world to benefit from the fruits of
our shared innovations.
BIS response: The U.S. Government
works with China in multiple ways to
reduce tensions and find areas in which
the two governments can work together.
Where the policies of the Chinese
Communist Party (CCP) run counter to
U.S. national security and foreign policy
interests, the U.S. Government takes
appropriate actions to address its
concerns, including by ensuring that
items subject to the EAR are not used to
assist CCP military advancement.
Topic 9: A commenter noted that
trade with China brings many important
benefits to the U.S. economy and
American workers. This commenter
noted that advanced U.S. manufacturers
of all sizes and their American business
partners and consumers have benefitted
from globally integrated supply chains
that have improved efficiency and
lowered production costs for U.S. firms.
Revenues generated in China are often
reinvested in global and U.S. research
and development (R&D) activities,
which in turn allows U.S. companies to
maintain their competitive edge over
PRC and foreign competition. Another
commenter noted a belief that the
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October 7 IFR is counter to U.S. free
trade advocacy and could boomerang
negatively on the United States if China
retaliates with similar trade restrictions.
BIS response: BIS agrees with the
importance of continued trade with
China. China’s military-civil fusion
policy has made it much more
challenging for the U.S. Government, as
well as exporters, reexporters, and
transferors, to be able to clearly identify
items and transactions that will be only
for civil end uses. BIS has tried to
address this circumstance by imposing
focused controls. Focused controls can
be more complex than the imposition of
broad controls (such as on an entire
country), but BIS has adopted focused
controls to restrict trade as necessary for
national security or foreign policy
reasons while not impairing trade for
civil applications.
Regarding the comment that the
October 7 IFR is counter to U.S. free
trade advocacy and could lead to the
imposition of trade controls by China,
BIS notes the national security and
foreign policy reasons described in that
rule as the reasons for the imposition of
those controls. See 87 FR 62186–88
(noting, among other things, China’s use
of advanced computers for its military
modernization efforts, military decision
making, planning, and logistics,
cognitive electronic warfare, radar,
signals intelligence, and jamming, as
well as China’s use of supercomputers
to improve calculations in weapons
design and testing including for WMD
such as nuclear weapons and
hypersonics and other advanced missile
systems). These controls were not
implemented as protective trade
measures, but rather were imposed to
protect U.S. national security. BIS is
aware of and takes into account
concerns about the implications of
imposing controls, but those concerns
cannot deter BIS from taking actions to
protect U.S. national security and
foreign policy interests.
Importance of Regular Review of These
Controls To Achieve the National
Security and Foreign Policy Objectives
Outlined in the October 7 IFR, and for
Consistency With ECRA
Topic 10: A commenter noted that
ECRA requires that any controls
imposed under section 4812, which
include end-use controls, ‘‘must be
evaluated on an ongoing basis . . . to
avoid negatively affecting U.S.
leadership in the science, technology,
engineering, and manufacturing sectors,
including foundational technology that
is essential to innovation.’’ ECRA
section 4811(3). The commenter noted
that the October 7 IFR needs to be
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reviewed regularly. Another commenter
noted that the October 7 IFR
demonstrates a significant U.S. policy
shift, as articulated by U.S. National
Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, that the
previous U.S. ‘‘sliding scale approach
. . . to stay only a couple of generations
ahead . . . is not the strategic
environment we are in today.’’ Yet, the
United States will struggle to maintain
‘‘as large a lead as possible’’ if the
government pursues a unilateral
approach that alienates allies and
trading partners and restricts companies
from selling consumer technologies
worldwide.
BIS response: BIS intends, consistent
with all export controls administered
under the EAR, to review the controls
from the October 7 IFR on a regular
basis to determine if any updates are
needed to make those controls more
effective. Since the October 7 IFR was
announced, BIS has been reviewing
these controls, not just in response to
the public comments received, but also
based on BIS’s experience in
administering and enforcing the
controls, as well as discussions with
allies. These considerations have
resulted in the changes made to the
October 7 IFR included in this AC/S IFR
and SME IFR. BIS will continue to
review these controls on an ongoing
basis and make changes as warranted,
including to controls that use specified
control parameters that over time may
need to be reevaluated. BIS notes that
National Security Advisor Sullivan’s
remarks provide an example of the
Administration previewing policy and
related controls and are responsive to
other comments requesting this type of
guidance. Consistent with the policy
described by National Security Adviser
Sullivan, the October 7 IFR controls
resulted from the speed of the
technological advancements that could
be leveraged for the most sensitive
national security activities, as well as
furthering human rights violations. The
controls established in the October 7
IFR and these rules are needed to
address the current national security
threats presented by China.
Agrees With the National Security and
Foreign Policy Concerns Identified in
the October 7 IFR for Why These
Changes Were Needed
Topic 11: A commenter noted that
monitoring the production of more
supercomputers and AI will benefit the
world at large. The commenter sees the
October 7 IFR as the best option for
national security and regional stability
purposes because it addresses the
military use of these computers. If these
AI and supercomputers are left
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unmonitored, they may fall into the
wrong hands and become a threat to the
world at large.
BIS response: BIS agrees.
Topic 12: A commenter noted that
given the likely importance of AI
capabilities to national security and
economic prosperity, the commenter
expects significant pressure for China to
stay at the frontier of AI. The
commenter noted that all viable paths
for doing so may be explored. This
pressure will mount over time, as the
importance of AI technology grows and
as the AI-relevant ICs produced outside
of China outpace the technology to
which AI-developers in China,
including the People’s Liberation Army
(PLA), have access. Another commenter
noted that the October 7 IFR chip
controls were implemented to prevent
human rights abuses and protect
international security interests by
making it more difficult for the
government of China to attain advanced
AI capabilities. This commenter noted
that the use of these supercomputers to
monitor the activities of PRC citizens is
inappropriate and this is why the
October 7 IFR is the best option.
BIS response: BIS acknowledges both
comments and takes PRC human rights
abuses seriously. China has been
transparent about its military-civil
fusion (MCF) strategy and the
importance it places on advanced AI as
part of MCF. China has already
demonstrated on numerous occasions
how it has been leveraging advanced
technologies against its own people.
See, e.g., 84 FR 54002 (Oct. 2, 2019)
(adding Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous
Region (XUAR) People’s Government
Public Security Bureau, eighteen of its
subordinate municipal and county
bureaus, and several other entities in
China to the Entity List because they
were implicated in human rights
violations and abuses in the
implementation of China’s campaign of
repression, mass arbitrary detention,
and high-technology surveillance
against Uighurs, Kazakhs, and other
members of Muslim minority groups in
the XUAR).
U.S. CHIPS Act and Sufficiency of
Existing Company Compliance
Programs
Topic 13: A commenter noted that the
U.S. CHIPS Act will help keep the
United States in the lead for
semiconductors. The U.S. CHIPS Act,
which appropriated over $52 billion to
shore up the semiconductor ecosystem
in the United States, will enable
continued U.S. leadership in leadingedge semiconductors and SME, and
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help preserve the large technological
differential vis-a`-vis China.
BIS response: The October 7 IFR was
designed to address the U.S. national
security and foreign policy concerns
with China over acquiring these
capabilities and their use in WMDrelated applications. BIS agrees that the
U.S. CHIPS Act is important for helping
to promote U.S. to maintain its
leadership in semiconductors. The most
comprehensive and effective policy both
restricts key technologies from China
where needed to address national
security and foreign policy concerns
and promotes U.S. and allied country
technology leadership.
Topic 14: A commenter noted that
companies’ sophisticated export
compliance programs should mitigate
the need for additional controls. This
commenter noted that many U.S.
companies—as well as multinational
companies from U.S. allied countries
and partners with a U.S. presence—have
longstanding, sophisticated export
control compliance programs to acquire
export licenses and ensure that their
products and processes are not
facilitating the technological
development of items by a sanctioned
entity, military end user, or military end
use.
BIS response: BIS notes that
compliance programs are designed to
follow the rules as they are written.
While BIS applauds efforts by
companies to conduct extensive due
diligence, this does not replace the need
for regulations addressing national
security and foreign policy concerns.
China Will Obtain the Items it Needs
Regardless of U.S. Controls
Topic 15: A commenter noted that
research indicates that China’s military
systems primarily rely on older and less
sophisticated chips made in China, on
which U.S. export controls will have
limited effect. The commenter noted
should China require more advanced
chips for AI-driven systems, they will
likely be able to develop and produce
them—at significant cost and on a
slower timeline.
BIS response: Certain PRC weapons
systems may not rely on the most
advanced ICs. However, for the most
advanced weapons systems such as
hypersonic missiles or for super
computers that are used to make more
advanced WMD or design and produce
more advanced weapons systems,
advanced ICs are critical to PRC efforts.
Topic 16: A commenter noted that
restricting U.S. persons in assisting
China’s advanced semiconductor
manufacturing is not going to be
enough. This commenter noted that
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some U.S. persons working in financial
institutions (e.g., venture capital and
private equity) help China to invest in
the semiconductor industry and help
PRC companies obtain semiconductor
talent, intellectual property, and
equipment from all over the world.
BIS response: BIS shares these
concerns that certain actors will try to
evade the regulations imposed through
the October 7 IFR and these rules. These
concerns underpinned the October 7
IFR controls such as the expanded ‘‘U.S.
persons’’ control under § 744.6, two new
end use controls under § 744.23, and the
two new foreign direct product rules
and expanded Entity List FDP rule
under § 734.9. To address concerns
around U.S. investment, the
Administration issued Executive Order
14105 that will address outbound
investment from the United States.
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China and Macau Retaliation To Gain
Greater Market Share for PRC
Indigenous Companies Worldwide and
PRC Companies Filling the Void Left by
U.S. Companies
Topic 17: A commenter’s association
members expressed concern that one
unintended consequence of the October
7 IFR may be that China will increase
its production of legacy node
semiconductors and flood global
markets with those products at
significantly reduced prices.
BIS response: While the October 7 IFR
was not intended to impact legacy node
semiconductors in China, BIS
acknowledges the possibility that these
controls may generate spillover effects.
The type of concern described in the
comment relate to issues to be
addressed through other authorities and
forums and are outside of BIS’s
authorities.
Topic 18: A commenter noted that the
October 7 IFR has given a significant
boost to China’s own materials
suppliers.
BIS response: BIS is aware that the
restrictions imposed under the October
7 IFR may give PRC indigenous
providers an opportunity to try to fill
potential new voids in the market. The
October 7 controls, in particular the CCL
controls, were intended to impose
license requirements on key gateway
items that PRC entities would need but
which are not indigenously
manufactured in China. BIS intends to
continue to monitor such developments
and adjust its controls as warranted. BIS
encourages the public to provide
specific information on PRC indigenous
capabilities in comments responding to
this AC/S IFR and SME IFR. See section
D question 5.
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ECCN 3A090
Topic 19: A commenter noted that
there needs to be guidance on the
circumstances in which controls extend
to components controlled under ECCNs
4A003.b and 3A090.a. The commenter
noted that ECCN 4A003.b already
controls ICs with the 4A003.b
characteristics of 29 Weighted
TeraFLOPS (WT), soon to be 70 WT. In
addition, 4A090 controls devices with
ICs exceeding 4800 bits x TOPS. The
commenter noted that there is no
guidance as to which of these two limits
is to apply to license applications for
export to China. This commenter also
noted that ECCN 4A003.b (Adjusted
Peak Performance (APP) exceeding 29
WT) already covers the much higher, by
an order of magnitude, 4A090.a license
requirement limit, with no guidance as
to which of these limits is to apply to
license applications for export to China.
The commenter notes that these
differences present inconsistencies in
the EAR.
BIS response: The APP formula in
ECCN 4A003 and the bits x TOPS metric
(now modified to a TPP metric) in ECCN
3A090 apply to different commodities.
ECCNs 3A090 and 4A090 control items
based on the performance of a single
chip, while the APP formula in ECCN
4A003 describes aggregate performance
across multiple chips. However, BIS
acknowledges that a computer or
component could exceed the
performance parameters of both ECCNs
4A003.b and 4A090 or 3A090. The
October 7 IFR accounted for this
possibility by applying controls to items
classified on the Commerce Control List
(CCL) other than under ECCNs 4A090/
3A090 that meet or exceed the 4A090/
3A090 performance thresholds. This
AC/S IFR clarifies this issue by adding
a .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph to ECCN 4A003
to control items that meet or exceed
ECCN 4A090 specifications. This
change is intended to provide clear
guidance regarding the relationship
between ECCNs 4A090 and 4A003.b and
.z.
Topic 20: A commenter had a
question on interpreting Technical Note
2 under ECCN 3A090. The commenter
noted that the term ‘‘bit-manipulation
operations, and/or bitwise operations’’
seems susceptible of a broad
interpretation including any kind of
data processing, and questioned
whether this was the intent. The
commenter asked how exporters should
think about classifying a component for
a router or a switch that meets or
exceeds the technical control
parameters under ECCN 3A090 but
which would otherwise be classified
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73463
under an ECCN in Category 5, Part 1 or
Part 2.
BIS response: The October 7 controls
were not intended to apply to
telecommunications equipment or parts
and components designed for
telecommunications equipment. For
example, 4A090 is in Category 4, which
applies to computers. BIS would not
classify a router or switch in Category 4.
Therefore, a router or switch that meets
the control parameters of 4A090 would
not be subject to these controls.
Category 5 Part 2 could capture some of
these items, because that category also
applies to general purpose computing
equipment with encryption
functionality.
Topic 21: A commenter noted that
with respect to the ‘‘aggregate
bidirectional transfer rate’’ provision of
3A090, BIS should incorporate either an
additional technical note in the CCL
under 3A090, or a definition of
‘‘aggregate bidirectional transfer rate’’
with a specific explanation of how this
rate is calculated over all inputs and
outputs in part 772.
BIS response: BIS retains this
parameter in the revised ECCN 3A090
included in this AC/S IFR. For greater
clarity, including for providing greater
clarity on how to apply the criterion of
‘‘aggregate bidirectional transfer rate,’’
the AC/S IFR revises the Technical
Notes to 3A090 by removing the five
technical notes and replacing those with
four technical notes. Most importantly,
this AC/S IFR replaces bits x TOPS with
‘Total processing performance’ (‘TPP’)
values and defines objective criteria that
can be used to calculate the TPP value.
See section C.1. below for additional
information on the revision to these
technical notes.
Topic 22: A commenter noted that for
ECCN 3A090 and programmable ICs,
there is no inherent communications or
calculations capability. The commenter
requested that BIS issue guidance on
how to (1) address this complex
calculation/interpretation theoretical
performance situation, perhaps via a
practical manual, and (2) leverage
metrics from other programmable device
ECCNs that are already on the CCL, such
as under 3A001.a.7, 3A991.d, or others.
BIS response: The rewrite of ECCN
3A090 included in this rule addresses
this comment. BIS, in consultation with
its Information Systems Technical
Advisory Committee (ISTAC),
considered compiling a practitioner’s
guide but ultimately decided that
changing the text of ECCN 3A090 to
simplify the calculation was a better
approach.
Topic 23: A commenter noted that
performance parameter calculations
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stated in ECCN 3A090 are unclear and
requested further guidance, such as a
formula or additional details regarding
the types of performance parameters
that need to be included in the
calculations.
BIS response: BIS agrees. This AC/S
IFR includes a revision to ECCN 3A090
to adopt alternative control parameters
to address the concerns identified by the
commenters.
Topic 24: A commenter noted that
guidance needs to be provided on how
to calculate the 3A090 TOPS
Performance Metric. ECCN 3A090
introduces a new performance metric,
TOPS (trillions of operations per
second). The commenter noted that
undertaking a TOPS determination is
difficult because the definition of TOPS
relies on the term ‘‘operations.’’ The
word ‘‘operations’’ is not defined in the
October 7 IFR and does not have a
consistent industry definition.
BIS response: BIS agrees that there is
ambiguity in the TOPS calculation. For
this reason, BIS has amended the text of
ECCN 3A090. This AC/S IFR replaces
bits x TOPS with ‘Total processing
performance’ (‘TPP’) values and defines
objective criteria that can be used to
calculate the TPP value in ECCN 3A090.
BIS worked closely with its ISTAC in
developing this updated technical note.
ECCN 4A090
Topic 25: A commenter noted that
ECCN 4A090 creates a ‘‘see through’’
rule similar to something found in the
State Department’s International Traffic
in Arms Regulations (ITAR) that is too
broad for a civilian end item that
happens to include even a single IC
classified as 3A090. This commenter
noted that consistent with § 770.2(b)(1),
computers and electronic assemblies
that incorporate a single IC classified as
3A090 should be excluded from the
4A090 control if the physical
incorporation is not used to evade the
requirement for a license.
BIS response: BIS does not agree. The
structure of ECCN 4A090.a is needed to
ensure that incorporation of ECCN
3A090 items into higher level items is
not conducted to circumvent the intent
of the 3A090 controls. BIS also notes
that this is not a ‘‘see through’’ rule
because the high level computer,
‘‘electronic assembly’’ or ‘‘component’’
is still classified under 4A090. The
incorporation of the 3A090 commodity
changes the technical characteristics of
those referenced items, which leads to
control under 4A090 instead of other
CCL entries. This structure is not new
to Category 4. To calculate the APP
value for a 4A994 computer, an exporter
has to determine the APP value of the
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CPU. Exporters must apply the same
analysis to 4A090.
Topic 26: A commenter requested BIS
should confirm that an appliance would
not be considered a ‘‘computer’’ for
purposes of ECCN 4A090. BIS also
should confirm that a printed circuit
board specially designed for such
appliance would not be considered an
‘‘electronic assembly’’ for purposes of
ECCN 4A090.
BIS response: For control under ECCN
4A090, an item must be a general
purpose computer. For example, BIS
does not classify network security
appliances or DNA sequencing
appliances in Category 4. When
evaluating such systems, exporters
should determine the classification of
the item without regard to whether it
contains a 3A090 IC or has encryption
functionality. If the appliance would be
controlled in Category 4, then 4A090
controls would likely apply.
Topic 27: A commenter noted the
ECCN 4E001 has an NS control that is
likely not intended and should be
corrected. This technology in ECCN
4E001 is now subject to both RS and
NS1 controls, even though the
discussion in the October 7 IFR focuses
only on RS controls. The application of
NS1 controls creates new authorization
requirements (including deemed export
requirements) for all countries except
Canada. The commenter requests that
BIS revise ECCN 4E001 to exclude
technology for commodities controlled
by 4A090 or software specified by
4D090 from the NS1 controls.
BIS response: BIS agrees the NS
control was not intended. This AC/S
IFR makes this correction.
Topic 28: A commenter requested BIS
revise ECCN 4E001 to remove control of
‘‘use’’ technology for 4A090. The
commenter noted that this appears to be
over-controlled and beyond the intent of
the October 7 IFR. The October 7 IFR
imposes controls on the technology for
the ‘‘development,’’ ‘‘production,’’ and
‘‘use’’ of 4A090 items controlled under
4E001, but only imposes controls on the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
3A090 items controlled under 3E001—
but not the ‘‘use’’ technology of 3A090.
This results in the technology to ‘‘use’’
a 4A090 computer part (which happens
to have a 3A090 IC onboard) having
higher controls than the ‘‘use’’
technology of the 3A090 IC itself. The
commenter noted that this approach
appears to be inconsistent as applied to
other, more-controlled items.
BIS response: BIS agrees. This AC/S
IFR revises ECCN 4E001.a to add an
exclusion for technology for the ‘‘use’’
of a 4A003 computer.
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Topic 29: A commenter requests that
BIS issue a FAQ or regulatory
clarification on the classification of
ECCN 4E001 technology when 3A090 or
4A090 are applicable. The commenter
noted what it believes is a growing body
of ambiguity that stems from the ‘‘see
through’’ nature of 3A090 items
incorporated into the higher-level
4A090 items and the impacts that has
on associated technology. Exporters are
in a quandary reading 4E001, which
controls the technology for the
‘‘development,’’ ‘‘production,’’ or ‘‘use’’
of 4A090.
BIS response: Under ECCN 4E001 for
4A090 commodities, BIS controls
technology that is ‘‘required’’ for the
computer achieving or exceeding the
3A090 parameters. In some cases, this
may occur through a relatively
unsophisticated step, such as inserting a
card in a slot in the computer, which
BIS would consider to be
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ and as
noted in the BIS response to Topic 28,
this AC/S IFR adds an exclusion to
4E001 for ‘‘use’’ Technology for 4A090.
Other instances may require more
technical know-how that may rise to the
level of controlled 4E001 technology.
The application ultimately turns on an
analysis of what is ‘‘required’’ for
exceeding the control level. BIS intends
to issue a new FAQ to address this topic
more broadly.
Relationship of New Controls to
Category 5—Part 2, as it Relates to ‘‘or
Identified Elsewhere on the CCL That
Meet or Exceed the Performance
Parameters of ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090,
Consistent With § 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1)
and (h)(2)(ii) of the EAR’’ Under
§ 742.6(a)(6)
Topic 30: Several commenters raised
concerns with the October 7 IFR under
§ 742.6(a)(6), along with other
provisions in the October 7 IFR, e.g.,
§ 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and (h)(2)(ii), using
the criteria ‘‘or identified elsewhere on
the CCL that meet or exceed the
performance parameters of ECCNs
3A090 or 4A090.’’ These commenters
had concerns that this approach was
unprecedented under the EAR in several
respects and created ambiguity
regarding the correct classification, such
as whether an item should be classified
under 3A090 or 4A090 or under an
encryption ECCN, e.g., 5A002 or 5A992.
These commenters emphasized that
company compliance systems were not
set up to address this type of dual
classification complexity and that
mistakes in classification would likely
occur and significant questions would
be raised for managing export clearance.
These commenters requested BIS to
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adopt an alternative approach that
would be more in line with how items
are typically classified on the CCL by
either creating additional ECCNs to
control these items that would
otherwise meet or exceed the
performance parameters of ECCN 3A090
or 4A090 or to add under the relevant
additional ECCNs an ‘‘items’’ level
paragraph to identify the items that
would meet or exceed the performance
parameters of ECCN 3A090 or 4A090.
BIS response: BIS is changing this
aspect of the October 7 IFR. BIS
recognizes that certain aspects of the
criteria used in the October 7 IFR
deviated from standard EAR practices,
e.g., imposing an RS license
requirement on certain ECCNs that did
not contain an RS control. However, BIS
did not intend to change underlying
classifications. For example, an ECCN
5A002 commodity that met or exceeded
the control parameters in 3A090 or
4A090, would have still been classified
under ECCN 5A002, but would require
a license under § 742.6(a)(6). BIS agrees
with the commenters that because of the
special RS license requirements, that
effectively would mean exporters,
reexporters, and transferors would have
to identify and treat that 5A002
commodity that met or exceeded the
control parameters in 3A090 or 4A090
differently. BIS also agrees with the
concerns raised by these commenters
that it would create significant burdens
and possibly confusion for exporters,
reexporters, or transferors.
To address this issue, this AC/S IFR
removes the criteria of concern and
instead identifies the nine ECCNs on the
CCL that BIS determined meet or exceed
the control parameters in ECCNs 3A090
or 4A090. As a result, when classifying
an item, review can focus on these nine
ECCNs, which addresses the
commenter’s concerns. In addition, BIS
agrees that creating a distinct
classification for ‘‘items’’ in each of
these ECCNs under a new .z ‘‘items’’
paragraph is warranted. This AC/S IFR
also adds an RS control for these nine
ECCNs, as well as adding Related
Controls to cross reference 3A090,
4A090, 3A991.p, and 4A994.l. This rule
provides additional guidance for export
clearance of these .z items, as well as
3A090 and 4A090 to make it easier for
exporters and recipients outside the
United States to identify these items,
and for the U.S. Government to have
greater transparency into what items are
being exported. This AC/S IFR also
revises §§ 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and
(h)(2)(ii) and 742.6(a)(6) to remove the
criterion and add in their place the .z
ECCNs.
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Additional discussion about the
addition of the .z paragraphs can be
found in section C.3 of this rule.
Additional Changes for ECCNs in the
October 7 IFR
Topic 31: A commenter requested BIS
change new ECCNs from 000 series to
900 series. This commenter noted that
because they are U.S. unilateral
controls, BIS should change the ECCN
numbers from 3A090, 3B090, 4A090,
4D990 to 3A990, 3B990, 4A990, 4D990.
This same commenter requested
deleting the term ‘‘specially designed’’
in various places as used in the ECCNs
included in the October 7 IFR and
replacing the use of the term with other
technical control parameters. This
commenter referenced documents from
the Coordinating Committee for
Multilateral Export Controls (COCOM),
including COCOM 1951 Administrative
Principle 4, in supporting their position
on the removal of ‘‘specially designed’’
from these ECCNs.
BIS response: BIS does not agree.
These items will be submitted to the
Wassenaar Arrangement for adoption as
multilateral controls, so it is appropriate
that they are placed in the ‘‘000’’ series.
BIS also does not agree on the removal
of ‘‘specially designed.’’ The term
‘‘specially designed’’ is needed in these
ECCNs to define the intended scope of
the control. In addition, BIS notes
COCOM has been defunct since March
31, 1994.
Topic 32: A commenter noted that the
WTOPs parameters need further study
in ECCNs 3A991.p, 4A003, and 4A994.b
and .l.
BIS response: BIS does not see an
inconsistency between ECCN 4A994.b
and 4A994.l. ECCN 4A994.b captures
computers using 64-bit or greater
processors, and 4A994.l captures
processors with lower bit rates. BIS
agrees that some items could be
captured under both 4A994.b and
4A994.l but notes that there are
computers that fall under 4A994.l but
not 4A994.b.
License Exception Eligibility for New
Advanced Computing and
Semiconductor Manufacturing Items
Under § 740.2(a)(9)
Topic 33: A commenter noted the
October 7 IFR’s limitations on the use of
License Exception ENC are difficult to
implement. The commenter noted that
many of the items affected were already
eligible for License Exception ENC, so
removing license exception eligibility
will be a challenge for items ‘‘listed
elsewhere in the CCL which meet or
exceed the performance parameters of
ECCN 3A090 or 4A090.’’ This
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commenter requested that BIS consider
amending the rule to create ECCNs
5x090 and 5x092 or additional items
paragraphs in existing ECCNs for 5x002
and 5x992 items that meet or exceed the
performance parameters of ECCN 3A090
or 4A090. This would allow industry to
set up more manageable rules for their
electronic inventory control and
shipping systems.
BIS response: BIS agrees and
addressed this with the addition of .z
‘‘items’’ paragraphs in nine ECCNs on
the CCL, as described under the BIS
response to Topic 30.
Topic 34: A commenter requested
confirmation that License Exception
Servicing and Replacement of parts and
equipment (RPL) covers transfers (incountry), or in the alternative that
§ 740.2(a)(9) be expanded to authorize
License Exception Temporary imports,
exports, reexports, and transfers (incountry) (TMP). This commenter noted
that the exclusion of ‘‘transfer (incountry)’’ from the scope of § 740.10
suggests that License Exception RPL
would not cover in-country movements
that constitute a transfer (in-country) as
defined in § 734.16. Alternatively, this
commenter requested that BIS expand
the scope of license exceptions available
for § 740.2(a)(9) to include License
Exception TMP, specifically
§ 740.9(a)(6) which authorizes exports,
reexports, and transfers (in-country) for
inspection, test, calibration, and repair.
BIS response: Section 740.1(a) already
specifies that any license exception
authorizing reexports also authorizes incountry transfers, provided the terms
and conditions for reexports under that
license exception are met. This includes
License Exception RPL. This SME IFR
expands the number of license
exceptions available for advanced
compute items in § 740.2(a)(9)(ii) by
adding License Exception TMP under
§ 740.9(a)(6) because this authorization
is intended to work with License
Exception RPL.
Level of Complexity of New FDP Rules
Topic 35: A commenter noted that the
new FDP rules create significant
complexity when manufacturing
products outside the United States using
U.S.-origin technology, software, tools,
or equipment. The commenter noted
that with the three new FDP rules, a
non-U.S. manufacturer using U.S.
technology or software must now know
or have additional information about a
number of things, including whether the
item: (1) involves one of thirty-eight
new ‘‘Footnote 4’’ companies on the
Entity List; (2) is or contains an
advanced IC that meets ECCN 3A090 or
4A090, or is their related software or
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technology, and is ultimately destined
for Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5; (3) will ultimately
be used in a ‘‘supercomputer’’ in Macau
or a destination specified in Country
Group D:5; or (4) will be used in the
development or production of an item
that will ultimately be used in a
‘‘supercomputer’’ in Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5. Another commenter noted that
because of the complexity there will
likely be some non-compliance simply
because foreign companies cannot
understand or do not have enough
information to make proper
determinations. This commenter noted
that this complexity will make
compliance with the EAR difficult for
non-U.S. manufacturers, many of whom
will not comply, not out of
maliciousness, but simple ignorance or
misunderstanding.
BIS response: BIS agrees that with the
addition of new FDP rules to the EAR,
foreign manufacturers have increased
compliance burdens. In adding new
FDP rules, including the two new FDP
rules and expanded Entity List FDP rule
added in the October 7 IFR, BIS has
tried to be as focused as possible.
Accordingly, each FDP rule has its own
criteria that needs to be reviewed. Each
FDP rule essentially poses a series of
questions or criteria; if one of the
required questions or criteria is
determined to be inapplicable, that FDP
rule can be ruled out as governing the
transaction. By taking this approach,
many of the FDP rules can be ruled out
fairly quickly. However, if the questions
as to whether the criteria apply are
answered in the affirmative, additional
questions need to be asked based on the
criteria of the respective FDP rule being
reviewed to ultimately determine
whether the foreign made direct product
is subject to the EAR. BIS included a
model certificate in the October 7 IFR to
assist people in applying the FDP rules
included in the October 7 IFR. In this
AC/S IFR, the model certificate is
broadened for use with all the FDP rules
to ease the compliance burden on
foreign manufacturers. BIS has been
conducting a robust outreach program
and updating its outreach materials on
the BIS website to address these types
of issues. As noted above, the basic
approach to applying the FDP rules has
been in the EAR for many years and has
not changed with respect to the need to
answer a series of questions. What is
new is some of the additional criteria for
the new FDP rules, in particular the end
user and end use-based criteria included
in some of the FDP rules. Once these
additional criteria become familiar to
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foreign manufacturers and incorporated
into compliance programs, these
concerns should be reduced. BIS will
conduct outreach on this rulemaking to
assist exporters as they develop
experience with the new controls.
Topic 36: A commenter noted that the
FDP rules capturing least sensitive items
will lead to designing out U.S.-origin
content. Expanding the U.S. export
control jurisdiction to less sensitive
items also drives foreign partners away
from U.S. technology, software, and tool
suppliers, as those are the basis on
which BIS hangs its expanded
jurisdiction. The commenter requested
that the China-focused FDP rules be
narrowed to apply only to specific
products that are listed on the CCL with
a license requirement to China, and
should never apply to EAR99 items or
Anti-Terrorism (AT)-only controlled
items.
BIS response: BIS does not agree that
the scope of these FDP rules should be
further narrowed. BIS calibrated the
scope of the commodities controlled
based on the current national security
and foreign policy concerns. Because
many of these lower-level items may be
technology level agnostic, it is still
warranted to keep them within the
product scope of the FDP rules.
Clarify Relationship Between FDP Rules
and Other EAR License Requirements
Topic 37: A commenter requested BIS
clarify whether reexports or exports
from abroad of FDP items also must
consider other EAR license
requirements in parts 742, 744, and 746.
BIS response: For a foreign-made
product that is located outside of the
United States to be subject to the EAR,
the foreign made product would need to
meet the criteria under one or more of
the FDP rules under § 734.9 or be
subject to the EAR because it exceeds
the applicable de minimis threshold. If
the foreign-made item is not subject to
the EAR, then none of the other EAR
license requirements would be
applicable. However, if the export from
abroad or reexport of the foreign-made
item was subject to the EAR, then the
other EAR license requirements would
need to also be taken into account.
Because the export from abroad or
reexport would already require a
license, the impact of those other
license requirements would primarily
be additional license review policies
that may be applicable.
Need To Continuously Monitor the FDP
Rules and revise license review Policies
as Needed
Topic 38: A commenter noted that BIS
needs to continuously monitor the
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effectiveness of the FDP rules, which are
unilateral. The commenter noted that if
BIS cannot succeed at getting allies and
partners to agree to substantively similar
controls, BIS should adopt a temporary
licensing policy that would authorize
the provision of such services and
exports by U.S. persons for civil
applications and if not otherwise
prohibited by the EAR and readily
available from non-U.S. providers, in
both quantity and quality, as substitutes.
BIS response: BIS is continuously
reviewing the FDP rules and will make
any appropriate changes as warranted
based on activity involving the adoption
of multilateral and/or effective
plurilateral controls, as well as trends
BIS may be seeing or hearing about the
designing out of U.S.-origin content.
Topic 39: One commenter raised
issues related to the legality of the
amendments made in the FDP rule
provisions.
BIS response: BIS has determined that
these changes are consistent with ECRA.
Topic 40: A commenter asked if a
foreign-made item not otherwise subject
to the EAR is nonetheless subject to the
EAR under the Entity List FDP rule
(§ 734.9(e)(2)) if it is shipped by an
unlisted entity to another unlisted entity
for incorporation into a commodity
when the shipper knows all other
components for the commodity had
been shipped by a Footnote 4 entity, but
the foreign-made item will not be
incorporated into, or used to produce or
develop, any commodity produced,
purchased or ordered by a listed entity.
This same commenter asked whether
the answer would change if a Footnote
4 entity is a shareholder, or if a Footnote
4 entity is a shareholder in the thirdparty assembler/seller. Another
commenter asked whether a Footnote 4
entity that profits from a transaction by
and among unlisted entities, but has no
other role or involvement, is a party to
the transaction under § 734.9(e)(2)(ii)(B).
BIS response: The answer to these
types of scenarios would be factspecific. While the Footnote 4 entity
described in these scenarios does not
necessarily fall under one of the
illustrative examples of parties to the
transaction under § 734.9(e)(2)(ii)(B),
additional analysis would be needed to
determine whether the Footnote 4 entity
was actually a party to the transaction.
For example, if the items will ultimately
be going to the Footnote 4 entity or
ultimately for the Footnote 4 entity’s use
or if profits were obtained by the
Footnote 4 entity acting as a purchaser,
or intermediate or ultimate consignee,
then the Footnote 4 entity would be
considered a party to the transaction. In
scenarios where a person is not sure
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whether the Footnote 4 entity would be
considered a party to a transaction, they
may contact BIS to request additional
guidance by identifying all of the
relevant information that they have
regarding the involvement of that party
in the transaction.
Topic 41: A commenter asked
whether BIS will consider providing
guidance as to what other activities may
constitute a Footnote 4 entity’s being a
‘‘party’’ to the transaction for purposes
of the Entity List FDP rule. We
understand that the phrase ‘‘e.g., as a
‘purchaser,’ ‘intermediate consignee,’
‘ultimate consignee,’ or ‘end-user,’ ’’ as
used in § 734.9(e)(2)(ii)(B), signals that
the list of referenced parties is not
exhaustive. However, the use of ‘‘e.g.’’
creates significant compliance
uncertainty.
BIS response: BIS confirms that this
commenter is correct that the ‘e.g.’
signifies that what follows is merely an
illustrative list of parties to the
transaction. If an exporter, reexporter, or
transferor is determining whether an
additional party that does not fill the
role of one of the illustrative parties
identified, but otherwise appears to be
a party to the transaction, is a party to
the transaction, they may submit an
advisory opinion request to BIS in
which they describe the role of that
other party. BIS will advise if that party
is considered a party to the transaction.
Advanced Computing FDP Rule—
§ 734.9(h)
Topic 42: A commenter requested BIS
clarify the relationship between
§ 734.9(h) and § 742.6 for ECCN 5A002
and License Exception ENC. This
commenter noted that the EAR should
in the Advanced Computing FDP,
reference the license requirements
under § 742.15 Encryption items (EI)
controls because this is important for
determining which additional EAR
restrictions may be applicable. For
example, § 740.2 restrictions may
restrict the use of License Exception
ENC.
BIS response: This AC/S IFR adds .z
‘items’ paragraphs to nine ECCNs,
including to ECCN 5A002.z and makes
conforming changes to add these .z
ECCNs, such as 5A002.z, to
§ 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) or (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2),
which is also responsive to this
comment.
Topic 43: A commenter noted that the
new § 734.9(h) Advanced computing
FDP rule is not needed because it is
already covered by pre-existing
§ 734.9(b) National Security FDP rule.
BIS response: BIS does not agree.
There is some cross over between these
two FDP rules, but the Advanced
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Computing FDP rule extends to certain
items that the National Security FDP
rule does not, so the Advanced
Computing FDP rule is necessary to
address the national security and
foreign policy concerns included in the
October 7 IFR.
Narrow the Scope of § 744.23
Fabrication Controls
Topic 44: A commenter noted that
§ 744.23 should only apply to the direct
end use of an item. This commenter
noted as an example that networking
equipment used for the enterprise
network of a semiconductor or
supercomputer manufacturer is not a
direct use in the ‘‘development,’’
‘‘production,’’ ‘‘use,’’ operation,
installation (including on-site
installation), maintenance (checking),
repair, overhaul, or refurbishing of a
‘‘supercomputer’’ or IC as opposed to
design software, materials, or test
equipment and should be excluded from
the license requirement.
BIS response: BIS agrees that if the
item is not used in the ‘‘development,’’
‘‘production,’’ operation, installation
(including on-site installation),
maintenance (checking), repair,
overhaul, or refurbishing of a
‘‘supercomputer,’’ IC, or SME, as
applicable, the item would not be
within the scope of § 744.23. However,
the exporter would need to analyze the
relationship between the activities
involving the enterprise network and
any prohibited end uses to confirm no
license is required.
Topic 45: A commenter noted that
resellers of supercomputers should not
meet the definition of a company that is
involved in the ‘‘development,’’
‘‘production,’’ ‘‘use,’’ operation,
installation (including on-site
installation), maintenance (checking),
repair, overhaul, or refurbishing of a
‘‘supercomputer’’ under § 744.23.
BIS response: BIS agrees and confirms
in this AC/S IFR that the mere act of
selling a ‘‘supercomputer’’ is not within
the prohibited scope of § 744.23, but
selling a ‘‘supercomputer’’ with
knowledge that a violation of § 744.23
has occurred, is about to occur, or is
intended to occur in connection with an
item subject to the EAR could be a
violation of § 764.2(e) of the EAR.
As-a-Service (IaaS) Solutions and the
October 7 Controls
Topic 46: A commenter noted that
PRC ‘‘supercomputer’’ controls may be
bypassed by as-a-Service (IaaS)
solutions. The commenter noted that the
October 7 IFR limits engagements
towards China ‘‘supercomputer’’
activity in China and may preclude
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73467
some high-performance compute
capability to China. With the
availability of IaaS solutions, however,
China compute workloads can be
offloaded to computers located in other
states, possibly including those in the
United States. This commenter noted
that without a multilateral end use/end
user control, non-U.S. states, even
Wassenaar Arrangement partners, may
give China computational access to their
equivalent ‘‘supercomputers’’ via an
IaaS arrangement. The commenter noted
that while § 744.6 provides controls on
U.S. persons for various situations
involving PRC semiconductor
fabrication, there does not appear to be
a parallel U.S. person control for
supercomputing.
This comment requests that BIS
clarify intent regarding supercomputing
IaaS, particularly in light of previous
Advisory Opinions on computing IaaS,
including January 2009: Application of
EAR to Grid and Cloud Computing
Services, and January 2011: Cloud
Computing and Deemed Exports.
BIS response: BIS is also concerned
regarding the potential for China to use
IaaS solutions to undermine the
effectiveness of the October 7 IFR
controls and continues to evaluate how
it may approach this through a
regulatory response. See section D
question 1 of this rule.
Information Needed From Other Parties
To Comply With These Controls
Topic 47: A commenter noted that the
burden to detect upgrades of PRC
computers into ‘‘supercomputers’’ is
difficult because it is a fluid moving
target and that a PRC computer
installation that does not meet the
threshold at one point may be quietly
upgraded by the operator (using 3rd
party items) to exceed the
‘‘supercomputer’’ threshold later.
Exporters, reexporters, and transferors
may not be able to rely on static End
Use Statements or similar certifications,
due to this ‘‘moving target’’
characteristic and this may require
exporters to obtain End Use Statements
to all PRC computer installations
(regardless of size) for every transaction,
which presents a high burden. The
commenter notes this is a situation in
which publishing a list of known
§ 744.23 supercomputer targets will
result in compliance that is more
effective, more consistent, and less
burdensome.
BIS response: BIS intends to continue
to identify ‘‘supercomputer’’ related
entities on the Entity List. BIS started
this process in the October 7 IFR and
will continue adding more
‘‘supercomputer’’ entities as they are
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identified and approved for addition by
the ERC to the Entity List. BIS
emphasizes that § 744.23 and the
expanded § 744.6 both contain
‘‘knowledge’’ provisions. The
compliance expectation is that
exporters, reexporters, and transferors
will evaluate the information coming to
them in the normal course of business.
Obtaining end-user statements is a good
compliance practice that BIS
encourages, but BIS does not expect that
exporters, reexporters, or transferors
will obtain these from every computer
user in China, so exporters, reexporters,
and transferors should look at all
information they have to determine
when additional due diligence may be
warranted.
Topic 48: A commenter requested that
BIS confirm that the due diligence
specified in BIS FAQ, IV.A2,
‘‘Appropriate due diligence includes
review of publicly available
information, capability of items to be
provided or serviced, proprietary market
data, and end-use statements’’
constitutes a reasonable level of due
diligence in this context, as well.
BIS response: BIS confirms here that
the same type of due diligence specified
in BIS FAQ IV.A2 that applies for
§ 744.6 also applies to § 744.23.
Permit License Exception Eligibility
Topic 49: A commenter requested BIS
revise § 744.23(c) to permit the use of
license exceptions specified in
§ 740.2(a)(9) for items lawfully exported
or reexported prior to October 7, 2022.
BIS response: BIS does not agree. Not
including License Exceptions RPL and
TMP in § 744.23(c) will make the
controls more effective because of the
importance of parts and components to
continued operation of items, which
may have been received by indigenous
companies in China without a required
license prior to the October 7 IFR. Based
on the national security and foreign
policy concerns identified in the
October 7 IFR, BIS would no longer
support the use of these EAR items in
China.
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Other Requested Clarifications to
§ 744.23
Topic 50: A commenter requested BIS
confirm that standalone data storage
equipment would not be considered a
‘‘component’’ subject to
§ 744.23(a)(1)(ii), which has been
redesignated as paragraph (a)(1)(ii)(B) in
this SME IFR. This commenter noted
that the data storage equipment is selfcontained and not physically
incorporated into a computer (e.g., it
consists of a storage controller and an
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array of storage drives in a separate
enclosure).
BIS response: BIS does not agree. BIS
does not consider standalone data
storage equipment classified as ECCN
5A002 to be controlled under
§ 744.23(a)(1)(ii), now redesignated as
(a)(1)(ii)(B), because standalone storage
equipment is not a computer or
component of a computer. Standalone
data storage equipment classified as
ECCN 5A002 is considered a
‘‘component’’ for purposes of
§ 744.23(a)(1)(ii)(B). This SME IFR
clarifies this point by adding ‘‘the
incorporation into, or the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of any
‘‘component’’ or ‘‘equipment’’ that will
be used in, a ‘‘supercomputer’’ ’’ to
make it clear that § 744.23(a)(1)(ii)(B) is
intended to cover ‘‘components’’ of a
separate computer going into a
supercomputer, e.g., a chip going into a
server which is going into a
supercomputer.
Topic 51: A commenter requested that
BIS clarify how broadly exporters may
interpret the term ‘‘used’’ in
determining the product scope under
§ 744.23(a)(1), which has been
redesignated as paragraph (a)(1)(i) in
this SME IFR. This commenter seeks
confirmation that their understanding is
correct that any product that does not
contribute to the ‘‘development’’ and
‘‘production’’ of the product would fall
outside the scope of these controls. For
example, storage devices and
networking devices may be present in a
facility, but they are not ‘‘used’’ for the
specified end use, and therefore would
not be subject to control under this
provision and can be exported without
a license. Other examples include socalled Facility Monitoring and Control
Systems (e.g., HVAC, clean room
temperature, and chillers, pumps and
boilers, as well as so-called voltage sag
correctors, which provide protection for
electric equipment from voltage
variations).
BIS response: Section 744.23(a)
specifies that the license requirements
apply when the item will be used in an
end use described under paragraph
(a)(2)(i) or (ii) of this section, which has
been redesignated as paragraph
(a)(1)(ii)(A) and (B) in this SME IFR. The
terms ‘‘development’’ and ‘‘production’’
encompass all of the items used in those
activities, so BIS takes an expansive
view of what items would be caught
under those terms.
Topic 52: A commenter asked BIS to
confirm whether the scope and reach of
§ 744.23(a)(2)(iii), which has been
redesignated as paragraph (a)(2)(i) in
this SME IFR, apply equally to
application of the controls over the
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shipment from outside the United States
of foreign-origin items not subject to the
EAR under the requirements of
§ 744.6(c)(2)(i) and (ii).
BIS response: For purposes of the
‘‘U.S. person’’ prohibition under
§ 744.6(c)(2)(i) and (ii), BIS will attempt
to maintain consistent approaches in
interpreting §§ 744.6(c)(2) and 744.23.
BIS’s response to Topic 61 on § 744.23,
which lays out how BIS would interpret
§ 744.6(c)(2) for a similar fact pattern
involving the U.S. person control.
Topic 53: A commenter requested BIS
clarify whether the controls extend to
projected future activity not yet started
under § 744.23(a)(2)(iii) and (iv), which
have been redesignated as paragraphs
(a)(2)(i) and (ii) in this SME IFR. The
commenter noted that there is confusion
regarding the proper tense of the rules
and asks whether the language as
written includes aspirational production
and development in the future. BIS
should clarify whether ‘‘fabricates’’
applies in the context of a fabrication
facility that has plans for future
advanced node production or whether
the rule applies to current advanced
node production only.
BIS response: Aspirational
development or production in the future
would raise a red flag that would
require additional due diligence to
determine whether a license is required
under § 744.23(a)(2)(iii) and (iv), which
have been redesignated as paragraphs
(a)(2)(i) and (ii) in this SME IFR. This
AC/S IFR adds a new red flag to provide
additional compliance guidance on
these types of scenarios.
Entity List Changes for Footnote 4
Entities
Topic 54: A commenter noted that it
is not clear what specific activities
involving expanded Entity List
(Footnote 4) entities may be prohibited,
assuming the product scope is met,
especially if the activity does not
involve providing any products to the
Footnote 4 entity and the entity is not
a party to the transaction between the
parties buying and providing the
foreign-made item.
BIS response: The Entity List license
requirements apply to exports,
reexports, and transfers (in-country) that
are subject to the EAR when a listed
entity is a party to the transaction. This
is also the scope of the license
requirement for the entities on the
Entity List with a footnote 4
designation, but because of the footnote
4 designation, the license requirement
specified in § 744.11(a)(2)(ii) (Footnote 4
entities) is also applicable, which
specifies a license is required for
reexport, export from abroad, or transfer
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(in-country) of any foreign-produced
item subject to the EAR pursuant to
§ 734.9(e)(2) of the EAR when an entity
designated with footnote 4 on the Entity
List in supp. no. 4 to this part is a party
to the transaction, or that will be used
in the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’
of any ‘‘part,’’ ‘‘component,’’ or
‘‘equipment’’ produced, purchased, or
ordered by any such entity. Section
744.11(a)(2)(ii) also includes a cross
reference to § 744.23 for additional
license requirements that may apply to
these entities, so the § 744.23 license
requirements also need to be taken into
account.
Topic 55: A commenter noted that
§ 744.11 states that a license is required
for the incorporation of a foreign-made
item into any ‘‘part,’’ ‘‘component,’’ or
‘‘equipment,’’ produced by a Footnote 4
entity. However, BIS does not specify if
a license is needed for a scenario in
which a third-party procures parts,
components, or equipment made by a
Footnote 4 entity and incorporates a
foreign made item into Footnote 4’s
product, and the procedure is not done
on behalf of the Footnote 4 entity, nor
will the final product be destined for a
Footnote 4 entity. The commenter
requests BIS release additional
clarification on whether license
requirements apply to sales to third
parties assembling a mixture of foreignmade and Footnote 4 entity components
that are not destined for a footnote 4
entity.
BIS response: The license requirement
under § 744.11(a)(2)(ii) extends to items
that will be used in the ‘‘development’’
or ‘‘production’’ of any ‘‘part,’’
‘‘component,’’ or ‘‘equipment’’
produced by any such entity. Therefore,
in a scenario in which a third-party
procures items produced by a Footnote
4 entity and adds to it using a foreignmade item, the license requirements
would still apply in that scenario to that
foreign-made item because even if the
Footnote 4 entity is not subsequently
receiving the items or receiving
compensation from the third-party that
used its item, the further processing
using the foreign-made item would be
part of the larger ‘‘production’’ process
of the Footnote 4 entity.
Topic 56: A commenter requested BIS
revise the 28 Entity List footnote entries
to address an inconsistency in the
license requirement by inserting ‘‘for
additional license requirements for
Foreign-Direct Product)’’ after ‘‘(See
§ 734.9(e) and 744.11 of the EAR).’’
BIS response: BIS does not agree that
a change needs to be added to these
entities. The Footnote 4 text provides
additional context on the meaning and
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scope of this parenthetical phrase
included in the 28 entities.
Requested Changes or Clarifications to
‘‘Supercomputers’’ Definition in § 772.1
Topic 57: A commenter requested BIS
clarify what is intended by closely
coupled compute cores in Note 2 of the
‘‘supercomputers’’ definition.
Specifically, the commenter asks BIS to
clarify whether ‘‘closely coupled
compute cores’’ refers to a system in
which all hardware and software
components are linked together and
dependent on one another and whether
the type of interconnect is relevant to
this analysis.
BIS response: Note 2 of the
‘‘supercomputer’’ definition is meant to
provide a general statement of scope of
a typical supercomputer. It is not
intended to impose additional
requirements beyond the main
definition. By using the term ‘‘closely
coupled compute cores,’’ BIS intended
to note that supercomputers typically
have thousands of cores working in
parallel in the same location and
connected by a high-speed interconnect
such as Infiniband or Ethernet. BIS also
intended to make clear that computers
that are connected together through the
internet over long distances are not the
type of computer that would meet the
definition of ‘‘supercomputer.’’
Topic 58: A commenter requested that
BIS identify the items of real concern
regarding the ‘‘supercomputer’’ end use.
Hitting the threshold of
‘‘supercomputer’’ is not difficult, and
when triggered under the October 7 IFR,
even items included in 5A992 will be
prohibited. The commenter noted that
could prohibit even a standard laptop
from being shipped if it is somehow
being ‘‘used’’ in a supercomputer.
BIS response: BIS does not agree that
the area of concern for supercomputers
was not adequately identified in the
October 7 IFR and the definition of
‘‘supercomputer’’ in § 772.1. The
definition includes clear technical
parameters for the types of
supercomputers that are of concern.
Specifically, a computing ‘‘system’’
having a collective maximum
theoretical compute capacity of 100 or
more double-precision (64-bit) petaflops
or 200 or more single-precision (32-bit)
petaflops within a 41,600 ft3 or smaller
envelope. The definition includes Note
1 and 2 to further clarify the types of
computers of concern. The preamble of
the October 7 IFR identified the national
security and foreign policy concerns
associated with a computer system that
can operate at these levels.
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Requested Changes or Clarifications to
Other Definitions
Topic 59: A commenter noted that the
definition of ‘‘transfer (in-country)’’
should not cover in-country movements
to effectuate repair services. This
commenter noted that in considering
whether an in-country movement
constitutes a change in end user, this
commenter believes that an entity
performing repairs or otherwise
servicing an item is not an ‘‘end user’’
as defined in part 772 of the EAR.
Specifically, the repair/service company
is not the party that ultimately uses the
item, but is instead taking an action on
behalf of the user and specifically for
the purpose of returning the repaired
item to the user. As a service/repair
company does not fall within the scope
of an end user under the EAR,
temporary in-country movements to or
from repair/service companies should
not constitute a change in end user.
BIS response: This commenter’s
understanding of the scope of transfer
(in-country) is not correct and is
inconsistent with long-standing agency
interpretation of the scope of transfer
(in-country). The person that receives
the item is changing the end use of the
item by using the item for a repair or
servicing of the item, or, in the case of
destruction, for destroying the item. The
definition of end user includes the
phrase ‘‘ultimately uses the item,’’ but
does not specify that the item needs to
be used for its intended end use.
Someone repairing or servicing an item
is using the item for a different purpose.
Someone that is destroying an item is
using the item for a specific purpose—
the destruction of the item. Even
transferring the item to another party for
storage (a type of end use) would be
considered a change in end use and end
user because that other party would be
using the item by storing it for future
use by another party. BIS notes that one
exception to this would be if another
party came to service or destroy an item
at the location of the authorized end
user, such as coming to repair or to
destroy a machine tool that would not
be considered a transfer (in-country),
provided the authorized end user
maintained possession and control of
the item at their facility. For most
transfers (in-country), such as when an
item is received under a BIS license and
needs to be transferred (in-country) to a
repair center, paragraph (a)(6) of License
Exception TMP is used to authorize the
transfer (in-country) to a repair facility
and License Exception RPL is used to
authorize the transfer (in-country) back
to the original party. However, for the
part 744 end use and end user controls,
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License Exceptions TMP and RPL are
not available, so a license is required for
that activity. Lastly, BIS adds that if the
item had been received with no license
requirement (i.e., No License Required
(NLR)) or under authorization of a
license exception that did not have
terms specific to end use or end user,
such as License Exception GBS (not
applicable for China, but included as an
example), then a transfer (in-country) to
a repair center would not require an
authorization, provided there were no
parts 744 or 746 license requirements
applicable that applied to transfers (incountry). BIS also highlights that
because the RS license requirement
under § 744.6(a)(6) extends to transfers
(in-country) for the items controlled for
RS in this AC/S IFR and SME IFR that
an EAR authorization is required for all
transfers (in-country) of items subject to
the EAR unless the original
authorization also authorizes
subsequent transfers (in-country), e.g., if
a 3A090.a item was received under a
BIS license by an ultimate consignee
listed on the license and was being
transferred within China to authorized
end users on the license.
Appropriateness of the Scope of U.S.
Person Control
Topic 60: A commenter noted that the
October 7 IFR is overly broad,
particularly with respect to the
prohibitions on U.S. person ‘‘support’’
for certain semiconductor
manufacturing activities in § 744.6(c)(2).
In the absence of clear scoping
restrictions, these broad controls create
difficulty for U.S. companies and
individuals trying to comply and make
it almost impossible for them to
understand what they can and cannot
do.
BIS response: This AC/S IFR has
narrowed the scope of § 744.6 where
warranted to better focus the controls on
activities of national security concern.
This rule has also clarified the scope of
‘‘U.S. person’’ activities that are caught,
which incorporates FAQs previously
published on the BIS website.
Additional discussion of amendments to
§ 744.6 can be found in Section C.4 of
this rule.
Topic 61: A commenter noted that a
‘‘U.S. person’’ should not have to obtain
a license under § 744.23(a)(2)(iv)
because an item could potentially be
used in an end use of concern. This
commenter asked why a U.S. person
with no knowledge of a proscribed
activity, but with knowledge of a nonproscribed activity for a dual use
computer or IC, should be required to
seek a license involving a non-U.S.origin item, simply because of a BIS
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theory, based on no knowledge, that the
activity ‘‘could involve’’ WMD use.
BIS response: The ‘‘U.S. person’’
would have a ‘‘knowledge’’ under
§ 744.6(c)(2)(iv), now redesignated as
§ 744.6(c)(2)(ii), that the CCL Category 3,
B, C, D, or E item was for use for
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
integrated circuits at a ‘‘facility,’’ which
this SME IFR updates to ‘‘of an entity
headquartered in either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5.’’ When this SME IFR and AC/S IFR
use the term ‘‘headquartered’’ in these
two rules, it includes parent entities.
China’s use of ICs in WMD-related
activities warrants imposition of a
higher level of affirmative duty to
‘‘know’’ in order to not be subject to a
license requirement.
‘‘U.S. Person’’ Control Due Diligence
Requirements, as Well as Certain
Limitations on Foreign Companies
Identifying People by Nationality
Topic 62: Some commenters noted
that requiring positive knowledge is a
burden shift for an end use control. This
commenter noted that the
§ 744.6(c)(2)(iv)–(vi) requirement
represents an unprecedented burden
shift. Whereas BIS has previously
required that companies not engage in
willful blindness or ignorance regarding
the end use of their exports, this
component of the rule effectively
mandates diligence via a licensing
requirement.
BIS response: BIS does not agree with
these commenters that the control
requiring positive knowledge is
unprecedented. For example,
§ 744.3(a)(3) (which has been in the EAR
for about 19 years) imposes a license
requirement for all items subject to the
EAR when the exporter, reexporter, or
transferor has ‘‘knowledge’’ that the
item subject to the EAR ‘‘will be used
in the design, ‘‘development,’’
‘‘production,’’ operation, installation
(including on-site installation),
maintenance (checking), repair,
overhaul, or refurbishing of any rocket
systems or unmanned aerial vehicles in
or by a country listed in Country Group
D:4, but you are unable to determine the
characteristics (i.e., range capabilities)
of the rocket systems or unmanned
aerial vehicles, or whether the rocket
systems or unmanned aerial vehicles,
regardless of range capabilities, will be
used in a manner prohibited under
paragraph (a)(2) of this section.’’ A more
recent example that was added in 2014
to part 746 under § 746.5(a)(1)(i)
specifies that a license is required to
export, reexport, or transfer (in-country)
any item subject to the EAR listed in
supplement no. 2 to this part and items
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specified in ECCNs 0A998, 1C992,
3A229, 3A231, 3A232, 6A991, 8A992,
and 8D999 when you ‘‘know’’ that the
item will be used directly or indirectly
in exploration for, or production of, oil
or gas in Russian deepwater (greater
than 500 feet) or Arctic offshore
locations or shale formations in Russia
or Belarus, or are unable to determine
whether the item will be used in such
projects.
Topic 63: A commenter noted that for
the first time, BIS has used the EAR to
inform all U.S. persons around the globe
that certain specific activities of U.S.
persons are regulated because they
could support prohibited WMD
activities in China. This commenter
noted that the regulated activities all
involve shipping, transmitting,
transferring (in-country), or servicing, or
facilitating the shipment, transmission,
or transfer (in-country), of certain items
that are ‘‘not subject to the EAR’’ to or
within China.
BIS response: BIS does not agree. The
regulated activities are consistent with
other regulated activities under § 744.6
and the activities are being regulated
because they could support prohibited
WMD activities in China and Macau.
Topic 64: A commenter noted that
many foreign employers do not track
whether persons are U.S. persons,
which will make it harder to comply
with these U.S. person controls. The
application of these new controls will
be complicated, as U.S. person status is
not widely maintained by non-U.S.
employers. These new controls raise
certain specific practical
implementation concerns.
BIS response: BIS does not agree that
a ‘‘U.S. person’’ restriction applies to a
non-U.S. person entity (e.g., a foreign
corporation) that employs the U.S.
person, unless the entity had knowledge
of the individual’s U.S. person status
and that the individual was in violation
of an applicable U.S. person control.
While a corporation may not track the
U.S. person status of its personnel, a
natural person would be positioned to
‘‘know’’ whether they were a ‘‘U.S.
person.’’
U.S. Person Control Impact on U.S.
Persons Working Outside the U.S. and
on Innovation
Topic 65: A commenter noted that
without clarification as to the scope of
what U.S. person activities constitute
support for the development of certain
advanced semiconductors and
associated technologies in China,
§ 744.6(c)(2) will have a chilling effect
on U.S. academic collaborations with
universities in China as well as on U.S.
university recruitment of highly
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qualified students and researchers from
China in the semiconductor field. This
may detrimentally impact U.S.
leadership and competitiveness in the
advanced semiconductor sector.
Another commenter noted that the U.S.
person control may result in companies
not hiring U.S. persons. This commenter
noted that despite added clarifications
from BIS regarding the scope of these
restrictions, the relevant provisions
continue to be mired in uncertainty.
Companies, consequently, may choose
to interpret the U.S. persons provisions
broadly, and needlessly restrict their
U.S. person employees and contractors
from engaging in a number of businesscritical functions, which prevents such
persons from participating fully in
company operations. In any event, U.S.
person individuals can often be readily
replaced by non-U.S. person individuals
without impeding the shipment of nonEAR items to a covered fabrication
facility.
BIS response: The intent of the
October 7 IFR and this AC/S IFR and
SME IFR is to impose controls as
focused as possible in addressing the
ongoing U.S. national security and
foreign policy concerns discussed in
these rules. BIS does not intend the new
controls to chill research by U.S.
universities or undercut U.S.
technological leadership where such
activity does not present national
security or foreign policy concerns.
With its initial FAQs on the October 7
IFR, BIS clarified the intended scope of
the ‘‘U.S. persons’’ controls. This AC/S
IFR adds those clarifications to the EAR.
In addition, this AC/S IFR clarifies that
the scope of § 744.6 does not include
information or software that would
otherwise be excluded from the EAR
based on the exclusion criteria under
part 734, e.g., under § 734.7 Published
and § 734.8 ‘‘Technology’’ or ‘‘software’’
that arises during, or results from,
fundamental research, as well as
specifying this in § 744.6(d)(1)(ii). BIS
does not intend for the October 7 IFR
controls to result in foreign companies
not wanting to hire ‘‘U.S. persons.’’ BIS
believes the clarifications made to
§ 744.6 in this AC/S IFR and SME IFR
should reduce these concerns. The U.S.
person changes made in this rule are
discussed in Section C.4.
Topic 66: A commenter noted that the
U.S. person control has broad
applicability to many people outside the
U.S. and could be discriminatory to
them. It is important for BIS to take into
account that many individuals located
abroad fall within the definition of ‘‘U.S
person’’ even if they have never lived in
the United States or are currently
permanently residing outside of the U.S.
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and these individuals should not be
singled out due to their citizenship,
which can lead to discrimination and
other claims under the laws of certain
countries.
BIS response: The intent of the
October 7 IFR was to be as focused as
possible in addressing ongoing U.S.
national security and foreign policy
concerns. Being a ‘‘U.S. person’’ has
many benefits, but also certain
responsibilities that go along with being
a ‘‘U.S. person,’’ such as not being
involved in specified activities that are
of concern for WMD reasons as
specified under § 744.6. The U.S.
Department of Treasury’s Office of
Foreign Assets Controls (OFAC) also has
certain responsibilities and restrictions
that go along with being a U.S. person,
so BIS also directs commenters in this
area to review the applicable OFAC
controls on U.S. persons that may be
applicable.
Whether To Use Export, Reexport, and
Transfer (In-Country) Controls or a U.S.
Person Control To Address This
National Security Issue
Topic 67: A commenter requested that
the new restrictions on semiconductor
manufacturing be implemented solely
through BIS’s traditional jurisdiction
over exports, reexports, and transfers
(in-country) of items subject to the EAR,
rather than a new, untested, and overly
broad restriction on U.S. person
‘‘support’’ activities.
BIS response: The national security
and foreign policy concerns addressed
in the October 7 IFR required that BIS
use its full set of regulatory tools under
the EAR, which included using CCLbased controls, end-use controls, and
end-user controls. For the end-use
controls, BIS used both a standard enduse control and expanded the ‘‘U.S.
person’’ control to appropriately address
its concerns. This AC/S IFR and SME
IFR have focused and clarified the scope
of both §§ 744.6 and 744.23.
Provide More Information on Restricted
U.S. Person Activities
Topic 68: A commenter requested BIS
amend the list of controlled activities to
specify whether additional business
processes are controlled or not. This
commenter noted that doing so will
decrease compliance delays arising from
ambiguous language. For example, it is
not clear if restrictions apply to a U.S.
person that processes product payments
but does not conduct physical transfer
of subject items.
BIS response: This AC/S IFR adds
paragraph (c)(3) (Scope of activities of
‘‘U.S. persons’’ that require a license
under § 744.6(c)(2) of the EAR),
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73471
including sub-paragraph (c)(3)(i) that
provides greater specificity on the ‘‘U.S.
person’’ activities that are caught,
consistent with the FAQs posted on the
BIS website on January 25, 2023 on the
scope of the ‘‘U.S. persons’’ control in
§ 744.6(c)(2). This AC/S IFR adds
paragraph (c)(3)(ii) (Due diligence) to
provide compliance guidance for this
‘‘U.S. person’’ control, and adds
paragraph (d)(1) (Exclusion of certain
administrative and clerical activities) to
add greater specificity on the ‘‘U.S.
person’’ activities that are excluded.
U.S. Persons Giving Up U.S. Citizenship
or Permanent Residency in Order To
Participate in PRC Innovation Efforts
Topic 69: A commenter noted that
some U.S. persons may give up their
U.S. nationality to help China build
advanced semiconductors, and they
would be compensated by the PRC
government to obtain a third country
passport. This commenter noted in this
scenario that the now-former U.S.
persons’ spouses may still be U.S.
citizens, so these persons will be able to
return to the United States when they
retire after making money in China. This
commenter believes this is a very clear
loophole in the October 7 IFR.
BIS response: The October 7 IFR and
this AC/S IFR and SME IFR used the
various export control tools that BIS has
under its jurisdiction to address U.S.
national security and foreign policy
concerns. BIS included an expanded
‘‘U.S. person’’ control because of its
concerns that these types of items that
are being used by China are part of their
WMD programs. BIS highly discourages
any ‘‘U.S. person’’ from relinquishing
U.S. nationality to help China engage in
military advancement and human rights
violations. BIS does not have regulatory
authority over immigration matters, so
BIS is not positioned to respond to that
aspect of the comment. However, being
a U.S. citizen or legal permanent
resident of the U.S. has certain benefits
and legal rights that are not afforded to
foreign persons. BIS cautions anyone
that is considering giving up their U.S.
nationality for purposes of work in the
advanced semiconductor industry in
China to weigh those considerations
carefully and not assume they would be
able to return to the United States
following participation in activities
contrary to U.S. national security and
foreign policy interests. BIS also notes
that a person who relinquished their
U.S. nationality would become a foreign
person for purposes of ERC assessment.
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Meaning and Scope of ‘Support’ Under
U.S. Person Control in § 744.6(b)(6)
Topic 70: A commenter noted that the
exact definition of ‘‘support’’ is not clear
under the October 7 IFR. BIS should
consider reconfiguring certain
definitions to factor in business
processes in the logistics sector. This
commenter requested that BIS publish
additional guidance on how logistics
firms can understand and apply
‘‘support’’ requirements to their supply
chains without inducing severe
operational disruptions.
BIS response: The term ‘support’ is
defined for purposes of § 744.6 under
paragraph (b)(6). BIS also notes that the
term ‘support’ is not a new term added
in the October 7 IFR. However, based on
the comments received in response to
the October 7 IFR, BIS agrees that
additional clarifications should be made
on what types of activities involving
‘support’ are excluded, such as certain
logistics activities. This AC/S IFR states
here that for logistics companies, the
prohibited act is the actual delivery, by
shipment, transmittal, or transfer (incountry), of the item and the act of
authorizing the same.
Topic 71: A commenter noted that
§ 744.6 prohibits U.S. persons from
providing ‘‘support’’ for WMD-related
end uses and § 744.6(c) provides that
certain specified activities by U.S.
persons involving items not subject to
the EAR used in semiconductor
fabrication could involve ‘‘support’’ for
a prohibited WMD-related end use, but
it does not say that these specified
activities are the only activities by U.S.
persons related to semiconductor
fabrication that are considered
prohibited ‘‘support’’ for WMD-related
end uses.
BIS response: This commenter misses
the intent of the phrase ‘‘which could
involve ‘support’ for the [WMD]-related
end uses set forth in paragraph (b) of
this section’’ in the introductory text of
§ 744.6(c)(2). The prohibition under
§ 744.6(c)(2) is limited to the exhaustive
listing of ‘support’ activities defined
under § 744.6(b)(6). The phrase ‘‘which
could involve’’ is an acknowledgement
that in certain cases these activities
described under § 744.6(c)(2) may not
involve WMD-related activities, but BIS
believes that there is a significant
possibility that in Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5 such end-uses could involve WMDrelated activities. In cases in which a
‘‘U.S. person’’ believes the prohibited
activity does not involve a WMD-related
activity, the ‘‘U.S. person’’ can set forth
its reasoning in the license application.
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Topic 72: A commenter asked BIS to
confirm whether expediting a part or
component shipment with a supplier or
vendor, by a ‘‘U.S. person,’’ is within
the scope of the controls in § 744.6 or
§ 744.23 if there is knowledge that such
a part or component will be exported,
reexported, or transferred to a covered
fabrication facility. Another commenter
noted that it is unclear whether the
reference to ‘‘support’’ in § 744.6(c)(2)
incorporates all of the definitions of
‘‘support’’ under § 744.6(b)(6) in the
activities that are prohibited under
§ 744.6(c)(2).
BIS response: For the comment
regarding expediting a part or
component, whether that activity is
captured would depend on whether the
act was limited to a U.S. person
conducting administrative or clerical
activities or otherwise implementing a
decision already approved by other
persons, consistent with § 744.6(d)(1)(i),
added in this rule. In addition, the
reference to ‘‘support’’ in § 744.6(c)(2)
incorporates all of the definitions of
‘‘support’’ under § 744.6(b)(6) in the
activities that are prohibited under
§ 744.6(c)(2).
of any other export control agencies,
such as OFAC. Questions on the use of
OFAC regulations terminology should
be directed to OFAC.
Topic 74: A commenter requested BIS
adopt the definition of ‘facilitation’ as,
‘‘Authorizing, servicing, and conducting
support on the production of advanced
nodes.’’ Another commenter requested
that facilitating should be replaced with
the term authorizing if that is what is
really intended, noting that BIS
guidance indicates that ‘‘facilitating’’
such activities means ‘‘authorizing’’
such activities. Without such an
amendment, U.S. persons can be
unnecessarily cut out from fully
engaging in the business of their
employer.
BIS response: The term ‘facilitation’
in the context of § 744.6(b)(6)(iii) has
broader application than to just
paragraph (c)(2), so it would not be
appropriate to adopt the suggested
definitions. Authorizing is an important
part of the scope of facilitating, but there
are additional activities that fall under
facilitating that also need to be caught,
so removing facilitating and adding in
its place authorizing is not accepted.
BIS Has Experience With Regulating
Facilitating, but Should Adopt a
Definition That Is Narrower Than That
Used by OFAC
Topic 73: A commenter noted that
restrictions on exports of services by
U.S. persons are traditionally
administered by OFAC, which has
accordingly developed a framework of
guidance and authorizations over time
to facilitate the implementation of these
restrictions. Some commenters noted
that the scope of ‘‘facilitate’’ should be
narrower under EAR than under the
OFAC sanctions. These commenters
noted that while BIS and OFAC share
some overlapping jurisdiction, the
underlying statutory authorities for the
EAR and the OFAC regulations are no
longer aligned—the current EAR is
legally framed by ECRA, not the
International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (IEEPA). These commenters
noted that this distinction underscores
that controls on ‘‘facilitation’’ or
‘‘facilitating’’ enacted by BIS under the
authority of the EAR or ECRA must be
more limited than controls imposed by
OFAC under IEEPA’s broad authority.
BIS response: BIS has long experience
with regulating activity using the term
facilitating as Section 744.6 has been in
the EAR since the early 1990s. Use of
this term under the EAR is specific to
BIS, and other interpretations from
other agencies are not applicable under
the EAR. Moreover, BIS interpretations
should not be applied to the regulations
Meaning and Scope of Definition of
‘Production’
Topic 75: A commenter requested that
BIS provide an exact definition of
‘‘production’’ because it is not clear
under the October 7 IFR.
BIS response: ‘‘Production’’ is a
foundational EAR term that is already
defined in § 772.1. The term is also
defined and used in the multilateral
export control regimes. As a result, there
should be no ambiguity in how the term
is used and no need for an additional
definition for this term.
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Meaning and Scope of Definition of
‘Servicing’
Topic 76: A commenter requested that
BIS provide an exact definition of
‘‘servicing’’ because it is not clear under
the October 7 IFR.
BIS response: The term servicing has
been used in the EAR for many decades
and in various EAR provisions, such as
under License Exception RPL under
§§ 740.10 and 764.2(e), and in General
Prohibition 10 under § 736.2(b)(10).
This term is intended to have an
expansive meaning and BIS believes it
is well understood in the context of the
EAR. For example, in the context of
License Exception RPL, servicing means
inspection, testing, calibration or repair,
including overhaul and reconditioning
(see § 740.10(b)(2)(i)). BIS has also
provided guidance through FAQs on the
October 7 IFR on what U.S. person
activities are captured by servicing for
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purposes of § 744.6. BIS interprets the
meaning of servicing in the context of
§ 744.6 consistent with the expansive
definition provided under License
Exception RPL.
Scope of Information Covered Under the
‘‘U.S. Person’’ Control
Topic 77: Commenter requests that
BIS clarify the scope of ‘‘any item not
subject to the EAR’’ in § 744.6(c)(2) to
specifically exclude technology and
software that is published and/or that
arises during or results from
fundamental research. Another
commenter is concerned that, without
further clarification from BIS regarding
the scope of ‘‘support’’ and
‘‘facilitating,’’ these terms could be
interpreted to include core university
activities such as training and teaching
students and researchers from China in
the United States. This commenter
requests that BIS expand FAQ IV.A2 to
further clarify that these terms do not
include training and teaching of
students and researchers from China in
the United States.
BIS response: BIS agrees. As noted
above, this AC/S IFR in responding to
these comments clarifies that the scope
of § 744.6(c)(2) does not include
information or software that would
otherwise be excluded from the EAR
based on the exclusion criteria under
part 734, e.g., under § 734.7 Published
and § 734.8 ‘‘Technology’’ or ‘‘software’’
that arises during, or results from,
fundamental research, which this AC/S
IFR specifies in § 744.6(d)(1)(ii).
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Exclude Certain Activities When
Employer Has a BIS Authorization To
Engage in Those Activities
Topic 78: A commenter requested BIS
issue guidance that activities of U.S.
persons in support of licensed activities
by their employer are excluded from the
scope of the controls. It would be
unfortunate for a U.S. person to
unintentionally violate the EAR because
the items subject to the EAR that they
are exporting or reexporting subject to a
BIS license happen to include an item
that was not subject to the EAR, such as
bundled software or a spare part.
BIS response: BIS clarifies here in this
AC/S IFR that existing BIS licenses
would also cover such ‘‘U.S. person’’
activities as described in the
commenter’s scenario. BIS cautions that
if the activity being provided goes
outside the scope of the BIS license,
then a separate analysis of that ‘‘U.S.
person’’ activity must be conducted.
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C. Expansion of Export Controls on
Advanced Computing Items and
Supercomputers
This section describes the specific
EAR revisions adopted in this IFR,
which expand and refine the October 7
IFR with respect to advanced computing
items and supercomputers, and
addresses the national security concerns
that led to an expansion of the country
scope for these commodities and related
software and technology.
Overview of EAR Changes
This AC/S IFR revises ECCN 3A090 to
remove paragraph a, including
paragraphs a.1 through a.4, and adds in
its place a simplified control paragraph.
Those changes, as well as a conforming
change to ECCN 3A991.p, are discussed
below in section C.1 of this rule. This
rule also introduces License Exception
Notified Advanced Computing (NAC),
which is discussed in section C.2. In
response to public comments, the rule
also replaces the criteria ‘‘any other item
on CCL that meet or exceed the
performance parameters of 3A090 or
4A090’’ by positively identifying those
ECCNs in new .z paragraphs, along with
various conforming changes related to
the new .z paragraphs in other parts of
the EAR. The public comments on this
issue are described in section B under
Topics 19–24; additional details about
those changes, and the accompanying
conforming changes including to the
Automated Export System (AES), can be
found in section C.3.
In addition, this rule broadens the
country scope for the Regional Stability
controls to destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5 in
supplement no. 1 to part 740 that are
not also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6 and amends the licensing
policy, as described in section C.4.
Section C.5 discusses clarifications to
the scope of ‘‘U.S. person’’ and end-use
controls related to supercomputers and
advanced computing items. Section
744.23 is expanded to capture PRC
operations outside of China in light of
ongoing national security concerns
related to diversion and misuse of items
subject to the EAR; those changes are
discussed in section C.6. As discussed
in section C.7, this rule adds ECCNs
3A991.p and 4A994.l to License
Exception Consumer Communication
Device (CCD).
As discussed in section C.8, this rule
also broadens the country scope with
respect to the advanced computing FDP
rule to destinations specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5 that are not
also specified in Country Groups A:5 or
A:6. Section C.9 describes changes
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clarifying that the model certificate
published in the October 7 IFR may be
used for all FDP rules. Section C.10
discusses changes to enhance
compliance, including the addition of
five new red flags to assist with
compliance, including adding a red flag
for enhanced FDP guidance for
recognizing ‘‘direct products.’’ The
addition of one new TGL is described in
section C.11. Additional corrections and
clarifications made in this rule are
described in section C.12.
Lastly, BIS requests specific
comments on several issues, which are
listed and described in section D.
National Security and Foreign Policy
Considerations for Expanding Controls
and Country Scope
As noted earlier in the rule, these
advanced or frontier AI capabilities,
such as large dual-use AI foundation
models with capabilities of concern are
particularly problematic because their
use can lead to improved design and
execution of WMD and advanced
conventional weapons. Military
decision-making aided by these AI
models can improve speed, accuracy,
planning, and logistics. The use of such
items in development and deployment
of these AI models would further
China’s goals of surpassing the military
capability of the United States and its
allies, a goal noted in the February 6,
2023 Annual Threat Assessment of the
U.S. Intelligence Community. That same
report indicated that ‘‘China is rapidly
expanding and improving its artificial
intelligence (AI) and big data analytics
capabilities, which could expand
beyond domestic use.’’ These national
security concerns were paramount in
the issuance of this AC/S IFR.
Consistent with the national security
and foreign policy concerns described
in the October 7 IFR, BIS is updating the
EAR to enhance effectiveness of the
controls in addressing these ongoing
concerns. Following the implementation
of the controls last year, BIS continued
to study and assess their effectiveness.
This rule strengthens and improves
those controls by addressing the
national security considerations that
have come to light through open-source
reporting, public comments, and the
intelligence community. Through this
process, BIS learned that certain
additional ICs could provide nearly
comparable AI model training capability
as those controlled in the October 7 IFR
BIS also seeks to further impair
diversion channels through third
countries, particularly those with AI
commercial and research ties to the
PRC.
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In addition, credible open source
reporting identified PRC companies
using foreign subsidiaries to purchase
chips subject to EAR controls, and
accessing and operating datacenters
located outside of the PRC with the ICs
subject to EAR controls. Moreover, BIS
is also concerned about certain
additional ICs, which in turn can be
used to train frontier AI models that
have the most significant potential for
advanced warfare applications,
including unmanned intelligent combat
systems, enhanced battlefield
situational awareness and decision
making, multidomain operations,
automatic target recognition,
autopiloting, missile fusion, precise
guidance for hypersonic platforms, and
cyber attacks. Accordingly, to address
these issues, BIS is making several
changes to the rule.
First, to prevent technical
workarounds, BIS is adding a
performance density parameter to the
original control and including a new
structure for the control. A performance
density parameter prevents the
workaround of simply purchasing a
larger number of smaller datacenter AI
chips which, if combined, would be
equally powerful as restricted chips.
Second, to address PRC operations
inside and outside of China and Macau
seeking to acquire advanced ICs through
transshipment and diversion, and
accessing datacenters with advanced
ICs, the rule expands controls to
destinations in country groups D:1, D:4,
and D:5 that are not also in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6. Additionally, the
rule also adds two new end use controls
to prevent circumvention of the
controls. Moreover, in section D, this
rule is also soliciting comment from
Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)
providers and other stakeholders on
additional regulations in this area,
including know your customer
requirements that can be adopted to
address uses that present a national
security or foreign policy concern.
Third, because advanced-ICs have
varying capabilities implicating national
security concerns, with this rule, BIS is
controlling a wider scope of advancedICs through adoption of a tiered
approach. Thus, first, for the most
powerful data-center ICs (as described
in ECCN 3A090.a), which are of the
greatest national security and foreign
policy concern, BIS is imposing a
license requirement to any destination
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or
D:5 that are not also in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. Second, for advanced-ICs
that are less powerful but could be used
to train large-scale AI systems by a
sufficiently well-resourced actor (as
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described in ECCN 3A090.b, as well as
certain 3A090.a commodities) BIS is
providing license exception NAC for
destinations in Country Groups D:1, D:4,
or D:5, but use of such license exception
will require pre-notification of the
export or reexport to Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5.
This AC/S IFR also adds a new red
flag to assist semiconductor fabrication
facilities’ additional compliance with
the advanced computing FDP rule as
described under section C.10.A.
1. Revision of ECCN 3A090 and
Conforming Change to 3A991.p
A. Revisions to 3A090 control
parameters to ensure ICs for AI training
are controlled.
In ECCN 3A090, this AC/S IFR revises
the ‘‘items’’ paragraph in the List of
Items Controlled section to remove
paragraph a, including paragraphs a.1
through a.4, and adds in its place a
simplified paragraph .a and .b. The
revised 3A090.a control parameter will
control ICs with one or more digital
processing units having either: (1) a
‘total processing performance’ of 4800
or more, or (2) a ‘total processing
performance’ of 1600 or more and a
‘performance density’ of 5.92 or more.
The new ECCN 3A090.b will control ICs
with one or more digital processing
units having either: (1) a ‘total
processing performance’ of 2400 or
more and less than 4800 and a
‘performance density’ of 1.6 or more and
less than 5.92, or (2) a ‘total processing
performance’ of 1600 or more and a
‘performance density’ of 3.2 or more and
less than 5.92. See Technical Notes to
ECCN 3A090 for calculating ‘total
processing performance’ and
‘performance density.’ Together, these
paragraphs expand the scope of control
as compared to the October 7 IFR. This
action is necessary to ensure that ICs
below the October 7 ECCN 3A090
parameters that were still useful for
training advanced AI with military
applications would be controlled.
To more precisely control the types of
ICs presenting the concerns described
above in section C of this rule, ICs that
meet certain performance thresholds
described in Note 2 are not subject to
3A090 controls. Thus, no license is
required for these ICs under 3A090;
however, such ICs may require a license
under another ECCN.
The scope of this control is calibrated
through the addition of several Notes to
ECCN 3A090 and a new license
exception, the former discussed below
in sections C.1.B, C.1.C, and C.1.F and
the latter discussed in section C.2. BIS
excludes from ECCN 3A090 ICs that (1)
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are not designed or marketed for use in
datacenters, and (2) do not have a ‘total
processing performance’ of 4800 or
more (see Note 2). As discussed in
section C.2 of this rule, License
Exception NAC provides a path for prior
notification to BIS when exporting or
reexporting eligible items to the PRC
and Macau. The notification
requirements do not apply for transfers
(in-country) within the PRC and Macau.
Eligible items for License Exception
NAC are defined as those ICs under
ECCN 3A090.b (including ICs that are
designed or marketed for use in a data
center) and specific ICs under 3A090.a
(not designed or marketed for use in a
data center).
B. Addition of exclusion for ‘nondatacenter integrated circuits’ from the
expanded 3A090 control parameter.
In ECCN 3A090, this AC/S IFR adds
a new Note 2 to 3A090 to specify that
3A090 does not apply to non-datacenter
integrated circuits that are (a) not
designed or marketed for use in
datacenters; and (b) do not have a ‘total
processing performance’ of 4800 or
more. In response to this AC/S IFR, BIS
seeks comments on how to refine these
parameters to more granularly cover
additional ICs that would not raise
concerns for use in training large-scale
AI systems. See section D question 6 of
this rule.
The purpose of this Note 2 is to
ensure that as implementation occurs in
the future, the expanded ECCN 3A090.a
and .b control parameters do not
increasingly control certain nondatacenter ICs.
C. Revisions to technical notes for
clarity.
This AC/S IFR also makes several
revisions to the Technical Notes to
address the various comments that BIS
received noting that there are multiple
ways to calculate the TOPS calculations
and identifying that the criteria
provided in the Technical Notes
included in the October 7 IFR under
ECCN 3A090 were not adequate for a
consistent interpretation on how to
calculate the TOPS calculation. BIS
agreed that revisions were needed. This
AC/S IFR revises the five technical
notes for clarity. Most importantly, this
AC/S IFR replaces bits x TOPS with
‘Total processing performance’ (‘TPP’)
values and defines clear, objective
criteria that can be used to calculate the
‘TPP’ value.
In ECCN 3A991, this AC/S IFR
amends Technical Note for 3A991.p,
paragraph 3, to conform with the
changes to the Technical Notes to ECCN
3A090.
D. Expanded license requirement.
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This AC/S IFR also revises the
License Requirements section for the RS
license requirement that applies to the
entire ECCN 3A090 to expand the scope
of the destination-based license
requirements by removing China and
Macau and adding in its place any
destination specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, or D:5 that is not also specified
in Country Groups A:5 or A:6. This
expanded license requirement is
warranted because of the potential
diversion concern for these activities of
concern in or with Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5. However, for destinations to or
within destinations not specified in
Country Group D:5 (except Macau),
license applications will generally be
reviewed under a presumption of
approval license review policy under
§ 742.6(b)(10) paragraph (b)(10)(ii)
(License review policy for paragraph
(a)(6)(iii)). See section C.4 for fuller
description of the license review
policies that will be applicable to these
destinations referenced in this
paragraph.
This AC/S IFR also adds a cross
reference in the RS control in ECCN
3A090 to see § 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
E. Addition of Note 3 to 3A090 and
adding Related Controls cross references
from related ECCNs.
This AC/S IFR, as a conforming
change for the addition of Note 3 to
3A090, adds a Related Controls
reference to Note 3 to 3A090 in ECCNs
3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z,
4A005.z, 4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z,
5A992.z, 5D002.z, or 5D992.z.
2. Addition of License Exception
Notified Advanced Computing (NAC)
for Consumer-Grade ICs With AI
Capabilities
In § 740.8, which prior to the effective
date of this rule was reserved, this AC/
S IFR adds new license exception NAC.
This license exception is for ICs under
ECCN 3A090.b (i.e., ICs designed or
marketed for use in datacenters) and
non-datacenter ICs under 3A090.a (i.e.,
ICs not designed or marketed for use in
datacenters and that do have a ‘total
processing performance’ of 4800 or
more). NAC is available for exports,
reexports, and transfers in or within
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 with
different requirements applicable to
Macau and destinations specified in
Country Group D:5. The purpose of the
notification process, which is only
required for exports and reexports to
Macau or destinations specified in
Country Group D:5, is to provide BIS
and its interagency export controls
partners the opportunity to evaluate the
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national security risk posed by ICs that
fall within this parameter.
This license exception as specified
under the paragraph (a) (Eligibility
requirements) will authorize export,
reexport, and transfer (in-country) of
any item classified in ECCNs 3A090,
4A090, 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z,
4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z,
5D002.z, or 5D992.z, except for items
designed or marketed for use in a
datacenter and meeting the parameters
of 3A090.a. License Exception NAC
authorizes exports, reexports, or
transfers (in-country) to any destination
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or
D:5, provided the applicable criteria
specified under paragraphs (a) and (b)
are met. For exports and reexports to
Macau or destinations specified in
Country Group D:5, in addition to
meeting the criteria under paragraphs
(a) and (b), the notification requirements
under paragraph (c) of License
Exception NAC must all be met. The
notification requirement does not apply
to exports or reexports to any
destination specified in Country Groups
D:1 or D:4 (other than Macau or
destinations also specified in Country
Group D:5) nor does it apply to transfers
(in-country) to any destination.
Paragraph (a)(1) (Written purchase
order) requires that any export or
reexport authorized under License
Exception NAC must be made pursuant
to a written purchase order, except for
commercial samples which are not
subject to this purchase order
requirement. Written purchase orders
are not required for transfers (incountry). Exports, reexports, or transfers
(in-country) to or within any other
destination identified under Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 are authorized
under License Exception NAC, provided
the applicable criteria under paragraphs
(a) and (b) are met.
Paragraph (a)(2) (Notification to BIS)
specifies that for exports or reexports to
Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5, you must notify BIS
prior to exporting or reexporting,
according to the procedures set forth in
paragraph (c) of License Exception NAC.
Paragraph (a)(2) specifies that if you
intend to engage in multiple exports or
reexports after the signing of the
purchase order, you need only notify
BIS prior to the first export or reexport.
Paragraph (a)(2) is not required for
transfers (in-country) within Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5.
Paragraph (b) (Restrictions) apply to
all exports, reexports, or transfers (incountry) authorized under License
Exception NAC. Paragraph (b)(1)
(Prohibited end uses and end users)
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specifies that License Exception NAC is
not able to overcome any part 744 or
746 license requirements, except for a
license required under § 744.23(a)(3) for
reexports or exports to any destination
other than those specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 (excluding any
destination also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6) for an entity that is
headquartered in, or whose ultimate
parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or a destination specified
in Country Group D:5. The restriction
under paragraph (b)(2) (‘Military end
use’ or ‘military end user’) specifies that
no exports, reexports, or transfers (incountry) may be made under License
Exception NAC to or for a ‘military end
use’ as defined in § 744.21(f) or ‘military
end user’ as defined in defined in
§ 744.21(g). This ‘military end use’ or
‘military end use’ restriction applies to
a broader country scope than those
prohibited under §§ 744.17 and 744.21.
Paragraph (c) (Prior notification
procedures) specifies the notification
requirements that must be followed
prior to making any export or reexport
to Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5 under License
Exception NAC. Paragraph (c)(1)
(Procedures) specifies the requirement
to make this notification prior to using
License Exception NAC as well as what
Blocks need to be completed in SNAP–
R for submitting a notification request.
You do not need to submit a commodity
classification determination from BIS
with your notification, but doing so will
be helpful in limiting any concerns
associated with the technical nature of
the item because BIS will already be
familiar with the item’s performance
characteristics if it has conducted a
classification review.
Paragraph (c)(2) (Action by BIS)
specifies that BIS intends during the 25calendar day review period to review
the notification together with the other
export control agencies. Paragraph (c)(3)
(Status of pending NAC notification
requests) describes the process for
entities to follow in BIS’s System for
Tracking Export License Applications
(STELA) (https://snapr.bis.doc.gov/
stela) to obtain the status of a pending
NAC notification or verify the status in
BIS’s Simplified Network Applications
Processing Redesign (SNAP–R) System.
Paragraph (c)(3) also specifies that if no
objection to a NAC notification is raised,
STELA will, on the twenty-fifth
calendar day following the date of
registration, provide a confirmation of
that fact and a NAC confirmation
number to be submitted in AES.
Paragraph (c)(3) also indicates that if the
NAC notification is not approved, on
the twenty-fifth calendar day following
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the date of registration, STELA will
provide you with confirmation if you
cannot use License Exception NAC.
BIS intends to post an announcement
on the BIS website once entities may
submit License Exception NAC
notifications with the goal that License
Exception NAC requests may be
submitted prior to the effective date of
this rule.
This AC/S IFR, as a conforming
change for the addition of License
Exception NAC, adds a NAC paragraph
to the List-Based License Exception
section under ECCNs 3A001.z, 3A090,
4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z,
and 5D992.z.
3. Replacing Criteria for Any Other Item
on CCL That Meet or Exceed the
Performance Parameters of 3A090 or
4A090 by Positively Identifying Those
ECCNs and Adopting .z Paragraphs
The October 7 IFR under § 742.6(a)(6),
along with other provisions in the
October 7 IFR, used the criteria ‘‘or
identified elsewhere on the CCL that
meet or exceed the performance
parameters of ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090.’’
As described above, commenters on the
October 7 IFR raised significant
concerns that this type of catch-all text
deviated from the common structure of
the CCL under supplement no. 1 to part
774 of the EAR, would be burdensome
and possibly unimplementable for many
exporters, reexporters, and transferors,
and would lead to confusion regarding
the appropriate classification and
control of items on the CCL.
Commenters strongly encouraged BIS to
adopt a more conventional approach to
implementing these changes by either
adding new ECCNs to control those
additional items that would otherwise
meet or exceed the performance
parameters of ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090,
or by identifying a positive list of
additional ECCNs that may warrant this
additional control on the CCL and then
creating separate ‘‘items’’ level
paragraphs in each of these respective
ECCNs.
After reviewing the concerns raised
by the commenters, BIS agrees that a
more conventional structure is needed
for imposing this aspect of the October
7 IFR. Accordingly, BIS is identifying a
positive list of the nine additional
ECCNs for which BIS has determined
also have performance characteristics or
functions that meet or exceed the
performance parameters of ECCNs
3A090 or 4A090 and is adding a new
‘‘items’’ level paragraph in the List of
Items Controlled section of each of these
nine ECCNs by adding .z paragraphs to
each. This AC/S IFR makes several
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changes to the EAR to implement this
important change to the October 7 IFR.
For ease of reference these changes are
described here under four types of
changes: (1) adding .z paragraphs to
nine ECCNs; (2) revising Related
Controls for 3A090, 3A991, 4A090,
4A994 and the nine ECCNs to cross
reference each other to assist with
classification; (3) making other EAR
conforming changes needed because of
the addition of .z paragraphs; and (4)
changing export clearance requirements
to increase transparency of .z, 3A090,
and 4A090 shipments.
A. Adding .z paragraphs to nine
ECCNs.
This final rule revises nine ECCNs
3A001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005, 5A002,
5A004, 5A992, 5D002, and 5D992 to
address overlapping controls with
ECCNs 3A090, 4A090, 3A991.p and
4A994.l by adding .z paragraphs to each
of these nine ECCNs. These changes are
intended to make it easier for exporters,
reexporters, and transferors to identify
these items subject to controls added in
the October 7 IFR and to more easily
distinguish these items from other items
controlled under these same nine
ECCNs. Each .z paragraph uses the same
structure, but there are differences in
the .z paragraphs because the
overlapping controls with 3A090 and
4A090, as well as 3A991.p and 4A994.l,
are not the same for each of the nine
ECCNs. Despite the differences in the
text used for each .z paragraph, the
commonality in the paragraphs’
structure should assist understanding.
Some of the .z paragraphs are limited to
one paragraph, but others such as ECCN
5A002 have several paragraphs under
the .z paragraph. BIS is adopting the .z
structure because no ECCN currently
has a .z ‘‘items’’ level paragraph. Similar
to the structure used with the .x and .y
paragraphs for the ‘‘600 series,’’ 9x515,
and 0x5zz ECCNs, using a common
‘‘items’’ paragraph designation will
make it easier for exporters, reexporters,
and transferors to identify these items,
as well as for the U.S. Government to
identify these items under these nine
ECCNs.
For each ECCN this rule revises to add
a .z paragraph, this rule reserves the
items level paragraph from where the
items paragraph ended prior to this AC/
S IFR becoming effective up through
paragraph .y. For example under ECCN
5A002, this rule revises 5A002 to
reserve paragraphs .f through .y. This
rule does the same in each of the other
eight ECCNs that are being revised to
add the .z paragraphs, but depending on
how many items paragraphs each ECCN
had before the effective date of this AC/
S IFR, different paragraphs are reserved.
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BIS includes as an illustrative
example some of the .z paragraphs from
ECCN 5A002 that this AC/S IFR adds.
The introductory text of the 5A002.z
paragraph identifies ‘‘Other
commodities, as follows’’ and then
includes additional control parameters
to identify these .z commodities. ECCN
5A002, because of the complexity of the
ECCN and the overlapping controls with
3A090 and 4A090, has several .z
subparagraphs that are tied to the other
‘‘items’’ paragraphs in 5A002. For
example, 5A002.z.1 controls
commodities that are described in
5A002.a and that also meet or exceed
the performance parameters in 3A090 or
4A090. Similarly, 5A002.z.2 controls
commodities that are described in
5A002.b and that also meet or exceed
the performance parameters in 3A090 or
4A090. Some of the other relevant
ECCNs have a simpler and shorter
structure and may be limited to a single
.z paragraph. However, regardless of
how many .z paragraphs are added, each
.z paragraph functions the same way
because it references an item that is
described elsewhere in the same ECCN
that also meets or exceeds the
performance parameters in 3A090,
4A090, 3A991.p, or 4A994.l, as
applicable and specified in the
respective .z paragraph. By classifying
these items in their own .z paragraph, it
will be easier for exporters, reexporters,
and transferors to identify these items
and the additional controls and other
restrictions that are applicable to them.
In ECCN 3A001, this AC/S IFR
reserves paragraphs j. through y. and
adds paragraphs z.1 through .4 to the
‘‘items’’ paragraph in the List of Items
Controlled section and makes the
following conforming changes by
adding certain 3A001.z items to the
NS1, RS1, MT1 and NP1 Controls
paragraphs and adding a RS control that
applies to items controlled by 3A001.z
for destinations specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5. This AC/S IFR
adds 3A001.z to the exclusion on using
License Exception LVS.
In ECCN 4A003, this AC/S IFR
reserves paragraphs h. through y. and
adds paragraphs .z.1 through .z.4 in the
List of Items Controlled section and
makes a corresponding change to the
Reason for Control section by adding a
RS control for items controlled by
4A003.z for destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5. This
AC/S IFR adds 4A003.z to the exclusion
on using License Exception LVS. This
AC/S IFR also adds a new Note to List
Based License Exception in ECCN
4A003 to specify that the related
equipment specified under ECCN
4A003.g, z.2, or z.4 are eligible for
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License Exception GBS if three
conditions are met. The related
equipment must be exported,
reexported, or transferred (in-country)
as part of a computer system, the
computer system must either be
designated as NLR or eligible for
License Exception APP, and the related
equipment must be eligible for License
Exception APP.
In ECCN 4A004, this AC/S IFR
reserves paragraphs d. through y. and
adds paragraph .z in the List of Items
Controlled section and makes a
corresponding change to the Reasons for
Control section by adding a RS control
that applies to items controlled by
4A004.z (1) for destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are
not also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6 and (2) to or with any
destination not specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 when the export,
reexport or transfer (in-country)
includes an ultimate consignee or end
user headquartered in a destination in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that is
not also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. This AC/S IFR adds 4A004.z
to the exclusion on using License
Exception LVS.
In ECCN 4A005, this AC/S IFR revises
the heading to add the parenthetical
phrase ‘‘(see List of Items Controlled).’’
This AC/S IFR revises the phrase that
referenced ‘‘[T]he list of items
controlled is contained in the ECCN
heading’’ in the ‘‘Items’’ paragraph in
the List of Items Controlled section to
add the phrase ‘‘except for the
commodities controlled under
4A005.z.’’ This rule reserves paragraphs
a. through .y, adds paragraph .z, and
makes a corresponding change to the
Reasons for Control section to add a RS
control that applies to items controlled
by 4A005.z for destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are
not also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. This AC/S IFR also adds
4A005.z to the exclusion on using
License Exception ACE.
BIS notes that although the general
restriction on the use of license
exceptions under § 740.2(a)(9)(ii) and
the terms and conditions of certain listbased license exceptions, such as LVS
or GBS, or the terms of License
Exception STA, would preclude the use
of these EAR license exceptions for
destinations specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, that are not also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6,
that this AC/S IFR as an additional
safeguard still adds exclusions for the
new .z paragraphs for these ECCNs as an
additional reminder to exporters,
reexporters, and transferors that these
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license exceptions are not available for
.z items for these destinations.
In ECCN 5A002, this AC/S IFR
reserves paragraphs f. through y. and
adds paragraphs .z.1 through .5 in the
List of Items Controlled section and
makes the following conforming
changes by adding a RS control that
applies to items controlled by 5A002.z
for destinations specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are not also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6.
This AC/S IFR also adds 5A002.z to the
exclusion on using License Exceptions
LVS and ENC.
In ECCN 5A992, this AC/S IFR
reserves paragraphs d. through y. and
adds paragraphs .z.1 and .2 in the List
of Items Controlled section and makes a
corresponding change to the Reasons for
Control section by revising the RS
control that applies for 5A992.z items
destined to or within destinations
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or
D:5 that are not also specified in
Country Groups A:5 or A:6.
In ECCN 5A004, this AC/S IFR
reserves paragraphs c. through y. and
adds paragraphs .z.1 and .2 in the List
of Items Controlled section and makes
the following conforming change by
adding a RS control that applies to items
controlled by 5A004.z for destinations
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or
D:5 that are not also specified in
Country Groups A:5 or A:6. This AC/S
IFR also adds 5A004.z to the exclusion
on using License Exceptions LVS and
ENC.
In ECCN 5D002, this AC/S IFR
reserves paragraphs e. through y. and
adds paragraphs .z.1 through .9 in the
List of Items Controlled section and
makes the following conforming change
by adding a RS control that applies to
items controlled by 5D002.z for
destinations specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are not also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6.
This AC/S IFR also adds 5D002.z to the
exclusion on using License Exception
ENC.
In ECCN 5D992, this AC/S IFR
reserves paragraphs d. through y. and
adds paragraph .z in the List of Items
Controlled section and makes a
corresponding change to the Reasons for
Control section by revising the RS
control that applies for destinations
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or
D:5 that are not also specified in
Country Groups A:5 or A:6.
B. Revising Related Controls for
3A090, 4A090, 5E001, and the Nine
ECCNs to cross reference each other to
assist with classification.
BIS includes Related Controls
paragraphs in the List of Items
Controlled section of ECCNs to alert
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73477
persons classifying items of related
controls that may be applicable. This
rule revises the Related Controls
paragraphs in ECCNs 3A090 and 4A090
to add references to the nine ECCNs that
this final rule adds .z paragraphs to, as
applicable. Because the cross over that
is being addressed is not identical for
each of these nine ECCNs with .z
paragraphs added, the revisions to the
Related Controls paragraphs are not
identical in all cases.
In ECCN 3A001, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCN 3A090.
In ECCN 3A090, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also 3A001.z, 5A002.z,
5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, and
5D992.z.
In ECCN 3A991, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCNs 5A002.z,
5A004.z, and 5A992.z.
In ECCN 4A003, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCN 4A090.
In ECCN 4A004, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCN 4A090.
In ECCN 4A005, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCN 4A090.
In ECCN 4A090, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCNs 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z,
5A992.z, 5D002.z, and 5D992.z.
In ECCN 4A994, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCNs 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z,
and 5A992.z.
In ECCN 5A002, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCNs 3A090
and 4A090.
In ECCN 5A004, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCNs 3A090
and 4A090.
In ECCN 5A992, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCNs 3A090
and 4A090.
In ECCN 5D002, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCNs 3D001.z
and 4D001.z.
In ECCN 5D992, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCNs 3D001.z
and 4D001.z.
In ECCN 5E001, this AC/S IFR adds
a reference to see also ECCN 3A001.z.
C. Other EAR conforming changes
needed because of addition of .z
paragraphs.
This AC/S IFR makes various changes
to other ECCNs and other parts of the
EAR to make conforming changes where
needed as a result of the addition of the
.z items paragraphs to the nine ECCNs
3A001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005, 5A002,
5A004, 5A992, 5D002, and 5D992.
These changes are made to ensure that
certain provisions that currently apply
for other items controlled under these
nine ECCNs are not narrowed or
expanded as a result of the addition of
the .z paragraphs. In other cases,
specific ‘‘items’’ paragraphs from these
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nine ECCNs are identified in other
provisions where in certain cases, it was
needed to also add in references to
ensure the same provisions will apply to
the .z paragraphs. Because some of the
nine ECCNs include ECCNs, such as
5A002 and 5D002, which are referenced
in various other provisions of the EAR,
this AC/S IFR needed to make various
conforming changes to these other
ECCNs and parts of the EAR. Although
this appears to be extensive revision, the
intent in most cases is to ensure that the
scope of the controls prior to this AC/
S IFR generally does not change. The
changes are described below in the
order they appear in the EAR.
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Conforming Changes in Part 734
In § 734.4(b)(2), this AC/S IFR
removes ECCNs 5A992.c and 5D992.c
and adds in their place ECCNs 5A992
and 5D992. These requirements are
intended to apply to the entire ECCNs,
so these changes are needed to account
for the addition of .z to 5A992 and
5D992.
In § 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and
(h)(1)(ii)(B)(2), this AC/S IFR revises
these two paragraphs to remove the
phrase ‘‘elsewhere on the CCL and
meets the performance parameters in
3A090 or 4A090’’ and adds a more
specific reference to ‘‘meeting the
performance parameters in ECCNs
3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, or 5A992.z.’’ By
adding this more specific reference tied
to the new .z paragraphs, this AC/S IFR
will make it easier for foreign
manufacturers to comply with this
aspect of the Advanced Computing
Foreign Direct Product (FDP) rule and to
more easily apply the de minimis
provisions.
Conforming Changes in Part 740
In § 740.2 Restrictions on all License
Exceptions, this AC/S IFR revises the
general restriction on the use of license
exceptions under paragraph (a)(9)(ii),
which will now be paragraph
(a)(9)(ii)(B) because of the revisions
made in this SME IFR, to remove the
phrase ‘‘elsewhere on the CCL which
meets or exceeds the performance
parameters in ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090’’
and adds in its place the more specific
reference to ‘‘specified in ECCNs
3A001.z; 3D001 (for ‘‘software’’ for
commodities controlled by 3A001.z,
3A090), 3E001 (for ‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 3A001.z);
4A003.z; 4A004.z; 4A005.z; 4D001 (for
‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled
by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z);
4E001 (for ‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 4A003.z,
4A004.z, and 4A005.z); 5A002.z;
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5A004.z; 5A992.z; 5D002.z; 5D992.z;
5E002 (for ‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 5A002.z or
5A004.z); ‘‘software’’ specified by
5D002 (for 5A002.z or 5A004.z
commodities); 5E992 (for ‘‘technology’’
for commodities controlled by 5A992.z
or ‘‘software’’ controlled by 5D992.z).’’
By adding this more specific reference
tied to the new .z paragraphs, this AC/
S IFR will make it easier for exporters,
reexporters, and transferors to know
when this general restriction will apply
on the use of license exceptions. In the
introductory text of paragraph (a)(9)(ii),
this AC/S IFR adds a reference to new
License Exception NAC by adding the
phrase ‘‘NAC, under the provisions of
§ 740.8.’’
In addition to amending § 740.2(a)(9)
to prohibit the use of license exceptions
for certain ECCNs, including those with
a .z paragraph, BIS also notes
restrictions for certain license
exceptions as a reminder for exporters.
In § 740.7 Computers (APP), this AC/S
IFR adds a reference to 4A003.z.2 or z.4
after the reference to 4A003.g in
paragraph (b)(1) to remind exporters
that this restriction on the use of
License Exception APP will also apply
when a commodity that is described in
4A003.g is controlled under 4A003.z.2
or .z.4.
In § 740.16 Additional permissive
reexports (APR), this AC/S IFR revises
paragraphs (a)(2) and (b)(2)(ii) to add a
reference to 3A001.z to ensure that the
restrictions under 3A001.b.2 or b.3 will
continue to apply when a commodity
described under one of those two
‘‘items’’ paragraphs is controlled under
3A001.z.
In § 740.17 Encryption Commodities,
Software and Technology (ENC), this
AC/S IFR makes several conforming
changes to ensure the intended scope of
this license exception is not changed as
a result of the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’
paragraphs:
Under the fifth sentence of the
introductory text to § 740.17, this AC/S
IFR removes the reference to 5A992.c
and 5D992.c and adds in its place a
reference to 5A992 and 5D992.
Under paragraph (b)(1) to § 740.17,
this AC/S IFR adds a reference after
5A002.a to 5A002.z.1 and removes the
reference to 5A992.c and 5D992.c and
adds in its place a reference to 5A992
and 5D992. BIS could have added a
reference to 5D992.z, but because ECCN
5D992 only includes ‘‘items’’
paragraphs .c and .z, it was simpler to
add a reference to 5D992.
Under paragraph (b)(2)(i)(D) to
§ 740.17, this AC/S IFR after 5A002.c
adds a reference to 5A002.z.3 to ensure
the intended scope of this provision is
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not changed as a result of the addition
of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
Under the Note to paragraph (b)(2) to
§ 740.17, this AC/S IFR adds after ECCN
5A002.b a reference to 5A002.z.2 and
after 5D002.b a reference to 5D002.z.5 to
ensure the intended scope of this
provision is not changed as a result of
the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
Under (b)(3) introductory text to
§ 740.17, this AC/S IFR removes
5A992.c and 5D992.c and adds in their
place references to 5A992 and 5D992.
BIS could have added a reference to
5D992.z, but because ECCN 5D992 only
includes ‘‘items’’ paragraphs .c and .z, it
was simpler to add a reference to 5D992.
Under (b)(3)(i) introductory text to
§ 740.17, this AC/S IFR after 5A002.a
adds a reference to 5A002.z.1 to ensure
the intended scope of this provision is
not changed as a result of the addition
of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
Under paragraph (b)(3)(iii)(B) to
§ 740.17, this AC/S IFR after 5D002.a.3.b
adds a reference to 5D002.z.4, and after
5D002.c.3.b adds a reference to
5D002.z.9 to ensure the intended scope
of this provision is not changed as a
result of the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’
paragraph.
Under paragraph (b)(3)(iv) to § 740.17,
this AC/S IFR after 5A002.b adds a
reference to 5A002.z.2, and after
5D002.b adds a reference to 5D002.z.5 to
ensure the intended scope of this
provision is not changed as a result of
the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
Under paragraph (e)(3) second
sentence to § 740.17, this AC/S IFR
removes the reference to 5A992.c and
5D992.c and adds in its place a
reference to 5A992 and 5D992. BIS
could have added a reference to
5D992.z, but because ECCN 5D992 only
includes ‘‘items’’ paragraphs .c and .z, it
was simpler to add a reference to 5D992.
Under paragraph (f)(1) to § 740.17,
this AC/S IFR adds after 5A004.a a
reference to 5A004.z.1 and z.2, after
5D002.a.3.a a reference to 5D002.z.3 and
z.8 to ensure the intended scope of this
provision is not changed as a result of
the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
Conforming Changes in Parts 742, 746,
and 748
In § 742.6 Regional stability, this AC/
S IFR revises paragraph (a)(6)(i), to
remove the phrases beginning with
‘‘5A992 (that meet or exceed the
performance parameters of ECCNs
3A090 or 4A090)’’ and ‘‘5D992 (that
meet or exceed the performance
parameters of ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090).’’
Also in paragraph (a)(6)(iii), this AC/S
IFR removes the phrase ‘‘elsewhere on
the CCL that meet or exceed the
performance parameters of ECCNs
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3A090 or 4A090’’ and in its place
references the nine .z ECCNs ‘‘3A001.z,
4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z,
5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, or
5D992.z.’’ As noted and requested by
several commenters, having a positive
listing of relevant ECCNs will
significantly ease the burden on
exporters, reexporters, and transferors
and the controls will be easier to
implement.
In § 746.8 Sanctions against Russia
and Belarus, this AC/S IFR adds .c after
5A992 and 5D992. This AC/S IFR makes
this change to ensure that 5A992.z and
5D992.z commodities and software will
not be within the scope of this
exclusion.
In § 742.15 (Encryption items), this
AC/S IFR revises the third sentence of
paragraph (a)(1) to remove the .c after
5A992.c and 5D992.c to ensure the
scope of requirement is not changed by
the addition of 5A992.z and 5D992.z.
In § 746.10 ‘Luxury Goods’ Sanctions
Against Russia and Belarus and Russian
and Belarusian Oligarchs and Malign
Actors, this AC/S IFR adds .c after
5A992 and 5D992. This AC/S IFR makes
this change to ensure that 5A992.z and
5D992.z commodities and software will
not be within the scope of this
exclusion.
In 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, this AC/S IFR revises the
VEU entry for ‘‘Advanced Micro Devices
China, Inc.’’ in China to remove the
reference to 4A003 and add in its place
the more specific reference to 4A003.b
through .g to ensure that the currently
approved scope of this VEU entry does
not change because of the addition of
4A003.z. In addition, this AC/S IFR
revises the entry for ‘‘Shanghai Huahong
Grace Semiconductor Manufacturing
Corporation’’ in China to remove the
reference to 5A002 and add in its place
the more specific reference to 5A002.a
through .e; remove the reference to
5A004 and add in its place a more
specific reference to 5A004.a through .b;
and remove 5A992 and adds in its place
a reference to 5A992.c. Also in
supplement no. 7 to part 748, this AC/
S IFR revises the heading of the
supplement to add the parenthetical
phrase ‘‘(in-country)’’ after the term
‘‘transfer’’ for clarity on the scope of the
VEU authorizations under this
supplement and for consistency with
other EAR the provisions, such as the
definition of ‘‘transfer (in-country).’’
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Conforming Changes to §§ 770.2 and
772.1
In § 770.2 Item interpretations, this
AC/S IFR after 4A003.g adds a reference
to 4A003.z.2 and .z.4 in paragraph (l)(2)
to ensure the intended scope of this
provision is not changed as a result of
the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
In § 772.1 Definitions of terms as used
in the Export Administration
Regulations (EAR), this AC/S IFR
revises Note 1 to the term ‘‘specially
designed,’’ to add the parenthetical
phrase ‘‘(except for .z)’’ after ECCNs
5A992 and 5D992 to ensure the
intended scope of this provision is not
changed as a result of the addition of the
.z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
In ECCNs 3D001, 3E001, 4D001,
4E001, 5D002 5E002, and 5E992, this
AC/S IFR revises the License
Requirement section of each of these
nine ECCNs to add related ‘‘software’’
and ‘‘technology’’ controls for the new
.z items added to the nine ECCNs
3A001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005, 5A002,
5A004, 5A992, 5D002, and 5D992 to
impose the same license requirements
on the related ‘‘software’’ and
‘‘technology’’ as applies to the .z
commodities this AC/S IFR adds.
Conforming Changes to the CCL
In ECCN 3D001, this AC/S IFR revises
the TSR paragraph in the List Based
License Exceptions section to add after
ECCN 3A001.b.8 a reference to 3A001.z
to ensure the intended scope of this
provision is not changed as a result of
the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
In ECCN 3E001, this AC/S IFR revises
the TSR paragraph in the List Based
License Exceptions section to add after
ECCNs 3A001.b.8, 3A001.e.4,
3A001.b.2, and 3A001.b.3 references to
3A001.z after each of these items
paragraphs to ensure the intended scope
of this provision is not changed as a
result of the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’
paragraph. Also in ECCN 3E001 under
the Special Conditions for STA section,
this AC/S IFR adds after ECCN
3A001.b.2 and .b.3 a reference to
3A001.z to ensure the intended scope of
this provision is not changed as a result
of the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’
paragraph. Also in Note 2 in the ‘‘items’’
paragraph in the List of Items Controlled
section, this rule adds after 3A001.a.3
and .14 a reference to 3A001.z to ensure
the intended scope of this provision is
not changed as a result of the addition
of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
In Note 3 to Category 4—Computers,
this AC/S IFR after 5A002.a adds a
reference to 5A002.z.1 and z.6, and after
5A004.b adds a reference to 5A004.z;
after 5D002.c.3 adds references to
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73479
5D002.z.6, 5D002.z.8, and z.9. These
changes are made to ensure the
intended scope of this provision is not
changed as a result of the addition of the
.z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
In the Technical Note paragraph 2 in
the TECHNICAL NOTE ON ‘‘ADJUSTED
PEAK PERFORMANCE’’ (‘‘APP’’) at the
end Category 4—Computers, this AC/S
IFR after 4A003.c adds a reference to
4A003.z.1 and z.3 to ensure the
intended scope of this provision is not
changed as a result of the addition of the
.z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
In Note 3 to Category 5—
Telecommunications and ‘‘Information
Security’’ Part 1—Telecommunications,
this AC/S IFR after 5A002.a adds a
reference to 5A002.z.1 and z.6; after
5A004.b adds a reference to 5A004.z;
after 5D002.c.1 adds a reference to
5D002.z.6; and after 5D002.c.3 adds a
reference to 5D002.z.8 and z.9 to ensure
the intended scope of this note is not
changed as a result of the addition of the
.z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
In Note 3 (Cryptography Note) to
Category 5—Telecommunications and
‘‘Information Security’’ Part 2—
‘‘Information Security,’’ to ensure the
intended scope of this note is not
changed as a result of the addition of the
.z ‘‘items’’ paragraph, this AC/S IFR
after 5D002.a.1 adds 5D002.z.1; after
5D002.b adds 5D002.z.5; and after
5D002.c.1 adds 5D002.z.6 . In addition,
under the N.B. to Note 3 (Cryptography
Note), this AC/S IFR removes 5A992.c
and 5D992.c and adds in their place
5A992 and 5D992. BIS could have
added a reference to 5A992.z and
5D992.z, but because ECCNs 5A992 and
5D992 only include ‘‘items’’ paragraphs
.c and .z, it was simpler to add
references to 5A992 and 5D992.
In ECCN 5B002 under ‘‘items’’
paragraph .b in the List of Items
Controlled section, this AC/S IFR after
5D002.a adds a reference to 5D002.z.1
through z.4 and after 5D002.c adds a
reference to 5D002.z.6 through z.9 to
ensure the intended scope of this
provision is not changed as a result of
the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
In ECCN 5E002, this AC/S IFR under
‘‘items’’ paragraph a in the List of Items
Controlled section after 5D002.a adds a
reference to 5D002.z.1 through .z.3, and
after 5D002.c adds a reference to
5D002.z.6 through .z.8. Also in the Note
to 5E002.a, this AC/S IFR after
5D002.a.3.b adds a reference to
5D002.z.4; and after 5D002.c.3.b adds a
reference to 5D002.z.9. Lastly under
‘items’’ paragraph b in the List of Items
Controlled section, this AC/S IFR after
5A002.b adds a reference to 5A002.z.2.
All of these changes are made to ECCN
5E002 to ensure the intended scope of
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these provisions is not changed as a
result of the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’
paragraph.
In ECCN 5E992, this AC/S IFR revises
‘‘items’’ paragraph b in the List of Items
Controlled section to remove 5D992.c
and add in its place 5D992. BIS could
have added a reference to 5D992.z, but
because ECCN 5D992 only includes an
‘‘items’’ paragraph .c and .z, it was
simpler to add a reference to 5D992.
In ECCN 9A004, this AC/S IFR under
‘‘items’’ paragraph d in the List of Items
Controlled section, after 3A001.b.1.a.4
adds a reference to 3A001.z (if also
described in 3A001.b.1.a.4), after
5A002.c adds a reference to 5A002.z.3,
and after 5A002.e adds a reference to
5A002.z.5 and z.10 to ensure the
intended scope of these provisions is
not changed as a result of the addition
of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
In ECCN 9A515 under Note 2 to
9A515.d and .e, this AC/S IFR after
3A001.a adds a reference to 3A001.z to
ensure the intended scope of this note
is not changed as a result of the addition
of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph. In addition,
under ‘‘items’’ paragraph x.4 in the List
of Items Controlled section, this rule
after 3A001.e.4 adds a reference to
3A001.z, after 3A001.b.4 adds a
reference to 3A001.z; and under ‘‘items’’
paragraph x.6 after 3A001.b.8 adds a
reference to 3A001.z. All of these
changes to ECCN 9A515 are made to
ensure the intended scope of these
provisions is not changed as a result of
the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’ paragraph.
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Conforming Changes to Supp. No. 6 to
Part 774
In supplement no. 6 to part 774—
Sensitive List, this AC/S IFR revises
paragraphs: (3)(i) to add after 3A001.b.2
the parenthetical phrase ‘‘(including
those described under 3A001.b.2 that
are controlled by 3A001.z)’’; (3)(ii) to
add after 3A001.b.3 the parenthetical
phrase ‘‘(including those described
under 3A001.b.3 that are controlled by
3A001.z);’’ (3)(iv) to add after 3A001.b.3
the phrase ‘‘equipment described under
3A001.b.2 or 3A001.b.3 that are
controlled under 3A001.z’’ and after
3A002.g.1 to add the phrase ‘‘and
equipment described under 3A002.g.2
that are controlled under 3A002.z;’’ and
lastly under (3)(v) after 3A001.b.3, adds
the phrase ‘‘equipment described under
3A001.b.2 or 3A001.b.3 that are
controlled under 3A001.z’’ and after
3A002.g.1 adds the phrase ‘‘and
equipment described under 3A002.g.2
that are controlled under 3A002.z.’’ All
of these changes to the Sensitive List are
made to ensure the intended scope of
these provisions is not changed as a
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result of the addition of the .z ‘‘items’’
paragraph.
D. Export clearance changes to
increase transparency of .z, 3A090, and
4A090 shipments.
i. Identification of .z items in AES.
The identification of items under .z
paragraphs will assist exporters,
reexporters, and transferors by having a
distinct classification of these items
under these nine ECCNs, which will
assist companies in reducing their
compliance burdens and keeping better
track of these items. For all shipments
to China, regardless of dollar value, an
Electronic Export Information (EEI)
filing is required in AES for any items
classified under an ECCN on the CCL
pursuant to the requirement under
§ 758.1(b)(10), which includes the nine
ECCNs that this rule adds .z paragraphs
to, unless authorized under License
Exception GOV under § 740.11. The
mandatory EEI filing requirement in
AES is important for transparency into
which CCL items are being shipped to
China. However, classification
information filed in AES is at the ECCN
level and does not include the ‘‘items’’
level classification. One exception to
this practice is in the case of end-item
firearms for exporters who wish to use
the EEI filing in AES as the method for
submitting conventional arms reporting
to BIS instead of submitting separate
reports to BIS. They do so by entering
the items level classification as the first
text to appear in the Commodity
description block in the EEI filing in
AES.
The benefit for exporters would be
undermined if they are not allowed to
identify in the EEI filing in AES the .z
items level classification because their
shipments to a destination specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5,
excluding any destination also specified
in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, could
potentially be stopped if someone from
the U.S. Government had questions as to
whether, for example, the item was
classified under ECCN 5A002.a or under
5A002.z. The U.S. Government also has
an interest in being able to easily
identify the .z items in the EEI filing
data in AES. The solution to this
problem, to benefit both exporters and
the U.S. Government, BIS applies the
successful model that has been used for
identifying end-item firearms in the EEI
data in AES by adopting a similar type
of requirement for these .z paragraphs
for EEI filings in AES. In § 758.1 (The
Electronic Export Information (EEI)
Filing to the Automated Export System
(AES)), this rule adds a new paragraph
(g)(5) (Exports of .z items that meet or
exceed the performance parameters of
ECCN 3A090 or 4A090). New paragraph
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(g)(5) imposes a requirement for
identifying .z items by ‘‘items’’ level
classification in the EEI filing in AES.
New paragraph (g)(5) specifies that for
any export of .z items controlled under
ECCNs 3A001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005,
5A002, 5A004, 5A992, 5D002, or 5D992
in addition to any other required data
for the associated EEI filing, the EEI filer
must include the items paragraph
classification (i.e., .z), when applicable,
for ECCNs 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z,
4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, or 5A992.z,
5D002.z, or 5D992.z. as the first text to
appear in the Commodity description
block in the EEI filing in AES.
ii. Identification of 3A090, 4A090,
and .z commodities on the commercial
invoice. In § 758.6, this AC/S IFR revises
paragraph (a)(2) to expand the list of
ECCNs that an exporter must
incorporate as an integral part of the
commercial invoice. Prior to this final
rule becoming effective, this
requirement was limited to ECCN(s) for
any 9x515 or ‘‘600 series’’ ‘‘items’’ being
shipped (i.e., exported in tangible form).
This AC/S IFR adds 3A090 and 4A090,
and the seven commodity .z ECCNs
3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, and 5A992.z, to the
requirement. This AC/S IFR does not
add ECCNs 5D002.z and 5D992.z to
§ 758.6 because these exports would
typically be done in an intangible
format. However, even when EEI is not
required to be filed in AES for an
intangible export, BIS still encourages
exporters, as a good compliance
practice, to identify the .z classification
for ECCN 5D002.z and 5D992.z on the
commercial invoice when applicable.
For the nine ECCNs with a .z paragraph,
the requirement to include the
classification only applies to
commodities classified under the .z
paragraphs. If the commodity is
classified under any other items
paragraph in one of those nine .z
ECCNs, then the requirement under
§ 758.6(a)(2) is not applicable. This AC/
S IFR also specifies that the requirement
for identifying ECCN 3A090 includes
identifying the commodity as either
3A090.a or .b.
BIS is adding this additional export
clearance requirement to increase the
transparency of these items for entities
receiving these items overseas. In
particular, with the foreign direct
product rules from the October 7 IFR
also tied to these ECCNs, it will assist
foreign manufacturers and other parties
to be able to more easily identify when
they receive a 3A090, 4A090, or a
3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, or 5A992.z ECCN
item. BIS is aware that companies
outside the United States have
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requested in the past on several
occasions that BIS broaden the
requirement under § 758.6(a)(2) to
require additional ECCNs to be included
on the commercial invoice to assist
them and reduce their burden. There
were also a significant number of
comments in response to the October 7
IFR that expressed concern that the
burdens being imposed in particular on
reexporters may lead to a designing out
of U.S.-origin content, so broadening
this requirement for U.S. exporters to
assist foreign manufacturers is a tangible
way that BIS can reduce the burden on
reexporters, while at the same time
helping to improve the effectiveness of
the October 7 IFR by ensuring greater
transparency for these items. BIS does
not anticipate any change in the burden
for exporters as a result of this expanded
requirement.
4. Expansion of RS License
Requirements, and Adoption of
Additional Presumption of Approval
License Review Policy With Certain
Exclusions That Will Be Presumption of
Denial
A. Expansion of RS license
requirement from China and Macau to
include Country Groups D:1, D:4, and
D:5.
In § 742.6 Regional stability, the AC/
S IFR revises paragraph (a)(6) (RS
requirement that applies to advanced
computing and semiconductor
manufacturing items) to reflect the
expanded scope of this paragraph for
certain items. BIS is revising paragraph
(a)(6)(i) to remove references to 3A090
and 4A090 and the associated software
and technology, adding .z items created
by this AC/S IFR, and imposing a
license requirement for these items
under new paragraph (a)(6)(iii) (Exports,
reexports, transfers (in-country) to or
within destinations specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5, excluding
destinations also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6). This AC/S IFR adds
these items under a separate paragraph
(a)(6)(iii) because of the expanded
country scope of destinations in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5 that
are not also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6, which will apply to these
items. The broader country scope
license requirement for these items
identified under paragraph (a)(6)(iii) is
warranted to address diversion concerns
from these destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5
(excluding destinations also specified in
Country Groups A:5 or A:6) to China
and Macau. BIS notes that these
additional countries are members of
Country Group D:1, D:4, or D:5 because
of concerns related to national security
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or missile technology proliferation, or as
countries subject to a U.S. arms
embargo, respectively. A fuller
description of the national security
concerns that led to these changes can
be found in section C of this rule,
including a description of the different
license review policies that apply to
some of these additional Country Group
D:1, D:4, or D:5 destinations compared
to China and Macau. See section C.4 for
the description of the license review
policies.
Also, in § 742.6(a)(6), the AC/S IFR
removes § 742.6(a)(6)(ii) (Deemed
exports) and redesignates that paragraph
as (a)(6)(iv), as described further below
under Section C.3.B. In addition, this
AC/S IFR removes the former license
requirement under paragraph (a)(6)(i)
that applied to exports from abroad
originating in either China or Macau,
and adds that under paragraph (a)(6)(ii),
including adding references to the .z
items this AC/S IFR adds to the EAR,
consistent with § 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and
(h)(2)(ii) of the EAR. This AC/S IFR
redesignates this text also under
paragraph (a)(6)(ii) because BIS is not
expanding the country scope of the FDP
rules under § 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and
(h)(2)(ii) of the EAR. This AC/S IFR also
removes paragraph (a)(6)(ii) (which this
SME IFR redesignated as (a)(6)(iii) and
this AC/S IFR redesignates as (a)(6)(iv)),
as described further below under
section C.3.B). Also, in § 742.6, this rule
redesignates the introductory text of
paragraph (b)(10) (Advanced computing
and semiconductor manufacturing
items) as new paragraph (b)(10)(i)
(License review policy for paragraphs
(a)(6)(i) and (ii)) to specify the license
review policy that applies to those two
new paragraphs. This AC/S IFR
specified that such license applications
will be reviewed consistent with license
review policies in § 744.23(d) of the
EAR, except applications will be
reviewed on a case-by-case basis if no
license would be required under part
744 of the EAR rule.
This AC/S IFR also adds a new
paragraph (b)(10)(ii) (License review
policy for paragraph (a)(6)(iii)) to
specify license applications for items
specified in paragraph (a)(6)(iii) to or
within destinations not specified in
Country Group D:5 (except Macau) will
be reviewed on a presumption of
approval basis, unless the export,
reexport, or transfer (in-country) is to an
entity headquartered in or whose
ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5, in which case license applications
will be reviewed under a presumption
of denial. This AC/S IFR also specifies
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73481
that license applications for items to or
within Macau or destinations specified
in Country Group D:5 for items
specified in paragraph (a)(6)(iii) will be
reviewed under a presumption of
denial.
In conformity to the changes
described above, this AC/S IFR also
revises ECCNs 3A001, 3D001, 3E001,
4A003, 4A004, 4A005, 5A002, 5A004,
and 5D002 to add a RS license
requirement and a reference to
destinations specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 (excluding
destinations specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6). Similarly, the RS
license requirement in ECCNs 3A090,
4A090, 5A992, and 5D992 is revised to
remove the reference to ‘‘China and
Macau’’ and to add in its place a
reference to destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5
(excluding destinations specified in
Country Groups A:5 or A:6).
B. Exclusion of deemed exports and
deemed reexports.
This AC/S IFR removes
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) that, prior to the
effective date of this SME IFR, specified
that deemed exports and deemed
reexports were excluded from the
license requirements under paragraph
(a)(6) and redesignates this paragraph as
paragraph (a)(6)(iv). See section D
question 4 for specific public comments
BIS is seeking on the application of
deemed exports and deemed reexports.
5. Clarifications for ‘‘U.S. Person’’ End
Use Control
A. Clarification of the scope of ‘‘U.S.
persons’’ activities controlled under
§ 744.6(c)(2) with the addition of new
paragraph (c)(3).
This AC/S IFR revises paragraphs
(c)(2)(i) and (ii) to broaden the country
scope of those controls from Macau and
China to apply to Macau and
destinations specified in Country Group
D:5 when you know the item will be
used in the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of ICs at a facility of an
entity headquartered in or whose
ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5.
This AC/S IFR also adds a paragraph
(c)(3) (Scope of activities of ‘‘U.S.
persons’’ that require a license under
§ 744.6(c)(2) of the EAR) to clarify the
scope of activities that are caught under
§ 744.6(c)(2)(i) through (iii). This
clarification, partially codifying
previously issued guidance from BIS
through Frequently Asked Questions for
the October 7 IFR, addresses questions
received regarding the types of activities
of ‘‘U.S. persons’’ that are intended to be
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caught and are subject to the paragraph
(c)(2)(i) through (iii) license
requirements. This AC/IFR adds
paragraph (c)(3)(i) to specify that the
‘‘U.S. persons’’ controls in § 744.6(c)(2)
apply to persons who meet the criteria
under paragraph (c)(3)(i)(A), (B), or (C).
The persons subject to the license
requirements under paragraph
(c)(3)(i)(A) are ‘‘U.S. persons’’ that
authorize the shipment, transmittal, or
transfer (in-country) of items not subject
to the EAR, under paragraph (c)(3)(i)(B)
are ‘‘U.S. persons’’ that conduct the
delivery, by shipment, transmittal, or
transfer in-country, of items not subject
to the EAR, and under paragraph
(c)(3)(i)(C) are ‘‘U.S. person’’ that
service, including maintaining,
repairing, overhauling, or refurbishing
items not subject to the EAR.
This AC/S IFR also adds paragraph
(c)(3)(ii) (Due diligence) to illustrate the
type of due diligence that should be
undertaken when reviewing a
transaction for purposes of
§ 744.6(c)(2)(i) through (iii). ‘‘U.S.
persons’’ should conduct due diligence
to determine whether the end use for
the item not subject to the EAR involves
the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
‘‘advanced-node integrated circuits
versus other legacy ICs.’’ Paragraph
(c)(3)(ii) provides examples of what
appropriate due diligence may include,
including guidance for how to resolve
potential red flags.
Lastly, this AC/S IFR adds a new
paragraph (d)(1) (Exclusion of certain
administrative and clerical activities
and information otherwise excluded),
which includes adding new paragraph
(d)(1)(i) (Exclusion of Certain
administrative and clerical activities) to
specify the types of ‘‘U.S. person’’
activities that are excluded from the
controls in § 744.6. This AC/S IFR also
adds new paragraph (d)(1)(ii) that
clarifies that the scope of § 744.6(c)(2)
does not include information or
software that would otherwise be
excluded from the EAR based on the
exclusion criteria under part 734, e.g.,
under § 734.7 Published and § 734.8
‘‘Technology’’ or ‘‘software’’ that arises
during, or results from, fundamental
research. This AC/S IFR also adds
paragraph (d)(1)(iii) to add an exclusion
of law enforcement and intelligence
operations of the U.S. Government to
specify the ‘‘U.S. persons’’ criteria in
§ 744.6(c)(2)(i)–(iii) do not extend to
‘‘U.S. persons’’ conducting law
enforcement and intelligence operations
of the U.S. Government.
B. Addition of guidance for
submitting license applications for
‘‘U.S. persons’’ activities.
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In supplement no. 2 to part 748—
Unique Application and Submission
Requirements, this rule adds a new
paragraph (s) (‘‘U.S. person’’ support
activities that require a license under
§ 744.6), to provide guidance on how to
apply for a license application for ‘‘U.S.
person’’ activities that require a license
application under § 744.6. The
guidance, codifying and expanding
upon previously issued BIS Frequently
Asked Questions on this issue, is under
new paragraph (s). The provision
specifies that applicants should use the
reexport designation on the SNAP–R
form and in the ‘‘Additional
Information’’ section of the license
application, they should note that a
license is required for the transaction
under § 744.6 of the EAR. The guidance
also specifies that in the special purpose
field, the applicant should describe the
specific activity the ‘‘U.S. person’’ is
engaged in that requires a license. In
addition, the guidance specifies the
applicant should provide the ECCN of
the technology or item or, if unknown,
use EAR99 (regardless of whether the
items are subject to the EAR), as well as
a complete explanation of the activity in
supplemental documentation.
In § 748.8 (Unique application and
submission requirements), this rule
makes a conforming change to add a
new paragraph (d) (U.S. person support
activities that require a license under
§ 744.6). This rule also, as additional
conforming changes with the existing
supplement no. 2 to part 748, adds
paragraphs (s) (Exports of firearms and
certain shotguns temporarily in the
United States); (t) (‘‘600 Series Major
Defense Equipment’’); and (z)
(Semiautomatic firearms controlled
under ECCN 0A501.a). Paragraphs (s),
(t), and (z) were included in supplement
no. 2 to part 748, but were inadvertently
omitted from the text in § 748.8, so this
rule corrects that oversight.
6. Expansion of § 744.23 To Add Two
Additional End-Use license
Requirements
A. Addition of end-use control for
Macau and D:5 headquartered
(headquartered in or whose ultimate
parent company is headquartered in
Macau or Country Group D:5),
companies when located outside of D:1,
D:4, or D:5.
In § 744.23 ‘‘Supercomputer’’ and
semiconductor manufacturing end use,
this rule expands the scope of the enduse controls under this section by
adding two new end-use controls. First,
this AC/S IFR adds under paragraph
(a)(3)(i) a new advanced computing enduse control which will apply to any
item subject to the EAR and specified in
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ECCN 3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090, 5A002.z,
5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, or 5D992.z.
A license will be required under
paragraph (a)(3)(i) for the export,
reexport, or transfer (in-country) to or
within any destination not specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5
(excluding any destination also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6)
of commodities identified in ECCNs
3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z,
4A005.z, 4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z,
5A992.z, or 5D002.z, or 5D992.z when
the exporter, reexporter, or transferor
has ‘‘knowledge’’ at the time of the
export, reexport, or transfer (in-country)
that item is destined for any entity that
is headquartered in, or whose ultimate
parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or a destination specified
in Country Group D:5. This additional
end-use control is needed to ensure that
the national security objectives of the
October 7 IFR and this AC/S IFR are not
undermined by Macau, PRC or other
Country Group D:5 entities setting up
cloud or data servers in other countries
to allow these headquartered companies
of concern to continue to train their AI
models in ways that would be contrary
to U.S. national security interests. This
expanded end-use control is intended to
target entities of concern, such as a PRCheadquartered cloud or data server
provider located outside of China in a
destination other than Country Groups
D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding any
destination also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6. The license
requirements under this end-use control
apply to destinations in Country Group
A:5 and A:6 and any other destination
not specified in Country Groups D:1,
D:4, or D:5.
B. Addition of end-use control for
‘‘production’’ of advanced computing
items in any destination worldwide
when using certain direct products
exported from Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group.
This AC/S IFR adds an additional
end-use control for the items identified
under paragraph (a)(3)(ii) to specify an
end-use control applies to any
‘‘technology’’ subject to the EAR and
specified in ECCN 3E001 (for 3A090)
‘‘technology’’ when the technology
meets all of the following: the
technology is developed by an entity
headquartered in or whose ultimate
parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or a destination specified
in Country Group D:5; the technology is
subject to the EAR pursuant to the FDP
rule in § 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and
(h)(2)(ii) of the EAR; and the technology
is for the reexport or transfer (incountry) from or within Macau or a
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destination specified in Country Group
D:5to any destination worldwide of
3E001. The FDP rule requirement
highlighted above is intended to better
ensure the intent of these two FDP rules
are not able to be circumvented by
trying to conduct these types of
activities outside of Macau or
destinations specified in Country Group
D:5 by entities headquartered in, or
whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5.
C. Expansion of Country Scope to
conform to broader country scope
included in this AC/S IFR.
This AC/S IFR as a conforming
change also revises paragraphs
(a)(1)(ii)(A) and (B) and (a)(2)(i) and (ii)
to remove China and add in its place the
broader country scope of Macau and any
destination specified in Country Group
D:5.
D. Revision of Supercomputer end-use
control.
This AC/S IFR revises paragraph
(a)(1)(ii)(A) and (B) to broaden the
destination scope of the supercomputer
end-use control by replacing ‘‘China or
Macau’’ with ‘‘Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5.’’
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7. Addition of ECCNs 3A991.p .z,
4A994.l, or .z to License Exception CCD
In § 740.19 Consumer
communications devices (CCD), this
final rule adds a new paragraph (b)(17)
to add commodities described under
3A991.p or 4A994.l, as commodities
eligible for License Exception CCD.
ECCNs 3A991.p and 4A994.l were not
included in the October 7 IFR. BIS
determined it is warranted to add these
commodities as eligible commodities
under License exception CCD because
these ECCNs are for low-level items and
are in line with other items identified as
eligible for License Exception CCD. This
AC/S IFR as a conforming change also
revises paragraph (b)(16) to remove the
period and add a semi-colon and the
word ‘‘and’’ after the semi-colon to
reflect the addition of new paragraph
(b)(17).
8. Broadening the Country Scope of the
Advanced Computing FDP Rule
In § 734.9(h) (Advanced computing
FDP rule), this AC/S IFR broadens the
country scope of the advanced
computing FDP rule by revising
paragraph (h)(2) (Destination or end use
scope of the advanced computing FDP
rule). Specifically, BIS revises
paragraphs (h)(2)(i) and (ii) by removing
‘‘PRC or Macau’’ and adding in its place
a ‘‘destination specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding any
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destination also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.’’ Under revised
paragraph (h)(2)(i) the country scope
also extends worldwide when the
‘‘direct product’’ is to or for an entity
headquartered in or whose ultimate
parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or a destination specified
in Country Groups D:5. This AC/IFR
also adds a new Note to paragraph (h)(2)
to clarify that the requirements apply
when any of these headquartered in or
whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, companies are a party
to the transaction involving the foreignproduced item, e.g., as a ‘‘purchaser,’’
‘‘intermediate consignee,’’ ‘‘ultimate
consignee,’’ or ‘‘end-user.’’ Additional
corrections and clarifications to this
section are described in Section C.11.A
of this rule.
9. Clarification That Model Certificate
May Be Used for All Foreign Direct
Product (FDP) Rules
In supplement no. 1 to part 734—
Model Certification for Purposes of
Advanced Computing FDP rule, this
AC/S IFR revises the heading to Model
Certification for Purposes of the FDP
rules, and revises paragraph (a) of that
supplement to clarify that the model
certification may be used for any of the
FDP rules under § 734.9. This AC/S IFR
revises paragraph (a) to clarify that the
model certificate may be provided by
any entity in a supply chain or to an
exporter, reexporter, or transferor of the
item. In addition, this rule adds an
example to improve public
understanding that the model
certification may flow more than one
way (forward or backwards) in a supply
chain.
This AC/S IFR also revises paragraph
(b) (model criteria), to revise the
introductory text of paragraph (b) and
the text of paragraph (b)(2) to make the
model certification applicable for any of
the FDP rules under § 734.9. New
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (ix) to
provide model criteria for any of the
FDP rules that is applicable to their
scenario.
This AC/S IFR removes paragraph
(b)(3) because the substance of
paragraph (b)(3) is already addressed
under paragraph (b)(2).
This AC/S IFR also redesignates
paragraph (b)(4) as (3) and revises the
newly redesignated paragraph to make a
conforming edit to add the phrase ‘‘or
exporter(s), reexporter(s), or
transferor(s)’’ to clarify that the model
certification can flow in either direction
in a supply chain. This AC/S IFR also
revises Note 1 to paragraph (b) to clarify
that the model certification can flow
from the exporter, reexporter, or
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transferor to another entity in the
supply chain or may flow the other way
from a consignee back to an exporter,
reexporter, or transferor in the supply
chain. The purpose of the model
certification is to enhance awareness of
the potential applicability of the FDP
rules in supply chains, so there is
flexibility for how entities use the
model certification between different
entities involved in supply chains to
help achieve that objective.
10. Changes To Enhance and Assist
With Compliance
A. Addition of five new red flags to
assist with compliance.
In supplement no. 3 to part 732—
BIS’s ‘‘Know Your Customer’’ Guidance
and Red Flags, this AC/S IFR adds five
new red flags that are intended to
provide additional compliance guidance
to assist exporters, reexporters, and
transferors as part of their compliance
programs for the October 7 IFR. Several
commenters on the October 7 IFR
requested BIS add red flags to the EAR
that have applicability for the types of
transactions involving items from the
October 7 IFR, similar to what was done
when the ‘‘600 series’’ military items
were moved to the EAR under Export
Control Reform. BIS agreed with the
commenters and adds five new red flags
to assist exporters, reexports, and
transfers identify potential red flags.
New red flag 15 identifies a scenario
where, prior to the October 7 IFR, a
customer’s website or other marketing
materials indicated that the company
had advertised or otherwise indicated
its capability for ‘‘developing’’ or
‘‘producing’’ ‘‘advanced-node integrated
circuits.’’ This type of activity would
raise a red flag and require additional
due diligence.
New red flag 16 is a variant of some
of the red flags regarding a mismatch
between what a customer says an item
would be used for, and the item’s
traditional use. New red flag 16
provides a similar type of example but
makes it specific to items intended for
the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
‘‘advanced-node integrated circuits.’’
New red flag 17 identifies a scenario
where the customer is ‘‘known’’ to
‘‘develop’’ or ‘‘produce’’ items for
companies located in Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5 that are involved with
supercomputers, which would also
trigger a red flag under the EAR. This
type of scenario may be indicative that
the items that are being ‘‘developed’’ or
‘‘produced’’ may be for use in
supercomputers and warrants additional
due diligence.
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New red flag 18 addresses how
exporters, reexporters, or transferors
should evaluate anticipated future
capabilities, which was another issue
about which commenters sought
additional compliance guidance, in
particular the end-use controls under
§ 744.23(a)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii), which have
been redesignated as paragraph
(a)(1)(i)(A) and (B) and (a)(2)(i) in this
SME IFR. New red flag 18 specifies that
in scenarios where a customer has
indicated intent to ‘‘develop’’ or
‘‘produce’’ supercomputers or integrated
circuits in Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5 in the
future that would otherwise be
restricted under § 744.23(a)(2)(i), (ii), or
(iii), redesignated as paragraphs
(a)(1)(i)(A) and (B) and (a)(2)(i), raises a
red flag under the EAR.
New red flag 19 addresses how
semiconductor fabrication facilities can
identify when they receive an order
from a destination in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, or D:5 or worldwide from an
entity headquartered in or whose
ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5 where the item to be produced is
likely a ‘‘direct product’’ that will be
subject to the EAR under § 734.9(h). Red
flag 19 is part of BIS’s efforts to provide
guidance to semiconductor fabrication
facilities trying to develop enhanced
FDP guidance for recognizing ‘‘direct
products.’’ Specifically, BIS is adding
this new red flag 19 to better assist any
semiconductor fabrication facility that is
or will be producing, for a company
headquartered in or whose ultimate
parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or a destination specified
in Country Group D:5 an IC, or a
computer, ‘‘electronic assembly,’’ or
‘‘component’’ that incorporates an IC
that meets certain specified criteria
under § 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and
(h)(1)(ii)(B)(2) that there is a high degree
of likelihood (‘‘knowledge’’) that the
‘‘direct product’’ that is or will be
‘‘produced’’ is within the product scope
of § 734.9(h). This criteria specifies that
if the item that is or will be produced
is an IC, or a computer, ‘‘electronic
assembly,’’ or ‘‘component’’ that
incorporates more than 50 billion
transistors and high-bandwidth memory
(HBM), it raises a red flag that there is
a high degree of likelihood that a license
is required under the EAR for reexport
or export from abroad of that ‘‘direct
product’’ if destined to any destination
in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5
excluding destinations also specified in
Country Groups A:5 or A:6 unless the
red flag is resolved. BIS emphasizes
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here in this AC/S IFR that red flag 19
is only applicable if the entity has
‘‘knowledge’’ the criteria of the red flag
19 are met. If the entity does not have
‘‘knowledge’’ that the transaction would
otherwise meet the criteria under red
flag 19, then this red flag is not
applicable.
A reexporter or transferor may take
additional steps as part of their
compliance program to attempt to
resolve the red flag, e.g., obtaining
additional information from the entity
requesting the item to be produced, in
order to determine whether the item
being produced is outside the scope of
§ 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2).
The addition of red flag 19 in this rule
includes adding a Technical note to
(b)19, which will provide technical
guidance on how to calculate the red
flag criteria under red flag 19. A
reexporter or transferor may also submit
a license to BIS to ask for assistance in
determining whether the foreign item to
be produced, is subject to the EAR as a
‘‘direct product’’ on the basis of the
§ 734.9(h), but BIS encourages
semiconductor fabrication facilities to
try to resolve these red flags themselves
before applying for a license. Direct
products that are subject to the EAR
under paragraphs (h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and
(h)(1)(ii)(B)(2) of § 734.9 require a
license under the EAR for reexport or
export from abroad of that direct
product if destined to any destination
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4 or
D:5 that is not also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6. BIS notes that this
red flag 19 can be overcome with
positive ‘‘knowledge’’ of the
classification of the item that is or will
be produced, provided the
semiconductor fabrication facility has
positively determined that the item that
is or will be produced is not an item
identified under paragraph
(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) or (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2), then that
foreign made product is not subject to
the EAR on the basis of § 734.9(h).
BIS is also interested in soliciting
additional public comments in this area
of identifying ways to assist
semiconductor fabrication facility
compliance in recognizing ‘‘direct
products.’’ See section D of this rule for
the additional comments BIS is
interested in receiving in this area.
11. Changes To Minimize the Impact on
Supply Chains—Adoption of TGL—
Advanced Computing Items
In supplement no. 1 to part 736—
General Orders, this AC/S IFR, revises
paragraph (d) (General Order No. 4) to
add a new paragraph (d)(2) (TGL—
Advanced computing items). The new
TGL for advanced computing items will
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overcome the license requirements
specified in § 742.6(a)(6)(iii), provided
the terms and conditions under
paragraphs (d)(3) through (5) are met.
This AC/S IFR adds new paragraph
(d)(2)(i) (Product scope) to specify the
items that may be authorized under this
new TGL. These items are limited to the
items subject to the EAR that are
specified in ECCNs 3A001.z; 3A090;
3D001 (for ‘‘software’’ for commodities
controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 3E001
(for ‘‘technology’’ for commodities
controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 4A003.z;
4A004.z; 4A005.z; 4A090; 4D001 (for
‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled
by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z);
4D090; 4E001 (for ‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090 or ‘‘software’’
specified by 4D001 (for 4A003.z,
4A004.z, and 4A005.z), 4D090);
5A002.z; 5A004.z; 5A992.z; 5D002.z;
5D992.z; 5E002 (for ‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 5A002.z or
5A004.z or ‘‘software’’ specified by
5D002 (for 5A002.z or 5A004.z
commodities)); or 5E992 (for
‘‘technology’’ for commodities
controlled by 5A992.z or ‘‘software’’
controlled by 5D992.z).
The TGL—Advanced computing
items is limited to the end use scope
specified in paragraphs (d)(2)(ii) (Enduse scope). Paragraph (d)(2)(i) has a
different product scope than the original
TGL that was included in the October 7
IFR, but is otherwise similar in the
scope of activity authorized, although
the destination scope is broader.
Paragraph (d)(2)(ii) requires that the
recipient (1) is located in, but not
headquartered in or whose ultimate
parent company is not headquartered in,
a destination specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that is not also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6.
The end-use scope of this paragraph
authorizes entities to continue or engage
in integration, assembly (mounting),
inspection, testing, quality assurance,
and distribution of items covered by
items specified in paragraph (d)(2)(i)
provided the items are for ultimate end
use (1) outside of destinations specified
in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5,
excluding destinations also specified in
Country Groups A:5 or A:6, and (2) by
entities that are not headquartered in, or
whose ultimate parent company is not
headquartered in, Macau or Country
Group D:5.
This AC/S IFR, as additional
conforming changes to the TGL
revisions made in the SME IFR, revises
the introductory text of paragraph (d)
(General Order No. 4) to add a reference
to paragraph (d)(2) that this AC/S IFR
adds. This AC/S IFR also revises
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paragraph (d)(3) (Validity date) to add a
sentence to specify the validity date for
paragraph (d)(2). The TGL under
paragraph (d)(1) (added in this SME
IFR) of supplement no. 1 to part 736 and
the TGL under paragraph (d)(2) (added
in this AC/S IFR) of supplement no. 1
to part 736 will both expire on
December 31, 2025, approximately a 2year validity period. This AC/S IFR also
revises paragraph (d)(4) (End-use and
end-user restrictions) to revises
paragraph (d)(4)(i) (Restrictions related
to part 744) to add a reference to new
paragraph (d)(2). This AC/S IFR under
paragraph (d)(4)(ii) (Indigenous
production) redesignates the text added
in this SME IFR as new paragraph
(d)(4)(ii)(A) and adds a new paragraph
(d)(4)(ii)(B) to impose a similar
restriction on indigenous production,
but specific to the new TGL—Advanced
computing items added under
paragraph (d)(2).
12. Additional Corrections and
Clarifications
A. Conforming changes to headings
for the Foreign Direct Product (FDP)
rules for clarity and consistency with
advanced computing rule.
In § 734.9, this AC/S IFR also revises
paragraph (a) to: add the paragraph
heading (Definitions and model
certification); redesignate the existing
Definitions text as new paragraph (a)(1)
(Definitions); and move and redesignate
existing paragraph (h)(3) as new
paragraph (a)(2) (Model certification).
This rule also makes conforming
changes to reflect that the model
certification may be used for any of the
FDP rules in § 734.9 instead of being
limited for use with the advanced
computing FDP rule under § 734.9(h).
In § 734.9 (Foreign Direct Product
(FDP) Rules), this AC/S IFR makes
conforming changes to the headings of
paragraphs (b)(1)(ii), (c)(1)(ii), (d)(1)(ii),
(f)(1)(ii), and (g)(1)(ii) by removing the
heading ’’ ‘‘Direct product’’ of a
complete plant or ‘major component’ of
a plant’’ and adding in its place the
heading ‘‘Product of a complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is a
‘‘direct product’’.’’ This change is made
to conform these paragraph headings to
the headings used in the advanced
computing rule for paragraphs
(e)(1)(i)(B), (e)(2)(i)(B), (h)(1)(ii), and
(i)(1)(i)(B) of § 734.9.
In § 734.9, this AC/S IFR, as a
clarifying change, revises the first
sentence of the introductory text of the
section, and paragraphs (e)(1)(i)(B),
(e)(2)(i)(B), (f)(1)(ii)(A), (g)(1)(ii), and
(i)(1)(ii) to remove the term ‘plant’ and
add in its place the more precise term
‘complete plant.’ This AC/S IFR makes
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this change, so the term ‘complete plant’
is used consistently throughout the
section. For purposes of this section,
prior to publication of this rule, BIS
interpreted the term ‘plant’ and
‘complete plant’ the same, so this is not
a substantive change, but is intended to
reduce any confusion regarding whether
the two formulations of the term have
different meanings. Additional changes
were made throughout the section to
ensure that the complete plant
provisions are identical.
In § 734.3 (Items subject to the EAR),
this AC/S IFR makes a conforming
change to paragraphs (a)(4) and (5) to
remove the reference to § 736.2(b)(3)
and add in its place a reference to
§ 734.9. Also in § 734.3, this AC/S IFR
as a conforming change to § 734.9,
revises paragraph (a)(5) to remove the
term ‘‘direct products’’ and add in its
place the term products, so it reads
certain foreign-produced products and
adds the phrase ‘‘that is a ‘‘direct
product’’ of specified ‘‘technology’’ or
‘‘software’’ ’’ after the phrase products of
a complete plant or major component of
plant. This change is made to conform
with the other clarifications made on
this under § 734.9.
B. Clarifying changes.
In supplement no. 1 to part 774—
Commerce Control List, this AC/S IFR
revises four ECCNs as follows:
In ECCN 4A090, this AC/S IFR revises
‘‘items’’ paragraph (a) in the List of
Items Controlled section, to add the
words ‘‘meets or,’’ to make it clear that
this control parameter applies to
computers, ‘‘electronic assemblies,’’ and
‘‘components’’ containing integrated
circuits, any of which meets or exceeds
the performance parameters of ECCN
3A090.a.
In ECCN 4A994, this AC/S IFR revises
‘‘items’’ paragraph (l) in the List of Items
Controlled section, to add the words
‘‘meets or,’’ to make it clear that this
control parameter applies to computers,
‘‘electronic assemblies,’’ and
‘‘components,’’ n.e.s., containing
integrated circuits, any of which meets
or exceeds the performance parameters
of ECCN 3A991.p.
In ECCNs 5A992 and 5D992, this AC/
S IFR revises the Country Chart column
in the License Requirements section in
both of these ECCNs to revise ‘‘RS’’
control to specify the RS control applies
to .z items in these ECCNs and the
license requirement applies to or within
destinations specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5 that are not
also specified in Country Groups A:5 or
A:6, along with adding a cross reference
to see § 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the EAR. This
change is made for consistency with the
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other ECCNs that reference § 742.6(a)(6),
which specify China and Macao.
C. Conforming changes to ECCNs to
not undermine deemed export and
deemed reexport exclusion.
This AC/S IFR revises two ECCNs:
4D001 and 4E001 to make conforming
changes to ensure these National
Security (NS) controlled software and
technology controls do not undermine
the intent of the deemed export and
deemed reexport exclusion under
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iv). This AC/S IFR does
this by adding exclusions where needed
to each of these NS controlled ECCNs to
exclude the relevant software and
technology from these ECCNs that are
associated with ECCNs 4A090 and
4D090. This software and technology
were intended to be excluded from
these NS controls but were
inadvertently not excluded in the
October 7 IFR. To correct this oversight,
this rule makes the following changes to
two ECCNs:
In ECCN 4D001, this rule revises
‘‘items’’ paragraph (a) in the List of
Items Controlled section to add an
exclusion for 4D090 for the software
controlled under 4D001.a.
In ECCN 4E001, this rule revises the
NS control column the License
Requirements section to exclude
technology for 4A090 or ‘‘software’’
specified by ECCN 4D090 from the NS
control under 4E001.
D. Typographical, grammatical, and
other conforming corrections.
In § 732.2(b) introductory text, this
AC/S IFR makes a conforming change to
the third sentence that referenced
supplement no. 1 to part 734 which,
prior to September 1, 2016, described
several practical examples describing
publicly available technology and
software that are outside the scope of
the EAR. These examples were removed
from the EAR on September 1, 2016,
and are now found on the BIS website,
but the needed conforming change was
not made at that time to this paragraph
(b). Subsequently, the October 7 IFR
added a new supplement no. 1 to part
734, but also inadvertently did not
update this reference to supplement no.
1 to part 734 in § 732.2(b). However, in
the context of this paragraph,
supplement no. 1 to part 734 should no
longer be referenced and instead a
reference to the FAQ guidance on the
BIS website at https://www.bis.doc.gov
should replace this text. This rule
revises the third sentence to make this
change and adds a cross reference by
adding a new fourth sentence to inform
the public to See the FAQs under the
heading, EAR Definitions, Technology
and Software, Fundamental Research,
and Patents FAQs, for where the
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guidance can be found on the BIS
website. This rule also makes this same
type of conforming change to
§ 734.2(a)(1).
In § 734.9, this AC/S IFR revises
paragraph (h)(3) to make a grammatical
correction to remove an unneeded ‘‘s’’
from the word ‘‘items.’’ As described
above, this rule also redesignates
paragraph (h)(3) as new paragraph (a)(2).
D. BIS Seeks Public Comments on the
Following Additional Questions
In addition to welcoming comments
on the topics and BIS responses and
description of the regulatory changes
described above under sections A
through C, BIS in this AC/S IFR also
specifically seeks comments on the
following questions:
1. Addressing access to
‘‘development’’ at an infrastructure as a
service (IaaS) provider by customers to
develop or with the intent to develop
large dual-use AI foundation models
with potential capabilities of concern,
such as models exceeding certain
thresholds of parameter count, training
compute, and/or training data. This AC/
S IFR seeks public comments on what
additional regulations or other
requirements may be warranted to
address this national security concern
relating to AI. BIS also seeks input from
IaaS providers on the feasibility for
them in complying with additional
regulations in this area, how they would
identify whether a customer is
‘‘developing’’ or ‘‘producing’’ a dual-use
AI foundation model, and what actions
would be needed to address this
national security concern while
minimizing the business process
changes that would be required to
comply with these regulations.
2. Developing technical solutions to
exempt items otherwise classified under
ECCNs 3A090 and 4A090. This AC/S
IFR seeks public comments on proposed
technical solutions that limit items
specified under ECCN 3A090 or 4A090
from being used in conjunction with
large numbers of other such items in
ways that enable training large dual-use
AI foundation models with capabilities
of concern. Such items could then be
exempted from these ECCNs. An
example approach would be to limit a
product that contains a set of ICs,
including ECCN 3A090 AI accelerators,
CPUs, and network interface cards—
which could form a high-bandwidth
domain including up to e.g., 256 AI
accelerators, from communicating
outside the product or set beyond 1 GB/
s in at least one of the input or output
direction. In one possible
implementation of this concept, each
device in the set might provide a
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cryptographic signature to other devices
in the set, and then have a tamperproof
silicon root-of-trust in each device that
would hold the private keys for the
cryptographic signatures. This approach
could constrain a 3A090 item from
being used to train large dual-use AI
foundation models with capabilities of
concern, while allowing AI training
capabilities at a small or medium scale.
In particular, the AC/S IFR seeks
specific technical proposals that would
be difficult to circumvent; comments on
the timeline and costs to bring such
proposals to market; and comments on
the demand for such ICs and products.
The AC/S IFR also seeks additional
proposals for exemptions involving
hardware-based technical solutions that
create the ability to limit training of
large dual-use AI foundation models
with capabilities of concern.
3. Identifying ways to assist
semiconductor fabrication facility
compliance in recognizing ‘‘direct
products.’’ As discussed further under
section C.10 above, this AC/S IFR adds
new red flag 19 in supplement no. 3 to
part 732 of the EAR to assist any facility
where ‘‘production’’ of ‘‘advanced node
ICs’’ occurs to follow guidance to
recognize ‘‘direct products.’’ New red
flag 19 will assist semiconductor
fabrication facilities to more easily
identify ‘‘direct products’’ that they are
or will be producing that are subject to
the EAR on the basis of the FDP rule.
In order to be most effective, this
enhanced FDP guidance or any
additional guidance that is developed
needs to identify criteria that (1) are
already ‘‘knowable’’ or easily
determined by the semiconductor
fabrication facilities and (2) should be
highly indicative of an IC that will meet
the FDP scope under
§ 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2).
BIS believes that the criteria added
under new red flag 19 meets this twopart test and will assist semiconductor
manufacturing facilities to more easily
identify their regulatory obligations
under the EAR. However, in addition to
the criteria BIS included in new red flag
19 in supplement no. 3 to part 732, BIS
also seeks any refinements to those
criteria or alternative criteria that would
better achieve those two objectives.
4. Deemed exports and deemed
reexports. BIS specifically seeks public
comment on the applicability of deemed
exports and deemed reexports in
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iv). Commenters are asked
to provide feedback regarding the
impact of this provision on their
business and operations, in particular,
what if any impact companies would
experience if a license were required for
deemed exports and deemed reexports.
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Commenters are also asked to provide
guidance on what, if any, practices are
utilized to safeguard technology and
intellectual property and the role of
foreign person employees in obtaining
and maintaining U.S. technology
leadership.
5. Control parameters under 3A090,
in particular Note 2 to 3A090. In
response to this AC/S IFR, BIS seeks
comments on how to refine the
parameters under ECCN 3A090 to more
granularly cover only ICs that would
raise concerns for use in training largescale AI systems and to and to more
specifically define ICs not designed or
marketed for us in datacenters.
6. Definition of headquartered
companies. BIS seeks comments on the
definition entities headquartered in, or
whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5, including comments on the ability
to access information required to assess
the status of a foreign party and any
other factors that would support the
policy goal of limiting access to
advanced computing capability by
Macau parties or a destination specified
in Country Group D:5 parties.
7. BIS is interested in receiving public
comments in response to this AC/S IFR
on the technical parameters included in
the definition of ‘‘supercomputer’’ and
how those relate to the end-use control
under § 744.23(a)(1). BIS is particularly
interested in whether the definition of
‘‘supercomputer’’ may result
increasingly in commercial datacenters
falling under the definition of
‘‘supercomputer’’ and the end-use
control under § 744.23(a)(1). BIS
welcomes comments on the definition
of ‘‘supercomputer,’’ as well on what
additional criteria could be added to
§ 744.23(a)(1) to better focus the control
to ensure that supercomputers used to
support foreign government agencies
would be caught under the end-use
control, but other datacenters strictly
involved in the commercial sector
would not be covered.
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) (codified, as amended, at 50
U.S.C. 4801–4852). ECRA provides the
legal basis for BIS’s principal authorities
and serves as the authority under which
BIS issues this rule.
Rulemaking Requirements
1. Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and
14094 direct agencies to assess all costs
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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 and 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 interim
final rule has been designated a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under
Executive Order 12866.
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 involves the following
OMB-approved collections of
information subject to the PRA:
• 0694–0088, ‘‘Multi-Purpose
Application,’’ which carries a burden
hour estimate of 29.4 minutes for a
manual or electronic submission;
• 0694–0096 ‘‘Five Year Records
Retention Period,’’ which carries a
burden hour estimate of less than 1
minute;
• 0694–0122, ‘‘Licensing
Responsibilities and Enforcement;’’ and
• 0607–0152 ‘‘Automated Export
System (AES) Program,’’ which carries a
burden hour estimate of 3 minutes per
electronic submission.
This AC/S IFR will affect the
collection under control number 0694–
0088, for the multipurpose application
because of the addition of the
notification requirement for exports and
reexports to China in order to use new
License Exception Notified Advanced
Computing (NAC) under § 740.8 that
this rule adds to the EAR. BIS estimates
that the new License Exception NAC
notification will result in an increase of
3,000 multi-purpose applications
submitted annually to BIS and an
increase of 950 burden hours under this
collection. BIS also anticipates the
submission annually of 200 license
applications as a result of the revision
to license requirements included in this
AC/S IFR, but because the original
estimate that was included in the
October 7 IFR (i.e., that BIS estimates
that these new controls under the EAR
imposed by the October 7 IFR would
result in an increase of 1,700 license
applications submitted annually to BIS)
was higher than the actual number of
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18:36 Oct 24, 2023
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license applications BIS has received
over the first year of the October IFR
changes being in place, BIS does not
anticipate any changes in these
estimates as a result of the changes
include in this AC/S IFR for license
applications submitted to BIS as a result
of this AC/S IFR with the one exception
of the increase in burden hours for the
License Exception NAC notifications,
which was not accounted for in the
October 7 IFR because License
Exception NAC was not part of the EAR
at that time.
This AC/S IFR will affect the
information collection under control
number 0607–0152, for filing EEI in
AES because this rule adds § 758.1(g)(5)
to impose a requirement for identifying
.z items by ‘‘items’’ level classification
in the EEI filing in AES. This change is
not anticipated to result in a change in
the burden under this collection
because filers are already required to
provide a description in the Commodity
description block in the EEI filing in
AES. This regulation also involves a
collection previously approved by the
OMB under control number 0694–0122,
‘‘Licensing Responsibilities and
Enforcement’’ because this rule under
the revision to § 758.6(a)(2) will require
the ECCN(s) for any 3A001.z, 3A090,
4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z to be
included on the commercial invoice,
similar to the previous requirement to
include the ‘‘600 series’’ and 9x515
ECCNs on the commercial invoice. BIS
does not anticipate a change in the total
burden hours associated with the PRA
and OMB control number 0694–0122 as
a result of this rule.
Additional information regarding
these collections of information—
including all background materials—can
be found at https://www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/PRAMain by using the search
function to enter either the title of the
collection or the OMB Control Number.
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 ECRA
(50 U.S.C. 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. While
section 1762 of ECRA provides
sufficient authority for such an
exemption, this action is also
independently exempt from these APA
requirements because it involves a
military or foreign affairs function of the
United States (5 U.S.C. 553(a)(1)).
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73487
5. Because a notice of proposed
rulemaking and an opportunity for
public comment are not required to be
given for this rule by 5 U.S.C. 553, or
by 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 Parts 732 and 748
Administrative practice and
procedure, Exports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
15 CFR Part 734
Administrative practice and
procedure, Exports, Inventions and
patents, Research, Science and
technology.
15 CFR Parts 740 and 758
Administrative practice and
procedure, Exports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
15 CFR Part 742
Exports, Terrorism.
15 CFR Part 744
Exports, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Terrorism.
15 CFR Parts 746 and 774
Exports, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
15 CFR Parts 736, 770, and 772
Exports.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, parts 732, 734, 736, 740, 742,
744, 746, 748, 758, 770, 772, and 774 of
the Export Administration Regulations
(15 CFR parts 730 through 774) are
amended as follows:
PART 732—STEPS FOR USING THE
EAR
1. The authority citation for part 732
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.; E.O.
13026, 61 FR 58767, 3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p.
228; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001
Comp., p. 783.
2. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 732.2 is amended by revising
paragraph (b) introductory text to read
as follows:
■
§ 732.2
Steps regarding scope of the EAR.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Step 2: Publicly available
technology and software. This step is
relevant for both exports and reexports.
Determine if your technology or
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software is publicly available as defined
and explained at part 734 of the EAR.
The Bureau of Industry and Security
(BIS) website at https://www.bis.doc.gov
contains several practical examples
describing publicly available technology
and software that are outside the scope
of the EAR under the FAQ section of the
website. See the FAQs under the
heading, EAR Definitions, Technology
and Software, Fundamental Research,
and Patents FAQs at https://
www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/
compliance-training/exportadministration-regulations-training/
1554-ear-definitions-faq/file. The
examples are illustrative, not
comprehensive. Note that encryption
software classified under ECCN 5D002
on the Commerce Control List (refer to
supplement no.1 to part 774 of the EAR)
is subject to the EAR even if publicly
available, except for publicly available
encryption object code software
classified under ECCN 5D002 when the
corresponding source code meets the
criteria specified in § 740.13(e) of the
EAR. The following also remains subject
to the EAR: ‘‘software’’ or ‘‘technology’’
for the production of a firearm, or
firearm frame or receiver, controlled
under ECCN 0A501, as referenced in
§ 734.7(c) of the EAR.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Effective November 17, 2023,
supplement no. 3 to part 732 is
amended by adding paragraphs (b)15
through 19 to read as follows:
Supplement No. 3 to Part 732—BIS’s
‘‘Know Your Customer’’ Guidance and
Red Flags
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*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
15. The customer’s website or other
marketing materials prior to October 7, 2022,
indicated that the company had advertised or
otherwise indicated its capability for
‘‘developing’’ or ‘‘producing’’ ‘‘advancednode integrated circuits.’’
16. The customer has made representations
that the items in question are not intended
for use in the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of ‘‘advanced-node integrated
circuits,’’ but the items that are being
requested to be exported, reexported, or
transferred (in-country) to this customer are
typically exclusively or predominantly used
for the production of ‘‘advanced-node
integrated circuits.’’
17. The customer is ‘‘known’’ to ‘‘develop’’
or ‘‘produce’’ items for companies located in
Macau or a destination specified in Country
Group D:5 that are involved with
‘‘supercomputers.’’
18. The exporter has ‘‘knowledge’’
indicating this customer intends to
‘‘develop’’ or ‘‘produce’’ ‘‘supercomputers’’
or integrated circuits in the future that would
otherwise be restricted under § 744.23(a)(1)(i)
or (a)(2)(i).
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19. The exporter has ‘‘knowledge’’ that it
is or seeks to be producing at a facility where
‘‘production’’ of ‘‘advanced node ICs’’ occur,
for a company headquartered in either Macau
or a destination specified in Country Group
D:5, an integrated circuit, or a computer,
‘‘electronic assembly,’’ or ‘‘component’’ that
will incorporate (A) more than 50 billion
transistors and (B) high-bandwidth memory
(HBM). This raises a red flag that needs to be
resolved or a license may be required under
the EAR for reexport or export from abroad
of that direct product if destined to Macau or
a destination specified in Country Group D:5
(see supplement no. 1 to part 774 and part
742 of the EAR for the CCL-based license
requirements for items identified under
§ 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2) of the
EAR), absent a determination that the item
being produced is outside the product scope
of these paragraphs under
§ 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2).
Technical note to (b)19: To calculate the
number of transistors within a die, a foundry
has two options. First, the foundry may take
the transistor density of the process node
used to manufacture the die and multiply
this density by the area of the die. This
number may be significantly higher than the
true transistor count, but if the result is
below the relevant transistor threshold, then
the foundry can be confident that the die in
question will not exceed that threshold.
Second, to adjudicate edge cases, the foundry
may use standard design verification tools to
estimate the number of (both active and
passive) transistors on the die using the GDS
file. Regardless of approach, if the foundry
has knowledge that multiple chiplets will be
included in a single package, then the
foundry should estimate the aggregate
number of transistors in any chiplets the
foundry is responsible for manufacturing. A
foundry does not need to count the
transistors of chiplets that it is not
responsible for manufacturing itself.
734.8, and 734.10. The Bureau of
Industry and Security (BIS) website at
https://www.bis.doc.gov contains
several practical examples describing
publicly available technology and
software that are outside the scope of
the EAR under the FAQ section of the
website. See the FAQs under the
heading, EAR Definitions, Technology
and Software, Fundamental Research,
and Patents FAQs. The examples are
illustrative, not comprehensive.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 734.3 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(4) and (5) to read as
follows:
PART 734—SCOPE OF THE EXPORT
ADMINISTRATION REGULATIONS
*
4. Effective November 17, 2023, the
authority citation for part 734 is revised
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.; E.O.
12938, 59 FR 59099, 3 CFR, 1994 Comp., p.
950; E.O. 13020, 61 FR 54079, 3 CFR, 1996
Comp., p. 219; E.O. 13026, 61 FR 58767, 3
CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 228; E.O. 13222, 66 FR
44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 783; E.O.
13637, 78 FR 16129, 3 CFR, 2014 Comp., p.
223; Notice of November 8, 2022, 87 FR
68015, 3 CFR, 2022 Comp., p. 563.
5. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 734.2 is amended by revising the last
sentence of paragraph (a)(1) and adding
three sentences at the end of the
paragraph to read as follows:
■
§ 734.2
Subject to the EAR.
(a) * * *
(1) * * * Publicly available
technology and software not subject to
the EAR are described in §§ 734.7,
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§ 734.3
Items subject to the EAR.
(a) * * *
(4) Certain foreign-produced ‘‘direct
products’’ of specified ‘‘technology’’ and
‘‘software,’’ as described in § 734.9 of
the EAR; and
Note to paragraph (a)(4): Certain foreignmanufactured items developed or produced
from U.S.-origin encryption items exported
pursuant to License Exception ENC are
subject to the EAR. See § 740.17(a) of the
EAR.
(5) Certain foreign-produced products
of a complete plant or any major
component of a plant that is a ‘‘direct
product’’ of specified ‘‘technology’’ or
‘‘software’’ as described in § 734.9 of the
EAR.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 734.4 is amended by revising
paragraph (b)(2) to read as follows:
§ 734.4
De minimis U.S. content.
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) The U.S.-origin encryption items
are classified under ECCNs 5A992,
5D992, or 5E992.b.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 734.9 is amended by:
■ a. Revising the first sentence of the
introductory text and paragraph (a), the
headings for paragraphs (b)(1)(ii),
(c)(1)(ii), and (d)(1)(ii), revising
paragraphs (e)(1)(i)(B), (e)(2)(i)(B), the
heading for paragraph (f)(1)(ii), and
revising paragraphs (f)(1)(ii)(A),
(g)(1)(ii), (h)(1)(i)(B)(2), (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2),
and (h)(2)(i) and (ii);
■ b. Adding a note to paragraph (h)(2);
■ c. Removing paragraph (h)(3); and
■ d. Revising paragraph (i)(1)(ii).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 734.9
Rules.
Foreign-Direct Product (FDP)
Foreign-produced items located
outside the United States are subject to
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the EAR when they are a ‘‘direct
product’’ of specified ‘‘technology’’ or
‘‘software,’’ or are produced by a
complete plant or ‘major component’ of
a plant that itself is a ‘‘direct product’’
of specified ‘‘technology’’ or ‘‘software.’’
* * *
(a) Definitions and model
certification—(1) Definitions. The terms
defined in this paragraph are specific to
§ 734.9 of the EAR. These terms are
indicated by single quotation marks.
Terms that are in double quotation
marks are defined in part 772 of the
EAR.
(i) Major component. A major
component of a plant located outside
the United States means ‘‘equipment’’
that is essential to the ‘‘production’’ of
an item, including testing ‘‘equipment.’’
(ii) [Reserved]
(2) Model certification. Exporters,
reexporters, and transferors may obtain
a written certification from a supplier
that asserts an item being provided
would be subject to the EAR if future
transactions meet the destination or end
user scope of one or more of the Foreign
Direct Product (FDP) rules under
§ 734.9. The model certificate described
by BIS in supplement no. 1 to part 734
is not required under the EAR, but
through its provision, the certificate
may assist exporters, reexporters, and
transferors with the process of resolving
potential red flags regarding whether an
item is subject to the EAR based on
§ 734.9. The model certificate provided
by BIS contemplates signature by an
official or designated employee of the
certifying company and inclusion of all
the information described in paragraph
(b) of supplement no. 1 to part 734.
While this certificate is expected to be
useful for a company to understand the
application of the EAR to an item, BIS
does not view this as the only step to
be completed during a company’s due
diligence process. See supplement no. 1
to part 734 and supplement no. 3 to part
732 of the EAR.
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is a
‘‘direct product.’’ * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is a
‘‘direct product.’’ * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is a
‘‘direct product.’’ * * *
*
*
*
*
*
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(e) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) * * *
(B) Product of a complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is a
‘‘direct product.’’ A foreign-produced
item meets the product scope of this
paragraph if the foreign-produced item
is produced by any complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is
located outside the United States, when
the complete plant or ‘major
component’ of a plant, whether made in
the U.S. or a foreign country, itself is a
‘‘direct product’’ of U.S.-origin
‘‘technology’’ or ‘‘software’’ that is
specified in ECCN 3D001, 3D991,
3E001, 3E002, 3E003, 3E991, 4D001,
4D993, 4D994, 4E001, 4E992, 4E993,
5D001, 5D991, 5E001, or 5E991 of the
CCL.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) * * *
(i) * * *
(B) Product of a complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is a
‘‘direct product.’’ A foreign-produced
item meets the product scope of this
paragraph if the foreign-produced item
is produced by any complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is
located outside the United States, when
the complete plant or ‘major
component’ of a plant, whether made in
the U.S. or a foreign country, itself is a
‘‘direct product’’ of U.S.-origin
‘‘technology’’ or ‘‘software’’ that is
specified in ECCN 3D001, 3D991,
3E001, 3E002, 3E003, 3E991, 4D001,
4D993, 4D994, 4E001, 4E992, 4E993,
5D001, 5D002, 5D991, 5E001, 5E002, or
5E991 of the CCL.
(f) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is a
‘‘direct product.’’ * * *
(A) A foreign-produced item meets
the product scope of this paragraph if
the foreign-produced item is produced
by any complete plant or ‘major
component’ of a plant that is located
outside the United States, when the
complete plant or ‘major component’ of
a plant, whether made in the United
States or a foreign country, itself is a
‘‘direct product’’ of U.S.-origin
‘‘technology’’ or ‘‘software’’ that is
specified in any ECCN in product
groups D or E of the CCL; and
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is a
‘‘direct product.’’ A foreign-produced
item meets the product scope of this
paragraph if the foreign-produced item
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73489
is produced by any complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is
located outside the United States, when
the complete plant or ‘major
component’ of a plant, whether made in
the United States or a foreign country,
itself is a ‘‘direct product’’ of U.S.-origin
‘‘technology’’ or ‘‘software’’ that is
specified in any ECCN in product
groups D or E in any categories of the
CCL.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) * * *
(B) * * *
(2) An integrated circuit, computer,
‘‘electronic assembly,’’ or ‘‘component’’
specified in ECCN 3A001.z, 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, or
5A992.z.
(ii) * * *
(B) * * *
(2) An integrated circuit, computer,
‘‘electronic assembly,’’ or ‘‘component’’
specified in ECCN 3A001.z, 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, or
5A992.z.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) * * *
(i) Destined to a destination specified
in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5,
excluding any destination also specified
in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, or will
be incorporated into any ‘‘part,’’
‘‘component,’’ ‘‘computer,’’ or
‘‘equipment’’ not designated EAR99 that
is destined to a destination specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5,
excluding any destination also specified
in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, or
worldwide to an entity headquartered
in, or whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5; or
(ii) ‘‘Technology’’ ‘‘developed’’ by an
entity headquartered in, or whose
ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5, for the ‘‘production’’ of a mask or
an integrated circuit wafer or die.
Note to paragraph (h)(2): These end-use
requirements under paragraph (h) apply
when any entity headquartered in, or whose
ultimate parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or destination specified in
Country Group D:5, is a party to any
transaction involving the foreign-produced
item, e.g., as a ‘‘purchaser,’’ ‘‘intermediate
consignee,’’ ‘‘ultimate consignee,’’ or ‘‘enduser.’’
(i) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is a
‘‘direct product.’’ A foreign-produced
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item meets the product scope of this
paragraph if the foreign-produced item
is produced by any complete plant or
‘major component’ of a plant that is
located outside the United States, when
the complete plant or ‘major
component’ of a plant, whether made in
the United States or a foreign country,
itself is a ‘‘direct product’’ of U.S.-origin
‘‘technology’’ or ‘‘software’’ that is
specified in ECCN 3D001, 3D991,
3E001, 3E002, 3E003, 3E991, 4D001,
4D994, 4E001, 4E992, 4E993, 5D001,
5D002, 5D991, 5E001, 5E002, or 5E991
of the CCL.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. Effective November 17, 2023,
supplement no. 1 to part 734 is revised
to read as follows:
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
Supplement No. 1 to Part 734—Model
Certification for Purposes of the FDP
Rule
(a) General. This supplement is included
in the EAR to assist exporters, reexporters,
and transferors in determining whether the
items being exported, reexported, or
transferred (in-country) are subject to the
EAR based on one or more of the Foreign
Direct Product (FDP) rules under § 734.9. The
model certificate provided by BIS in
supplement no. 1 to this part is not required
under the EAR, but through its provision, the
certificate may assist exporters, reexporters,
and transferors with the process of resolving
potential red flags regarding whether an item
is subject to the EAR based on one or more
of the FDP rules under § 734.9. The model
certificate provided in this supplement by
BIS contemplates signature by an official or
designated employee of the certifying
company and inclusion of the information
described in paragraph (b) of this
supplement. The certificate may be provided
by any entity in a supply chain or by an
exporter, reexporter, or transferor of the item.
For example, the certificate may be provided
by an exporter, reexporter, or transferor to
any other entity later in a supply chain.
Similarly, any entity later in a supply chain
may request a certificate from an exporter,
reexporter, or transferor earlier in a supply
chain. Any certification relied on for this part
must be retained pursuant to recordkeeping
provisions in part 762 of the EAR. Obtaining
the certification set forth in this supplement
no. 1 to part 734 does not relieve exporters,
reexporters and transferors of their obligation
to exercise due diligence in determining
whether items are subject to the EAR,
including by following the ‘‘Know Your
Customer’’ guidance in supplement no. 3 to
part 732 of the EAR.
(b) Model criteria. A certification will be
most useful if it meets the criteria described
in this supplement and if it contains at least
the following information:
(1) The certification must be signed by an
organization official specifically authorized
to certify the document as being accurate and
complete. The certifying official attests that
the information herein supplied in response
to this paragraph is complete and correct to
the best of his/her ‘‘knowledge.’’
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(2) The organization [INSERT NAME OF
THE CERTIFYING OFFICIAL’S COMPANY]
has reviewed the criteria for the foreign
direct product (FDP) rules under § 734.9 the
U.S. Export Administration Regulations
(EAR) (15 CFR 730–774) and attests that from
the certifying official’s ‘‘knowledge’’ of the
item, [INSERT A DESCRIPTION OF THE
ITEMS], provided to [INSERT NAME OF
THIS CUSTOMER], are subject to the EAR if
future transactions are within the country/
destination and/or end use scope or end-user
scope of one or more of the following FDP
rules [include whichever ones are
applicable]:
(i) Country scope of § 734.9(b)(2), i.e.,
exported or reexported to or transferred
within a destination listed in Country Group
D:1, E:1, or E:2 (see supplement no.1 to part
740 of the EAR);
(ii) Country scope of § 734.9(c)(2), i.e.,
exported or reexported to or transferred
within a destination listed in Country Group
D:5, E:1, or E:2 (see supplement no.1 to part
740 of the EAR);
(iii) Country scope of § 734.9(d)(2), i.e.,
exported or reexported to or transferred
within a destination listed in Country Group
D:1, D:3, D:4, D:5, E:1, or E:2 (see supplement
no.1 to part 740 of the EAR);
(iv) End-user scope of § 734.9(e)(1)(ii) or
(e)(2)(ii) for a Footnote 1 or Footnote 4 entity,
respectively (see supplement no. 4 to part
744);
(v) Destination scope of § 734.9(f)(2), i.e.,
exported or reexported to or transferred
within Russia, Belarus, or the temporarily
occupied Crimea region of Ukraine or will be
incorporated into or used in the
‘‘production’’ or ‘‘development’’ of any
‘‘part,’’ ‘‘component,’’ or ‘‘equipment’’
specified in any ECCN on the CCL or in
supplement no. 6 or 7 to part 746 of the EAR
and produced in or destined to Russia,
Belarus, or the temporarily occupied Crimea
region of Ukraine;
(vi) End-user scope of § 734.9(g)(2) for a
Footnote 3 entity (see supplement no. 4 to
part 744);
(vii) Destination and end-use scope of
§ 734.9(h)(2), i.e., the foreign-produced item
is: destined to a destination specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding
any destination also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6, or will be incorporated
into any ‘‘part,’’ ‘‘component,’’ ‘‘computer,’’
or ‘‘equipment’’ not designated EAR99 that is
destined to a destination specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding any
destination also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6, or worldwide to an entity
headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent
company is headquartered in, either a
destination specified in Country Groups D:1,
D:4, or D:5, excluding any destination also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6; or
technology developed by an entity
headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent
company is headquartered in, either Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding any
destination also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6, for the ‘‘production’’ of a mask
or an integrated circuit wafer or die;
(viii) Country and end-use scope of
§ 734.9(i)(2), i.e., used in the design,
‘‘development,’’ ‘‘production,’’ operation,
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Fmt 4701
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installation (including on-site installation),
maintenance (checking), repair, overhaul, or
refurbishing of, a ‘‘supercomputer’’ located in
or destined to Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5; or
incorporated into, or used in the
‘‘development,’’ or ‘‘production,’’ of any
‘‘part,’’ ‘‘component,’’ or ‘‘equipment’’ that
will be used in a ‘‘supercomputer’’ located in
or destined to Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5;
(ix) Destination scope of § 734.9(j)(2), i.e.,
is destined to Iran or will be incorporated
into or used in the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of any ‘‘part,’’ ‘‘component,’’
or ‘‘equipment,’’ including any modified or
designed ‘‘components,’’ ‘‘parts,’’
‘‘accessories,’’ and ‘‘attachments’’ therefor,
identified in supplement no. 7 to part 746 of
the EAR or is specified in any ECCN on the
CCL in Categories 3 through 5 or 7 of the CCL
that is located in or destined to Iran; and
(3) My organization affirms its commitment
to comply with all applicable requirements
under the EAR.
[INSERT NAME(S) OF CONSIGNEE(S) OR
EXPORTER(S), REEXPORTERS), OR
TRANSFERORS AS APPLICABLE].
[INSERT DATE(S) SIGNED]
Note 1 to paragraph (b): When multiple
consignees engaged in a production process
(or other type of collaborative activity, such
as joint development) will be exporting,
reexporting, transferring, or receiving items
subject to the EAR, a single model
certification statement for multiple
consignees may be used.
(c) Additional information. Because this is
only a model certification, parties to the
transaction may add additional elements to
the certification and/or use it for multiple
purposes as part of their compliance
program. For example, if a company has ten
affiliated companies in a multi-step supply
chain, instead of obtaining a model
certification for each export, reexport, or
transfer (in-country), the exporter, reexporter,
or transferor may request all ten parties to
sign the certification, if appropriate, which
may further reduce the burden on parties
participating in the supply chain.
PART 736—GENERAL PROHIBITIONS
10. The authority citation for part 736
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.; E.O.
12938, 59 FR 59099, 3 CFR, 1994 Comp., p.
950; E.O. 13020, 61 FR 54079, 3 CFR, 1996
Comp., p. 219; E.O. 13026, 61 FR 58767, 3
CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 228; E.O. 13222, 66 FR
44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 783; E.O.
13338, 69 FR 26751, 3 CFR, 2004 Comp., p.
168; Notice of November 8, 2022, 87 FR
68015 (November 10, 2022); Notice of May 8,
2023, 88 FR 30211 (May 10, 2023).
11. Effective November 17, 2023, to
January 1, 2026, supplement no. 1 to
part 736 is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (d) introductory
text;
■ b. Adding paragraph (d)(2); and
■ c. Revising paragraphs (d)(3) and (4).
■
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The revisions and addition read as
follows:
Supplement No. 1 to Part 736—General
Orders
*
*
*
*
*
(d) General Order No. 4. Exports, reexports,
or transfers (in-country) authorized under the
Temporary General Licenses (TGL) specified
under paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of this
supplement must also comply with the terms
and conditions under paragraphs (d)(3)
through (5) of this supplement.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
*
*
*
*
*
(2) TGL—Advanced computing items. This
TGL only overcomes the license
requirements described in § 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
EAR when:
(i) Product scope. The items subject to the
EAR that are specified in ECCNs 3A001.z;
3A090; 3D001 (for ‘‘software’’ for
commodities controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090);
3E001 (for ‘‘technology’’ for commodities
controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 4A003.z;
4A004.z; 4A005.z; 4A090; 4D001 (for
‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled by
4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z); 4D090;
4E001 (for ‘‘technology’’ for commodities
controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
4A090 or ‘‘software’’ specified by 4D001 (for
4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z), 4D090);
5A002.z; 5A004.z; 5A992.z; 5D002.z;
5D992.z; 5E002 (for ‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 5A002.z or
5A004.z or ‘‘software’’ specified by 5D002
(for 5A002.z or 5A004.z commodities)); or
5E992 (for ‘‘technology’’ for commodities
controlled by 5A992.z or ‘‘software’’
controlled by 5D992.z) of the Commerce
Control List (CCL); and
(ii) End-use scope. Any item identified
under the paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this
supplement, may be exported, reexported, or
transferred (in-country) to or within a
destination specified in Country Groups D:1,
D:4, or D:5 (and not specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A6) when the recipient is
located in but is not headquartered or whose
ultimate parent company is not
headquartered in Macau or Country Group
D:5 to continue or engage in integration,
assembly (mounting), inspection, testing,
quality assurance, and distribution of items
covered by items specified in paragraph
(d)(2)(i) for the ultimate end use of these
items outside of destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 (and not
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A6) by
entities not headquartered or whose ultimate
parent company is not headquartered in
Macau or a destination specified in Country
Group D:5.
(3) Validity date. The TGLs under
paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of this supplement
expire on December 31, 2025.
(4) End-use and end-user restrictions—(i)
Restrictions related to part 744 of the EAR.
The TGL under paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of
this supplement does not overcome the
license requirements of § 744.11 or § 744.21
of the EAR when an entity listed in
supplements no. 4 or 7 to part 744 is a party
to the transaction as described in § 748.5(c)
through (f) of the EAR, or when there is
knowledge of any other prohibited end use
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18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
or end user (other than the § 744.23
provisions specified above in the TGL).
(ii) Indigenous production. (A) The TGL
under paragraph (d)(1) of this supplement
cannot be used for the indigenous
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of Category
3B tools in either Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5, i.e., where
the ‘‘part,’’ ‘‘component,’’ or ‘‘equipment’’ is
‘‘developed’’ or ‘‘produced’’ at the direction
of an entity that is headquartered in, or
whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5.
(B) The TGL under paragraph (d)(2) of this
supplement cannot be used for the
indigenous ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’
of any item identified under paragraph
(d)(2)(i) of this supplement where the ‘‘part,’’
‘‘component,’’ or ‘‘equipment’’ is
‘‘developed’’ or ‘‘produced’’ at the direction
of an entity that is headquartered in, or
whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 740—LICENSE EXCEPTIONS
73491
software or technology specified in
ECCNs 3A001.z; 3D001 (for ‘‘software’’
for commodities controlled by 3A001.z,
3A090); 3E001 (for ‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 3A001.z);
4A003.z; 4A004.z; 4A005.z; 4D001 (for
‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled
by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z); and
4E001 (for ‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z); 5A002.z; 5A004.z;
5A992.z; 5D002.z; 5D992.z; 5E002 (for
‘‘technology’’ for commodities
controlled by 5A002.z or 5A004.z);
‘‘software’’ specified by 5D002 (for
5A002.z or 5A004.z commodities));
5E992 (for ‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 5A992.z or
‘‘software’’ controlled by 5D992.z).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 740.7 is amended by revising
paragraph (b)(1) to read as follows:
§ 740.7
Computers (APP).
13. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 740.2 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(9)(ii) introductory text
and (a)(9)(ii)(B) to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Related equipment controlled
under ECCN 4A003.g, z.2, or z.4 may
not be exported or reexported under this
license exception when exported or
reexported separately from eligible
computers authorized under this license
exception.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 15. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 740.8 is added to read as follows:
§ 740.2 Restrictions on all License
Exceptions.
§ 740.8
(NAC).
*
(a) Eligibility requirements. License
Exception NAC permits the export,
reexport, and transfer (in-country) of
any item classified in ECCN 3A090,
4A090, 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z,
4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z,
5D002.z, or 5D992.z, except for items
designed or marketed for use in a
datacenter and meeting the parameters
of 3A090.a. License Exception NAC
authorizes exports, reexports, and
transfers (in-country) to or within any
destination specified in Country Groups
D:1 or D:4, and transfers (in-country)
within Macau or any destination
specified in Country Group D:5,
provided your export, reexport, or
transfer (in-country) meets all of the
applicable criteria identified under
paragraph (b) of this section. The
notification requirements do not apply
for transfers (in-country). License
Exception NAC also permits exports and
reexports to Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5, or to an
entity headquartered in, or with an
ultimate parent headquartered in,
Macau or a destination specified in
12. The authority citation for part 740
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.; 22 U.S.C.
7201 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.
■
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(9) * * *
(ii) The item is identified in paragraph
(a)(9)(ii)(A) or (B) of this section, is
being exported, reexported, or
transferred (in-country) to or within a
destination specified in Country Group
D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding any
destination also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6, and the license
exception is other than: TMP, restricted
to eligibility under the provisions of
§ 740.9(a)(6); NAC, under the provisions
of § 740.8; RPL, under the provisions of
§ 740.10, including § 740.10(a)(3)(v),
which prohibits exports and reexports
of replacement parts to a destination
specified in Country Group E:1 (see
supplement no. 1 to this part)); GOV,
restricted to eligibility under the
provisions of § 740.11(b); or TSU under
the provisions of § 740.13(a) and (c).
Items restricted to eligibility only for the
foregoing license exceptions are:
*
*
*
*
*
(B) An integrated circuit, ‘‘electronic
assembly’’ or ‘‘component’’ or related
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*
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Country Group D:5, of these items,
provided your export or reexport meets
all of the applicable criteria identified
under paragraphs (b) and (c) of this
section, as applicable:
(1) Written purchase order. The
export or reexport is made pursuant to
a written purchase order unless
specifically excepted in this section.
Exports or reexports of commercial
samples are not subject to this purchase
order requirement, but such transactions
are obligated to comply with paragraph
(a)(2) of this section.
(2) Notification to BIS. Prior to any
exports or reexports to Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5, the exporter or reexporter must
notify BIS in accordance with the
procedures set forth in paragraph (c) of
this section. For multiple exports or
reexports, the exporter or reexporter
need only notify BIS prior to the first
export or reexport. A notification under
this paragraph is not required for
transfers (in-country) within Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5. BIS will provide further
information on the notification process
in policy guidance.
(b) Restrictions. License Exception
NAC may not be used for restricted
activities under paragraph (b)(1) or (2) of
this section.
(1) Prohibited end uses and end users.
No exports, reexports, or transfers (incountry) may be made under License
Exception NAC that are subject to a
license requirement under part 744 or
746 of the EAR, except for a license
required under § 744.23(a)(3) for
reexports or exports to any destination
other than those specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 (excluding any
destination also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6) for an entity that is
headquartered in, or whose ultimate
parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or a destination specified
in Country Group D:5; and
(2) ‘Military end use’ or ‘military end
user.’ No exports, reexports, or transfers
(in-country) may be made under License
Exception NAC to or for a ‘military end
use,’ as defined in § 744.21(f), or
‘military end user,’ as defined in
§ 744.21(g).
(c) Prior notification procedures—(1)
Procedures. At least twenty-five
calendar days prior to exports or
reexports to or within Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5, you must provide prior notification
under License Exception NAC by
submitting a completed application in
SNAP–R in accordance with § 748.1 of
the EAR. The following blocks must be
completed, as appropriate: Blocks 1, 2,
3, 4, 5 (by marking box 5 ‘‘Other’’), 9,
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18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22 (a), (e), (f), (g),
(h), (i), (j), 22(d), 23, 24, and 25
according to the instructions described
in supplement no. 1 to part 748 of the
EAR. Box 9 under special purpose must
include NAC.
(2) Action by BIS. If the information
provided is complete, BIS will inform
you within twenty-five calendar days of
notification if you may use License
Exception NAC. Note that the fact that
you have been advised by BIS that you
can use License Exception NAC does
not exempt you from other licensing
requirements under the EAR, such as
those based on ‘‘knowledge’’ of a
prohibited end use or end user as
referenced in general prohibition five
(part 736 of the EAR) and set forth in
part 744 of the EAR.
(3) Status of pending NAC notification
requests. You must log into BIS’s
System for Tracking Export License
Applications (STELA) (https://
snapr.bis.doc.gov/stela) for status of
your pending NAC notification or to
verify the status in BIS’s Simplified
Network Applications Processing
Redesign (SNAP–R) System. STELA will
provide the date the NAC notification is
registered. STELA will, on the twentyfifth calendar day following the date of
registration, provide a confirmation of
the fact that you can use License
Exception NAC and a NAC confirmation
number to be submitted in AES or
provide you with confirmation if you
cannot use License Exception NAC. In
addition, BIS may provide such
confirmation by email, telephone, fax,
courier service, or other means.
■ 16. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 740.16 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(2) and (b)(2)(ii) to read as
follows:
§ 740.16
(APR).
Additional permissive reexports
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(2) The commodities being reexported
are not controlled for NP, CB, MT, SI,
or CC reasons; described in ECCNs
0A919, 3A001.b.2, b.3 (except those that
are being reexported for use in civil
telecommunications applications), or .z,
6A002, or 6A003; or commodities
classified under a 0x5zz ECCN; and
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) Commodities in 3A001.b.2, b.3
(except those that are being reexported
for use in civil telecommunications
applications), or .z;
*
*
*
*
*
■ 17. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 740.17 is amended by revising the fifth
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Fmt 4701
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sentence of the introductory text and
revising paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2)(i)(D),
the note to paragraph (b)(2), paragraphs
(b)(3) introductory text (retaining note),
(b)(3)(i) introductory text, (b)(3)(iii)(B),
and (b)(3)(iv), the second sentence of
paragraph (e)(3) introductory text, and
revising paragraph (f)(1) to read as
follows:
§ 740.17 Encryption Commodities,
Software and Technology (ENC).
* * * Items described in paragraphs
(b)(1) and (b)(3)(i), (b)(3)(ii) or (b)(3)(iv)
of this section that meet the criteria set
forth in Note 3 to Category 5—Part 2 of
the Commerce Control List (the ‘‘mass
market’’ note) are classified under ECCN
5A992 or 5D992 following selfclassification or classification by BIS
and are no longer subject to ‘‘EI’’ and
‘‘NS’’ controls. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Immediate authorization. This
paragraph (b)(1) authorizes the exports,
reexports, and transfers (in-country) of
the associated commodities selfclassified under ECCNs 5A002.a, z.1, or
5B002, and equivalent or related
software therefor classified under
5D002, except any such commodities,
software, or components described in
paragraph (b)(2) or (3) of this section,
subject to submission of a selfclassification report in accordance with
§ 740.17(e)(3) of the EAR. Items
described in this paragraph (b)(1) that
meet the criteria set forth in Note 3 to
Category 5—Part 2 of the Commerce
Control List (the ‘‘mass market’’ note)
are classified as ECCN 5A992 or 5D992
following self-classification or
classification by BIS and are removed
from ‘‘EI’’ and ‘‘NS’’ controls.
(2) * * *
(i) * * *
(D) Quantum cryptography. ECCN
5A002.c, z.3, or 5D002 ‘‘quantum
cryptography’’ commodities or software;
*
*
*
*
*
Note to paragraph (b)(2): Commodities,
components, and software classified under
ECCNs 5A002.b, z.2, or 5D002.b or z.5, for
the ‘‘cryptographic activation’’ of
commodities or software specified by
paragraph (b)(2) of this section are also
controlled under paragraph (b)(2) of this
section.
(3) Classification request required for
specified commodities, software, and
components. Thirty (30) days after a
classification request is submitted to BIS
in accordance with paragraph (d) of this
section and subject to the reporting
requirements in paragraph (e) of this
section, this paragraph authorizes
exports, reexports, and transfers (incountry) of the items submitted for
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classification, as further described in
this paragraph (b)(3), to any end user,
provided the item does not perform the
functions, or otherwise meet the
specifications, of any item described in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Items
described in paragraph (b)(3)(ii) or (iv)
of this section that meet the criteria set
forth in Note 3 to Category 5—Part 2 of
the CCL (the ‘‘mass market’’ note) are
classified under ECCN 5A992 or 5D992
following classification by BIS.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) Non-‘‘mass market’’
‘‘components,’’ toolsets, and toolkits.
Specified components classified under
ECCN 5A002.a, or z.1, and equivalent or
related software classified under ECCN
5D002 that do not meet the criteria set
forth in Note 3 to Category 5—Part 2 of
the CCL (the ‘‘mass market’’ note) and
are not described by paragraph (b)(2) or
(b)(3)(ii) of this section, as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
(iii) * * *
(B) Digital forensics and investigative
tools. Items specified in ECCNs:
5A004.b, z.3; 5D002.a.3.b or z.4; or
5D002.c.3.b or z.9 in supplement no. 1
to part 774 of the EAR.
(iv) ‘‘Cryptographic activation’’
commodities, components, and
software. Commodities, components,
and software classified under ECCNs
5A002.b, z.2, or 5D002.b or z.5, where
the product or cryptographic
functionality is not otherwise described
in paragraph (b)(2) or (b)(3)(i) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(3) * * * Specifically, this reporting
requirement applies to ‘‘mass market’’
encryption components and ‘executable
software’ that meet the criteria of the
Cryptography Note—Note 3 to Category
5—Part 2 of the CCL (‘‘mass market’’
note) and are classified under ECCN
5A992 or 5D992 following selfclassification, as well as to non-‘‘mass
market’’ encryption commodities and
software that remain classified in ECCN
5A002, 5B002, or 5D002 following selfclassification, provided these items are
not further described by paragraph (b)(2)
or (3) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(1) ‘‘Cryptanalytic items,’’ classified
in ECCN 5A004.a, z.1 or z.2,
5D002.a.3.a, c.3.a, z.3, or z.8, or 5E002;
*
*
*
*
*
■ 18. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 740.19 is amended by revising
paragraphs (b) introductory text and
(b)(16) and adding paragraph (b)(17) to
read as follows:
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§ 740.19 Consumer communications
devices (CCD).
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Eligible commodities and software.
Commodities and ‘‘software’’ in
paragraphs (b)(1) through (17) of this
section are eligible for export, reexport,
or transfer (in-country) under this
section to and within Cuba, Russia, and
Belarus.
*
*
*
*
*
(16) Consumer ‘‘software’’ (except
‘‘encryption source code’’) classified
under ECCNs 4D994, 5D991 or 5D992.c
or designated EAR99 to be used for
equipment described in paragraphs
(b)(1) through (17) of this section; and
(17) Commodities described under
3A991.p or 4A994.l.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 742—CONTROL POLICY—CCL
BASED CONTROLS
19. The authority citation for part 742
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.; 22 U.S.C.
3201 et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 2139a; 22 U.S.C. 7201
et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 7210; Sec. 1503, Pub. L.
108–11, 117 Stat. 559; E.O. 12058, 43 FR
20947, 3 CFR, 1978 Comp., p. 179; E.O.
12851, 58 FR 33181, 3 CFR, 1993 Comp., p.
608; E.O. 12938, 59 FR 59099, 3 CFR, 1994
Comp., p. 950; E.O. 13026, 61 FR 58767, 3
CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 228; E.O. 13222, 66 FR
44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 783;
Presidential Determination 2003–23, 68 FR
26459, 3 CFR, 2004 Comp., p. 320; Notice of
November 8, 2022, 87 FR 68015 (November
10, 2022).
20. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 742.6 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(6) and (b)(10) to read as
follows:
■
§ 742.6
Regional stability.
(a) * * *
(6) RS requirement that applies to
advanced computing and
semiconductor manufacturing items—(i)
Exports, reexports, transfers (in-country)
to or within Macau or Country Group
D:5. A license is required for items
specified in ECCNs 3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b,
k to p, 3B002.b and c; and associated
software and technology in 3D001 (for
3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to p, 3B002.b
and c), 3D002 (for 3B001a.4, c, d, f.1.b,
k to p, 3B002.b and c), and 3E001 (for
3B001a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to p, 3B002.b and
c) being exported, reexported, or
transferred (in-country) to or within
Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5 in supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the EAR.
(ii) Exports from abroad originating in
either Macau or a destination specified
in Country Group D:5. A license is also
required for the export from abroad
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73493
originating in either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5 to any destination worldwide
excluding any destination also specified
in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, of 3E001
(for 3A090) technology developed by an
entity headquartered in, or whose
ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5 that is the direct product of software
subject to the EAR and is for the
‘‘production’’ of commodities identified
in ECCNs 3A090, 4A090, 3A001.z,
4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z,
5A004.z, or 5A992.z, consistent with
§ 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and (h)(2)(ii) of the
EAR.
(iii) Exports, reexports, transfers (incountry) to or within destinations
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4,
and D:5, excluding destinations also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6.
A license is required for items specified
in ECCNs 3A001.z; 3A090; 3D001 (for
‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled
by 3A001.z, 3A090); 3E001 (for
‘‘technology’’ for commodities
controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 4A003.z;
4A004.z; 4A005.z; 4A090; 4D001 (for
‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled
by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z);
4D090 (for ‘‘software’’ for commodities
controlled by 4A090); 4E001 (for
‘‘technology’’ for commodities
controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z,
4A005.z, 4A090 or ‘‘software’’ specified
by 4D001 (for 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and
4A005.z), 4D090 (for ‘‘software’’ for
commodities controlled by 4A090));
5A002.z; 5A004.z; 5A992.z; 5D002.z;
5D992.z; 5E002 (for ‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 5A002.z or
5A004.z or ‘‘software’’ specified by
5D002 (for 5A002.z or 5A004.z
commodities)); or 5E992 (for
‘‘technology’’ for commodities
controlled by 5A992.z or ‘‘software’’
controlled by 5D992.z) being exported,
reexported, or transferred (in-country) to
or within a destination specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5,
excluding destinations also specified in
Country Groups A:5 or A:6, in
supplement no. 1 to part 740 of the
EAR.
(iv) Deemed exports and reexports.
The license requirements in paragraphs
(a)(6)(i) through (iii) of this section do
not apply to deemed exports or deemed
reexports.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(10) Advanced computing and
semiconductor manufacturing items—(i)
License review policy for paragraphs
(a)(6)(i) and (ii) of this section. License
applications for items specified in
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paragraphs (a)(6)(i) and (ii) of this
section will be reviewed consistent with
license review policies in § 744.23(d) of
the EAR, except applications will be
reviewed on a case-by-case basis if no
license would be required under part
744 of the EAR.
(ii) License review policy for
paragraph (a)(6)(iii) of this section.
License applications for items specified
in paragraph (a)(6)(iii) of this section to
or within destinations not specified in
Country Group D:5 (except Macau) will
be reviewed on a presumption of
approval basis, unless the export,
reexport, or transfer (in-country) is to an
entity headquartered in, whose ultimate
parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or a destination specified
in Country Group D:5, in which case
license applications will be reviewed
under a presumption of denial. License
applications for items to or within
Macau or destinations specified in
Country Group D:5 for items specified
in paragraph (a)(6)(iii) will be reviewed
under a presumption of denial.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 21. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 742.15 is amended by revising the
third, fourth, and fifth sentences of
paragraph (a)(1) to read as follows:
§ 742.15
Encryption items.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) * * * Following classification or
self-classification, items that meet the
criteria of Note 3 to Category 5—Part 2
of the Commerce Control List (the ‘‘mass
market’’ note), are classified under
ECCN 5A992 or 5D992 and are no
longer subject to this Section (see
§ 740.17 of the EAR). Before submitting
a license application, please review
License Exception ENC to determine
whether this license exception is
available for your item or transaction.
For exports, reexports, or transfers (incountry) of encryption items that are not
eligible for a license exception, you
must submit an application to obtain
authorization under a license or an
Encryption Licensing Arrangement.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 744—CONTROL POLICY: END–
USER AND END–USE BASED
22. The authority citation for part 744
continues to read as follows:
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■
Authority: 50 U.S.C. 4801–4852; 50 U.S.C.
4601 et seq.; 50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.; 22 U.S.C.
3201 et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 2139a; 22 U.S.C. 7201
et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 7210; E.O. 12058, 43 FR
20947, 3 CFR, 1978 Comp., p. 179; E.O.
12851, 58 FR 33181, 3 CFR, 1993 Comp., p.
608; E.O. 12938, 59 FR 59099, 3 CFR, 1994
Comp., p. 950; E.O. 13026, 61 FR 58767, 3
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18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 228; E.O. 13099, 63 FR
45167, 3 CFR, 1998 Comp., p. 208; E.O.
13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p.
783; E.O. 13224, 66 FR 49079, 3 CFR, 2001
Comp., p. 786; Notice of November 8, 2022,
87 FR 68015, 3 CFR, 2022 Comp., p. 563;
Notice of September 7, 2023, 88 FR 62439
(September 11, 2023).
23. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 744.6 is amended by revising
paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (ii) and adding
paragraphs (c)(3) and (d)(1) to read as
follows:
■
§ 744.6 Restrictions on specific activities
of ‘‘U.S. persons.’’
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) ‘‘Development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
‘‘advanced-node ICs.’’ To or within
Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5, any item not subject
to the EAR that you know will be used
in the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’
of integrated circuits at a ‘‘facility’’ of an
entity headquartered in, or whose
ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5 where ‘‘production’’ of ‘‘advancednode integrated circuits’’ occurs;
(ii) Category 3 items for
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
‘‘advanced-node ICs.’’ To or within
Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5, any item not subject
to the EAR and meeting the parameters
of any ECCN in Product Groups B, C, D,
or E in Category 3 of the CCL that you
know will be used in the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
integrated circuits at a ‘‘facility’’ of an
entity headquartered in, or whose
ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5 where ‘‘production’’ of integrated
circuits occurs, but you do not know
whether ‘‘production’’ of ‘‘advancednode integrated circuits’’ occurs at such
‘‘facility’’;
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Scope of activities of ‘‘U.S.
persons’’ that require a license under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section. (i)
Controlled activities. The U.S. persons
controls in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) through
(iii) of this section apply to persons
who:
(A) Authorize the shipment,
transmittal, or transfer (in-country) of
items not subject to the EAR and
described in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) through
(iii) of this section;
(B) Conduct the delivery, by
shipment, transmittal, or transfer (incountry), of items not subject to the EAR
described in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) through
(iii) of this section; or
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(C) Service, including maintaining,
repairing, overhauling, or refurbishing
items not subject to the EAR described
in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) through (iii) of
this section.
(ii) Due diligence. Appropriate due
diligence includes but is not limited to
review of publicly available
information, capability of items to be
provided, proprietary market data, and
end-use statements. ‘‘U.S. persons’’
should conduct due diligence to assess
whether the item is for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
‘‘advanced-node integrated circuits’’ at a
‘‘facility’’ of an entity headquartered in,
or whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5, consistent with paragraphs (c)(2)(i)
through (iii) of this section. As set forth
in paragraph (c)(2)(ii), for items
specified in Category 3B, 3C, 3D, or 3E
ECCNs, license requirements may apply
even when the ‘‘U.S. person’’ does not
know whether the activity is for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
‘‘advanced-node integrated circuits.’’ In
addition, some of the exclusions may
require due diligence, such as those in
paragraphs (d)(3) and (5) of this section.
‘‘U.S. persons’’ should follow the
‘‘Know Your Customer’’ guidance in
supplement no. 3 to part 732 of the
EAR. ‘‘U.S. persons’’ can also submit
Advisory Opinion requests to BIS
pursuant to § 748.3(c) of the EAR for
guidance on specific fabrication
facilities. To submit an Advisory
Opinion request, email RPD2@
bis.doc.gov.
(d) * * *
(1) Exclusion of certain administrative
and clerical activities and information
otherwise excluded—(i) Exclusion of
certain administrative and clerical
activities. Given the policy objective of
these controls, the ‘‘U.S. persons’’
criteria in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) through
(iii) of this section do not extend to
‘‘U.S. persons’’ conducting
administrative or clerical activities (e.g.,
arranging for shipment or preparing
financial documents) or otherwise
implementing a decision to approve a
restricted shipment, transmittal, or incountry transfer, or to activities of ‘‘U.S.
persons’’ that are not directly related to
the provision or servicing of specific
items to the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of ‘‘advanced-node
integrated circuits.’’
(ii) Exclusion of information
otherwise excluded under the EAR
under part 734. The exclusion of certain
activities specified in paragraph (c)(3) of
this section only applies to paragraph
(c)(2) of this section, and does not, for
example, limit the scope of paragraph
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(b) of this section or apply to other uses
of the term facilitate or facilitation
found elsewhere in the EAR. The scope
of paragraph (c)(2) of this section does
not include information or software that
would otherwise be excluded from the
EAR based on the exclusion criteria
under part 734, e.g., under § 734.7
(entitled ‘‘Published’’) Tand § 734.8
‘‘Technology’’ or ‘‘software’’ that arises
during, or results from, fundamental
research.
(iii) Exclusion of law enforcement and
intelligence operations of the U.S.
Government. Given the policy objective
of these controls, the ‘‘U.S. persons’’
criteria in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) through
(iii) of this section do not extend to
‘‘U.S. persons’’ conducting law
enforcement and intelligence operations
of the U.S. Government.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 24. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 744.23 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(1)(ii) and (a)(2) and
adding paragraph (a)(3) to read as
follows:
§ 744.23 ‘‘Supercomputer’’ and
semiconductor manufacturing end use.
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*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Destination and end-use scope.
(A) The ‘‘development,’’ ‘‘production,’’
operation, installation (including on-site
installation), maintenance (checking),
repair, overhaul, or refurbishing of a
‘‘supercomputer’’ located in or destined
to Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5 of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the EAR; or
(B) The incorporation into, or the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of any
‘‘component’’ or ‘‘equipment’’ that will
be used in a ‘‘supercomputer’’ located in
or destined to Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5.
(2) ‘‘Advanced-node ICs’’—(i) Any
item at a ‘‘production’’ ‘‘facility’’ of
‘‘advanced-node ICs.’’ Any items subject
to the EAR when you know the items
will be used in the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of ICs destined to a
‘‘facility’’ located in Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5 where ‘‘production’’ of ‘‘advancednode ICs’’ occurs.
(ii) Category 3 items to a ‘‘facility’’
where the technology node is unknown.
Any item subject to the EAR specified
in an ECCN in Product Groups B, C, D,
or E in Category 3 of the CCL when you
know the item will be used in the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of ICs
destined to a ‘‘facility’’ located in Macau
or a destination specified in Country
Group D:5 where ‘‘production’’ of
integrated circuits occurs, but you do
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not know whether ‘‘production’’ of
‘‘advanced-node ICs’’ occurs at such
‘‘facility.’’
(3) Advanced computing items. (i)
Any item subject to the EAR and
specified in ECCN 3A001.z, 3A090,
4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, or
5D992.z destined to any destination
other than those specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 (excluding any
destination also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6) for an entity that is
headquartered in, or whose ultimate
parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or a destination specified
in Country Group D:5 (e.g., a PRCheadquartered cloud or data server
provider located in a destination not
otherwise excluded).
(ii) ECCN 3E001 (for 3A090)
‘‘technology’’ when it meets all of the
following:
(A) The technology is developed by
an entity headquartered in, or whose
ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group
D:5;
(B) The ‘‘technology’’ is subject to the
EAR pursuant to the foreign direct
product rule in § 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and
(h)(2)(ii) of the EAR;
(C) The ‘‘technology’’ is for reexport
or transfer (in-country) from or within a
destination specified in Country Group
D:1, D:4, D:5, excluding any destination
also specified in Country Groups A:5 or
A:6, to any destination worldwide; and
(D) The ‘‘technology’’ is for the
‘‘production’’ of commodities or
software specified in ECCN 3A001.z,
3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, or 5A992.z.
Note 1 to paragraph (a)(3)(ii): This
paragraph (a)(3)(ii) includes items subject to
the EAR pursuant to the foreign direct
product rule in § 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and
(h)(2)(ii) of the EAR.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 746—EMBARGOES AND OTHER
SPECIAL CONTROLS
25. Effective November 17, 2023, the
authority citation for part 746 is revised
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.; 22 U.S.C.
287c; Sec 1503, Pub. L. 108–11, 117 Stat. 559;
22 U.S.C. 2151 note; 22 U.S.C. 6004; 22
U.S.C. 7201 et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 7210; E.O.
12854, 58 FR 36587, 3 CFR, 1993 Comp., p.
614; E.O. 12918, 59 FR 28205, 3 CFR, 1994
Comp., p. 899; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3
CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 783; E.O. 13338, 69 FR
26751, 3 CFR, 2004 Comp., p 168;
Presidential Determination 2003–23, 68 FR
26459, 3 CFR, 2004 Comp., p. 320;
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73495
Presidential Determination 2007–7, 72 FR
1899, 3 CFR, 2006 Comp., p. 325; Notice of
May 810, 2023, 88 FR 30211 (May 10, 2023).
26. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 746.8 is amended by revising
paragraph (a) introductory text to read
as follows:
■
§ 746.8 Sanctions against Russia and
Belarus.
(a) License requirements. For
purposes of paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of
this section, commodities specified
under ECCN 5A991, and commodities
and software classified under ECCNs
5A992.c or 5D992.c that have been
‘classified in accordance with § 740.17’
do not require a license to or within
Russia or Belarus for the following civil
end-users: wholly-owned U.S.
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices;
joint ventures between two or more U.S.
companies, including the wholly-owned
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of
such joint ventures; joint ventures
between U.S. companies and companies
headquartered in countries from
Country Group A:5 and A:6 in
supplement no. 1 to part 740 of the
EAR, including the wholly-owned
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of
such joint ventures; wholly-owned
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of
companies headquartered in countries
from Country Group A:5 and A:6 in
supplement no. 1 to part 740; or joint
ventures between two or more
companies headquartered in Country
Group A:5 and A:6 in supplement no. 1
to part 740, including the wholly-owned
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of
such joint ventures.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 27. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 746.10 is amended by revising
paragraph (a) introductory text to read
as follows:
§ 746.10 ‘Luxury Goods’ Sanctions
Against Russia and Belarus and Russian
and Belarusian oligarchs and malign actors.
(a) License requirements. For
purposes of paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of
this section, commodities specified
under ECCN 5A991, and commodities
and software classified under ECCNs
5A992.c or 5D992.c that have been
‘classified in accordance with § 740.17’
do not require a license to or within
Russia or Belarus for the following civil
end-users: wholly-owned U.S.
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices;
joint ventures between two or more U.S.
companies, including the wholly-owned
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of
such joint ventures; joint ventures
between U.S. companies and companies
headquartered in countries from
Country Group A:5 and A:6 in
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
supplement no. 1 to part 740 of the
EAR, including the wholly-owned
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of
such joint ventures; wholly-owned
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of
companies headquartered in countries
from Country Group A:5 and A:6 in
supplement no. 1 to part 740; or joint
ventures between two or more
companies headquartered in Country
Group A:5 and A:6 in supplement no. 1
to part 740, including the wholly-owned
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of
such joint ventures.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 748—APPLICATIONS
(CLASSIFICATION, ADVISORY, AND
LICENSE) AND DOCUMENTATION
28. Effective November 17, 2023, the
authority citation for part 748 is revised
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.; 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, 2023, 88
FR 55549 (August 16, 2023).
Country
29. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 748.8 is amended by adding
paragraphs (d), (s), (t), and (z) to read as
follows:
■
§ 748.8 Unique application and
submission requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) U.S. person support activities that
require a license under § 744.6.
*
*
*
*
*
(s) Exports of firearms and certain
shotguns temporarily in the United
States.
(t) ‘‘600 Series Major Defense
Equipment.’’
*
*
*
*
*
(z) Semiautomatic firearms controlled
under ECCN 0A501.a.
■ 30. Effective November 17, 2023,
supplement No. 2 to part 748 is
amended by adding paragraph (d) to
read as follows:
Supplement No. 2 to Part 748—Unique
Application and Submission
Requirements
*
Validated end-user
*
*
China (People’s Re- Advanced Micro Devices China,
public of).
Inc.
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*
Shanghai Huahong Grace Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation.
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*
*
*
*
(d) ‘‘U.S. person’’ support activities that
require a license under § 744.6 of the EAR.
Use SNAP–R for submitting a license
PO 00000
application for ‘‘U.S. person’’ activities.
Applicants should use the reexport
designation on the SNAP–R form and include
in the ‘‘Additional Information’’ section of
the license application that a license is
required for the transaction under § 744.6 of
the EAR. In the special purpose field, specify
the specific activities the ‘‘U.S. person’’ is
engaged. The applicant should provide, as
relevant: the ECCN of the technology or item
or, if unknown, use the EAR99 designation
(regardless of whether the items being dealt
with are subject to the EAR); and a complete
explanation of the activity in supplemental
documentation.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 31. Effective November 17, 2023,
supplement no. 7 to part 748 is
amended by revising the heading and
the entries for ‘‘Advanced Micro
Devices China, Inc’’ and ‘‘Shanghai
Huahong Grace Semiconductor
Manufacturing Corporation’’ under
‘‘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 (In-Country),
and Eligible Destinations
Eligible items
(by ECCN)
Eligible destination
*
*
3D002, 3D003, 3E001 (limited to
‘‘technology’’ for items classified under 3C002 and 3C004
and ‘‘technology’’ for use during
the International Technology
Roadmap for Semiconductors
(ITRS) process for items classified under ECCNs 3B001 and
3B002), 3E002 (limited to
‘‘technology’’ for use during the
ITRS process for items classified under ECCNs 3B001 and
3B002), 3E003.e (limited to the
‘‘development’’ and ‘‘production’’ of integrated circuits for
commercial applications),
4D001 and 4E001 (limited to
the ‘‘development’’ of products
under ECCN 4A003.b through
.g).
*
*
Advanced Micro Devices (Shanghai) Co., Ltd., Buildings 33
(Unit 1), 46, 47, 48 & 49, River
Front Harbor, Zhangjiang HiTech Park, No. 1387 Zhang
Dong Road, Pudong District,
Shanghai, China 201203.
AMD Technology Development
(Beijing) Co., Ltd., North and
South Buildings,
RaycomInfotech, Park Tower
C, No. 2 Science Institute
South Rd., Zhong Guan Cun,
Haidian District, Beijing, China
100190.
*
*
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.a through .e, 5A004.a
through .b, or 5A992.c 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).
Frm 00040
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
AMD Products (China) Co. Ltd.,
North and South Buildings,
RaycomInfotech Park Tower C,
No. 2 Science Institute South
Rd., Zhong Guan Cun, Haidian
District, Beijing, China 100190.
*
*
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.
E:\FR\FM\25OCR3.SGM
25OCR3
Federal Register
*
75 FR 25763, 5/10/10.
76 FR 2802, 1/18/11.
78 FR 3319, 1/16/13.
81 FR 40785, 6/23/16.
88 FR [INSERT PAGE NUMBER], 10/25/23.
*
78 FR 32981, 6/3/13. 88 FR [INSERT PAGE NUMBER], 10/25/
23.
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Country
Eligible items
(by ECCN)
Validated end-user
*
*
*
*
32. The authority citation for part 758
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.; E.O.
13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p.
783.
33. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 758.1 is amended by adding paragraph
(g)(5) to read as follows:
■
§ 758.1 The Electronic Export Information
(EEI) Filing to the Automated Export System
(AES).
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(5) Exports of .z items that meet or
exceed the performance parameters of
ECCN 3A090 or 4A090. This paragraph
(g)(5) imposes a requirement for
identifying .z items by ‘‘items’’ level
classification in the EEI filing in AES.
For any export of .z items controlled
under ECCNs 3A001, 4A003, 4A004,
4A005, 5A002, 5A004, 5A992, 5D002, or
5D992 in addition to any other required
data for the associated EEI filing, you
must include the items paragraph
classification (i.e., .z), when applicable,
as the first text to appear in the
Commodity description block in the EEI
filing in AES.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 34. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 758.6 is amended by revising
paragraph (a)(2) to read as follows:
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
§ 758.6 Destination control statement and
other information furnished to consignees.
(a) * * *
(2) The ECCN(s) for any 3A001.z,
3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z,
9x515 or ‘‘600 series’’ ‘‘items’’ being
shipped (i.e., exported in tangible form).
For the seven ECCNs with a .z
paragraph, the requirement to include
the classification only applies to
commodities classified under the .z
paragraphs. If the commodity is
classified under any other paragraph in
one of those seven ECCNs, then the
requirement under this paragraph is not
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18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
*
*
PART 758—EXPORT CLEARANCE
REQUIREMENTS
Eligible destination
*
applicable. For ECCN 3A090, identify
the commodity as either 3A090.a or .b.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 772—DEFINITIONS OF TERMS
35. The authority citation for part 772
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.; E.O.
13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p.
783.
36. Effective November 17, 2023,
§ 772.1 is amended by revising the last
sentence in note 1 to the definition for
‘‘specially designed’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 772.1 Definitions of terms as used in the
Export Administration Regulations (EAR).
*
*
*
*
*
Specially designed. * * *
NOTE 1: * * * For purposes of
‘‘specially designed,’’ ECCNs 0B505.c,
0B999, 0D999, 1B999, 1C992, 1C995,
1C997, 1C999, 3A991, 4A994, 5A992
(except for .z), 5D992 (except for .z),
6A998 (except for .b), and 9A991 are
treated as ECCNs controlled exclusively
for AT reasons.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 774—THE COMMERCE
CONTROL LIST
37. The authority citation for 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.
38. Effective November 17, 2023,
supplement no. 1 to part 774 is
amended by:
■ a. Revising ECCNs 3A001, 3A090,
3A991, 3D001, 3E001;
■ b. Revising Note 3 to Category 4—
Computers;
■ c. Revising ECCNs 4A003, 4A004,
4A005, 4A090, 4A994, 4D001, and
4E001;
■ d. Revising Technical Note paragraph
2 in the TECHNICAL NOTE ON
■
PO 00000
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Federal Register
Shanghai Huahong Grace Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation—GFab1, 1399
Zuchongzhi Road, Zhangjiang
Hi-Tech Park, Shanghai
201203 China.
*
*
*
73497
*
*
*
‘‘ADJUSTED PEAK PERFORMANCE’’
(‘‘APP’’) at the end Category 4—
Computers;
■ e. Revising the Note 3. to Category 5—
Telecommunications and ‘‘Information
Security’’ Part 1—Telecommunications
introductory text;
■ f. Revising ECCN 5E001;
■ g. Revising Note 3 and the N/B. to
Note 3 (Cryptography Note) to Category
5—Telecommunications and
‘‘Information Security’’ Part 2—
‘‘Information Security’’; and
■ h. Revising ECCNs 5A002, 5A992,
5A004, 5B002, 5D002, 5D992, 5E002,
5E992, 9A004, and 9A515.
The revisions read as follows:
Supplement No. 1 to Part 774—The
Commerce Control List
*
*
*
*
*
3A001 Electronic items as follows (see List
of Items Controlled).
Reason for Control: NS, RS, MT, NP, AT
Control(s)
NS applies to ‘‘Monolithic Microwave
Integrated Circuit’’
(‘‘MMIC’’) amplifiers
in 3A001.b.2 and
discrete microwave
transistors in
3A001.b.3, except
those 3A001.b.2
and b.3 items
being exported or
reexported for use
in civil telecommunications
applications.
NS applies to entire
entry, except
3A001.z.
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(see supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS Column 1.
NS Column 2.
73498
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Control(s)
RS applies ‘‘Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuit’’
(‘‘MMIC’’) amplifiers
in 3A001.b.2 and
discrete microwave
transistors in
3A001.b.3, except
those 3A001.b.2
and b.3 items
being exported or
reexported for use
in civil telecommunications
applications.
RS applies to
3A001.z.
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MT applies to
3A001.a.1.a and .z
when usable in
‘‘missiles’’; and to
3A001.a.5.a and .z
when ‘‘designed or
modified’’ for military use, hermetically sealed and
rated for operation
in the temperature
range from below
¥54 °C to above
+125 °C.
NP applies to pulse
discharge capacitors in 3A001.e.2
and superconducting solenoidal
electromagnets in
3A001.e.3 that
meet or exceed the
technical parameters in 3A201.a
and 3A201.b, respectively.
AT applies to entire
entry.
Country chart
(see supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
RS Column 1.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
MT Column 1.
NP Column 1.
AT Column 1.
Reporting Requirements: See § 743.1 of
the EAR for reporting requirements for
exports under 3A001.b.2 or b.3 under
License Exceptions, and Validated EndUser authorizations.
License Requirements Note: See § 744.17
of the EAR for additional license
requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and
an arithmetic logic unit with an access
width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ‘‘information security’’
functionality, and associated ‘‘software’’
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and ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A for MT, NP or 3A001.z; N/A for
‘‘Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuit’’
(‘‘MMIC’’) amplifiers in 3A001.b.2 and
discrete microwave transistors in
3A001.b.3, except those that are being
exported or reexported for use in civil
telecommunications applications.
Yes for:
$1500: 3A001.c
$3000: 3A001.b.1, b.2 (exported or
reexported for use in civil
telecommunications applications), b.3
(exported or reexported for use in civil
telecommunications applications), b.9,
.d, .e, .f, and .g.
$5000: 3A001.a (except a.1.a and a.5.a
when controlled for MT), .b.4 to b.7, and
b.12.
GBS: Yes for 3A001.a.1.b, a.2 to a.14 (except
.a.5.a when controlled for MT), b.2
(exported or reexported for use in civil
telecommunications applications), b.8
(except for ‘‘vacuum electronic devices’’
exceeding 18 GHz), b.9., b.10, .g, and .h,
and .i.
NAC: Yes, for 3A001.z; N/A for all other
3A001 commodities.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be
used to ship any item in 3A001.b.2 or b.3,
except those that are being exported or
reexported for use in civil
telecommunications applications, to any of
the destinations listed in Country Group
A:5 or A:6 (See Supplement No. 1 to part
740 of the EAR).
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See Category XV of the
USML for certain ‘‘space-qualified’’
electronics and Category XI of the USML
for certain ASICs, ‘transmit/receive
modules,’ or ‘transmit modules’ ‘‘subject to
the ITAR’’ (see 22 CFR parts 120 through
130). (2) See also 3A090 (including Note 4
to 3A090), 3A101, 3A201, 3A611, 3A991,
and 9A515.
Related Definitions: ‘Microcircuit’ means a
device in which a number of passive or
active elements are considered as
indivisibly associated on or within a
continuous structure to perform the
function of a circuit. For the purposes of
integrated circuits in 3A001.a.1, 5 × 103
Gy(Si) = 5 × 105 Rads (Si); 5 × 106 Gy (Si)/
s = 5 × 108 Rads (Si)/s.
Items:
a. General purpose integrated circuits, as
follows:
Note 1: Integrated circuits include the
following types:
—‘‘Monolithic integrated circuits’’;
—‘‘Hybrid integrated circuits’’;
—‘‘Multichip integrated circuits’’;
—Film type integrated circuits, including
silicon-on-sapphire integrated circuits’’;
—‘‘Optical integrated circuits’’;
—‘‘Three dimensional integrated circuits’’;
—‘‘Monolithic Microwave Integrated
Circuits’’ (‘‘MMICs’’).
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
a.1. Integrated circuits designed or rated as
radiation hardened to withstand any of the
following:
a.1.a. A total dose of 5 × 103 Gy (Si), or
higher;
a.1.b. A dose rate upset of 5 × 106 Gy (Si)/
s, or higher; or
a.1.c. A fluence (integrated flux) of
neutrons (1 MeV equivalent) of 5 × 1013 n/
cm2 or higher on silicon, or its equivalent for
other materials;
Note: 3A001.a.1.c does not apply to Metal
Insulator Semiconductors (MIS).
a.2. ‘‘Microprocessor microcircuits,’’
‘‘microcomputer microcircuits,’’
microcontroller microcircuits, storage
integrated circuits manufactured from a
compound semiconductor, analog-to-digital
converters, integrated circuits that contain
analog-to-digital converters and store or
process the digitized data, digital-to-analog
converters, electro-optical or ‘‘optical
integrated circuits’’ designed for ‘‘signal
processing’’, field programmable logic
devices, custom integrated circuits for which
either the function is unknown or the control
status of the equipment in which the
integrated circuit will be used in unknown,
Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) processors,
Static Random-Access Memories (SRAMs), or
‘non-volatile memories,’ having any of the
following:
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.a.2, ‘non-volatile memories’ are
memories with data retention over a period
of time after a power shutdown.
a.2.a. Rated for operation at an ambient
temperature above 398 K (+125 °C);
a.2.b. Rated for operation at an ambient
temperature below 218 K (¥55 °C); or
a.2.c. Rated for operation over the entire
ambient temperature range from 218 K
(¥55 °C) to 398 K (+125 °C);
Note: 3A001.a.2 does not apply to
integrated circuits designed for civil
automobile or railway train applications.
a.3. ‘‘Microprocessor microcircuits’’,
‘‘microcomputer microcircuits’’ and
microcontroller microcircuits, manufactured
from a compound semiconductor and
operating at a clock frequency exceeding 40
MHz;
Note: 3A001.a.3 includes digital signal
processors, digital array processors and
digital coprocessors.
a.4. [Reserved]
a.5. Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) and
Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC) integrated
circuits, as follows:
a.5.a. ADCs having any of the following:
a.5.a.1. A resolution of 8 bit or more, but
less than 10 bit, with a ‘‘sample rate’’ greater
than 1.3 Giga Samples Per Second (GSPS);
a.5.a.2. A resolution of 10 bit or more, but
less than 12 bit, with a ‘‘sample rate’’ greater
than 600 Mega Samples Per Second (MSPS);
a.5.a.3. A resolution of 12 bit or more, but
less than 14 bit, with a ‘‘sample rate’’ greater
than 400 MSPS;
a.5.a.4. A resolution of 14 bit or more, but
less than 16 bit, with a ‘‘sample rate’’ greater
than 250 MSPS; or
a.5.a.5. A resolution of 16 bit or more with
a ‘‘sample rate’’ greater than 65 MSPS;
N.B.: For integrated circuits that contain
analog-to-digital converters and store or
process the digitized data see 3A001.a.14.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Technical Notes: For the purposes of
3A001.a.5.a:
1. A resolution of n bit corresponds to a
quantization of 2n levels.
2. The resolution of the ADC is the number
of bits of the digital output that represents
the measured analog input. Effective Number
of Bits (ENOB) is not used to determine the
resolution of the ADC.
3. For ‘‘multiple channel ADCs’’, the
‘‘sample rate’’ is not aggregated and the
‘‘sample rate’’ is the maximum rate of any
single channel.
4. For ‘‘interleaved ADCs’’ or for ‘‘multiple
channel ADCs’’ that are specified to have an
interleaved mode of operation, the ‘‘sample
rates’’ are aggregated and the ‘‘sample rate’’
is the maximum combined total rate of all of
the interleaved channels.
a.5.b. Digital-to-Analog Converters (DAC)
having any of the following:
a.5.b.1. A resolution of 10-bit or more but
less than 12-bit, with an ‘adjusted update
rate’ of exceeding 3,500 MSPS; or
a.5.b.2. A resolution of 12-bit or more and
having any of the following:
a.5.b.2.a. An ‘adjusted update rate’
exceeding 1,250 MSPS but not exceeding
3,500 MSPS, and having any of the following:
a.5.b.2.a.1. A settling time less than 9 ns to
arrive at or within 0.024% of full scale from
a full scale step; or
a.5.b.2.a.2. A ‘Spurious Free Dynamic
Range’ (SFDR) greater than 68 dBc (carrier)
when synthesizing a full scale analog signal
of 100 MHz or the highest full scale analog
signal frequency specified below 100 MHz; or
a.5.b.2.b. An ‘adjusted update rate’
exceeding 3,500 MSPS;
Technical Notes: For the purposes of
3A001.a.5.b:
1. ‘Spurious Free Dynamic Range’ (SFDR)
is defined as the ratio of the RMS value of
the carrier frequency (maximum signal
component) at the input of the DAC to the
RMS value of the next largest noise or
harmonic distortion component at its output.
2. SFDR is determined directly from the
specification table or from the
characterization plots of SFDR versus
frequency.
3. A signal is defined to be full scale when
its amplitude is greater than –3 dBfs (full
scale).
4. ‘Adjusted update rate’ for DACs is:
a. For conventional (non-interpolating)
DACs, the ‘adjusted update rate’ is the rate
at which the digital signal is converted to an
analog signal and the output analog values
are changed by the DAC. For DACs where the
interpolation mode may be bypassed
(interpolation factor of one), the DAC should
be considered as a conventional (noninterpolating) DAC.
b. For interpolating DACs (oversampling
DACs), the ‘adjusted update rate’ is defined
as the DAC update rate divided by the
smallest interpolating factor. For
interpolating DACs, the ‘adjusted update
rate’ may be referred to by different terms
including:
• input data rate
• input word rate
• input sample rate
• maximum total input bus rate
• maximum DAC clock rate for DAC clock
input.
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a.6. Electro-optical and ‘‘optical integrated
circuits’’, designed for ‘‘signal processing’’
and having all of the following:
a.6.a. One or more than one internal
‘‘laser’’ diode;
a.6.b. One or more than one internal light
detecting element; and
a.6.c. Optical waveguides;
a.7. ‘Field programmable logic devices’
having any of the following:
a.7.a. A maximum number of single-ended
digital input/outputs of greater than 700; or
a.7.b. An ‘aggregate one-way peak serial
transceiver data rate’ of 500 Gb/s or greater;
Note: 3A001.a.7 includes:
—Complex Programmable Logic Devices
(CPLDs);
—Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs);
—Field Programmable Logic Arrays (FPLAs);
—Field Programmable Interconnects (FPICs).
N.B.: For integrated circuits having field
programmable logic devices that are
combined with an analog-to-digital converter,
see 3A001.a.14.
Technical Notes: For the purposes of
3A001.a.7:
1. Maximum number of digital input/
outputs in 3A001.a.7.a is also referred to as
maximum user input/outputs or maximum
available input/outputs, whether the
integrated circuit is packaged or bare die.
2. ‘Aggregate one-way peak serial
transceiver data rate’ is the product of the
peak serial one-way transceiver data rate
times the number of transceivers on the
FPGA.
a.8. [Reserved]
a.9. Neural network integrated circuits;
a.10. Custom integrated circuits for which
the function is unknown, or the control
status of the equipment in which the
integrated circuits will be used is unknown
to the manufacturer, having any of the
following:
a.10.a. More than 1,500 terminals;
a.10.b. A typical ‘‘basic gate propagation
delay time’’ of less than 0.02 ns; or
a.10.c. An operating frequency exceeding 3
GHz;
a.11. Digital integrated circuits, other than
those described in 3A001.a.3 to 3A001.a.10
and 3A001.a.12, based upon any compound
semiconductor and having any of the
following:
a.11.a. An equivalent gate count of more
than 3,000 (2 input gates); or
a.11.b. A toggle frequency exceeding 1.2
GHz;
a.12. Fast Fourier Transform (FFT)
processors having a rated execution time for
an N-point complex FFT of less than (N log2
N)/20,480 ms, where N is the number of
points;
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.a.12, when N is equal to 1,024 points,
the formula in 3A001.a.12 gives an execution
time of 500 ms.
a.13. Direct Digital Synthesizer (DDS)
integrated circuits having any of the
following:
a.13.a. A Digital-to-Analog Converter
(DAC) clock frequency of 3.5 GHz or more
and a DAC resolution of 10 bit or more, but
less than 12 bit; or
a.13.b. A DAC clock frequency of 1.25 GHz
or more and a DAC resolution of 12 bit or
more;
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Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.a.13, the DAC clock frequency may be
specified as the master clock frequency or the
input clock frequency.
a.14. Integrated circuits that perform or are
programmable to perform all of the following:
a.14.a. Analog-to-digital conversions
meeting any of the following:
a.14.a.1. A resolution of 8 bit or more, but
less than 10 bit, with a ‘‘sample rate’’ greater
than 1.3 Giga Samples Per Second (GSPS);
a.14.a.2. A resolution of 10 bit or more, but
less than 12 bit, with a ‘‘sample rate’’ greater
than 1.0 GSPS;
a.14.a.3. A resolution of 12 bit or more, but
less than 14 bit, with a ‘‘sample rate’’ greater
than 1.0 GSPS;
a.14.a.4. A resolution of 14 bit or more, but
less than 16 bit, with a ‘‘sample rate’’ greater
than 400 Mega Samples Per Second (MSPS);
or
a.14.a.5. A resolution of 16 bit or more
with a ‘‘sample rate’’ greater than 180 MSPS;
and
a.14.b. Any of the following:
a.14.b.1. Storage of digitized data; or
a.14.b.2. Processing of digitized data;
N.B. 1: For analog-to-digital converter
integrated circuits see 3A001.a.5.a.
N.B. 2: For field programmable logic
devices see 3A001.a.7.
Technical Notes: For the purposes of
3A001.a.14:
1. A resolution of n bit corresponds to a
quantization of 2n levels.
2. The resolution of the ADC is the number
of bits of the digital output of the ADC that
represents the measured analog input.
Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) is not used
to determine the resolution of the ADC.
3. For integrated circuits with noninterleaving ‘‘multiple channel ADCs’’, the
‘‘sample rate’’ is not aggregated and the
‘‘sample rate’’ is the maximum rate of any
single channel.
4. For integrated circuits with ‘‘interleaved
ADCs’’ or with ‘‘multiple channel ADCs’’ that
are specified to have an interleaved mode of
operation, the ‘‘sample rates’’ are aggregated
and the ‘‘sample rate’’ is the maximum
combined total rate of all of the interleaved
channels.
b. Microwave or millimeter wave items, as
follows:
Technical Note: For purposes of 3A001.b,
the parameter peak saturated power output
may also be referred to on product data
sheets as output power, saturated power
output, maximum power output, peak power
output, or peak envelope power output.
b.1. ‘‘Vacuum electronic devices’’ and
cathodes, as follows:
Note 1: 3A001.b.1 does not control
‘‘vacuum electronic devices’’ designed or
rated for operation in any frequency band
and having all of the following:
a. Does not exceed 31.8 GHz; and
b. Is ‘‘allocated by the ITU’’ for radiocommunications services, but not for radiodetermination.
Note 2: 3A001.b.1 does not control non‘‘space-qualified’’ ‘‘vacuum electronic
devices’’ having all the following:
a. An average output power equal to or less
than 50 W; and
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b. Designed or rated for operation in any
frequency band and having all of the
following:
1. Exceeds 31.8 GHz but does not exceed
43.5 GHz; and
2. Is ‘‘allocated by the ITU’’ for radiocommunications services, but not for radiodetermination.
b.1.a. Traveling-wave ‘‘vacuum electronic
devices,’’ pulsed or continuous wave, as
follows:
b.1.a.1. Devices operating at frequencies
exceeding 31.8 GHz;
b.1.a.2. Devices having a cathode heater
with a turn on time to rated RF power of less
than 3 seconds;
b.1.a.3. Coupled cavity devices, or
derivatives thereof, with a ‘‘fractional
bandwidth’’ of more than 7% or a peak
power exceeding 2.5 kW;
b.1.a.4. Devices based on helix, folded
waveguide, or serpentine waveguide circuits,
or derivatives thereof, having any of the
following:
b.1.a.4.a. An ‘‘instantaneous bandwidth’’ of
more than one octave, and average power
(expressed in kW) times frequency
(expressed in GHz) of more than 0.5;
b.1.a.4.b. An ‘‘instantaneous bandwidth’’ of
one octave or less, and average power
(expressed in kW) times frequency
(expressed in GHz) of more than 1;
b.1.a.4.c. Being ‘‘space-qualified’’; or
b.1.a.4.d. Having a gridded electron gun;
b.1.a.5. Devices with a ‘‘fractional
bandwidth’’ greater than or equal to 10%,
with any of the following:
b.1.a.5.a. An annular electron beam;
b.1.a.5.b. A non-axisymmetric electron
beam; or
b.1.a.5.c. Multiple electron beams;
b.1.b. Crossed-field amplifier ‘‘vacuum
electronic devices’’ with a gain of more than
17 dB;
b.1.c. Thermionic cathodes, designed for
‘‘vacuum electronic devices,’’ producing an
emission current density at rated operating
conditions exceeding 5 A/cm2 or a pulsed
(non-continuous) current density at rated
operating conditions exceeding 10 A/cm2;
b.1.d. ‘‘Vacuum electronic devices’’ with
the capability to operate in a ‘dual mode.’
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.b.1.d, ‘dual mode’ means the
‘‘vacuum electronic device’’ beam current
can be intentionally changed between
continuous-wave and pulsed mode operation
by use of a grid and produces a peak pulse
output power greater than the continuouswave output power.
b.2. ‘‘Monolithic Microwave Integrated
Circuit’’ (‘‘MMIC’’) amplifiers that are any of
the following:
N.B.: For ‘‘MMIC’’ amplifiers that have an
integrated phase shifter see 3A001.b.12.
b.2.a. Rated for operation at frequencies
exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and including 6.8
GHz with a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ greater
than 15%, and having any of the following:
b.2.a.1. A peak saturated power output
greater than 75 W (48.75 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and
including 2.9 GHz;
b.2.a.2. A peak saturated power output
greater than 55 W (47.4 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 2.9 GHz up to and
including 3.2 GHz;
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b.2.a.3. A peak saturated power output
greater than 40 W (46 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 3.2 GHz up to and including 3.7
GHz; or
b.2.a.4. A peak saturated power output
greater than 20 W (43 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 3.7 GHz up to and including 6.8
GHz;
b.2.b. Rated for operation at frequencies
exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 16
GHz with a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ greater
than 10%, and having any of the following:
b.2.b.1. A peak saturated power output
greater than 10 W (40 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 8.5
GHz; or
b.2.b.2. A peak saturated power output
greater than 5 W (37 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 8.5 GHz up to and including 16
GHz;
b.2.c. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 3 W
(34.77 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 16
GHz up to and including 31.8 GHz, and with
a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of greater than
10%;
b.2.d. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 0.1 nW
(¥70 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 31.8
GHz up to and including 37 GHz;
b.2.e. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 1 W (30
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 37 GHz up
to and including 43.5 GHz, and with a
‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of greater than 10%;
b.2.f. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 31.62
mW (15 dBm) at any frequency exceeding
43.5 GHz up to and including 75 GHz, and
with a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of greater than
10%;
b.2.g. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 10 mW
(10 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 75 GHz
up to and including 90 GHz, and with a
‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of greater than 5%; or
b.2.h. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 0.1 nW
(¥70 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 90
GHz;
Note 1: [Reserved]
Note 2: The control status of the ‘‘MMIC’’
whose rated operating frequency includes
frequencies listed in more than one frequency
range, as defined by 3A001.b.2.a through
3A001.b.2.h, is determined by the lowest
peak saturated power output control
threshold.
Note 3: Notes 1 and 2 following the
Category 3 heading for product group A.
Systems, Equipment, and Components mean
that 3A001.b.2 does not control ‘‘MMICs’’ if
they are ‘‘specially designed’’ for other
applications, e.g., telecommunications,
radar, automobiles.
b.3. Discrete microwave transistors that are
any of the following:
b.3.a. Rated for operation at frequencies
exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and including 6.8
GHz and having any of the following:
b.3.a.1. A peak saturated power output
greater than 400 W (56 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and
including 2.9 GHz;
b.3.a.2. A peak saturated power output
greater than 205 W (53.12 dBm) at any
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frequency exceeding 2.9 GHz up to and
including 3.2 GHz;
b.3.a.3. A peak saturated power output
greater than 115 W (50.61 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 3.2 GHz up to and
including 3.7 GHz; or
b.3.a.4. A peak saturated power output
greater than 60 W (47.78 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 3.7 GHz up to and
including 6.8 GHz;
b.3.b. Rated for operation at frequencies
exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 31.8
GHz and having any of the following:
b.3.b.1. A peak saturated power output
greater than 50 W (47 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 8.5
GHz;
b.3.b.2. A peak saturated power output
greater than 15 W (41.76 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 8.5 GHz up to and
including 12 GHz;
b.3.b.3. A peak saturated power output
greater than 40 W (46 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 12 GHz up to and including 16
GHz; or
b.3.b.4. A peak saturated power output
greater than 7 W (38.45 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 16 GHz up to and
including 31.8 GHz;
b.3.c. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 0.5 W
(27 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 31.8
GHz up to and including 37 GHz;
b.3.d. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 1 W (30
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 37 GHz up
to and including 43.5 GHz;
b.3.e. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 0.1 nW
(¥70 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 43.5
GHz; or
b.3.f. Other than those specified by
3A001.b.3.a to 3A001.b.3.e and rated for
operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 5 W (37.0 dBm) at all frequencies
exceeding 8.5 GHz up to and including 31.8
GHz;
Note 1: The control status of a transistor
in 3A001.b.3.a through 3A001.b.3.e, whose
rated operating frequency includes
frequencies listed in more than one frequency
range, as defined by 3A001.b.3.a through
3A001.b.3.e, is determined by the lowest
peak saturated power output control
threshold.
Note 2: 3A001.b.3 includes bare dice, dice
mounted on carriers, or dice mounted in
packages. Some discrete transistors may also
be referred to as power amplifiers, but the
status of these discrete transistors is
determined by 3A001.b.3.
b.4. Microwave solid state amplifiers and
microwave assemblies/modules containing
microwave solid state amplifiers, that are any
of the following:
b.4.a. Rated for operation at frequencies
exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and including 6.8
GHz with a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ greater
than 15%, and having any of the following:
b.4.a.1. A peak saturated power output
greater than 500 W (57 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and
including 2.9 GHz;
b.4.a.2. A peak saturated power output
greater than 270 W (54.3 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 2.9 GHz up to and
including 3.2 GHz;
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b.4.a.3. A peak saturated power output
greater than 200 W (53 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 3.2 GHz up to and
including 3.7 GHz; or
b.4.a.4. A peak saturated power output
greater than 90 W (49.54 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 3.7 GHz up to and
including 6.8 GHz;
b.4.b. Rated for operation at frequencies
exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 31.8
GHz with a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ greater
than 10%, and having any of the following:
b.4.b.1. A peak saturated power output
greater than 70 W (48.45 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and
including 8.5 GHz;
b.4.b.2. A peak saturated power output
greater than 50 W (47 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 8.5 GHz up to and including 12
GHz;
b.4.b.3. A peak saturated power output
greater than 30 W (44.77 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 12 GHz up to and
including 16 GHz; or
b.4.b.4. A peak saturated power output
greater than 20 W (43 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 16 GHz up to and including 31.8
GHz;
b.4.c. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 0.5 W
(27 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 31.8
GHz up to and including 37 GHz;
b.4.d. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 2 W (33
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 37 GHz up
to and including 43.5 GHz, and with a
‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of greater than 10%;
b.4.e. Rated for operation at frequencies
exceeding 43.5 GHz and having any of the
following:
b.4.e.1. A peak saturated power output
greater than 0.2 W (23 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 43.5 GHz up to and including 75
GHz, and with a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of
greater than 10%;
b.4.e.2. A peak saturated power output
greater than 20 mW (13 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 75 GHz up to and
including 90 GHz, and with a ‘‘fractional
bandwidth’’ of greater than 5%; or
b.4.e.3. A peak saturated power output
greater than 0.1 nW (¥70 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 90 GHz; or
b.4.f. [Reserved]
N.B.:
1. For ‘‘MMIC’’ amplifiers see 3A001.b.2.
2. For ‘transmit/receive modules’ and
‘transmit modules’ see 3A001.b.12.
3. For converters and harmonic mixers,
designed to extend the operating or
frequency range of signal analyzers, signal
generators, network analyzers or microwave
test receivers, see 3A001.b.7.
Note 1: [Reserved]
Note 2: The control status of an item
whose rated operating frequency includes
frequencies listed in more than one frequency
range, as defined by 3A001.b.4.a through
3A001.b.4.e, is determined by the lowest
peak saturated power output control
threshold.
b.5. Electronically or magnetically tunable
band-pass or band-stop filters, having more
than 5 tunable resonators capable of tuning
across a 1.5:1 frequency band (fmax/fmin) in
less than 10 ms and having any of the
following:
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b.5.a. A band-pass bandwidth of more than
0.5% of center frequency; or
b.5.b. A band-stop bandwidth of less than
0.5% of center frequency;
b.6. [Reserved]
b.7. Converters and harmonic mixers, that
are any of the following:
b.7.a. Designed to extend the frequency
range of ‘‘signal analyzers’’ beyond 90 GHz;
b.7.b. Designed to extend the operating
range of signal generators as follows:
b.7.b.1. Beyond 90 GHz;
b.7.b.2. To an output power greater than
100 mW (20 dBm) anywhere within the
frequency range exceeding 43.5 GHz but not
exceeding 90 GHz;
b.7.c. Designed to extend the operating
range of network analyzers as follows:
b.7.c.1. Beyond 110 GHz;
b.7.c.2. To an output power greater than
31.62 mW (15 dBm) anywhere within the
frequency range exceeding 43.5 GHz but not
exceeding 90 GHz;
b.7.c.3. To an output power greater than 1
mW (0 dBm) anywhere within the frequency
range exceeding 90 GHz but not exceeding
110 GHz; or
b.7.d. Designed to extend the frequency
range of microwave test receivers beyond 110
GHz;
b.8. Microwave power amplifiers
containing ‘‘vacuum electronic devices’’
controlled by 3A001.b.1 and having all of the
following:
b.8.a. Operating frequencies above 3 GHz;
b.8.b. An average output power to mass
ratio exceeding 80 W/kg; and
b.8.c. A volume of less than 400 cm3;
Note: 3A001.b.8 does not control
equipment designed or rated for operation in
any frequency band which is ‘‘allocated by
the ITU’’ for radio-communications services,
but not for radio-determination.
b.9. Microwave Power Modules (MPM)
consisting of, at least, a traveling-wave
‘‘vacuum electronic device,’’ a ‘‘Monolithic
Microwave Integrated Circuit’’ (‘‘MMIC’’) and
an integrated electronic power conditioner
and having all of the following:
b.9.a. A ‘turn-on time’ from off to fully
operational in less than 10 seconds;
b.9.b. A volume less than the maximum
rated power in Watts multiplied by 10 cm3/
W; and
b.9.c. An ‘‘instantaneous bandwidth’’
greater than 1 octave (fmax > 2fmin) and having
any of the following:
b.9.c.1. For frequencies equal to or less
than 18 GHz, an RF output power greater
than 100 W; or
b.9.c.2. A frequency greater than 18 GHz;
Technical Notes: For the purposes of
3A001.b.9:
1. To calculate the volume in 3A001.b.9.b,
the following example is provided: for a
maximum rated power of 20 W, the volume
would be: 20 W × 10 cm3/W = 200 cm3.
2. The ‘turn-on time’ in 3A001.b.9.a refers
to the time from fully-off to fully operational,
i.e.,it includes the warm-up time of the MPM.
b.10. Oscillators or oscillator assemblies,
specified to operate with a single sideband
(SSB) phase noise, in dBc/Hz, less (better)
than ¥(126 + 20log10F¥20log10f) anywhere
within the range of 10 Hz ≤ F ≤ 10 kHz;
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.b.10, F is the offset from the operating
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frequency in Hz and f is the operating
frequency in MHz.
b.11. ‘Frequency synthesizer’ ‘‘electronic
assemblies’’ having a ‘‘frequency switching
time’’ as specified by any of the following:
b.11.a. Less than 143 ps;
b.11.b. Less than 100 ms for any frequency
change exceeding 2.2 GHz within the
synthesized frequency range exceeding 4.8
GHz but not exceeding 31.8 GHz;
b.11.c. [Reserved]
b.11.d. Less than 500 ms for any frequency
change exceeding 550 MHz within the
synthesized frequency range exceeding 31.8
GHz but not exceeding 37 GHz;
b.11.e. Less than 100 ms for any frequency
change exceeding 2.2 GHz within the
synthesized frequency range exceeding 37
GHz but not exceeding 75 GHz;
b.11.f. Less than 100 ms for any frequency
change exceeding 5.0 GHz within the
synthesized frequency range exceeding 75
GHz but not exceeding 90 GHz; or
b.11.g. Less than 1 ms within the
synthesized frequency range exceeding 90
GHz;
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.b.11, a ‘frequency synthesizer’ is any
kind of frequency source, regardless of the
actual technique used, providing a
multiplicity of simultaneous or alternative
output frequencies, from one or more
outputs, controlled by, derived from or
disciplined by a lesser number of standard
(or master) frequencies.
N.B.: For general purpose ‘‘signal
analyzers’’, signal generators, network
analyzers and microwave test receivers, see
3A002.c, 3A002.d, 3A002.e and 3A002.f,
respectively.
b.12. ‘Transmit/receive modules,’
‘transmit/receive MMICs,’ ‘transmit
modules,’ and ‘transmit MMICs,’ rated for
operation at frequencies above 2.7 GHz and
having all of the following:
b.12.a. A peak saturated power output (in
watts), Psat, greater than 505.62 divided by
the maximum operating frequency (in GHz)
squared [Psat > 505.62 W * GHz2/fGHz2] for
any channel;
b.12.b. A ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of 5% or
greater for any channel;
b.12.c. Any planar side with length d (in
cm) equal to or less than 15 divided by the
lowest operating frequency in GHz [d ≤ 15cm
* GHz * N/fGHz] where N is the number of
transmit or transmit/receive channels; and
b.12.d. An electronically variable phase
shifter per channel.
Technical Notes: For the purposes of
3A001.b.12:
1. A ‘transmit/receive module’ is a
multifunction ‘‘electronic assembly’’ that
provides bi-directional amplitude and phase
control for transmission and reception of
signals.
2. A ‘transmit module’ is an ‘‘electronic
assembly’’ that provides amplitude and
phase control for transmission of signals.
3. A ‘transmit/receive MMIC’ is a
multifunction ‘‘MMIC’’ that provides bidirectional amplitude and phase control for
transmission and reception of signals.
4. A ‘transmit MMIC’ is a ‘‘MMIC’’ that
provides amplitude and phase control for
transmission of signals.
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5. 2.7 GHz should be used as the lowest
operating frequency (fGHz) in the formula in
3A001.b.12.c for transmit/receive or transmit
modules that have a rated operation range
extending downward to 2.7 GHz and below
[d ≤ 15cm * GHz * N/2.7 GHz].
6. 3A001.b.12 applies to ‘transmit/receive
modules’ or ‘transmit modules’ with or
without a heat sink. The value of d in
3A001.b.12.c does not include any portion of
the ‘transmit/receive module’ or ‘transmit
module’ that functions as a heat sink.
7. ‘Transmit/receive modules’ or ‘transmit
modules,’ ‘transmit/receive MMICs’ or
‘transmit MMICs’ may or may not have N
integrated radiating antenna elements where
N is the number of transmit or transmit/
receive channels.
c. Acoustic wave devices as follows and
‘‘specially designed’’ ‘‘components’’ therefor:
c.1. Surface acoustic wave and surface
skimming (shallow bulk) acoustic wave
devices, having any of the following:
c.1.a. A carrier frequency exceeding 6 GHz;
c.1.b. A carrier frequency exceeding 1 GHz,
but not exceeding 6 GHz and having any of
the following:
c.1.b.1. A ‘frequency side-lobe rejection’
exceeding 65 dB;
c.1.b.2. A product of the maximum delay
time and the bandwidth (time in ms and
bandwidth in MHz) of more than 100;
c.1.b.3. A bandwidth greater than 250
MHz; or
c.1.b.4. A dispersive delay of more than 10
ms; or
c.1.c. A carrier frequency of 1 GHz or less
and having any of the following:
c.1.c.1. A product of the maximum delay
time and the bandwidth (time in ms and
bandwidth in MHz) of more than 100;
c.1.c.2. A dispersive delay of more than 10
ms; or
c.1.c.3. A ‘frequency side-lobe rejection’
exceeding 65 dB and a bandwidth greater
than 100 MHz;
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.c.1, ‘frequency side-lobe rejection’ is
the maximum rejection value specified in
data sheet.
c.2. Bulk (volume) acoustic wave devices
that permit the direct processing of signals at
frequencies exceeding 6 GHz;
c.3. Acoustic-optic ‘‘signal processing’’
devices employing interaction between
acoustic waves (bulk wave or surface wave)
and light waves that permit the direct
processing of signals or images, including
spectral analysis, correlation or convolution;
Note: 3A001.c does not control acoustic
wave devices that are limited to a single band
pass, low pass, high pass or notch filtering,
or resonating function.
d. Electronic devices and circuits
containing ‘‘components,’’ manufactured
from ‘‘superconductive’’ materials, ‘‘specially
designed’’ for operation at temperatures
below the ‘‘critical temperature’’ of at least
one of the ‘‘superconductive’’ constituents
and having any of the following:
d.1. Current switching for digital circuits
using ‘‘superconductive’’ gates with a
product of delay time per gate (in seconds)
and power dissipation per gate (in watts) of
less than 10¥14 J; or
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d.2. Frequency selection at all frequencies
using resonant circuits with Q-values
exceeding 10,000;
e. High energy devices as follows:
e.1. ‘Cells’ as follows:
e.1.a ‘Primary cells’ having any of the
following at 20 °C:
e.1.a.1. ‘Energy density’ exceeding 550 Wh/
kg and a ‘continuous power density’
exceeding 50 W/kg; or
e.1.a.2. ‘Energy density’ exceeding 50 Wh/
kg and a ‘continuous power density’
exceeding 350 W/kg;
e.1.b. ‘Secondary cells’ having an ‘energy
density’ exceeding 350 Wh/kg at 20 °C;
Technical Notes:
1. For the purposes of 3A001.e.1, ‘energy
density’ (Wh/kg) is calculated from the
nominal voltage multiplied by the nominal
capacity in ampere-hours (Ah) divided by the
mass in kilograms. If the nominal capacity is
not stated, energy density is calculated from
the nominal voltage squared then multiplied
by the discharge duration in hours divided by
the discharge load in Ohms and the mass in
kilograms.
2. For the purposes of 3A001.e.1, a ‘cell’ is
defined as an electrochemical device, which
has positive and negative electrodes, an
electrolyte, and is a source of electrical
energy. It is the basic building block of a
battery.
3. For the purposes of 3A001.e.1.a, a
‘primary cell’ is a ‘cell’ that is not designed
to be charged by any other source.
4. For the purposes of 3A001.e.1.b, a
‘secondary cell’ is a ‘cell’ that is designed to
be charged by an external electrical source.
5. For the purposes of 3A001.e.1.a,
‘continuous power density’ (W/kg) is
calculated from the nominal voltage
multiplied by the specified maximum
continuous discharge current in ampere (A)
divided by the mass in kilograms.
‘Continuous power density’ is also referred to
as specific power.
Note: 3A001.e does not control batteries,
including single-cell batteries.
e.2. High energy storage capacitors as
follows:
e.2.a. Capacitors with a repetition rate of
less than 10 Hz (single shot capacitors) and
having all of the following:
e.2.a.1. A voltage rating equal to or more
than 5 kV;
e.2.a.2. An energy density equal to or more
than 250 J/kg; and
e.2.a.3. A total energy equal to or more
than 25 kJ;
e.2.b. Capacitors with a repetition rate of
10 Hz or more (repetition rated capacitors)
and having all of the following:
e.2.b.1. A voltage rating equal to or more
than 5 kV;
e.2.b.2. An energy density equal to or more
than 50 J/kg;
e.2.b.3. A total energy equal to or more
than 100 J; and
e.2.b.4. A charge/discharge cycle life equal
to or more than 10,000;
e.3. ‘‘Superconductive’’ electromagnets and
solenoids, ‘‘specially designed’’ to be fully
charged or discharged in less than one
second and having all of the following:
Note: 3A001.e.3 does not control
‘‘superconductive’’ electromagnets or
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
solenoids ‘‘specially designed’’ for Magnetic
Resonance Imaging (MRI) medical
equipment.
e.3.a. Energy delivered during the
discharge exceeding 10 kJ in the first second;
e.3.b. Inner diameter of the current
carrying windings of more than 250 mm; and
e.3.c. Rated for a magnetic induction of
more than 8 T or ‘‘overall current density’’
in the winding of more than 300 A/mm2;
e.4. Solar cells, cell-interconnectcoverglass (CIC) assemblies, solar panels, and
solar arrays, which are ‘‘space-qualified,’’
having a minimum average efficiency
exceeding 20% at an operating temperature
of 301 K (28°C) under simulated ‘AM0’
illumination with an irradiance of 1,367
Watts per square meter (W/m2);
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.e.4, ‘AM0’, or ‘Air Mass Zero’, refers
to the spectral irradiance of sun light in the
earth’s outer atmosphere when the distance
between the earth and sun is one
astronomical unit (AU).
f. Rotary input type absolute position
encoders having an ‘‘accuracy’’ equal to or
less (better) than 1.0 second of arc and
‘‘specially designed’’ encoder rings, discs or
scales therefor;
g. Solid-state pulsed power switching
thyristor devices and ‘thyristor modules’,
using either electrically, optically, or electron
radiation controlled switch methods and
having any of the following:
g.1. A maximum turn-on current rate of
rise (di/dt) greater than 30,000 A/ms and offstate voltage greater than 1,100 V; or
g.2. A maximum turn-on current rate of
rise (di/dt) greater than 2,000 A/ms and
having all of the following:
g.2.a. An off-state peak voltage equal to or
greater than 3,000 V; and
g.2.b. A peak (surge) current equal to or
greater than 3,000 A;
Note 1: 3A001.g. includes:
—Silicon Controlled Rectifiers (SCRs)
—Electrical Triggering Thyristors (ETTs)
—Light Triggering Thyristors (LTTs)
—Integrated Gate Commutated Thyristors
(IGCTs)
—Gate Turn-off Thyristors (GTOs)
—MOS Controlled Thyristors (MCTs)
—Solidtrons
Note 2: 3A001.g does not control thyristor
devices and ‘thyristor modules’ incorporated
into equipment designed for civil railway or
‘‘civil aircraft’’ applications.
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.g, a ‘thyristor module’ contains one or
more thyristor devices.
h. Solid-state power semiconductor
switches, diodes, or ‘modules’, having all of
the following:
h.1. Rated for a maximum operating
junction temperature greater than 488 K (215
°C);
h.2. Repetitive peak off-state voltage
(blocking voltage) exceeding 300 V; and
h.3. Continuous current greater than 1 A.
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.h, ‘modules’ contain one or more
solid-state power semiconductor switches or
diodes.
Note 1: Repetitive peak off-state voltage in
3A001.h includes drain to source voltage,
collector to emitter voltage, repetitive peak
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reverse voltage and peak repetitive off-state
blocking voltage.
Note 2: 3A001.h includes:
—Junction Field Effect Transistors (JFETs)
—Vertical Junction Field Effect Transistors
(VJFETs)
—Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect
Transistors (MOSFETs)
—Double Diffused Metal Oxide
Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor
(DMOSFET)
—Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor (IGBT)
—High Electron Mobility Transistors
(HEMTs)
—Bipolar Junction Transistors (BJTs)
—Thyristors and Silicon Controlled Rectifiers
(SCRs)
—Gate Turn-Off Thyristors (GTOs)
—Emitter Turn-Off Thyristors (ETOs)
—PiN Diodes
—Schottky Diodes
Note 3: 3A001.h does not apply to
switches, diodes, or ‘modules’, incorporated
into equipment designed for civil automobile,
civil railway, or ‘‘civil aircraft’’ applications.
i. Intensity, amplitude, or phase electrooptic modulators, designed for analog signals
and having any of the following:
i.1. A maximum operating frequency of
more than 10 GHz but less than 20 GHz, an
optical insertion loss equal to or less than 3
dB and having any of the following:
i.1.a. A ‘half-wave voltage’ (‘Vp’) less than
2.7 V when measured at a frequency of 1 GHz
or below; or
i.1.b. A ‘Vp’ of less than 4 V when
measured at a frequency of more than 1 GHz;
or
i.2. A maximum operating frequency equal
to or greater than 20 GHz, an optical insertion
loss equal to or less than 3 dB and having
any of the following:
i.2.a. A ‘Vp’ less than 3.3 V when measured
at a frequency of 1 GHz or below; or
i.2.b. A ‘Vp’ less than 5 V when measured
at a frequency of more than 1 GHz.
Note: 3A001.i includes electro-optic
modulators having optical input and output
connectors (e.g., fiber-optic pigtails).
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3A001.i, a ‘half-wave voltage’ (‘Vp’) is the
applied voltage necessary to make a phase
change of 180 degrees in the wavelength of
light propagating through the optical
modulator.
j. through y. [Reserved]
z. Any commodity described in 3A001 that
meets or exceeds the performance parameters
in 3A090.
*
*
*
*
*
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
3A090 Integrated circuits as follows (see
List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: RS, AT
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18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
Control(s)
RS applies to entire
entry.
AT applies to entire
entry.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
NAC: Yes, for 3A090.a, if the item is not
designed or marketed for use in datacenters
and has a ‘total processing performance’ of
4800 or more; yes, for 3A090.b, if the item
is designed or marketed for use in
datacenters.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See ECCNs 3D001,
3E001, 5D002.z, and 5D992.z for associated
technology and software controls. (2) See
ECCNs 3A001.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, and
5A992.z.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. Integrated circuits having one or more
digital processing units having either of the
following:
a.1. a ‘total processing performance’ of
4800 or more, or
a.2. a ‘total processing performance’ of
1600 or more and a ‘performance density’ of
5.92 or more.
b. Integrated circuits having one or more
digital processing units having either of the
following:
b.1. a ‘total processing performance’ of
2400 or more and less than 4800 and a
‘performance density’ of 1.6 or more and less
than 5.92, or
b.2. a ‘total processing performance’ of
1600 or more and a ‘performance density’ of
3.2 or more and less than 5.92.
Note 1 to 3A090: Integrated circuits
specified by 3A090 include graphical
processing units (GPUs), tensor processing
units (TPUs), neural processors, in-memory
processors, vision processors, text processors,
co-processors/accelerators, adaptive
processors, field-programmable logic devices
(FPLDs), and application-specific integrated
circuits (ASICs). Examples of integrated
circuits are in the Note to 3A001.a.
Note 2 to 3A090: 3A090 does not apply to
items that are not designed or marketed for
use in datacenters and do not have a ‘total
processing performance’ of 4800 or more. For
integrated circuits that are not designed or
marketed for use in datacenters and that
have a ‘total processing performance’ of 4800
or more, see license exception NAC.
Note 3 to 3A090: For ICs that are excluded
from ECCN 3A090 under Note 2 or 3 to
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
73503
3A090, those ICs are also not applicable for
classifications made under ECCNs 3A001.z,
4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090, 5A002.z,
5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, or 5D992.z
because those other CCL classifications are
based on the incorporation of an IC that
meets the control parameters under ECCN
3A090 or otherwise meets or exceeds the
control parameters or ECCNs 3A090 or
4A090 . See the Related Controls paragraphs
of 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z,
or 5D992.z, which reference back to Note 4
to 3A090.
Technical Notes:
1. ‘Total processing performance’ (‘TPP’) is
2 × ‘MacTOPS’ × ‘bit length of the operation’,
aggregated over all processing units on the
integrated circuit.
a. For purposes of 3A090, ‘MacTOPS’ is the
theoretical peak number of Tera (1012)
operations per second for multiplyaccumulate computation (D = A × B + C).
b. The 2 in the ‘TPP’ formula is based on
industry convention of counting one
multiply-accumulate computation, D = A × B
+ C, as 2 operations for purpose of
datasheets. Therefore, 2 × MacTOPS may
correspond to the reported TOPS or FLOPS
on a datasheet.
c. For purposes of 3A090, ‘bit length of the
operation’ for a multiply-accumulate
computation is the largest bit-length of the
inputs to the multiply operation.
d. Aggregate the TPPs for each processing
unit on the integrated circuit to arrive at a
total. ‘TPP’ = TPP1 + TPP2 + . . . . + TPPn
(where n is the number or processing units
on the integrated circuit).
2. The rate of ‘MacTOPS’ is to be
calculated at its maximum value
theoretically possible. The rate of ‘MacTOPS’
is assumed to be the highest value the
manufacturer claims in annual or brochure
for the integrated circuit. For example, the
‘TPP’ threshold of 4800 can be met with 600
tera integer operations (or 2 × 300
‘MacTOPS’) at 8 bits or 300 tera FLOPS (or
2 × 150 ‘MacTOPS’) at 16 bits. If the IC is
designed for MAC computation with multiple
bit lengths that achieve different ‘TPP’
values, the highest ‘TPP’ value should be
evaluated against parameters in 3A090.
3. For integrated circuits specified by
3A090 that provide processing of both sparse
and dense matrices, the ‘TPP’ values are the
values for processing of dense matrices (e.g.,
without sparsity).
4. ‘Performance density’ is ‘TPP’ divided by
‘applicable die area’. For purposes of 3A090,
‘applicable die area’ is measured in
millimeters squared and includes all die area
of logic dies manufactured with a process
node that uses a non-planar transistor
architecture.
*
*
*
*
*
3A991 Electronic devices, and
‘‘components’’ not controlled by 3A001.
License Requirements
Reason for Control: AT
E:\FR\FM\25OCR3.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Control(s)
AT applies to entire
entry.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
AT Column 1.
License Requirements Note: See § 744.17
of the EAR for additional license
requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and
an arithmetic logic unit with an access
width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ‘‘information security’’
functionality, and associated ‘‘software’’
and ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) For associated
‘‘software’’ for commodities in this ECCN,
see 3D991 and for associated ‘‘technology
for commodities in this ECCN, see 3E991.
(2) See also ECCNs 5A002.z, 5A004.z, and
5A992.z.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ‘‘Microprocessor microcircuits’’,
‘‘microcomputer microcircuits’’, and
microcontroller microcircuits having any of
the following:
a.1. A performance speed of 5 GFLOPS or
more and an arithmetic logic unit with an
access width of 32 bit or more;
a.2. A clock frequency rate exceeding 25
MHz; or
a.3. More than one data or instruction bus
or serial communication port that provides a
direct external interconnection between
parallel ‘‘microprocessor microcircuits’’ with
a transfer rate of 2.5 Mbyte/s;
b. Storage integrated circuits, as follows:
b.1. Electrical erasable programmable readonly memories (EEPROMs) with a storage
capacity;
b.1.a. Exceeding 16 Mbits per package for
flash memory types; or
b.1.b. Exceeding either of the following
limits for all other EEPROM types:
b.1.b.1. Exceeding 1 Mbit per package; or
b.1.b.2. Exceeding 256 kbit per package
and a maximum access time of less than 80
ns;
b.2. Static random access memories
(SRAMs) with a storage capacity:
b.2.a. Exceeding 1 Mbit per package; or
b.2.b. Exceeding 256 kbit per package and
a maximum access time of less than 25 ns;
c. Analog-to-digital converters having any
of the following:
c.1. A resolution of 8 bit or more, but less
than 12 bit, with an output rate greater than
200 million words per second;
c.2. A resolution of 12 bit with an output
rate greater than 105 million words per
second;
c.3. A resolution of more than 12 bit but
equal to or less than 14 bit with an output
rate greater than 10 million words per
second; or
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18:36 Oct 24, 2023
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c.4. A resolution of more than 14 bit with
an output rate greater than 2.5 million words
per second;
d. Field programmable logic devices
having a maximum number of single-ended
digital input/outputs between 200 and 700;
e. Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) processors
having a rated execution time for a 1,024
point complex FFT of less than 1 ms;
f. Custom integrated circuits for which
either the function is unknown, or the
control status of the equipment in which the
integrated circuits will be used is unknown
to the manufacturer, having any of the
following:
f.1. More than 144 terminals; or
f.2. A typical ‘‘basic propagation delay
time’’ of less than 0.4 ns;
g. Traveling-wave ‘‘vacuum electronic
devices,’’ pulsed or continuous wave, as
follows:
g.1. Coupled cavity devices, or derivatives
thereof;
g.2. Helix devices based on helix, folded
waveguide, or serpentine waveguide circuits,
or derivatives thereof, with any of the
following:
g.2.a. An ‘‘instantaneous bandwidth’’ of
half an octave or more; and
g.2.b. The product of the rated average
output power (expressed in kW) and the
maximum operating frequency (expressed in
GHz) of more than 0.2;
g.2.c. An ‘‘instantaneous bandwidth’’ of
less than half an octave; and
g.2.d. The product of the rated average
output power (expressed in kW) and the
maximum operating frequency (expressed in
GHz) of more than 0.4;
h. Flexible waveguides designed for use at
frequencies exceeding 40 GHz;
i. Surface acoustic wave and surface
skimming (shallow bulk) acoustic wave
devices (i.e., ‘‘signal processing’’ devices
employing elastic waves in materials), having
either of the following:
i.1. A carrier frequency exceeding 1 GHz;
or
i.2. A carrier frequency of 1 GHz or less;
and
i.2.a. A frequency side-lobe rejection
exceeding 55 Db;
i.2.b. A product of the maximum delay
time and bandwidth (time in microseconds
and bandwidth in MHz) of more than 100; or
i.2.c. A dispersive delay of more than 10
microseconds;
j. Cells as follows:
j.1. Primary cells having an energy density
of 550 Wh/kg or less at 293 K (20 °C);
j.2. Secondary cells having an energy
density of 350 Wh/kg or less at 293 K (20 °C);
Note: 3A991.j does not control batteries,
including single cell batteries.
Technical Notes:
1. For the purposes of 3A991.j energy
density (Wh/kg) is calculated from the
nominal voltage multiplied by the nominal
capacity in ampere-hours divided by the
mass in kilograms. If the nominal capacity is
not stated, energy density is calculated from
the nominal voltage squared then multiplied
by the discharge duration in hours divided by
the discharge load in Ohms and the mass in
kilograms.
2. For the purposes of 3A991.j, a ‘cell’ is
defined as an electrochemical device, which
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
has positive and negative electrodes, and
electrolyte, and is a source of electrical
energy. It is the basic building block of a
battery.
3. For the purposes of 3A991.j.1, a ‘primary
cell’ is a ‘cell’ that is not designed to be
charged by any other source.
4. For the purposes of 3A991.j.2, a
‘secondary cell’ is a ‘cell’ that is designed to
be charged by an external electrical source.
k. ‘‘Superconductive’’ electromagnets or
solenoids ‘‘specially designed’’ to be fully
charged or discharged in less than one
minute, having all of the following:
Note: 3A991.k does not control
‘‘superconductive’’ electromagnets or
solenoids designed for Magnetic Resonance
Imaging (MRI) medical equipment.
k.1. Maximum energy delivered during the
discharge divided by the duration of the
discharge of more than 500 kJ per minute;
k.2. Inner diameter of the current carrying
windings of more than 250 mm; and
k.3. Rated for a magnetic induction of more
than 8T or ‘‘overall current density’’ in the
winding of more than 300 A/mm2;
l. Circuits or systems for electromagnetic
energy storage, containing ‘‘components’’
manufactured from ‘‘superconductive’’
materials ‘‘specially designed’’ for operation
at temperatures below the ‘‘critical
temperature’’ of at least one of their
‘‘superconductive’’ constituents, having all of
the following:
l.1. Resonant operating frequencies
exceeding 1 MHz;
l.2. A stored energy density of 1 MJ/M3 or
more; and
l.3. A discharge time of less than 1 ms;
m. Hydrogen/hydrogen-isotope thyratrons
of ceramic-metal construction and rate for a
peak current of 500 A or more;
n. Digital integrated circuits based on any
compound semiconductor having an
equivalent gate count of more than 300 (2
input gates);
o. Solar cells, cell-interconnect-coverglass
(CIC) assemblies, solar panels, and solar
arrays, which are ‘‘space qualified’’ and not
controlled by 3A001.e.4;
p. Integrated circuits, n.e.s., having any of
the following:
p.1. A processing performance of 8 TOPS
or more; or
p.2. An aggregate bidirectional transfer rate
over all inputs and outputs of 150 Gbyte/s or
more to or from integrated circuits other than
volatile memories.
Technical Notes: For the purposes of
3A991.p:
1. This ECCN includes but is not limited to
central processing units (CPU), graphics
processing units (GPU), tensor processing
units (TPU), neural processors, in-memory
processors, vision processors, text processors,
co-processors/accelerators, adaptive
processors, and field-programmable logic
devices (FPLDs).
2. TOPS is Tera Operations Per Second or
1012 Operations per Second.
3. For purposes of 3A991.p, TOPS is 2 ×
‘MacTOPS’ aggregated over all processing
units on the integrated circuit.
a. For purposes of 3A991.p, ‘MacTOPS’ is
the theoretical peak number of Tera (10∧12)
operations per second for multiplyaccumulate computation (D = A × B + C).
E:\FR\FM\25OCR3.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
equipment specified by 3A001.z, 3A090,
3A002.g.1, 3B001.a.4, a.2, c, d, f.1.b, k to
p, or 3B002.b and c to any of the
destinations listed in Country Group A:6
(See Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the
EAR).
b. The 2 in the formula is based on
industry convention of counting one
multiply-accumulate computation, D = A × B
+ C, as 2 operations for purpose of
datasheets. Therefore, 2 × ‘MacTOPS’ may
correspond to the reported TOPS or FLOPS
on a datasheet.
*
*
*
*
List of Items Controlled
*
3D001 ‘‘Software’’ ‘‘specially designed’’ for
the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
commodities controlled by 3A001.b to
3A002.h, 3A090, or 3B (except 3B991
and 3B992).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT
Control(s)
NS applies to ‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled by
3A001.b to
3A001.h, 3A002,
and 3B (except
3B001.a.4, c, d,
f.1.b, k to p,
3B002.b and c).
NS applies to ‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled by
3B001.a.4, c, d,
f.1.b, k to p,
3B002.b and c.
RS applies to ‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled by
3A001.z and
3A090.
AT applies to entire
entry.
NS Column 1.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
*
*
*
*
3E001 ‘‘Technology’’ according to the
General Technology Note for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
commodities controlled by 3A (except
3A980, 3A981, 3A991, 3A992, or
3A999), 3B (except 3B991 or 3B992) or
3C (except 3C992).
RS applies to ‘‘technology’’ for commodities controlled
by 3B001.a.4, c, d,
f.1.b, k to p,
3B002.b and c.
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, MT, NP, RS, AT
Control(s)
To or within destinations specified in
Country Group D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR or Macau. See
§ 742.4(a)(4) of the
EAR.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
Reporting Requirements
See § 743.1 of the EAR for reporting
requirements for exports under License
Exceptions, Special Comprehensive
Licenses, and Validated End-User
authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
TSR: Yes, except for ‘‘software’’ ‘‘specially
designed’’ for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of Traveling Wave Tube
Amplifiers described in 3A001.b.8 having
operating frequencies exceeding 18 GHz; or
commodities specified in 3A001.z, 3A090,
3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to p, and 3B002.b
and c.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be
used to ship or transmit ‘‘software’’
‘‘specially designed’’ for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
RS applies to ‘‘technology’’ for commodities controlled
by 3A001.z, 3A090.
Related Controls: N/A
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
The list of items controlled is contained in
the ECCN heading.
*
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
Control(s)
18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
NS applies to ‘‘technology’’ for commodities controlled
by 3A001 (except
3A001.z), 3A002,
3A003, 3B001 (except 3B001 a.4, c,
d, f.1.b, k to p),
3B002 (except
3B002.b and c), or
3C001 to 3C006.
NS applies to ‘‘technology’’ for 3B001
a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to
p, 3B002.b and c.
MT applies to ‘‘technology’’ for commodities controlled
by 3A001 (except
for 3A001.z) or
3A101 for MT Reasons.
NP applies to ‘‘technology’’ for commodities controlled
by 3A001 (except
3A001.z), 3A201,
or 3A225 to 3A234
for NP reasons.
RS applies to ‘‘technology’’ for commodities controlled
in 3A090, when exported from Macau
or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5.
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4701
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS Column 1.
To or within Macau or
a destination specified in Country
Group D:5 of supplement no. 1 to
part 740 of the
EAR. See
§ 742.4(a)(4) of the
EAR.
MT Column 1.
NP Column 1.
Worldwide (See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(ii).
Sfmt 4700
AT applies to entire
entry.
73505
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Group D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR or Macau. See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(i) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
License Requirements Note: See § 744.17
of the EAR for additional license
requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and
an arithmetic logic unit with an access
width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ‘‘information security’’
functionality, and associated ‘‘software’’
and ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of such microprocessors.
Reporting Requirements
See § 743.1 of the EAR for reporting
requirements for exports under License
Exceptions, Special Comprehensive
Licenses, and Validated End-User
authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
TSR: Yes, except N/A for MT, and
‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of: (a) vacuum electronic
device amplifiers described in 3A001.b.8,
having operating frequencies exceeding 19
GHz; (b) solar cells, coverglassinterconnect-cells or covered-interconnectcells (CIC) ‘‘assemblies’’, solar arrays and/
or solar panels described in 3A001.e.4; (c)
‘‘Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuit’’
(‘‘MMIC’’) amplifiers in 3A001.b.2; (d)
discrete microwave transistors in
3A001.b.3; and (e) commodities described
in 3A001.z, 3A090, 3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k
to p, 3B002.b and c.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be
used to ship or transmit ‘‘technology’’
according to the General Technology Note
for the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
equipment specified by ECCNs 3A002.g.1
or 3B001.a.2 to any of the destinations
listed in Country Group A:6 (See
Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR).
License Exception STA may not be used to
ship or transmit ‘‘technology’’ according to
the General Technology Note for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
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components specified by ECCN 3A001.b.2,
b.3, commodities specified in 3A001.z,
3A090, 3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to p, or
3B002.b and c, to any of the destinations
listed in Country Group A:5 or A:6 (See
Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR).
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) ‘‘Technology’’ according
to the General Technology Note for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of certain
‘‘space-qualified’’ atomic frequency
standards described in Category XV(e)(9),
MMICs described in Category XV(e)(14),
and oscillators described in Category
XV(e)(15) of the USML are ‘‘subject to the
ITAR’’ (see 22 CFR parts 120 through 130).
See also 3E101, 3E201 and 9E515. (2)
‘‘Technology’’ for ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of ‘‘Microwave Monolithic
Integrated Circuits’’ (‘‘MMIC’’) amplifiers
in 3A001.b.2 is controlled in this ECCN
3E001; 5E001.d refers only to that
additional ‘‘technology’’ ‘‘required’’ for
telecommunications.
Related Definition: N/A
Items:
The list of items controlled is contained in
the ECCN heading.
Note 1: 3E001 does not control
‘‘technology’’ for equipment or
‘‘components’’ controlled by 3A003.
Note 2: 3E001 does not control
‘‘technology’’ for integrated circuits
controlled by 3A001.a.3 to a.14 or .z, having
all of the following:
(a) Using ‘‘technology’’ at or above 0.130
mm; and
(b) Incorporating multi-layer structures
with three or fewer metal layers.
Note 3: 3E001 does not apply to ‘Process
Design Kits’ (‘PDKs’) unless they include
libraries implementing functions or
technologies for items specified by 3A001.
Technical Note: For the purposes of
3E001 Note 3, a ‘Process Design Kit’ (‘PDK’)
is a software tool provided by a
semiconductor manufacturer to ensure that
the required design practices and rules are
taken into account in order to successfully
produce a specific integrated circuit design
in a specific semiconductor process, in
accordance with technological and
manufacturing constraints (each
semiconductor manufacturing process has its
particular ‘PDK’).
*
*
*
*
*
CATEGORY 4—COMPUTERS
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
*
*
*
*
*
Note 3: Commodities and ‘‘software’’ in
ECCNs 4A005 and 4D004 that are also
controlled in ECCNs 5A002.a, 5A002.z.1,
5A002.z.6, 5A004.a, 5A004.b, 5A004.z,
5D002.c.1, 5D002.c.3, 5D002.z.6, 5D002.z.8,
or 5D002.z.9, remain controlled in Category
5—Part 2 by those entries. Category 5—Part
2 does not apply to elements of source code
that implement functionality controlled by
these Category 4 ECCNs, or to any item
subject to the EAR where Encryption Item
(EI) functionality is absent, removed or
otherwise non-existent.
*
*
*
*
*
4A003 ‘‘Digital computers’’, ‘‘electronic
assemblies’’, and related equipment
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
therefor, as follows (see List of Items
Controlled) and ‘‘specially designed’’
‘‘components’’ therefor.
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, CC, AT
Control(s)
NS applies to
4A003.b and .c.
NS applies to
4A003.g.
RS applies to
4A003.z.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS Column 1.
NS Column 2.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
CC Column 1.
CC applies to ‘‘digital
computers’’ for
computerized finger-print equipment.
AT applies to entire
AT Column 1.
entry (refer to
4A994 for controls
on ‘‘digital computers’’ with a APP
>0.0128 but ≤70
WT).
Note: For all destinations, except those
countries in Country Group E:1 or E:2 of
Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR,
no license is required (NLR) for computers
with an ‘‘Adjusted Peak Performance’’
(‘‘APP’’) not exceeding 70 Weighted
TeraFLOPS (WT) and for ‘‘electronic
assemblies’’ described in 4A003.c that are
not capable of exceeding an ‘‘Adjusted
Peak Performance’’ (‘‘APP’’) exceeding 70
Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT) in aggregation,
except certain transfers as set forth in
§ 746.3 (Iraq).
Reporting Requirements
Special Post Shipment Verification reporting
and recordkeeping requirements for
exports of computers to destinations in
Computer Tier 3 may be found in § 743.2
of the EAR.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: $5000; N/A for 4A003.b, .c, and .z.
GBS: Yes, for 4A003.g and ‘‘specially
designed’’ ‘‘parts’’ and ‘‘components’’
therefor, exported separately or as part of
a system.
APP: Yes, for computers controlled by
4A003.b, and ‘‘electronic assemblies’’
controlled by 4A003.c, to the exclusion of
other technical parameters. See § 740.7 of
the EAR.
NAC: Yes, for 4A003.z; N/A for all other
4A003 commodities.
Note to List Based License Exceptions:
Related equipment specified under ECCN
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
4A003.g, z.2, or z.4 are eligible for License
Exception GBS if all the following
conditions are met:
■ 1. The related equipment is exported,
reexported, or transferred (in-country) as part
of a computer system,
■ 2. The computer system is either
designated as NLR or eligible for License
Exception APP, and
■ 3. The related equipment is eligible for
License Exception APP.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See also ECCNs 4A090,
4A994 and 4A980. (2) See also Note 4 to
ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
Note 1: 4A003 includes the following:
—‘Vector processors’ (as defined in Note 7 of
the ‘‘Technical Note on ‘‘Adjusted Peak
Performance’’ (‘‘APP’’)’’);
—Array processors;
—Digital signal processors;
—Logic processors;
—Equipment designed for ‘‘image
enhancement.’’
Note 2: The control status of the ‘‘digital
computers’’ and related equipment described
in 4A003 is determined by the control status
of other equipment or systems provided:
a. The ‘‘digital computers’’ or related
equipment are essential for the operation of
the other equipment or systems;
b. The ‘‘digital computers’’ or related
equipment are not a ‘‘principal element’’ of
the other equipment or systems; and
N.B. 1: The control status of ‘‘signal
processing’’ or ‘‘image enhancement’’
equipment ‘‘specially designed’’ for other
equipment with functions limited to those
required for the other equipment is
determined by the control status of the other
equipment even if it exceeds the ‘‘principal
element’’ criterion.
N.B. 2: For the control status of ‘‘digital
computers’’ or related equipment for
telecommunications equipment, see Category
5, Part 1 (Telecommunications).
c. The ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘digital
computers’’ and related equipment is
determined by 4E.
a. [Reserved]
b. ‘‘Digital computers’’ having an
‘‘Adjusted Peak Performance’’ (‘‘APP’’)
exceeding 70 Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT);
c. ‘‘Electronic assemblies’’ ‘‘specially
designed’’ or modified to be capable of
enhancing performance by aggregation of
processors so that the ‘‘APP’’ of the
aggregation exceeds the limit in 4A003.b.;
Note 1: 4A003.c applies only to ‘‘electronic
assemblies’’ and programmable
interconnections not exceeding the limit in
4A003.b when shipped as unintegrated
‘‘electronic assemblies.’’
Note 2: 4A003.c does not control
‘‘electronic assemblies’’ ‘‘specially designed’’
for a product or family of products whose
maximum configuration does not exceed the
limit of 4A003.b.
d. to f. [Reserved]
N.B.: For ‘‘electronic assemblies,’’ modules
or equipment, performing analog-to-digital
conversions, see 3A002.h.
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g. Equipment ‘‘specially designed’’ for
aggregating the performance of ‘‘digital
computers’’ by providing external
interconnections which allow
communications at unidirectonal data rates
exceeding 2.0 Gbyte/s per link.
Note: 4A003.g does not control internal
interconnection equipment (e.g., backplanes,
buses) passive interconnection equipment,
‘‘network access controllers’’ or
‘‘communication channel controllers’’.
h. through y. [Reserved]
z. Commodities specified in 4A003 that
also meet or exceed the performance
parameters in 4A090.
4A004 Computers as follows (see List of
Items Controlled) and ‘‘specially
designed’’ related equipment,
‘‘electronic assemblies’’ and
‘‘components’’ therefor.
computational components based on
previous data.
3. For the purposes of 4A004.c, ‘optical
computers’ are computers designed or
modified to use light to represent data and
whose computational logic elements are
based on directly coupled optical devices.
d. through y. [Reserved]
z. Commodities that are described in
4A004 and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 4A090.
The list of items controlled is contained in
the ECCN heading, except for the
commodities controlled under 4A005.z.
a. through y. [Reserved]
z. Commodities that are specified in 4A005
that also meet or exceed the performance
parameters in 4A090.
4A005 ‘‘Systems,’’ ‘‘equipment,’’ and
‘‘components’’ therefor, ‘‘specially
designed’’ or modified for the
generation, command and control, or
delivery of ‘‘intrusion software’’ (see List
of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
License Requirements
NS applies to entire
entry (except
4A004.z).
RS applies to
4A004.z.
AT applies to entire
entry.
NS Column 2.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
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List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: $5000; N/A 4A004.z
GBS: N/A
NAC: Yes, for 4A004.z; N/A for all other
4A004 commodities.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See also ECCN 4A090.
(2) See also Note 4 to ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ‘Systolic array computers’;
b. ‘Neural computers’;
c. ‘Optical computers’.
Technical Notes:
1. For the purposes of 4A004.a, ‘systolic
array computers’ are computers where the
flow and modification of the data is
dynamically controllable at the logic gate
level by the user.
2. For the purposes of 4A004.b, ‘neural
computers’ are computational devices
designed or modified to mimic the behaviour
of a neuron or a collection of neurons, i.e.,
computational devices which are
distinguished by their hardware capability to
modulate the weights and numbers of the
interconnections of a multiplicity of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
NS applies to entire
entry (except
4A005.z).
RS applies to items
controlled by
4A005.z.
AT applies to entire
entry.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
See § 743.1 of the EAR for reporting
requirements for exports under License
Exceptions, and Validated End-User
authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
APP: N/A
ACE: Yes, except to Country Group E:1 or E:2
and for 4A005.z. See § 740.22 of the EAR
for eligibility criteria.
NAC: Yes, for 4A005.z; N/A for all other
4A005 commodities.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be
used to ship items specified by ECCN
4A005.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) Defense articles
described in USML Category XI(b), and
software directly related to a defense
article, are ‘‘subject to the ITAR’’; see
§ 120.33(a)(4). (2) See also ECCNs 4A090.
(3) See also Note 4 to ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
Frm 00051
Fmt 4701
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
Control(s)
NS Column 1.
Reporting Requirements
PO 00000
Reason for Control: RS, AT
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
Control(s)
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
4A090 Computers as follows (see List of
Items Controlled) and related
equipment, ‘‘electronic assemblies,’’ and
‘‘components’’ therefor.
RS applies to entire
entry.
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT
Control(s)
73507
Sfmt 4700
AT applies to entire
entry.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
NAC: Yes, for 4A090, if the item incorporates
a 3A090.a IC that is not designed or
marketed for use in datacenters and has a
‘total processing performance’ of 4800 or
more, or if the 4A090 item incorporates a
3A090.b IC, if the item is designed or
marketed for use in datacenters.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) For associated
‘‘software’’ for commodities in this ECCN,
see 4D090, 5D002.z, and 5D992.z and for
associated ‘‘technology’’ for commodities
in this ECCN, see 4E001. (2) Also ECCNs
4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z,
5A004.z, and 5A992.z. (3) See also Note 4
to ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. Computers, ‘‘electronic assemblies,’’ and
‘‘components’’ containing integrated circuits,
any of which meets or exceeds the limit in
3A090.a.
Technical Note: For purposes of 4A090.a,
computers include ‘‘digital computers,’’
‘‘hybrid computers,’’ and analog computers.
b. [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
4A994 Computers, ‘‘electronic assemblies’’
and related equipment, not controlled
by 4A001 or 4A003, and ‘‘specially
designed’’ ‘‘parts’’ and ‘‘components’’
therefor (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: AT
E:\FR\FM\25OCR3.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Control(s)
AT applies to entire
entry.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
AT Column 1.
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List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) For associated
‘‘software’’ for commodities in this ECCN,
see 4D994 and for associated ‘‘technology’’
for commodities in this ECCN, see 4E992.
(2) See also ECCNs 4A003.z, 4A004.z,
4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, and 5A992.z.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
Note 1: The control status of the ‘‘digital
computers’’ and related equipment described
in 4A994 is determined by the control status
of other equipment or systems provided:
a. The ‘‘digital computers’’ or related
equipment are essential for the operation of
the other equipment or systems;
b. The ‘‘digital computers’’ or related
equipment are not a ‘‘principal element’’ of
the other equipment or systems; and
N.B. 1: The control status of ‘‘signal
processing’’ or ‘‘image enhancement’’
equipment ‘‘specially designed’’ for other
equipment with functions limited to those
required for the other equipment is
determined by the control status of the other
equipment even if it exceeds the ‘‘principal
element’’ criterion.
N.B. 2: For the control status of ‘‘digital
computers’’ or related equipment for
telecommunications equipment, see Category
5, Part 1 (Telecommunications).
c. The ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘digital
computers’’ and related equipment is
determined by 4E.
a. Electronic computers and related
equipment, and ‘‘electronic assemblies’’ and
‘‘specially designed’’ ‘‘parts’’ and
‘‘components’’ therefor, rated for operation at
an ambient temperature above 343 K (70 °C);
b. ‘‘Digital computers’’, including
equipment of ‘‘signal processing’’ or image
enhancement’’, having an ‘‘Adjusted Peak
Performance’’ (‘‘APP’’) equal to or greater
than 0.0128 Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT);
c. ‘‘Electronic assemblies’’ that are
‘‘specially designed’’ or modified to enhance
performance by aggregation of processors, as
follows:
c.1. Designed to be capable of aggregation
in configurations of 16 or more processors;
c.2. [Reserved];
Note 1: 4A994.c applies only to ‘‘electronic
assemblies’’ and programmable
interconnections with a ‘‘APP’’ not exceeding
the limits in 4A994.b, when shipped as
unintegrated ‘‘electronic assemblies’’. It does
not apply to ‘‘electronic assemblies’’
inherently limited by nature of their design
for use as related equipment controlled by
4A994.k.
Note 2: 4A994.c does not control any
‘‘electronic assembly’’ ‘‘specially designed’’
for a product or family of products whose
maximum configuration does not exceed the
limits of 4A994.b.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
d. [Reserved];
e. [Reserved];
f. Equipment for ‘‘signal processing’’ or
‘‘image enhancement’’ having an ‘‘Adjusted
Peak Performance’’ (‘‘APP’’) equal to or
greater than 0.0128 Weighted TeraFLOPS
WT;
g. [Reserved];
h. [Reserved];
i. Equipment containing ‘‘terminal
interface equipment’’ exceeding the limits in
5A991;
j. Equipment ‘‘specially designed’’ to
provide external interconnection of ‘‘digital
computers’’ or associated equipment that
allows communications at data rates
exceeding 80 Mbyte/s.
Note: 4A994.j does not control internal
interconnection equipment (e.g., backplanes,
buses) passive interconnection equipment,
‘‘network access controllers’’ or
‘‘communication channel controllers’’.
k. ‘‘Hybrid computers’’ and ‘‘electronic
assemblies’’ and ‘‘specially designed’’
‘‘parts’’ and ‘‘components’’ therefor
containing analog-to-digital converters
having all of the following characteristics:
k.1. 32 channels or more; and
k.2. A resolution of 14 bit (plus sign bit)
or more with a conversion rate of 200,000
conversions/s or more.
l. Computers, ‘‘electronic assemblies,’’ and
‘‘components,’’ n.e.s., containing integrated
circuits, any of which meets or exceeds the
limit of ECCN 3A991.p.
Technical Note: For the purposes of
4A994.l, computers include ‘‘digital
computers,’’ ‘‘hybrid computers,’’ and analog
computers.
*
*
*
*
*
4D001 ‘‘Software’’ as follows (see List of
Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, CC, AT
Control(s)
NS applies to entire
entry, except
4A003.z, 4A004.z,
and 4A005.z.
RS applies to ‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled by
4A003.z, 4A004.z,
and 4A005.z.
CC applies to ‘‘software’’ for computerized finger-print
equipment controlled by 4A003 for
CC reasons.
AT applies to entire
entry.
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4701
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS Column 1.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
CC Column 1.
Reporting Requirements
See § 743.1 of the EAR for reporting
requirements for exports under License
Exceptions, and Validated End-User
authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
TSR: Yes, except for ‘‘software’’ for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of the
following:
(1) Commodities with an ‘‘Adjusted Peak
Performance’’ (‘‘APP’’) exceeding 29 WT;
or
(2) Commodities controlled by 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005 or ‘‘software’’ controlled
by 4D004.
APP: Yes to specific countries (see § 740.7 of
the EAR for eligibility criteria), except
‘‘software’’ for commodities controlled by
4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z.
ACE: (1) Yes for 4D001.a (for the
‘‘development’’, ‘‘production’’ or ‘‘use’’ of
equipment or ‘‘software’’ specified in
ECCN 4A005 or 4D004), except to Country
Group E:1 or E:2. See § 740.22 of the EAR
for eligibility criteria. (2) No for ‘‘software’’
for commodities controlled by 4A003.z,
4A004.z, and 4A005.z
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be
used to ship or transmit ‘‘software’’
‘‘specially designed’’ or modified for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
equipment specified by ECCN 4A001.a.2 or
for the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
‘‘digital computers’’ having an ‘Adjusted
Peak Performance’ (‘APP’) exceeding 29
Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT) to any of the
destinations listed in Country Group A:6
(See Supplement No.1 to part 740 of the
EAR); and may not be used to ship or
transmit ‘‘software’’ specified in 4D001.a
‘‘specially designed’’ for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
equipment specified by ECCN 4A003.z,
4A004.z, or 4A005 to any of the
destinations listed in Country Group A:5 or
A:6.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: N/A
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ‘‘Software’’ ‘‘specially designed’’ or
modified for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’, of equipment or ‘‘software’’
controlled by 4A001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005
or 4D (except 4D090, 4D980, 4D993 or
4D994).
b. ‘‘Software’’, other than that controlled by
4D001.a, ‘‘specially designed’’ or modified
for the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
equipment as follows:
b.1. ‘‘Digital computers’’ having an
‘‘Adjusted Peak Performance’’ (‘‘APP’’)
exceeding 24 Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT);
b.2. ‘‘Electronic assemblies’’ ‘‘specially
designed’’ or modified for enhancing
performance by aggregation of processors so
that the ‘‘APP’’ of the aggregation exceeds the
limit in 4D001.b.1.
*
AT Column 1.
Sfmt 4700
*
*
*
*
4E001 ‘‘Technology’’ as follows (see List of
Items Controlled).
E:\FR\FM\25OCR3.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, MT, RS, CC, AT
Control(s)
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS applies to entire
NS Column 1.
entry, except for
technology for
4A003.z, 4A004.z,
4A005.z, 4A090 or
‘‘software’’ specified by 4D001 (for
4A003.z, 4A004.z
or 4A005.z), 4D090.
MT applies to ‘‘techMT Column 1.
nology’’ for items
controlled by
4A001.a and
4A101 for MT reasons.
RS applies to ‘‘techTo or within destinanology’’ for comtions specified in
modities controlled
Country Groups
by 4A003.z,
D:1, D:4, and D:5
4A004.z, 4A005.z,
of supplement no. 1
4A090 or ‘‘softto part 740 of the
ware’’ specified by
EAR, excluding any
4D001 (for
destination also
4A003.z, 4A004.z,
specified in Country
and 4A005.z),
Groups A:5 or A:6.
4D090.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
CC applies to ‘‘softCC Column 1.
ware’’ for computerized finger-print
equipment controlled by 4A003
(except 4A003.z)
for CC reasons.
AT applies to entire
AT Column 1.
entry.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
Reporting Requirements
See § 743.1 of the EAR for reporting
requirements for exports under License
Exceptions, and Validated End-User
authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for Description of All License Exceptions)
TSR: Yes, except for the following:
(1) ‘‘Technology’’ for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of commodities with an
‘‘Adjusted Peak Performance’’ (‘‘APP’’)
exceeding 70 WT or for the ‘‘development’’
or ‘‘production’’ of commodities controlled
by 4A005 or ‘‘software’’ controlled by
4D004;
(2) ‘‘Technology’’ for the ‘‘development’’ of
‘‘intrusion software’’; or
(3) ‘‘Technology’’ for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of commodities controlled by
4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090 or
‘‘software’’ specified by 4D001 (for
4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z), 4D090
when destined to destinations in Country
Group D:1, D:4, or D:5 of supplement no.
1 to part 740 of the EAR.
APP: Yes to specific countries (see § 740.7 of
the EAR for eligibility criteria). No, for
‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of commodities controlled by
4A003.z, or ‘‘software’’ specified by 4D001
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
(for 4A003.z) when destined to
destinations in Country Group D:1, D:4, or
D:5 of supplement no. 1 to part 740 of the
EAR.
ACE: Yes for 4E001.a (for the ‘‘development’’,
‘‘production’’ or ‘‘use’’ of equipment or
‘‘software’’ specified in ECCN 4A005
(except 4A005.z to destinations in Country
Group D:1, D:4, or D:5) or 4D004) and for
4E001.c, except to Country Group E:1 or
E:2. See § 740.22 of the EAR for eligibility
criteria.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be
used to ship or transmit ‘‘technology’’
according to the General Technology Note
for the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
any of the following equipment or
‘‘software’’: a. Equipment specified by
ECCN 4A001.a.2; b. ‘‘Digital computers’’
having an ‘Adjusted Peak Performance’
(‘APP’) exceeding 70 Weighted TeraFLOPS
(WT); or c. ‘‘software’’ specified in the
License Exception STA paragraph found in
the License Exception section of ECCN
4D001 to any of the destinations listed in
Country Group A:6 (See Supplement No. 1
to part 740 of the EAR); and may not be
used to ship or transmit ‘‘technology’’
specified in 4E001.a (for the
‘‘development’’, ‘‘production’’ or ‘‘use’’ of
equipment or ‘‘software’’ specified in
ECCN 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005, 4A090, or
‘‘software’’ specified by 4D001 (for
4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z), 4D004, or
4D090); and 4E001.c to any of the
destinations listed in Country Group A:5 or
A:6.
TECHNICAL NOTE ON ‘‘ADJUSTED PEAK
PERFORMANCE’’ (‘‘APP’’)
*
*
*
*
*
Technical Notes
*
*
*
*
*
2. Processor combinations share memory
when any processor is capable of accessing
any memory location in the system through
the hardware transmission of cache lines or
memory words, without the involvement of
any software mechanism, which may be
achieved using ‘‘electronic assemblies’’
specified in 4A003.c, z.1, or z.3.
*
*
*
*
*
CATEGORY 5—TELECOMMUNICATIONS
AND ‘‘INFORMATION SECURITY’’
Part 1—TELECOMMUNICATIONS
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Notes:
*
*
3. Commodities in ECCN 5A001.j, and
related ‘‘software’’ specified in 5D001.c (for
5A001.j) that are also controlled in ECCNs
5A002.a, 5A002.z.1, 5A002.z.6, 5A004.a,
5A004.b, 5A004.z, 5D002.c.1, 5D002.c.3,
5D002.z.6, 5D002.z.8, or z 5D002.z.9, remain
controlled in Category 5—Part 2 by those
entries. Category 5—Part 2 does not apply to
elements of source code that implement
functionality controlled by these Category 5
Part 1 ECCNs, or to any item subject to the
EAR where Encryption Item (EI) functionality
is absent, removed or otherwise non-existent.
*
*
*
*
*
5E001 ‘‘Technology’’ as follows (see List of
Items Controlled).
List of Items Controlled
License Requirements
Related Controls: N/A
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ‘‘Technology’’ according to the General
Technology Note, for the ‘‘development’’,
‘‘production’’, or ‘‘use’’ of equipment or
‘‘software’’ controlled by 4A (except 4A980
or 4A994 and ‘‘use’’ of equipment controlled
under 4A090 or ‘‘software’’ controlled under
4D001 (for 4A090)) or 4D (except 4D980,
4D993, 4D994 and ‘‘use’’ of software
controlled under 4D090).
b. ‘‘Technology’’ according to the General
Technology Note, other than that controlled
by 4E001.a, for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of equipment as follows:
b.1. ‘‘Digital computers’’ having an
‘‘Adjusted Peak Performance’’ (‘‘APP’’)
exceeding 24 Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT);
b.2. ‘‘Electronic assemblies’’ ‘‘specially
designed’’ or modified for enhancing
performance by aggregation of processors so
that the ‘‘APP’’ of the aggregation exceeds the
limit in 4E001.b.1.
c. ‘‘Technology’’ for the ‘‘development’’ of
‘‘intrusion software.’’
Note 1: 4E001.a and 4E001.c do not apply
to ‘‘vulnerability disclosure’’ or ‘‘cyber
incident response’’.
Note 2: Note 1 does not diminish national
authorities’ rights to ascertain compliance
with 4E001.a and 4E001.c.
Reason for Control: NS, SL, AT
*
PO 00000
*
*
Frm 00053
*
Fmt 4701
*
Sfmt 4700
73509
Control(s)
NS applies to entire
entry.
SL applies to ‘‘technology’’ for the
‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of
equipment, functions or features
controlled by
5A001.f.1, or for
the ‘‘development’’
or ‘‘production’’ of
‘‘software’’ controlled by ECCN
5D001.a (for
5A001.f.1).
AT applies to entire
entry.
E:\FR\FM\25OCR3.SGM
25OCR3
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS Column 1.
A license is required
for all destinations,
as specified in
§ 742.13 of the
EAR. Accordingly, a
column specific to
this control does
not appear on the
Commerce Country
Chart (Supplement
No. 1 to Part 738 of
the EAR).
Note to SL paragraph:
This licensing requirement does not
supersede, implement, construe or
limit the scope of
any criminal statute,
including, but not
limited to, the Omnibus Safe Streets
Act of 1968, as
amended.
AT Column 1.
73510
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Reporting Requirements
See § 743.1 of the EAR for reporting
requirements for exports under License
Exceptions and Validated End-User
authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for Description of All License Exceptions)
TSR: Yes, except for exports or reexports to
destinations outside of those countries
listed in Country Group A:5 (See
Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR)
of ‘‘technology’’ controlled by 5E001 for
the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of the
following:
(1) Items controlled by 5A001.b.5, .h or .j;
(2) ‘‘Software’’ controlled by 5D001.a that is
‘‘specially designed’’ for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
equipment, functions or features controlled
by 5A001.b.5, 5A001.h, 5A001.j, or
5B001.a (for 5A001.j); or
(3) ‘‘Software’’ controlled by 5D001.c (for
5A001.j or 5B001.a (for 5A001.j)).
ACE: Yes, for 5E001.a (for 5A001.j, 5B001.a
(for 5A001.j), 5D001.a (for 5A001.j), or
5D001.c (for 5A001.j or 5B001.a (for
5A001.j))) except to Country Group E:1 or
E:2. See § 740.22 of the EAR for eligibility
criteria.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be
used to ship or transmit ‘‘technology’’
according to the General Technology Note
for the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
equipment, functions or features specified
by 5A001.b.3, .b.5 or .h; or for ‘‘software’’
in 5D001.a or .c, that is specified in the
STA paragraph in the License Exception
section of ECCN 5D001 to any of the
destinations listed in Country Group A:6
(See Supplement No.1 to part 740 of the
EAR); or ‘‘technology’’ specified in 5E001.a
according to the General Technology Note
for the ‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
equipment, functions or features specified
by 5A001.j, 5B001.a (for 5A001.j), 5D001.a
(for 5A001.j), 5D001.c (for 5A001.j or
5B001.a) to any destinations listed in
Country Group A:5 or A:6.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See also 5E101, 5E980
and 5E991. (2) ‘‘Technology’’ for
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
‘‘Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuit’’
(‘‘MMIC’’) amplifiers that meet the control
criteria given at 3A001.b.2 or .z (for
commodities also described in 3A001.b.2)
is controlled in 3E001; 5E001.d refers only
to that additional ‘‘technology’’ ‘‘required’’
for telecommunications.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ‘‘Technology’’ according to the General
Technology Note for the ‘‘development’’,
‘‘production’’ or ‘‘use’’ (excluding operation)
of equipment, functions or features,
controlled by 5A001 or ‘‘software’’ controlled
by 5D001.a or 5D001.e.
b. Specific ‘‘technology’’, as follows:
b.1. ‘‘Technology’’ ‘‘required’’ for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
telecommunications equipment ‘‘specially
designed’’ to be used on board satellites;
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
b.2. ‘‘Technology’’ for the ‘‘development’’
or ‘‘use’’ of ‘‘laser’’ communication
techniques with the capability of
automatically acquiring and tracking signals
and maintaining communications through
exoatmosphere or sub-surface (water) media;
b.3. ‘‘Technology’’ for the ‘‘development’’
of digital cellular radio base station receiving
equipment whose reception capabilities that
allow multi-band, multi-channel, multimode, multi-coding algorithm or multiprotocol operation can be modified by
changes in ‘‘software’’;
b.4. ‘‘Technology’’ for the ‘‘development’’
of ‘‘spread spectrum’’ techniques, including
‘‘frequency hopping’’ techniques.
Note: 5E001.b.4 does not apply to
‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘development’’ of any of
the following:
a. Civil cellular radio-communications
systems; or
b. Fixed or mobile satellite Earth stations
for commercial civil telecommunications.
c. ‘‘Technology’’ according the General
Technology Note for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of any of the following:
c.1. [Reserved]
c.2. Equipment employing a ‘‘laser’’ and
having any of the following:
c.2.a. A transmission wavelength
exceeding 1,750 nm;
c.2.b. [Reserved]
c.2.c. [Reserved]
c.2.d. Employing wavelength division
multiplexing techniques of optical carriers at
less than 100 GHz spacing; or
c.2.e. Employing analog techniques and
having a bandwidth exceeding 2.5 GHz;
Note: 5E001.c.2.e does not control
‘‘technology’’ for commercial TV systems.
N.B.: For ‘‘technology’’ for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of nontelecommunications equipment employing a
‘‘laser’’, see Product Group E of Category 6,
e.g., 6E00x
c.3. Equipment employing ‘‘optical
switching’’ and having a switching time less
than 1 ms; or
c.4. Radio equipment having any of the
following:
c.4.a. Quadrature-Amplitude-Modulation
(QAM) techniques above level 1,024; or
c.4.b. Operating at input or output
frequencies exceeding 31.8 GHz; or
Note: 5E001.c.4.b does not control
‘‘technology’’ for equipment designed or
modified for operation in any frequency band
which is ‘‘allocated by the ITU’’ for radiocommunications services, but not for radiodetermination.
c.4.c. Operating in the 1.5 MHz to 87.5
MHz band and incorporating adaptive
techniques providing more than 15 dB
suppression of an interfering signal; or
c.5. [Reserved]
c.6. Mobile equipment having all of the
following:
c.6.a. Operating at an optical wavelength
greater than or equal to 200nm and less than
or equal to 400nm; and
c.6.b. Operating as a ‘‘local area network’’;
d. ‘‘Technology’’ according to the General
Technology Note for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of ‘‘Monolithic Microwave
Integrated Circuit’’ (‘‘MMIC’’) amplifiers
‘‘specially designed’’ for telecommunications
and that are any of the following:
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Technical Note: For purposes of 5E001.d,
the parameter peak saturated power output
may also be referred to on product data
sheets as output power, saturated power
output, maximum power output, peak power
output, or peak envelope power output.
d.1. Rated for operation at frequencies
exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and including 6.8
GHz with a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ greater
than 15%, and having any of the following:
d.1.a. A peak saturated power output
greater than 75 W (48.75 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and
including 2.9 GHz;
d.1.b. A peak saturated power output
greater than 55 W (47.4 dBm) at any
frequency exceeding 2.9 GHz up to and
including 3.2 GHz;
d.1.c. A peak saturated power output
greater than 40 W (46 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 3.2 GHz up to and including 3.7
GHz; or
d.1.d. A peak saturated power output
greater than 20 W (43 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 3.7 GHz up to and including 6.8
GHz;
d.2. Rated for operation at frequencies
exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 16
GHz with a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ greater
than 10%, and having any of the following:
d.2.a. A peak saturated power output
greater than 10W (40 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 8.5
GHz; or
d.2.b. A peak saturated power output
greater than 5W (37 dBm) at any frequency
exceeding 8.5 GHz up to and including 16
GHz;
d.3. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 3 W
(34.77 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 16
GHz up to and including 31.8 GHz, and with
a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of greater than
10%;
d.4. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 0.1 nW
(¥70 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 31.8
GHz up to and including 37 GHz;
d.5. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 1 W (30
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 37 GHz up
to and including 43.5 GHz, and with a
‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of greater than 10%;
d.6. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 31.62
mW (15 dBm) at any frequency exceeding
43.5 GHz up to and including 75 GHz, and
with a ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of greater than
10%;
d.7. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 10 mW
(10 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 75 GHz
up to and including 90 GHz, and with a
‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of greater than 5%; or
d.8. Rated for operation with a peak
saturated power output greater than 0.1 nW
(¥70 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 90
GHz;
e. ‘‘Technology’’ according to the General
Technology Note for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of electronic devices and
circuits, ‘‘specially designed’’ for
telecommunications and containing
‘‘components’’ manufactured from
‘‘superconductive’’ materials, ‘‘specially
designed’’ for operation at temperatures
E:\FR\FM\25OCR3.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
below the ‘‘critical temperature’’ of at least
one of the ‘‘superconductive’’ constituents
and having any of the following:
e.1. Current switching for digital circuits
using ‘‘superconductive’’ gates with a
product of delay time per gate (in seconds)
and power dissipation per gate (in watts) of
less than 10¥14 J; or
e.2. Frequency selection at all frequencies
using resonant circuits with Q-values
exceeding 10,000.
*
*
*
*
*
Category 5—Telecommunications and
‘‘Information Security’’
Part 2—‘‘Information Security’’
*
*
*
*
*
Note 3: Cryptography Note: ECCNs 5A002,
5D002.a.1, .b, .c.1, z.1, z.5, and z.6, do not
control items as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
N.B. to Note 3 (Cryptography Note):
You must submit a classification request or
self-classification report to BIS for certain
mass market encryption commodities and
software eligible for the Cryptography Note
employing a key length greater than 64 bits
for the symmetric algorithm (or, for
commodities and software not implementing
any symmetric algorithms, employing a key
length greater than 768 bits for asymmetric
algorithms described by Technical note 2.b to
5A002.a or greater than 128 bits for elliptic
curve algorithms, or any asymmetric
algorithm described by Technical Note 2.c to
5A002.a) in accordance with the
requirements of § 740.17(b) of the EAR in
order to be released from the ‘‘EI’’ and ‘‘NS’’
controls of ECCN 5A002 or 5D002. For mass
market commodities and software that do not
require a self-classification report pursuant
to § 740.17(b) and (e)(3) of the EAR, such
items are also released from ‘‘EI’’ and ‘‘NS’’
controls and controlled under ECCN 5A992
or 5D992.
*
*
*
*
*
5A002 ‘‘Information security’’ systems,
equipment and ‘‘components,’’ as follows
(see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT, EI
Control(s)
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
NS applies to entire
entry (except
5A002.z).
RS applies to items
controlled by
5A002.z.
AT applies to entire
entry.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS Column 1.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
Control(s)
EI applies to entire
entry.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
Refer to § 742.15 of
the EAR.
License Requirements Note: See
§ 744.17 of the EAR for additional license
requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and
an arithmetic logic unit with an access width
of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ‘‘information security’’
functionality, and associated ‘‘software’’ and
‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: Yes: $500 for ‘‘components,’’ except for
5A002.z.
N/A for systems and equipment.
GBS: N/A
ENC: Yes for certain EI controlled
commodities, see § 740.17 of the EAR for
eligibility, except for 5A002.z.
NAC: Yes, for 5A002.z; N/A for all other
5A002 commodities.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) ECCN 5A002.a
controls ‘‘components’’ providing the means
or functions necessary for ‘‘information
security.’’ All such ‘‘components’’ are
presumptively ‘‘specially designed’’ and
controlled by 5A002.a. (2) See USML
Categories XI (including XI(b)) and XIII(b)
(including XIII(b)(2)) for controls on systems,
equipment, and components described in
5A002.d or .e that are subject to the ITAR.
(3) For ‘‘satellite navigation system’’
receiving equipment containing or employing
decryption see 7A005, and for related
decryption ‘‘software’’ and ‘‘technology’’ see
7D005 and 7E001. (4) Noting that items may
be controlled elsewhere on the CCL,
examples of items not controlled by ECCN
5A002.a.4 include the following: (a) An
automobile where the only ‘cryptography for
data confidentiality’ having a ‘described
security algorithm’ is performed by a
Category 5—Part 2 Note 3 eligible mobile
telephone that is built into the car. In this
case, secure phone communications support
a non-primary function of the automobile but
the mobile telephone (equipment), as a
standalone item, is not controlled by ECCN
5A002 because it is excluded by the
Cryptography Note (Note 3) (See ECCN
5A992.c). (b) An exercise bike with an
embedded Category 5—Part 2 Note 3 eligible
web browser, where the only controlled
cryptography is performed by the web
browser. In this case, secure web browsing
supports a non-primary function of the
exercise bike but the web browser
(‘‘software’’), as a standalone item, is not
controlled by ECCN 5D002 because it is
excluded by the Cryptography Note (Note 3)
(See ECCN 5D992.c). (5) After classification
or self-classification in accordance with
§ 740.17(b) of the EAR, mass market
encryption commodities that meet eligibility
requirements are released from ‘‘EI’’ and
‘‘NS’’ controls. These commodities are
designated 5A992.c. (6) See also ECCNs
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
73511
3A090 (including Note 4 to ECCN 3A090),
and 4A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. Designed or modified to use
‘cryptography for data confidentiality’ having
a ‘described security algorithm’, where that
cryptographic capability is usable, has been
activated, or can be activated by any means
other than secure ‘‘cryptographic activation’’,
as follows:
a.1. Items having ‘‘information security’’ as
a primary function;
a.2. Digital communication or networking
systems, equipment or components, not
specified in paragraph 5A002.a.1;
a.3. Computers, other items having
information storage or processing as a
primary function, and components therefor,
not specified in paragraphs 5A002.a.1 or .a.2;
N.B.: For operating systems see also
5D002.a.1 and .c.1.
a.4. Items, not specified in paragraphs
5A002.a.1 to a.3, where the ‘cryptography for
data confidentiality’ having a ‘described
security algorithm’ meets all of the following:
a.4.a. It supports a non-primary function of
the item; and
a.4.b. It is performed by incorporated
equipment or ‘‘software’’ that would, as a
standalone item, be specified by ECCNs
5A002, 5A003, 5A004, 5B002 or 5D002.
N.B. to paragraph a.4: See Related
Control Paragraph (4) of this ECCN 5A002 for
examples of items not controlled by
5A002.a.4.
Technical Notes:
1. For the purposes of 5A002.a,
‘cryptography for data confidentiality’ means
‘‘cryptography’’ that employs digital
techniques and performs any cryptographic
function other than any of the following:
1.a. ‘‘Authentication;’’
1.b. Digital signature;
1.c. Data integrity;
1.d. Non-repudiation;
1.e. Digital rights management, including
the execution of copy-protected ‘‘software;’’
1.f. Encryption or decryption in support of
entertainment, mass commercial broadcasts
or medical records management; or
1.g. Key management in support of any
function described in paragraphs 1.a to 1.f of
this Technical Note paragraph 1.
2. For the purposes of 5A002.a, ‘described
security algorithm’ means any of the
following:
2.a. A ‘‘symmetric algorithm’’ employing a
key length in excess of 56 bits, not including
parity bits;
2.b. An ‘‘asymmetric algorithm’’ where the
security of the algorithm is based on any of
the following:
2.b.1. Factorization of integers in excess of
512 bits (e.g., RSA);
2.b.2. Computation of discrete logarithms
in a multiplicative group of a finite field of
size greater than 512 bits (e.g., Diffie-Hellman
over Z/pZ); or
2.b.3. Discrete logarithms in a group other
than mentioned in paragraph 2.b.2 of this
Technical Note in excess of 112 bits (e.g.,
Diffie-Hellman over an elliptic curve); or
2.c. An ‘‘asymmetric algorithm’’ where the
security of the algorithm is based on any of
the following:
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2.c.1. Shortest vector or closest vector
problems associated with lattices (e.g.,
NewHope, Frodo, NTRUEncrypt, Kyber,
Titanium);
2.c.2. Finding isogenies between
Supersingular elliptic curves (e.g.,
Supersingular Isogeny Key Encapsulation); or
2.c.3. Decoding random codes (e.g.,
McEliece, Niederreiter).
Technical Note: An algorithm described
by Technical Note 2.c. may be referred to as
being post-quantum, quantum-safe or
quantum-resistant.
Note 1: Details of items must be accessible
and provided upon request, in order to
establish any of the following:
a. Whether the item meets the criteria of
5A002.a.1 to a.4; or
b. Whether the cryptographic capability for
data confidentiality specified by 5A002.a is
usable without ‘‘cryptographic activation.’’
Note 2: 5A002.a does not control any of
the following items, or specially designed
‘‘information security’’ components therefor:
a. Smart cards and smart card ‘readers/
writers’ as follows:
a.1. A smart card or an electronically
readable personal document (e.g., token coin,
e-passport) that meets any of the following:
a.1.a. The cryptographic capability meets
all of the following:
a.1.a.1. It is restricted for use in any of the
following:
a.1.a.1.a. Equipment or systems, not
described by 5A002.a.1 to a.4;
a.1.a.1.b. Equipment or systems, not using
‘cryptography for data confidentiality’ having
a ‘described security algorithm’; or
a.1.a.1.c. Equipment or systems, excluded
from 5A002.a by entries b. to f. of this Note;
and
a.1.a.2. It cannot be reprogrammed for any
other use; or
a.1.b. Having all of the following:
a.1.b.1. It is specially designed and limited
to allow protection of ‘personal data’ stored
within;
a.1.b.2. Has been, or can only be,
personalized for public or commercial
transactions or individual identification; and
a.1.b.3. Where the cryptographic capability
is not user-accessible;
Technical Note to paragraph a.1.b.1 of
Note 2: For the purposes of 5A002.a Note
2.a.1.b.1,‘personal data’ includes any data
specific to a particular person or entity, such
as the amount of money stored and data
necessary for ‘‘authentication.’’
a.2. ‘Readers/writers’ specially designed or
modified, and limited, for items specified by
paragraph a.1 of this Note;
Technical Note to paragraph a.2 of
Note 2: ‘For the purposes of 5A002.a Note
2.a.2, ‘readers/writers’ include equipment
that communicates with smart cards or
electronically readable documents through a
network.
b. Cryptographic equipment specially
designed and limited for banking use or
‘money transactions’;
Technical Note to paragraph b. of Note
2: For the purposes of 5A002.a Note
2.b,‘money transactions’ in 5A002 Note 2
paragraph b. includes the collection and
settlement of fares or credit functions.
c. Portable or mobile radiotelephones for
civil use (e.g., for use with commercial civil
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cellular radio communication systems) that
are not capable of transmitting encrypted
data directly to another radiotelephone or
equipment (other than Radio Access Network
(RAN) equipment), nor of passing encrypted
data through RAN equipment (e.g., Radio
Network Controller (RNC) or Base Station
Controller (BSC));
d. Cordless telephone equipment not
capable of end-to-end encryption where the
maximum effective range of unboosted
cordless operation (i.e., a single, unrelayed
hop between terminal and home base station)
is less than 400 meters according to the
manufacturer’s specifications;
e. Portable or mobile radiotelephones and
similar client wireless devices for civil use,
that implement only published or
commercial cryptographic standards (except
for anti-piracy functions, which may be nonpublished) and also meet the provisions of
paragraphs a.2 to a.4 of the Cryptography
Note (Note 3 in Category 5—Part 2), that have
been customized for a specific civil industry
application with features that do not affect
the cryptographic functionality of these
original non-customized devices;
f. Items, where the ‘‘information security’’
functionality is limited to wireless ‘‘personal
area network’’ functionality implementing
only published or commercial cryptographic
standards;
g. Mobile telecommunications Radio
Access Network (RAN) equipment designed
for civil use, which also meet the provisions
of paragraphs a.2 to a.4 of the Cryptography
Note (Note 3 in Category 5—Part 2), having
an RF output power limited to 0.1W (20 dBm)
or less, and supporting 16 or fewer
concurrent users;
h. Routers, switches, gateways or relays,
where the ‘‘information security’’
functionality is limited to the tasks of
‘‘Operations, Administration or
Maintenance’’ (‘‘OAM’’) implementing only
published or commercial cryptographic
standards;
i. General purpose computing equipment
or servers, where the ‘‘information security’’
functionality meets all of the following:
i.1. Uses only published or commercial
cryptographic standards; and
i.2. Is any of the following:
i.2.a. Integral to a CPU that meets the
provisions of Note 3 in Category 5—Part 2;
i.2.b. Integral to an operating system that
is not specified by 5D002; or
i.2.c. Limited to ‘‘OAM’’ of the equipment;
or
j. Items specially designed for a ‘connected
civil industry application’, meeting all of the
following:
j.1. Being any of the following:
j.1.a. A network-capable endpoint device
meeting any of the following:
j.1.a.1. The ‘‘information security’’
functionality is limited to securing ’nonarbitrary data’ or the tasks of ‘‘Operations,
Administration or Maintenance’’ (‘‘OAM’’);
or
j.1.a.2. The device is limited to a specific
’connected civil industry application’; or
j.1.b. Networking equipment meeting all of
the following:
j.1.b.1. Being specially designed to
communicate with the devices specified by
paragraph j.1.a. above; and
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j.1.b.2. The ‘‘information security’’
functionality is limited to supporting the
‘connected civil industry application’ of
devices specified by paragraph j.1.a. above,
or the tasks of ‘‘OAM’’ of this networking
equipment or of other items specified by
paragraph j. of this Note; and
j.2. Where the ‘‘information security’’
functionality implements only published or
commercial cryptographic standards, and the
cryptographic functionality cannot easily be
changed by the user.
Technical Notes:
1. For the purposes of 5A002.a Note
2.j,‘connected civil industry application’
means a network-connected consumer or
civil industry application other than
‘‘information security’’, digital
communication, general purpose networking
or computing.
2. For the purposes of 5A002.a Note
2.j.1.a.1,‘non-arbitrary data’ means sensor or
metering data directly related to the stability,
performance or physical measurement of a
system (e.g., temperature, pressure, flow rate,
mass, volume, voltage, physical location,
etc.), that cannot be changed by the user of
the device.
b. Being a ‘cryptographic activation token’;
Technical Note: For the purposes of
5A002.b, a ‘cryptographic activation token’ is
an item designed or modified for any of the
following:
1. Converting, by means of ‘‘cryptographic
activation’’, an item not specified by Category
5—Part 2 into an item specified by 5A002.a
or 5D002.c.1, and not released by the
Cryptography Note (Note 3 in Category 5—
Part 2); or
2. Enabling by means of ‘‘cryptographic
activation’’, additional functionality
specified by 5A002.a of an item already
specified by Category 5—Part 2;
c. Designed or modified to use or perform
‘‘quantum cryptography’’;
Technical Note: For the purposes of
5A002.c,’’quantum cryptography’’ is also
known as Quantum Key Distribution (QKD).
d. Designed or modified to use
cryptographic techniques to generate
channelizing codes, scrambling codes or
network identification codes, for systems
using ultra-wideband modulation techniques
and having any of the following:
d.1. A bandwidth exceeding 500 MHz; or
d.2. A ‘‘fractional bandwidth’’ of 20% or
more;
e. Designed or modified to use
cryptographic techniques to generate the
spreading code for ‘‘spread spectrum’’
systems, not specified by 5A002.d, including
the hopping code for ‘‘frequency hopping’’
systems.
f. through y. [Reserved]
z. Other commodities, as follows:
z.1. Commodities that are described in
5A002.a and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090;
z.2. Commodities that are described in
5A002.b and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090;
z.3. Commodities that are described in
5A002.c and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090;
z.4. Commodities that are described in
5A002.d and that also meet or exceed the
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performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090;
or
z.5. Commodities that are described in
5A002.e and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090.
5A992 Equipment not controlled by 5A002
(see List of Items Controlled)
License Requirements
Control(s)
NS applies to entire
entry (except
5A004.z).
RS applies to items
controlled by
5A004.z.
Reason for Control: RS, AT
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
Control(s)
RS applies to items
controlled by
5A992.z.
AT applies to entire
entry.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
License Requirements Note: See § 744.17
of the EAR for additional license
requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and
an arithmetic logic unit with an access
width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ‘‘information security’’
functionality, and associated ‘‘software’’
and ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
NAC: Yes, for 5A992.z; N/A for all other
5A992 commodities.
Related Controls: See also ECCNs 3A090
(including Note 4 to ECCN 3A090) and
4A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. [Reserved]
b. [Reserved]
c. Commodities classified as mass market
encryption commodities in accordance with
§ 740.17(b) of the EAR.
d. through y. [Reserved]
z. Commodities that are described in
5A992.c and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090.
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*
*
*
*
5A004 ‘‘Systems,’’ ‘‘equipment’’ and
‘‘components’’ for defeating, weakening
or bypassing ‘‘information security,’’ as
follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT, EI
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NS Column 1.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
Refer to § 742.15 of
the EAR.
License Requirements Note: See § 744.17
of the EAR for additional license
requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and
an arithmetic logic unit with an access
width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ‘‘information security’’
functionality, and associated ‘‘software’’
and ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: Yes: $500 for ‘‘components,’’ except for
5A004.z.
N/A for systems and equipment.
GBS: N/A
ENC: Yes for certain EI controlled
commodities, except for 5A004.z. See
§ 740.17 of the EAR for eligibility.
NAC: Yes, for 5A004.z; N/A for all other
5A004 commodities.
List of Items Controlled
List of Items Controlled
*
AT applies to entire
entry.
EI applies to entire
entry.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
Related Controls: (1) ECCN 5A004.a controls
‘‘components’’ providing the means or
functions necessary for ‘‘information
security.’’ All such ‘‘components’’ are
presumptively ‘‘specially designed’’ and
controlled by 5A004.a. (2) See also ECCNs
3A090 (including Note 4 to ECCN 3A090)
and 4A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. Designed or modified to perform
‘cryptanalytic functions.’
Note: 5A004.a includes systems or
equipment, designed or modified to perform
‘cryptanalytic functions’ by means of reverse
engineering.
Technical Note: For the purposes of
5A004.a,‘cryptanalytic functions’ are
functions designed to defeat cryptographic
mechanisms in order to derive confidential
variables or sensitive data, including clear
text, passwords or cryptographic keys.
b. Items, not specified by ECCNs 4A005 or
5A004.a, designed to perform all of the
following:
b.1. ‘Extract raw data’ from a computing or
communications device; and
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73513
b.2. Circumvent ‘‘authentication’’ or
authorisation controls of the device, in order
to perform the function described in
5A004.b.1.
Technical Note: For the purposes of
5A004.b.1, ‘extract raw data’ from a
computing or communications device means
to retrieve binary data from a storage
medium, e.g., RAM, flash or hard disk, of the
device without interpretation by the device’s
operating system or filesystem.
Note 1: 5A004.b does not apply to systems
or equipment specially designed for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of a
computing or communications device.
Note 2: 5A004.b does not include:
a. Debuggers, hypervisors;
b. Items limited to logical data extraction;
c. Data extraction items using chip-off or
JTAG; or
d. Items specially designed and limited to
jail-breaking or rooting.
c. through y. [Reserved]
z. Other commodities, as follows:
z.1. Commodities that are described in
5A004.a and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090;
or
z.2. Commodities that are described in
5A004.b and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090.
5B002 ‘‘Information Security’’ test,
inspection and ‘‘production’’ equipment,
as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, AT
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
Control(s)
NS applies to entire
entry.
AT applies to entire
entry.
NS Column 1.
AT Column 1.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
ENC: Yes for certain EI controlled equipment,
see § 740.17 of the EAR for eligibility.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: N/A
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. Equipment ‘‘specially designed’’ for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
equipment controlled by 5A002, 5A003,
5A004 or 5B002.b;
b. Measuring equipment ‘‘specially
designed’’ to evaluate and validate the
‘‘information security’’ functions of
equipment controlled by 5A002, 5A003 or
5A004, or of ‘‘software’’ controlled by
5D002.a, z.1 through z.4, or 5D002.c or z.6
through z.9.
*
*
*
*
*
5D002 ‘‘Software’’ as follows (see List of
Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT, EI
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Control(s)
NS applies to entire
entry (except
5D002.z).
RS applies to ‘‘software’’ controlled by
5D002.z.
AT applies to entire
entry.
EI applies to ‘‘software’’ in
5D002.a.1, a.3, .b,
c.1 and c.3, for
commodities or
‘‘software’’ controlled for EI reasons in ECCN
5A002, 5A004 or
5D002.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS Column 1.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
Refer to § 742.15 of
the EAR. Note:
Encryption software
is controlled because of its functional capacity, and
not because of any
informational value
of such software;
such software is not
accorded the same
treatment under the
EAR as other ‘‘software’; and for export licensing purposes, encryption
software is treated
under the EAR in
the same manner
as a commodity included in ECCN
5A002.
License Requirements Note: See § 744.17
of the EAR for additional license
requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and
an arithmetic logic unit with an access
width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ‘‘information security’’
functionality, and associated ‘‘software’’
and ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of such microprocessors.
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List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
TSR: N/A
ENC: Yes for certain EI controlled software,
except for 5D002.z. See § 740.17 of the EAR
for eligibility.
NAC: Yes, for 5D002.z; N/A for all other
5D002 software.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) After classification or
self-classification in accordance with
§ 740.17(b) of the EAR, mass market
encryption software that meets eligibility
requirements is released from ‘‘EI’’ and
‘‘NS’’ controls. This software is designated
as 5D992.c. (2) See also ECCNs 3D001.z
and 4D001.z. (3) See also Note 4 to ECCN
3A090.
Related Definitions: 5D002.a controls
‘‘software’’ designed or modified to use
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‘‘cryptography’’ employing digital or
analog techniques to ensure ‘‘information
security.’’
Items:
a. ‘‘Software’’ ‘‘specially designed’’ or
modified for the ‘‘development,’’
‘‘production’’ or ‘‘use’’ of any of the
following:
a.1. Equipment specified by 5A002 or
‘‘software’’ specified by 5D002.c.1;
a.2. Equipment specified by 5A003 or
‘‘software’’ specified by 5D002.c.2; or
a.3. Equipment or ‘‘software’’, as follows:
a.3.a. Equipment specified by 5A004.a or
‘‘software’’ specified by 5D002.c.3.a;
a.3.b. Equipment specified by 5A004.b or
‘‘software’’ specified by 5D002.c.3.b;
b. ‘‘Software’’ having the characteristics of
a ‘cryptographic activation token’ specified
by 5A002.b;
c. ‘‘Software’’ having the characteristics of,
or performing or simulating the functions of,
any of the following:
c.1. Equipment specified by 5A002.a, .c, .d
or .e;
Note: 5D002.c.1 does not apply to
‘‘software’’ limited to the tasks of ‘‘OAM’’
implementing only published or commercial
cryptographic standards.
c.2. Equipment specified by 5A003; or
c.3. Equipment, as follows:
c.3.a. Equipment specified by 5A004.a;
c.3.b. Equipment specified by 5A004.b.
Note: 5D002.c.3.b does not apply to
‘‘intrusion software’’.
d. [Reserved]
N.B.: See 5D002.b for items formerly
specified in 5D002.d.
e. through y. [Reserved]
z. Other software, as follows:
z.1. Software that is described in
5D002.a.1, and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090
or 4D001 for 4A090;
z.2. Software that is described in
5D002.a.2, and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090
or 4D001 for 4A090;
z.3. Software that is described in
5D002.a.3a, and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090
or 4D001 for 4A090;
z.4. Software that is described in
5D002.a.3.b, and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090
or 4D001 for 4A090;
z.5. Software that is described in 5D002.b
and that also meet or exceed the performance
parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090;
z.6 Software that is described in 5D002.c.1
and that also meet or exceed the performance
parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090;
z.7 Software that is described in 5D002.c.2
and that also meet or exceed the performance
parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090;
z.8 Software that is described in
5D002.c.3.a and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090
or 4D001 for 4A090; or
z.9 Software that is described in
5D002.c.3.b and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090
or 4D001 for 4A090.
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5D992 ‘‘Information Security’’ ‘‘software,’’
not controlled by 5D002, as follows (see
List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: RS, AT
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
Control(s)
RS applies to ‘‘software’’ controlled by
5D992.z.
AT applies to entire
entry.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
License Requirements Note: See § 744.17
of the EAR for additional license
requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and
an arithmetic logic unit with an access
width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ‘‘information security’’
functionality, and associated ‘‘software’’
and ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
TSR: N/A
NAC: Yes, for 5D992.z; N/A for all other
5D992.z software.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) This entry does not
control ‘‘software’’ designed or modified to
protect against malicious computer
damage, e.g., viruses, where the use of
‘‘cryptography’’ is limited to
authentication, digital signature and/or the
decryption of data or files. (2) See also
ECCNs 3D001.z and 4D001.z. (3) See also
Note 4 to ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. [Reserved]
b. [Reserved]
c. ‘‘Software’’ classified as mass market
encryption software in accordance with
§ 740.17(b) of the EAR.
d. through y. [Reserved]
z. Other software that is described in
5D992 and that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090
or 4D001 for 4A090.
*
*
*
*
*
5E002 ‘‘Technology’’ as follows (see List of
Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, AT, EI
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Control(s)
NS applies to entire
entry (except
‘‘technology’’ for
commodities controlled by 5A002.z
or 5A004.z or
‘‘software’’ specified by 5D002 (for
5A002.z or
5A004.z commodities).
RS applies to ‘‘technology’’ for commodities controlled
by 5A002.z or
5A004.z or ‘‘software’’ specified by
5D002 (for 5A002.z
or 5A004.z commodities).
AT applies to entire
entry.
EI applies to ‘‘technology’’ in 5E002.a
for commodities or
‘‘software’’ controlled for EI reasons in ECCNs
5A002, 5A004 or
5D002, and to
‘‘technology’’ in
5E002.b.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS Column 1.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
Refer to § 742.15 of
the EAR.
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*
*
*
*
5E992 ‘‘Information Security’’
‘‘technology’’ according to the General
Technology Note, not controlled by
5E002, as follows (see List of Items
Controlled).
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
Control(s)
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
TSR: N/A
ENC: Yes for certain EI controlled
technology. See § 740.17 of the EAR for
eligibility.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: See also 5E992. This entry
does not control ‘‘technology’’ ‘‘required’’
18:36 Oct 24, 2023
*
License Requirements
Reason for Control: AT
License Requirements Notes:
(1) See § 744.17 of the EAR for additional
license requirements for microprocessors
having a processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or
more and an arithmetic logic unit with an
access width of 32 bit or more, including
those incorporating ‘‘information security’’
functionality, and associated ‘‘software’’
and ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of such microprocessors.
(2) When a person performs or provides
technical assistance that incorporates, or
otherwise draws upon, ‘‘technology’’ that
was either obtained in the United States or
is of U.S.-origin, then a release of the
‘‘technology’’ takes place. Such technical
assistance, when rendered with the intent
to aid in the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of encryption commodities or
software that would be controlled for ‘‘EI’’
reasons under ECCN 5A002, 5A004 or
5D002, may require authorization under
the EAR even if the underlying encryption
algorithm to be implemented is from the
public domain or is not of U.S.-origin.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
for the ‘‘use’’ of equipment excluded from
control under the Related Controls
paragraph or the Technical Notes in ECCN
5A002 or ‘‘technology’’ related to
equipment excluded from control under
ECCN 5A002.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ‘‘Technology’’ according to the General
Technology Note for the ‘‘development,’’
‘‘production’’ or ‘‘use’’ of equipment
controlled by 5A002, 5A003, 5A004 or
5B002, or of ‘‘software’’ controlled by
5D002.a, z.1 through z.3, or 5D002.c, z.6
through z.8.
Note: 5E002.a does not apply to
‘‘technology’’ for items specified by 5A004.b,
z.3 or z.4, 5D002.a.3.b, z.4, or 5D002.c.3.b.
b. ‘‘Technology’’ having the characteristics
of a ‘cryptographic activation token’ specified
by 5A002.b, z.2.
Note: 5E002 includes ‘‘information
security’’ technical data resulting from
procedures carried out to evaluate or
determine the implementation of functions,
features or techniques specified in Category
5—Part 2.
Jkt 262001
RS applies to ‘‘technology’’ for commodities controlled
by 5A992.z or
‘‘software’’ controlled by 5D992.z.
AT applies to entire
entry.
To or within destinations specified in
Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5
of supplement no. 1
to part 740 of the
EAR, excluding any
destination also
specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6.
See
§ 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of
the EAR.
AT Column 1.
License Requirements Note: See § 744.17
of the EAR for additional license
requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and
an arithmetic logic unit with an access
width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ‘‘information security’’
functionality, and associated ‘‘software’’
and ‘‘technology’’ for the ‘‘production’’ or
‘‘development’’ of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
TSR: N/A
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: N/A
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. [Reserved]
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
73515
b. ‘‘Technology’’, n.e.s., for the ‘‘use’’ of
mass market commodities controlled by
5A992 or mass market ‘‘software’’ controlled
by 5D992.
*
*
*
*
*
9A004 Space launch vehicles and
‘‘spacecraft,’’ ‘‘spacecraft buses’’,
‘‘spacecraft payloads’’, ‘‘spacecraft’’ onboard systems or equipment, terrestrial
equipment, and air-launch platforms,
and ‘‘sub-orbital craft’’, as follows (see
List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, AT
Control(s)
NS applies to
9A004.g, .u, .v, .w
and .x.
AT applies to
9A004.g, .u, .v, .w,
.x and .y.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS Column 1.
AT Column 1.
License Requirement Note: 9A004.b
through .f, and .h are controlled under
ECCN 9A515.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See also 9A104, 9A515,
and 9B515. (2) See ECCNs 9E001
(‘‘development’’) and 9E002
(‘‘production’’) for technology for items
controlled by this entry. (3) See USML
Categories IV for the space launch vehicles
and XV for other spacecraft that are
‘‘subject to the ITAR’’ (see 22 CFR parts
120 through 130).
Related Definition: N/A
Items:
a. Space launch vehicles;
b. ‘‘Spacecraft’’;
c. ‘‘Spacecraft buses’’;
d. ‘‘Spacecraft payloads’’ incorporating
items specified by 3A001.b.1.a.4 or z (if also
described in 3A001.b.1.a.4), 3A002.g,
5A001.a.1, 5A001.b.3, 5A002.c, z.3 or z.8,
5A002.e, z.5, 6A002.a.1, 6A002.a.2, 6A002.b,
6A002.d, 6A003.b, 6A004.c, 6A004.e,
6A008.d, 6A008.e, 6A008.k, 6A008.l or
9A010.c;
e. On-board systems or equipment,
specially designed for ‘‘spacecraft’’ and
having any of the following functions:
e.1. ‘Command and telemetry data
handling’;
Note: For the purpose of 9A004.e.1,
‘command and telemetry data handling’
includes bus data management, storage, and
processing.
e.2. ‘Payload data handling’; or
Note: For the purpose of 9A004.e.2,
‘payload data handling’ includes payload
data management, storage, and processing.
e.3. ‘Attitude and orbit control’;
Note: For the purpose of 9A004.e.3,
‘attitude and orbit control’ includes sensing
and actuation to determine and control the
position and orientation of a ‘‘spacecraft’’.
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N.B.: Equipment specially designed for
military use is ‘‘subject to the ITAR’’. See 22
CFR parts 120 through 130.
f. Terrestrial equipment specially designed
for ‘‘spacecraft’’, as follows:
f.1. Telemetry and telecommand
equipment ‘‘specially designed’’ for any of
the following data processing functions:
f.1.a. Telemetry data processing of frame
synchronization and error corrections, for
monitoring of operational status (also known
as health and safe status) of the ‘‘spacecraft
bus’’; or
f.1.b. Command data processing for
formatting command data being sent to the
‘‘spacecraft’’ to control the ‘‘spacecraft bus’’;
f.2. Simulators ‘‘specially designed’’ for
‘verification of operational procedures’ of
‘‘spacecraft’’.
Technical Note: For the purposes of
9A004.f.2, ‘verification of operational
procedures’ is any of the following:
1. Command sequence confirmation;
2. Operational training;
3. Operational rehearsals; or
4. Operational analysis.
g. ‘‘Aircraft’’ ‘‘specially designed’’ or
modified to be air-launch platforms for space
launch vehicles or ‘‘sub-orbital craft’’.
h. ‘‘Sub-orbital craft’’.
i. through t. [RESERVED]
u. The James Webb Space Telescope
(JWST) being developed, launched, and
operated under the supervision of the U.S.
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA).
v. ‘‘Parts,’’ ‘‘components,’’ ‘‘accessories’’
and ‘‘attachments’’ that are ‘‘specially
designed’’ for the James Webb Space
Telescope and that are not:
v.1. Enumerated or controlled in the
USML;
v.2. Microelectronic circuits;
v.3. Described in ECCN 7A004 or 7A104;
or
v.4. Described in an ECCN containing
‘‘space-qualified’’ as a control criterion (See
ECCN 9A515.x.4).
w. The International Space Station being
developed, launched, and operated under the
supervision of the U.S. National Aeronautics
and Space Administration.
x. ‘‘Parts,’’ ‘‘components,’’ ‘‘accessories’’
and ‘‘attachments’’ that are ‘‘specially
designed’’ for the International Space Station.
y. Items that would otherwise be within
the scope of ECCN 9A004.v or .x but that
have been identified in an interagencycleared commodity classification (CCATS)
pursuant to § 748.3(e) as warranting control
in 9A004.y.
*
*
*
*
*
9A515 ‘‘Spacecraft’’ and related
commodities, as follows (see List of
Items Controlled).
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, MT, AT
Control(s)
NS applies to entire
entry, except .e
and .y.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
NS Column 1.
18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
Control(s)
RS applies to entire
entry, except .e
and .y.
RS applies to
9A515.e.
RS applies to
9A515.y, except to
Russia for use in,
with, or for the
International Space
Station (ISS), including launch to
the ISS.
MT applies to microcircuits in 9A515.d
and 9A515.e.2
when ‘‘usable in’’
‘‘missiles’’ for protecting ‘‘missiles’’
against nuclear effects (e.g., Electromagnetic Pulse
(EMP), X-rays,
combined blast and
thermal effects).
MT also applies to
9A515.h when the
total impulse capacity is equal to or
greater than 8.41 ×
105 newton seconds.
AT applies to entire
entry.
Country chart
(see Supp. No. 1 to
part 738)
RS Column 1.
RS Column 2.
China, Russia or Venezuela (see
§ 742.6(a)(7)).
MT Column 1.
AT Column 1.
License Requirement Note: The Commerce
Country Chart is not used for determining
license requirements for commodities
classified in ECCN 9A515.a.1, .a.2, .a.3,
.a.4, and .g. See § 742.6(a)(9), which
specifies that such commodities are subject
to a worldwide license requirement.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740
for a Description of All License Exceptions)
LVS: $1500
GBS: N/A
Special Conditions for STA
STA: (1) Paragraph (c)(1) of License
Exception STA (§ 740.20(c)(1) of the EAR)
may not be used for ‘‘spacecraft’’ in ECCNs
9A515.a.1, .a.2, .a.3, or .a.4, ‘‘sub-orbital
craft,’’ or items in 9A515.g, unless
determined by BIS to be eligible for License
Exception STA in accordance with
§ 740.20(g) (License Exception STA eligibility
requests for certain 9x515 and ‘‘600 series’’
items). (2) License Exception STA may not be
used if the ‘‘spacecraft’’ controlled in ECCN
9A515.a.1, .a.2, .a.3, or .a.4 contains a
separable or removable propulsion system
enumerated in USML Category IV(d)(2) or
USML Category XV(e)(12) and designated
MT. (3) Paragraph (c)(2) of License Exception
STA (§ 740.20(c)(2) of the EAR) may not be
used for any item in 9A515.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: Spacecraft, launch vehicles
and related articles that are enumerated in
the USML, and technical data (including
‘‘software’’) directly related thereto, and all
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
services (including training) directly
related to the integration of any satellite or
spacecraft to a launch vehicle, including
both planning and onsite support, or
furnishing any assistance (including
training) in the launch failure analysis or
investigation for items in ECCN 9A515.a,
are ‘‘subject to the ITAR.’’ All other
‘‘spacecraft,’’ as enumerated below and
defined in § 772.1, are subject to the
controls of this ECCN. See also ECCNs
3A001, 3A002, 3A991, 3A992, 6A002,
6A004, 6A008, and 6A998 for specific
‘‘space-qualified’’ items, 7A004 and 7A104
for star trackers, and 9A004 for the
International Space Station (ISS), the James
Webb Space Telescope (JWST), and
‘‘specially designed’’ ‘‘parts’’ and
‘‘components’’ therefor. See USML
Category XI(c) for controls on certain
‘‘Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuit’’
(‘‘MMIC’’) amplifiers. See ECCN 9A610.g
for pressure suits used for high altitude
aircraft.
Related Definitions: ‘Microcircuit’ means a
device in which a number of passive or
active elements are considered as
indivisibly associated on or within a
continuous structure to perform the
function of a circuit.
Items:
‘‘Spacecraft’’ and other items described in
ECCN 9A515 remain subject to the EAR even
if exported, reexported, or transferred (incountry) with defense articles ‘‘subject to the
ITAR’’ integrated into and included therein
as integral parts of the item. In all other
cases, such defense articles are subject to the
ITAR. For example, a 9A515.a ‘‘spacecraft’’
remains ‘‘subject to the EAR’’ even when it
is exported, reexported, or transferred (incountry) with a ‘‘hosted payload’’ described
in USML Category XV(e)(17) incorporated
therein. In all other cases, a ‘‘hosted payload’’
performing a function described in USML
Category XV(a) always remains a USML item.
The removal of the defense article subject to
the ITAR from the spacecraft is a retransfer
under the ITAR and would require an ITAR
authorization, regardless of the CCL
authorization the spacecraft is exported
under. Additionally, transfer of technical
data regarding the defense article subject to
the ITAR integrated into the spacecraft would
require an ITAR authorization.
a. ‘‘Spacecraft,’’ including satellites, and
space vehicles and ‘‘sub-orbital craft,’’
whether designated developmental,
experimental, research or scientific, not
enumerated in USML Category XV or
described in ECCN 9A004.u or .w, that:
a.1. Have electro-optical remote sensing
capabilities and having a clear aperture
greater than 0.35 meters, but less than or
equal to 0.50 meters;
a.2. Have remote sensing capabilities
beyond NIR (i.e., SWIR, MWIR, or LWIR);
a.3. Have radar remote sensing capabilities
(e.g., AESA, SAR, or ISAR) having a center
frequency equal to or greater than 1.0 GHz,
but less than 10.0 GHz and having a
bandwidth equal to or greater than 100 MHz,
but less than 300 MHz;
a.4. Provide space-based logistics,
assembly, or servicing of another
‘‘spacecraft’’; or
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a.5. Are not described in ECCN 9A515.a.1,
.a.2, .a.3 or .a.4.
Note: ECCN 9A515.a includes commercial
communications satellites, remote sensing
satellites, planetary rovers, planetary and
interplanetary probes, in-space habitats, and
‘‘sub-orbital craft,’’ not identified in ECCN
9A004 or USML Category XV(a).
b. Ground control systems and training
simulators ‘‘specially designed’’ for
telemetry, tracking, and control of the
‘‘spacecraft’’ controlled in paragraphs
9A004.u or 9A515.a.
c. [Reserved]
d. Microelectronic circuits (e.g., integrated
circuits, microcircuits, or MOSFETs) and
discrete electronic components rated,
certified, or otherwise specified or described
as meeting or exceeding all the following
characteristics and that are ‘‘specially
designed’’ for defense articles, ‘‘600 series’’
items, or items controlled by ECCNs 9A004.v
or 9A515:
d.1. A total dose of 5 × 105 Rads (Si) (5 ×
103 Gy (Si));
d.2. A dose rate upset threshold of 5 × 108
Rads (Si)/sec (5 × 106 Gy (Si)/sec);
d.3. A neutron dose of 1 × 1014 n/cm2 (1
MeV equivalent);
d.4. An uncorrected single event upset
sensitivity of 1 × 10¥10 errors/bit/day or less,
for the CRE`ME–MC geosynchronous orbit,
Solar Minimum Environment for heavy ion
flux; and
d.5. An uncorrected single event upset
sensitivity of 1 × 10¥10 errors/part or less for
a fluence of 1 × 107 protons/cm2 for proton
energy greater than 50 MeV.
e. Microelectronic circuits (e.g., integrated
circuits, microcircuits, or MOSFETs) and
discrete electronic components that are rated,
certified, or otherwise specified or described
as meeting or exceeding the characteristics in
either paragraph e.1 or e.2, AND ‘‘specially
designed’’ for defense articles controlled by
USML Category XV or items controlled by
ECCNs 9A004.u or 9A515:
e.1. A total dose ≥1 × 105 Rads (Si) (1 × 103
Gy(Si)) and <5 × 105 Rads (Si) (5 × 103
Gy(Si)); and a single event effect (SEE) (i.e.,
single event latchup (SEL), single event
burnout (SEB), or single event gate rupture
(SEGR)) immunity to a linear energy transfer
(LET) ≥80 MeV-cm2/mg; or
e.2. A total dose ≥5 × 105 Rads (Si) (5 × 103
Gy (Si)) and not described in 9A515.d.
Note 1 to 9A515.d and .e: Application
specific integrated circuits (ASICs),
integrated circuits developed and produced
for a specific application or function,
specifically designed or modified for defense
articles and not in normal commercial use
are controlled by Category XI(c) of the USML
regardless of characteristics.
Note 2 to 9A515.d and .e: See 3A001.a
and .z for controls on radiation-hardened
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:36 Oct 24, 2023
Jkt 262001
microelectronic circuits ‘‘subject to the EAR’’
that are not controlled by 9A515.d or
9A515.e.
f. Pressure suits (i.e., space suits) capable
of operating at altitudes 55,000 feet above sea
level.
g. Remote sensing components ‘‘specially
designed’’ for ‘‘spacecraft’’ described in
ECCNs 9A515.a.1 through 9A515.a.4 as
follows:
g.1. Space-qualified optics (i.e., lens,
mirror, membrane having active properties
(e.g., adaptive, deformable)) with the largest
lateral clear aperture dimension equal to or
less than 0.35 meters; or with the largest clear
aperture dimension greater than 0.35 meters
but less than or equal to 0.50 meters;
g.2. Optical bench assemblies ‘‘specially
designed’’ for ECCN 9A515.a.1, 9A515.a.2,
9A515.a.3, or 9A515.a.4 ‘‘spacecraft;’’ or
g.3. Primary, secondary, or hosted payloads
that perform a function of ECCN 9A515.a.1,
9A515.a.2, 9A515.a.3, or 9A515.a.4
‘‘spacecraft.’’
h. Spacecraft thrusters using bi-propellants
or mono-propellants that provide thrust
equal to or less than 150 lbf (i.e., 667.23 N)
vacuum thrust.
i. through w. [RESERVED]
x. ‘‘Parts,’’ ‘‘components,’’ ‘‘accessories’’
and ‘‘attachments’’ that are ‘‘specially
designed’’ for defense articles controlled by
USML Category XV or items controlled by
9A515, and that are NOT:
x.1. Enumerated or controlled in the USML
or elsewhere within ECCNs 9A515 or 9A004;
x.2. Microelectronic circuits and discrete
electronic components;
x.3. Described in ECCNs 7A004 or 7A104;
x.4. Described in an ECCN containing
‘‘space-qualified’’ as a control criterion (i.e.,
3A001.b.1, 3A001.e.4 or .z, 3A002.g.1,
3A991.o, 3A992.b.3, 6A002.a.1, 6A002.b.2,
6A002.d.1, 6A004.c and .d, 6A008.j.1,
6A998.b, or 7A003.d.2);
x.5. Microwave solid state amplifiers and
microwave assemblies (refer to ECCN
3A001.b.4 and .z for controls on these items);
x.6. Travelling wave tube amplifiers (refer
to ECCN 3A001.b.8 and .z for controls on
these items); or
x.7. Elsewhere specified in ECCN 9A515.y.
Note to 9A515.x: ‘‘Parts,’’ ‘‘components,’’
‘‘accessories,’’ and ‘‘attachments’’ specified
in USML subcategory XV(e) or enumerated in
other USML categories are subject to the
controls of that paragraph or category.
y. Items that would otherwise be within
the scope of ECCN 9A515.x but that have
been identified in an interagency-cleared
commodity classification (CCATS) pursuant
to § 748.3(e) as warranting control in
9A515.y.
y.1. Discrete electronic components not
specified in 9A515.e;
y.2. Space grade or for spacecraft
applications thermistors;
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Sfmt 9990
73517
y.3. Space grade or for spacecraft
applications RF microwave bandpass ceramic
filters (Dielectric Resonator Bandpass
Filters);
y.4. Space grade or for spacecraft
applications hall effect sensors;
y.5. Space grade or for spacecraft
applications subminiature (SMA and SMP)
plugs and connectors, TNC plugs and cable
and connector assemblies with SMA plugs
and connectors; and
y.6. Space grade or for spacecraft
applications flight cable assemblies.
*
*
*
*
*
39. Effective November 17, 2023,
supplement no. 6 to part 774 is
amended by revising paragraphs (3)(i)
introductory text, (3)(ii) introductory
text, and paragraphs (3)(iv) and (v) to
read as follows:
■
Supplement No. 6 to Part 774—
Sensitive List
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Category 3
(i) 3A001.b.2 (including those described
under 3A001.b.2 that are controlled by
3A001.z)—‘‘Monolithic Microwave
Integrated Circuit’’ (‘‘MMIC’’) amplifiers that
are any of the following:
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) 3A001.b.3 (including those described
under 3A001.b.3 that are controlled by
3A001.z)—Discrete microwave transistors
that are any of the following:
*
*
*
*
*
(iv) 3D001—‘‘Software’’ ‘‘specially
designed’’ for the ‘‘development’’ or
‘‘production’’ of equipment controlled under
3A001.b.2, 3A001.b.3, equipment described
under 3A001.b.2 or 3A001.b.3 that are
controlled under 3A001.z, 3A002.g.1, and
equipment described under 3A002.g.2 that
are controlled under 3A002.z.
(v) 3E001—‘‘Technology’’ according to the
General Technology Note for the
‘‘development’’ or ‘‘production’’ of
equipment controlled under 3A001.b.2,
3A001.b.3, equipment described under
3A001.b.2 or 3A001.b.3 that are controlled
under 3A001.z, 3A002.g.1, and equipment
described under 3A002.g.2 that are
controlled under 3A002.z.
*
*
*
*
*
Thea D. Rozman Kendler,
Assistant Secretary for Export
Administration.
[FR Doc. 2023–23055 Filed 10–18–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–33–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 205 (Wednesday, October 25, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 73458-73517]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-23055]
[[Page 73457]]
Vol. 88
Wednesday,
No. 205
October 25, 2023
Part III
Department of Commerce
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Bureau of Industry and Security
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15 CFR Parts 732, 734, 736, et al.
Implementation of Additional Export Controls: Certain Advanced
Computing Items; Supercomputer and Semiconductor End Use; Updates and
Corrections; Interim Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 25, 2023 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 73458]]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Industry and Security
15 CFR Parts 732, 734, 736, 740, 742, 744, 746, 748, 758, 770, 772,
and 774
[Docket No. 231013-0248]
RIN 0694-AI94
Implementation of Additional Export Controls: Certain Advanced
Computing Items; Supercomputer and Semiconductor End Use; Updates and
Corrections
AGENCY: Bureau of Industry and Security, Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Interim final rule; request for comments.
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SUMMARY: On October 7, 2022, the Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS)
released the interim final rule (IFR), ``Implementation of Additional
Export Controls: Certain Advanced Computing and Semiconductor
Manufacturing Items; Supercomputer and Semiconductor End Use; Entity
List Modification'' (October 7 IFR), which amended the Export
Administration Regulations (EAR) to implement controls on advanced
computing integrated circuits (ICs), computer commodities that contain
such ICs, and certain semiconductor manufacturing items, and to make
other EAR changes to implement appropriate related controls, including
on certain ``U.S. person'' activities. This Advanced Computing/
Supercomputing IFR (AC/S IFR) addresses comments received in response
to only the part of the October 7 IFR that controls advanced computing
ICs and computer commodities that contain such ICs. This rule also
makes other changes to make the controls more effective and less
burdensome, including by correcting and clarifying the controls to more
effectively achieve the policy objectives identified in the October 7
IFR. This AC/S IFR is published concurrently with a second BIS IFR,
``Export Controls on Semiconductor Manufacturing Items,'' which
addresses public comments received in response to other portions of the
October 7 IFR. Together, these IFRs revise the October 7 IFR controls
to more effectively achieve BIS's focused national security policy
objectives. These revisions protect U.S. national security interests by
further restricting China's ability to obtain critical technologies to
modernize its military capabilities in ways that threaten the national
security interests of the United States and its allies.
DATES: This rule is effective November 17, 2023, except for amendatory
instruction 11 amending supplement no. 1 to part 736 of the EAR, which
is effective from November 17, 2023, to January 1, 2026.
Comments must be received by BIS no later than December 18, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments on this rule may be submitted to the Federal
rulemaking portal (www.regulations.gov). The regulations.gov ID for
this rule is: BIS-2022-0025. Please refer to RIN 0694-AI94 in all
comments.
All filers using the portal should use the name of the person or
entity submitting the comments as the name of their files, in
accordance with the instructions below. Anyone submitting business
confidential information should clearly identify the business
confidential portion at the time of submission, file a statement
justifying nondisclosure and referring to the specific legal authority
claimed, and provide a non-confidential version of the submission.
For comments submitted electronically containing business
confidential information, the file name of the business confidential
version should begin with the characters ``BC.'' Any page containing
business confidential information must be clearly marked ``BUSINESS
CONFIDENTIAL'' on the top of that page. The corresponding non-
confidential version of those comments must be clearly marked
``PUBLIC.'' The file name of the non-confidential version should begin
with the character ``P.'' Any submissions with file names that do not
begin with either a ``BC'' or a ``P'' will be assumed to be public and
will be made publicly available through https://www.regulations.gov.
Commenters submitting business confidential information are encouraged
to scan a hard copy of the non-confidential version to create an image
of the file, rather than submitting a digital copy with redactions
applied, to avoid inadvertent redaction errors which could enable the
public to read business confidential information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For questions on the license
requirements in the October 7 IFR or the revisions included in this AC/
S IFR, contact Aaron Amundson, Director, Information Technology
Controls Division, Bureau of Industry and Security, Department of
Commerce, Phone: (202) 482-5299, Email: [email protected]. For emails,
include ``Advanced computing controls'' in the subject line.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
A. Introduction
On October 7, 2022, BIS released the interim final rule (IFR),
``Implementation of Additional Export Controls: Certain Advanced
Computing and Semiconductor Manufacturing Items; Supercomputer and
Semiconductor End Use; Entity List Modification,'' which made critical
changes to the Export Administration Regulations (15 CFR parts 730-774)
(EAR) in two areas to address U.S. national security concerns and
requested public comments on the newly imposed measures. This IFR was
published in the Federal Register on October 13, 2022 (October 7 IFR)
(87 FR 62186). BIS imposed these new controls to protect U.S. national
security interests by restricting certain exports to China that would
advance China's military modernization and surveillance efforts. With a
calibrated approach, focused on key, cutting-edge technologies, BIS
also sought not to undercut U.S. technology leadership or unduly
interfere with commercial trade. As noted in the Export Control Reform
Act of 2018 (50 U.S.C. 4801-4852, ECRA), the national security of the
United States requires that the United States maintain its leadership
in the science, technology, engineering, and manufacturing sectors,
including technology that is essential to innovation.
The advanced computing ICs and supercomputing capacity controlled
through the October 7 IFR are critical for preventing or limiting the
further development of weapons of mass destruction, advanced weapons
systems, and high-tech surveillance applications that create national
security concerns, including through their use in exascale
supercomputing, and artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities. Advanced
AI models, trained on advanced computing ICs, can be used to improve
the design and use of the items listed above. The PRC seeks to use
advanced computing ICs and supercomputing capacity in the development
and deployment of these AI models to further its goal of surpassing the
military capabilities of the United States and its allies.
The October 7 IFR imposed controls on two sets of items and
activities. First, the rule established new Export Control
Classification Numbers (ECCNs) and end-use controls on certain advanced
computing ICs, computer commodities that contain such ICs, and
supercomputers. Second, it established a new ECCN for certain
semiconductor manufacturing equipment (SME) and
[[Page 73459]]
end-use controls related to the ``development'' and ``production'' of
three types of ``advanced-node ICs,'' as well as end-use controls on
the ``development'' and ``production'' of SME.
Today, BIS addresses these two issues separately through
publication of this AC/S IFR and a second BIS IFR, ``Export Controls on
Semiconductor Manufacturing Items'' (SME IFR). Together, these IFRs
further advance the U.S. national security objectives identified above
and further discussed in section C of this rule. This AC/S IFR focuses
on the advanced computing controls and related end use provisions of
the October 7 IFR and amends the EAR to expand the scope of the October
7 IFR while responding to comments from stakeholders about the advanced
computing controls and related end use controls adopted in the October
7 IFR. This AC/S IFR: (1) revises ECCN 3A090 to remove paragraph a,
including paragraphs a.1 through a.4, and adds in its place simplified
control paragraphs .a and .b, along with a conforming change to ECCN
3A991.p; (2) replaces the criterion ``any other item on CCL that meet
or exceed the performance parameters of 3A090 or 4A090'' by positively
identifying those ECCNs in new .z paragraphs in nine ECCNs, along with
various conforming changes related to the new .z paragraphs in other
parts of the EAR; (3) clarifies the scope of ``U.S. person'' and end-
use controls related to supercomputers and advanced computing items;
(4) makes ECCNs 3A991.p and 4A994.l eligible for License Exception
Consumer Communication Devices (CCD, 15 CFR 740.19); (5) expands the
Regional Stability (RS) license requirements and amends the RS
licensing policy to adopt an additional case-by-case license review
policy for certain RS items and adopts a presumption of approval for
license applications for destinations other than Macau and Country
Group D:5, except for items destined to an entity headquartered in or
whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5 and with licenses for items
destined to Macau and Country Group D:5 being reviewed under a
presumption of denial license review policy; (6) broadens the country
scope for these controls, with respect to the items controlled for RS
reasons as well as the advanced computing Foreign Direct Product (FDP)
rule and advanced computing provisions in Sec. 744.23, to destinations
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5 in supplement no. 1 to
part 740 that are not also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, and
with respect to the supercomputer and advanced-node integrated circuit
Sec. 744.23 provisions, broadens the country scope from China and
Macau to Macau and destinations in Country Group D:5; (7) clarifies
that the model certificate published in the October 7 IFR may be used
for all FDP rules; (8) adds five new red flags to assist with
compliance, including for recognizing ``direct products'' under the FDP
rules; (9) adds one new Temporary General License (TGL); (10) creates a
new license exception for Notified Advanced Computing (NAC); and (11)
makes other corrections and clarifications.
B. Public Comments and BIS's Responses
BIS received 43 responsive public comments, covering 78 specific
topics, in response to the October 7 IFR. This rule summarizes and
addresses comments on the advanced computing provisions, as well as
general comments applicable to all aspects of the October 7 IFR that
are not otherwise addressed in this SME IFR. BIS appreciates the many
public comments it received, and encourages continued engagement and
feedback, including comments on the SME and AC/S IFRs which allow for a
60-day comment period and, for most provisions, a 30-day delayed
effective date.
Complexity and Compliance Burden
Topic 1: A commenter noted that the October 7 IFR is so complex
that only a small group of people with significant expertise in the EAR
and semiconductors can fully understand the rulemaking. This commenter
noted that many small and medium enterprises, or even large foreign
multinationals, not highly versed in these details will either not know
if they are following the rule, or out of an abundance of caution,
``over-comply'' by restricting legitimate exports and trade not
otherwise subject to these rules. Another commenter noted that ensuring
compliance will result in dramatic increases in compliance-related
costs and associated burdens. This commenter noted that the number of
specific components, other commodities, software, and technology
affected by the new rules is in the tens of millions, and each item
requires marking, analysis, or other handling to ensure compliance.
Another commenter noted that this complexity may result in
misunderstandings and non-compliance, so simpler controls are more
effective in furthering BIS's objectives.
BIS response: BIS does not agree that the rules are so complex that
only a handful of people with expertise will be able to understand the
controls. Nevertheless, BIS is revising the October 7 IFR to facilitate
the public's understanding of the IFR and to simplify the provisions,
e.g., changing the text of ECCN 3A090 to simplify the calculations
required. BIS has taken into account the commenters' concerns over
increases in compliance-related controls and associated burdens and
made changes in this AC/S IFR to make the controls more focused, which
should help reduce these burdens and compliance costs where possible.
In addition, Section C.10 discusses changes to enhance compliance,
including the addition of five new red flags to assist with compliance.
BIS has conducted a robust outreach program and posted FAQs on the
October 7 IFR to assist public understanding. Reducing complexity and
improving clarity are also two key objectives of this AC/S IFR and the
SME IFR.
Topic 2: A member of Congress noted that they had been told by one
of their constituents that the October 7 IFR is overly broad in its
current form and will damage and disrupt both American industry and
global semiconductor supply chains by excluding basic U.S. products
that are not subject to specific export controls. This commenter has
also been assured by their constituent that the resulting vacuum will
be filled by foreign-produced products, including those made in China.
This member of Congress shares BIS's stated goal of protecting
``critical U.S. national security and foreign policy interests.''
However, this member of Congress believes that we must ensure these
regulations are focused and do not extend beyond their intended
national security objectives.
BIS response: BIS shares concerns about imposing unilateral
controls that create an unlevel playing field for U.S. products and
companies. BIS intends the controls to be as focused as possible, while
at the same time achieving U.S. national security and foreign policy
objectives. One example is adding .z paragraphs to nine ECCNs in order
to replace the broad regional stability control for all items that
contain ``advanced-node ICs,'' see discussion in Section C.3.A. BIS is
adopting additional changes to better achieve these objectives in this
AC/S IFR and in the SME IFR.
[[Page 73460]]
Dialogue With Industry for the October 7 IFR, Taking Into Account
Potential Burden to Industry, Unintended Consequences, and Economic
Impacts
Topic 3: Some commenters noted that taking time to have meaningful
engagement with industry will help head off unintended consequences.
These commenters noted that while there will be emergencies that
require swift action without time for industry consultation, the U.S.
government, and particularly BIS, should endeavor to conduct meaningful
engagement with industry and relevant Technical Advisory Committees
(TACs) whenever possible. These commenters emphasized it is critical
that BIS prioritize and meaningfully leverage this engagement when a
rule of this breadth and complexity is under consideration, including
prior to publishing a final rule for the October 7 IFR. These
commenters noted that given the complexity of the October 7 IFR and the
global supply chain, BIS should conduct in-depth consultations with
industry experts--both in semiconductor companies and more broadly in
industries that incorporate semiconductors--in advance of releasing a
final rule. Another commenter noted that the economic analysis that
needs to be done for the impact of this October 7 IFR and similar rules
requires industry input.
BIS response: BIS agrees that having meaningful engagement with
industry through the BIS TACs and soliciting public comments prior to
implementing controls is beneficial for the agency as well as the
private sector and can reduce unintended consequences. BIS also agrees
that it is important to obtain input on the economic impact of export
controls. BIS's primary objective is protecting U.S. national security
and foreign policy interests, so at times the agency must act quickly
and decisively to ensure those national security and foreign policy
interests are protected. For the October 7 IFR, BIS did consult with
its TACs, but the national security and foreign policy concerns at
stake required that controls be put in place expeditiously. Because BIS
was aware that there may be some unintended impacts from the October 7
IFR, BIS published the October 7 IFR as an interim final rule with a
request for comments, which allowed for BIS in this AC/S IFR and SME
IFR to make additional changes to the control structure and address
some of those unintended consequences. Since the rule was published,
BIS has engaged extensively with its TACs to revise the control
parameters of ECCN 3A090.
Topic 4: A commenter noted that longer delayed effective dates
would ease company confusion and help improve compliance. This
commenter suggested that BIS consider implementing such rules in the
future with a delayed implementation period to allow for industry to
study the rules and implement effective compliance programs. This
approach would have significantly avoided the unintended confusion that
this new complex rule created. One commenter noted that BIS would have
benefitted from having more time to consider the October 7 IFR prior to
publication and noted that based on this commenter's interactions with
BIS shortly after the October 7 IFR was published, BIS did not seem
ready to advise the public on its own rule.
BIS response: In this AC/S IFR and SME IFR, BIS is adopting a 30-
day delayed effective date, except as noted in the AC/S IFR and SME IFR
where a sooner effective date is warranted. BIS agrees that longer
delayed effective dates can ease confusion by companies and help
improve compliance, but BIS also needs to account for the national
security and foreign policy concerns it is addressing. An extended
delayed effective date can undermine those national security and
foreign policy concerns. For example, a six-month delayed effective
date for the October 7 IFR would have provided additional time for
outreach and for companies to adjust to the controls, but that six
month delay would have also allowed end users in China substantial time
to acquire key pieces of SME needed to help them achieve advanced nodes
of semiconductor fabrication and to stockpile various ``parts'' and
``components'' needed for future development of supercomputers. BIS
acted expeditiously in imposing controls because of national security
and foreign policy concerns. In addition, to better enable compliance
and understanding of the rule, the agency provided FAQs to the public
(which were updated as needed), conducted a public hour-long briefing
on the rule by BIS leadership the day of publication, and extended the
public comment period for the October 7 IFR to enable industry to raise
concerns for the agency's consideration. To ensure BIS was providing
fulsome public guidance, the agency also held internal training for
staff responsible for primary public interactions. BIS takes this type
of deliberative approach to ensure, as much as possible, that there is
consistency and accuracy in the responses being given to the public.
Topic 5: A commenter noted that in the past, BIS had sought
industry input prior to publishing rules and should return to that
practice. This commenter noted that until recent years, it had been the
long-standing practice for BIS to obtain technical and other inputs
from both the public and the TACs before publishing rules (other than
those implementing new controls agreed to with the multilateral
regimes) given that there is much about commercial supply chains,
technologies, and economics that the U.S. Government does not fully
understand.
BIS response: This commenter may be referring to agency practice
during Export Control Reform (ECR), during which the Departments of
Commerce and State generally published related rules on a proposed
basis. At that time, the items that were being proposed to be moved to
the EAR were already controlled under the ITAR, so there was not the
same urgent national security imperative as was present with the
October 7 IFR. Before that time, the vast majority of BIS's rules were
published as direct final or interim final rules. Accordingly, the
commenter is not correct that recently BIS has deviated from past
precedent. Since ECR, BIS has continued to publish notices and proposed
rules, such as with the Section 1758 rules (other than those
implementing multilateral agreements). When BIS has needed to quickly
implement controls for national security or foreign policy reasons, BIS
has published interim final rules with requests for public comment to
gain public input while simultaneously allowing the agency to impose
needed controls, and if necessary, amend those controls in response to
public comment, as BIS is doing in this AC/S IFR. The imposition of
controls without first issuing a proposed rule is consistent with BIS's
statutory authority in ECRA, enacted in 2018, and is thus another
distinction from rules promulgated before 2018.
Other Ways That BIS Can Consult With Industry To Better Improve the
Effectiveness of Policies in This Area
Topic 6: A commenter requested that BIS should publish, or at least
make available for TAC review, the policy justifications for current
Category 3 and 4 controls. BIS is increasingly asking industry for
input on significant new controls related to semiconductors and
associated technology in Categories 3 and 4 and to provide effective
feedback and assessment, and it would be helpful to understand the
specific policy rationale for new and existing control classifications.
Another commenter requested if required by Congress or other parties to
publicly release
[[Page 73461]]
licensing data surrounding the October 7 IFR, that BIS should strive to
provide the most complete data possible, while still protecting
confidential business information. This commenter requested that the
data should include statistics on licenses that (i) are still pending
review, (ii) received an ``intent to deny'' response, (iii) were
``returned without action,'' and (iv) issued with restrictive
conditions. The data on approvals and denials should also be connected
to what the licensing policy is for such items and when those licensing
policies were created.
BIS response: This comment is somewhat outside the scope of the
October 7 IFR, but BIS is addressing it given its relevance to overall
controls. BIS understands the commenter's intent by asking for this
type of engagement with the TACs. BIS does attempt to share background
information on how controls developed over the years as well as the
basis and policy goals of those controls with the BIS TACs,
particularly during closed TAC sessions. BIS subject matter experts and
its TACs are also encouraged to take a fresh look at the controls on a
regular basis regardless of what the original rationale may have been
for imposing controls. Similarly, whether in response to a proposed
rule or IFR, the agency seeks the public's input on controls so that
the public can help assess whether policy goals are being met. BIS has
made every effort to share open source information related to its
policy objectives for this rule and the SME IFR as part of this
rulemaking.
In response to the comment that the agency should release specific
information to the public or Congress, BIS notes that, with limited
exceptions related to requests from Congressional committees of
appropriate jurisdiction, the agency is required by statute to withhold
from disclosure certain categories of information absent a
determination that the release is in the U.S. national interest. That
statutory restriction on release is intended to protect the business
confidential information noted by the commenter. BIS agrees that when
such licensing data is released, it will provide an accurate account of
the relevant licensing information.
Topic 7: A commenter noted that ECRA section 1765 (50 U.S.C. 4824)
requires BIS to submit to Congress by the end of the year a report on
the implementation of ECRA during the previous year. Subsection (a)(2)
requires that the annual report include a description of ``the impact
of [all that year's] controls on the scientific and technological
leadership of the United States.'' In addition, ECRA section 1752(1)
(50 U.S.C. 4811(1)) states that the United States should ``use export
controls only after full consideration of the impact on the economy of
the United States.'' Similarly, ECRA section 1752(3) states that the
impact of the implementation of new controls on U.S. leadership and
competitiveness ``must be evaluated on an ongoing basis and applied in
imposing controls . . . to avoid negatively affecting such
leadership.'' This commenter believes that it is important for BIS to
obtain formal industry input on this specific topic so that its report
to Congress is accurate and complete.
BIS response: BIS agrees that it may be beneficial to allow for
public input to assist BIS in preparing this annual report. BIS intends
in the next annual cycle for this report to publish a notice to solicit
comments in the area. BIS will then evaluate the amount and type of
public input provided to the agency to determine if continuing to
publish this type of notice is worthwhile in the future.
Free Trade, Addressing U.S. Relationship With China, and Benefits From
Trade With China
Topic 8: A commenter requested that especially at a time when U.S.-
China relations are fraught, we should aim to strengthen ties and
increase cooperation to reduce the risk of military conflict and to
allow the United States and the whole world to benefit from the fruits
of our shared innovations.
BIS response: The U.S. Government works with China in multiple ways
to reduce tensions and find areas in which the two governments can work
together. Where the policies of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) run
counter to U.S. national security and foreign policy interests, the
U.S. Government takes appropriate actions to address its concerns,
including by ensuring that items subject to the EAR are not used to
assist CCP military advancement.
Topic 9: A commenter noted that trade with China brings many
important benefits to the U.S. economy and American workers. This
commenter noted that advanced U.S. manufacturers of all sizes and their
American business partners and consumers have benefitted from globally
integrated supply chains that have improved efficiency and lowered
production costs for U.S. firms. Revenues generated in China are often
reinvested in global and U.S. research and development (R&D)
activities, which in turn allows U.S. companies to maintain their
competitive edge over PRC and foreign competition. Another commenter
noted a belief that the October 7 IFR is counter to U.S. free trade
advocacy and could boomerang negatively on the United States if China
retaliates with similar trade restrictions.
BIS response: BIS agrees with the importance of continued trade
with China. China's military-civil fusion policy has made it much more
challenging for the U.S. Government, as well as exporters, reexporters,
and transferors, to be able to clearly identify items and transactions
that will be only for civil end uses. BIS has tried to address this
circumstance by imposing focused controls. Focused controls can be more
complex than the imposition of broad controls (such as on an entire
country), but BIS has adopted focused controls to restrict trade as
necessary for national security or foreign policy reasons while not
impairing trade for civil applications.
Regarding the comment that the October 7 IFR is counter to U.S.
free trade advocacy and could lead to the imposition of trade controls
by China, BIS notes the national security and foreign policy reasons
described in that rule as the reasons for the imposition of those
controls. See 87 FR 62186-88 (noting, among other things, China's use
of advanced computers for its military modernization efforts, military
decision making, planning, and logistics, cognitive electronic warfare,
radar, signals intelligence, and jamming, as well as China's use of
supercomputers to improve calculations in weapons design and testing
including for WMD such as nuclear weapons and hypersonics and other
advanced missile systems). These controls were not implemented as
protective trade measures, but rather were imposed to protect U.S.
national security. BIS is aware of and takes into account concerns
about the implications of imposing controls, but those concerns cannot
deter BIS from taking actions to protect U.S. national security and
foreign policy interests.
Importance of Regular Review of These Controls To Achieve the National
Security and Foreign Policy Objectives Outlined in the October 7 IFR,
and for Consistency With ECRA
Topic 10: A commenter noted that ECRA requires that any controls
imposed under section 4812, which include end-use controls, ``must be
evaluated on an ongoing basis . . . to avoid negatively affecting U.S.
leadership in the science, technology, engineering, and manufacturing
sectors, including foundational technology that is essential to
innovation.'' ECRA section 4811(3). The commenter noted that the
October 7 IFR needs to be
[[Page 73462]]
reviewed regularly. Another commenter noted that the October 7 IFR
demonstrates a significant U.S. policy shift, as articulated by U.S.
National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, that the previous U.S.
``sliding scale approach . . . to stay only a couple of generations
ahead . . . is not the strategic environment we are in today.'' Yet,
the United States will struggle to maintain ``as large a lead as
possible'' if the government pursues a unilateral approach that
alienates allies and trading partners and restricts companies from
selling consumer technologies worldwide.
BIS response: BIS intends, consistent with all export controls
administered under the EAR, to review the controls from the October 7
IFR on a regular basis to determine if any updates are needed to make
those controls more effective. Since the October 7 IFR was announced,
BIS has been reviewing these controls, not just in response to the
public comments received, but also based on BIS's experience in
administering and enforcing the controls, as well as discussions with
allies. These considerations have resulted in the changes made to the
October 7 IFR included in this AC/S IFR and SME IFR. BIS will continue
to review these controls on an ongoing basis and make changes as
warranted, including to controls that use specified control parameters
that over time may need to be reevaluated. BIS notes that National
Security Advisor Sullivan's remarks provide an example of the
Administration previewing policy and related controls and are
responsive to other comments requesting this type of guidance.
Consistent with the policy described by National Security Adviser
Sullivan, the October 7 IFR controls resulted from the speed of the
technological advancements that could be leveraged for the most
sensitive national security activities, as well as furthering human
rights violations. The controls established in the October 7 IFR and
these rules are needed to address the current national security threats
presented by China.
Agrees With the National Security and Foreign Policy Concerns
Identified in the October 7 IFR for Why These Changes Were Needed
Topic 11: A commenter noted that monitoring the production of more
supercomputers and AI will benefit the world at large. The commenter
sees the October 7 IFR as the best option for national security and
regional stability purposes because it addresses the military use of
these computers. If these AI and supercomputers are left unmonitored,
they may fall into the wrong hands and become a threat to the world at
large.
BIS response: BIS agrees.
Topic 12: A commenter noted that given the likely importance of AI
capabilities to national security and economic prosperity, the
commenter expects significant pressure for China to stay at the
frontier of AI. The commenter noted that all viable paths for doing so
may be explored. This pressure will mount over time, as the importance
of AI technology grows and as the AI-relevant ICs produced outside of
China outpace the technology to which AI-developers in China, including
the People's Liberation Army (PLA), have access. Another commenter
noted that the October 7 IFR chip controls were implemented to prevent
human rights abuses and protect international security interests by
making it more difficult for the government of China to attain advanced
AI capabilities. This commenter noted that the use of these
supercomputers to monitor the activities of PRC citizens is
inappropriate and this is why the October 7 IFR is the best option.
BIS response: BIS acknowledges both comments and takes PRC human
rights abuses seriously. China has been transparent about its military-
civil fusion (MCF) strategy and the importance it places on advanced AI
as part of MCF. China has already demonstrated on numerous occasions
how it has been leveraging advanced technologies against its own
people. See, e.g., 84 FR 54002 (Oct. 2, 2019) (adding Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region (XUAR) People's Government Public Security Bureau,
eighteen of its subordinate municipal and county bureaus, and several
other entities in China to the Entity List because they were implicated
in human rights violations and abuses in the implementation of China's
campaign of repression, mass arbitrary detention, and high-technology
surveillance against Uighurs, Kazakhs, and other members of Muslim
minority groups in the XUAR).
U.S. CHIPS Act and Sufficiency of Existing Company Compliance Programs
Topic 13: A commenter noted that the U.S. CHIPS Act will help keep
the United States in the lead for semiconductors. The U.S. CHIPS Act,
which appropriated over $52 billion to shore up the semiconductor
ecosystem in the United States, will enable continued U.S. leadership
in leading-edge semiconductors and SME, and help preserve the large
technological differential vis-[agrave]-vis China.
BIS response: The October 7 IFR was designed to address the U.S.
national security and foreign policy concerns with China over acquiring
these capabilities and their use in WMD-related applications. BIS
agrees that the U.S. CHIPS Act is important for helping to promote U.S.
to maintain its leadership in semiconductors. The most comprehensive
and effective policy both restricts key technologies from China where
needed to address national security and foreign policy concerns and
promotes U.S. and allied country technology leadership.
Topic 14: A commenter noted that companies' sophisticated export
compliance programs should mitigate the need for additional controls.
This commenter noted that many U.S. companies--as well as multinational
companies from U.S. allied countries and partners with a U.S.
presence--have longstanding, sophisticated export control compliance
programs to acquire export licenses and ensure that their products and
processes are not facilitating the technological development of items
by a sanctioned entity, military end user, or military end use.
BIS response: BIS notes that compliance programs are designed to
follow the rules as they are written. While BIS applauds efforts by
companies to conduct extensive due diligence, this does not replace the
need for regulations addressing national security and foreign policy
concerns.
China Will Obtain the Items it Needs Regardless of U.S. Controls
Topic 15: A commenter noted that research indicates that China's
military systems primarily rely on older and less sophisticated chips
made in China, on which U.S. export controls will have limited effect.
The commenter noted should China require more advanced chips for AI-
driven systems, they will likely be able to develop and produce them--
at significant cost and on a slower timeline.
BIS response: Certain PRC weapons systems may not rely on the most
advanced ICs. However, for the most advanced weapons systems such as
hypersonic missiles or for super computers that are used to make more
advanced WMD or design and produce more advanced weapons systems,
advanced ICs are critical to PRC efforts.
Topic 16: A commenter noted that restricting U.S. persons in
assisting China's advanced semiconductor manufacturing is not going to
be enough. This commenter noted that
[[Page 73463]]
some U.S. persons working in financial institutions (e.g., venture
capital and private equity) help China to invest in the semiconductor
industry and help PRC companies obtain semiconductor talent,
intellectual property, and equipment from all over the world.
BIS response: BIS shares these concerns that certain actors will
try to evade the regulations imposed through the October 7 IFR and
these rules. These concerns underpinned the October 7 IFR controls such
as the expanded ``U.S. persons'' control under Sec. 744.6, two new end
use controls under Sec. 744.23, and the two new foreign direct product
rules and expanded Entity List FDP rule under Sec. 734.9. To address
concerns around U.S. investment, the Administration issued Executive
Order 14105 that will address outbound investment from the United
States.
China and Macau Retaliation To Gain Greater Market Share for PRC
Indigenous Companies Worldwide and PRC Companies Filling the Void Left
by U.S. Companies
Topic 17: A commenter's association members expressed concern that
one unintended consequence of the October 7 IFR may be that China will
increase its production of legacy node semiconductors and flood global
markets with those products at significantly reduced prices.
BIS response: While the October 7 IFR was not intended to impact
legacy node semiconductors in China, BIS acknowledges the possibility
that these controls may generate spillover effects. The type of concern
described in the comment relate to issues to be addressed through other
authorities and forums and are outside of BIS's authorities.
Topic 18: A commenter noted that the October 7 IFR has given a
significant boost to China's own materials suppliers.
BIS response: BIS is aware that the restrictions imposed under the
October 7 IFR may give PRC indigenous providers an opportunity to try
to fill potential new voids in the market. The October 7 controls, in
particular the CCL controls, were intended to impose license
requirements on key gateway items that PRC entities would need but
which are not indigenously manufactured in China. BIS intends to
continue to monitor such developments and adjust its controls as
warranted. BIS encourages the public to provide specific information on
PRC indigenous capabilities in comments responding to this AC/S IFR and
SME IFR. See section D question 5.
ECCN 3A090
Topic 19: A commenter noted that there needs to be guidance on the
circumstances in which controls extend to components controlled under
ECCNs 4A003.b and 3A090.a. The commenter noted that ECCN 4A003.b
already controls ICs with the 4A003.b characteristics of 29 Weighted
TeraFLOPS (WT), soon to be 70 WT. In addition, 4A090 controls devices
with ICs exceeding 4800 bits x TOPS. The commenter noted that there is
no guidance as to which of these two limits is to apply to license
applications for export to China. This commenter also noted that ECCN
4A003.b (Adjusted Peak Performance (APP) exceeding 29 WT) already
covers the much higher, by an order of magnitude, 4A090.a license
requirement limit, with no guidance as to which of these limits is to
apply to license applications for export to China. The commenter notes
that these differences present inconsistencies in the EAR.
BIS response: The APP formula in ECCN 4A003 and the bits x TOPS
metric (now modified to a TPP metric) in ECCN 3A090 apply to different
commodities. ECCNs 3A090 and 4A090 control items based on the
performance of a single chip, while the APP formula in ECCN 4A003
describes aggregate performance across multiple chips. However, BIS
acknowledges that a computer or component could exceed the performance
parameters of both ECCNs 4A003.b and 4A090 or 3A090. The October 7 IFR
accounted for this possibility by applying controls to items classified
on the Commerce Control List (CCL) other than under ECCNs 4A090/3A090
that meet or exceed the 4A090/3A090 performance thresholds. This AC/S
IFR clarifies this issue by adding a .z ``items'' paragraph to ECCN
4A003 to control items that meet or exceed ECCN 4A090 specifications.
This change is intended to provide clear guidance regarding the
relationship between ECCNs 4A090 and 4A003.b and .z.
Topic 20: A commenter had a question on interpreting Technical Note
2 under ECCN 3A090. The commenter noted that the term ``bit-
manipulation operations, and/or bitwise operations'' seems susceptible
of a broad interpretation including any kind of data processing, and
questioned whether this was the intent. The commenter asked how
exporters should think about classifying a component for a router or a
switch that meets or exceeds the technical control parameters under
ECCN 3A090 but which would otherwise be classified under an ECCN in
Category 5, Part 1 or Part 2.
BIS response: The October 7 controls were not intended to apply to
telecommunications equipment or parts and components designed for
telecommunications equipment. For example, 4A090 is in Category 4,
which applies to computers. BIS would not classify a router or switch
in Category 4. Therefore, a router or switch that meets the control
parameters of 4A090 would not be subject to these controls. Category 5
Part 2 could capture some of these items, because that category also
applies to general purpose computing equipment with encryption
functionality.
Topic 21: A commenter noted that with respect to the ``aggregate
bidirectional transfer rate'' provision of 3A090, BIS should
incorporate either an additional technical note in the CCL under 3A090,
or a definition of ``aggregate bidirectional transfer rate'' with a
specific explanation of how this rate is calculated over all inputs and
outputs in part 772.
BIS response: BIS retains this parameter in the revised ECCN 3A090
included in this AC/S IFR. For greater clarity, including for providing
greater clarity on how to apply the criterion of ``aggregate
bidirectional transfer rate,'' the AC/S IFR revises the Technical Notes
to 3A090 by removing the five technical notes and replacing those with
four technical notes. Most importantly, this AC/S IFR replaces bits x
TOPS with `Total processing performance' (`TPP') values and defines
objective criteria that can be used to calculate the TPP value. See
section C.1. below for additional information on the revision to these
technical notes.
Topic 22: A commenter noted that for ECCN 3A090 and programmable
ICs, there is no inherent communications or calculations capability.
The commenter requested that BIS issue guidance on how to (1) address
this complex calculation/interpretation theoretical performance
situation, perhaps via a practical manual, and (2) leverage metrics
from other programmable device ECCNs that are already on the CCL, such
as under 3A001.a.7, 3A991.d, or others.
BIS response: The rewrite of ECCN 3A090 included in this rule
addresses this comment. BIS, in consultation with its Information
Systems Technical Advisory Committee (ISTAC), considered compiling a
practitioner's guide but ultimately decided that changing the text of
ECCN 3A090 to simplify the calculation was a better approach.
Topic 23: A commenter noted that performance parameter calculations
[[Page 73464]]
stated in ECCN 3A090 are unclear and requested further guidance, such
as a formula or additional details regarding the types of performance
parameters that need to be included in the calculations.
BIS response: BIS agrees. This AC/S IFR includes a revision to ECCN
3A090 to adopt alternative control parameters to address the concerns
identified by the commenters.
Topic 24: A commenter noted that guidance needs to be provided on
how to calculate the 3A090 TOPS Performance Metric. ECCN 3A090
introduces a new performance metric, TOPS (trillions of operations per
second). The commenter noted that undertaking a TOPS determination is
difficult because the definition of TOPS relies on the term
``operations.'' The word ``operations'' is not defined in the October 7
IFR and does not have a consistent industry definition.
BIS response: BIS agrees that there is ambiguity in the TOPS
calculation. For this reason, BIS has amended the text of ECCN 3A090.
This AC/S IFR replaces bits x TOPS with `Total processing performance'
(`TPP') values and defines objective criteria that can be used to
calculate the TPP value in ECCN 3A090. BIS worked closely with its
ISTAC in developing this updated technical note.
ECCN 4A090
Topic 25: A commenter noted that ECCN 4A090 creates a ``see
through'' rule similar to something found in the State Department's
International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) that is too broad for
a civilian end item that happens to include even a single IC classified
as 3A090. This commenter noted that consistent with Sec. 770.2(b)(1),
computers and electronic assemblies that incorporate a single IC
classified as 3A090 should be excluded from the 4A090 control if the
physical incorporation is not used to evade the requirement for a
license.
BIS response: BIS does not agree. The structure of ECCN 4A090.a is
needed to ensure that incorporation of ECCN 3A090 items into higher
level items is not conducted to circumvent the intent of the 3A090
controls. BIS also notes that this is not a ``see through'' rule
because the high level computer, ``electronic assembly'' or
``component'' is still classified under 4A090. The incorporation of the
3A090 commodity changes the technical characteristics of those
referenced items, which leads to control under 4A090 instead of other
CCL entries. This structure is not new to Category 4. To calculate the
APP value for a 4A994 computer, an exporter has to determine the APP
value of the CPU. Exporters must apply the same analysis to 4A090.
Topic 26: A commenter requested BIS should confirm that an
appliance would not be considered a ``computer'' for purposes of ECCN
4A090. BIS also should confirm that a printed circuit board specially
designed for such appliance would not be considered an ``electronic
assembly'' for purposes of ECCN 4A090.
BIS response: For control under ECCN 4A090, an item must be a
general purpose computer. For example, BIS does not classify network
security appliances or DNA sequencing appliances in Category 4. When
evaluating such systems, exporters should determine the classification
of the item without regard to whether it contains a 3A090 IC or has
encryption functionality. If the appliance would be controlled in
Category 4, then 4A090 controls would likely apply.
Topic 27: A commenter noted the ECCN 4E001 has an NS control that
is likely not intended and should be corrected. This technology in ECCN
4E001 is now subject to both RS and NS1 controls, even though the
discussion in the October 7 IFR focuses only on RS controls. The
application of NS1 controls creates new authorization requirements
(including deemed export requirements) for all countries except Canada.
The commenter requests that BIS revise ECCN 4E001 to exclude technology
for commodities controlled by 4A090 or software specified by 4D090 from
the NS1 controls.
BIS response: BIS agrees the NS control was not intended. This AC/S
IFR makes this correction.
Topic 28: A commenter requested BIS revise ECCN 4E001 to remove
control of ``use'' technology for 4A090. The commenter noted that this
appears to be over-controlled and beyond the intent of the October 7
IFR. The October 7 IFR imposes controls on the technology for the
``development,'' ``production,'' and ``use'' of 4A090 items controlled
under 4E001, but only imposes controls on the ``development'' or
``production'' of 3A090 items controlled under 3E001--but not the
``use'' technology of 3A090. This results in the technology to ``use''
a 4A090 computer part (which happens to have a 3A090 IC onboard) having
higher controls than the ``use'' technology of the 3A090 IC itself. The
commenter noted that this approach appears to be inconsistent as
applied to other, more-controlled items.
BIS response: BIS agrees. This AC/S IFR revises ECCN 4E001.a to add
an exclusion for technology for the ``use'' of a 4A003 computer.
Topic 29: A commenter requests that BIS issue a FAQ or regulatory
clarification on the classification of ECCN 4E001 technology when 3A090
or 4A090 are applicable. The commenter noted what it believes is a
growing body of ambiguity that stems from the ``see through'' nature of
3A090 items incorporated into the higher-level 4A090 items and the
impacts that has on associated technology. Exporters are in a quandary
reading 4E001, which controls the technology for the ``development,''
``production,'' or ``use'' of 4A090.
BIS response: Under ECCN 4E001 for 4A090 commodities, BIS controls
technology that is ``required'' for the computer achieving or exceeding
the 3A090 parameters. In some cases, this may occur through a
relatively unsophisticated step, such as inserting a card in a slot in
the computer, which BIS would consider to be ``development'' or
``production'' and as noted in the BIS response to Topic 28, this AC/S
IFR adds an exclusion to 4E001 for ``use'' Technology for 4A090. Other
instances may require more technical know-how that may rise to the
level of controlled 4E001 technology. The application ultimately turns
on an analysis of what is ``required'' for exceeding the control level.
BIS intends to issue a new FAQ to address this topic more broadly.
Relationship of New Controls to Category 5--Part 2, as it Relates to
``or Identified Elsewhere on the CCL That Meet or Exceed the
Performance Parameters of ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090, Consistent With Sec.
734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and (h)(2)(ii) of the EAR'' Under Sec.
742.6(a)(6)
Topic 30: Several commenters raised concerns with the October 7 IFR
under Sec. 742.6(a)(6), along with other provisions in the October 7
IFR, e.g., Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and (h)(2)(ii), using the
criteria ``or identified elsewhere on the CCL that meet or exceed the
performance parameters of ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090.'' These commenters had
concerns that this approach was unprecedented under the EAR in several
respects and created ambiguity regarding the correct classification,
such as whether an item should be classified under 3A090 or 4A090 or
under an encryption ECCN, e.g., 5A002 or 5A992. These commenters
emphasized that company compliance systems were not set up to address
this type of dual classification complexity and that mistakes in
classification would likely occur and significant questions would be
raised for managing export clearance. These commenters requested BIS to
[[Page 73465]]
adopt an alternative approach that would be more in line with how items
are typically classified on the CCL by either creating additional ECCNs
to control these items that would otherwise meet or exceed the
performance parameters of ECCN 3A090 or 4A090 or to add under the
relevant additional ECCNs an ``items'' level paragraph to identify the
items that would meet or exceed the performance parameters of ECCN
3A090 or 4A090.
BIS response: BIS is changing this aspect of the October 7 IFR. BIS
recognizes that certain aspects of the criteria used in the October 7
IFR deviated from standard EAR practices, e.g., imposing an RS license
requirement on certain ECCNs that did not contain an RS control.
However, BIS did not intend to change underlying classifications. For
example, an ECCN 5A002 commodity that met or exceeded the control
parameters in 3A090 or 4A090, would have still been classified under
ECCN 5A002, but would require a license under Sec. 742.6(a)(6). BIS
agrees with the commenters that because of the special RS license
requirements, that effectively would mean exporters, reexporters, and
transferors would have to identify and treat that 5A002 commodity that
met or exceeded the control parameters in 3A090 or 4A090 differently.
BIS also agrees with the concerns raised by these commenters that it
would create significant burdens and possibly confusion for exporters,
reexporters, or transferors.
To address this issue, this AC/S IFR removes the criteria of
concern and instead identifies the nine ECCNs on the CCL that BIS
determined meet or exceed the control parameters in ECCNs 3A090 or
4A090. As a result, when classifying an item, review can focus on these
nine ECCNs, which addresses the commenter's concerns. In addition, BIS
agrees that creating a distinct classification for ``items'' in each of
these ECCNs under a new .z ``items'' paragraph is warranted. This AC/S
IFR also adds an RS control for these nine ECCNs, as well as adding
Related Controls to cross reference 3A090, 4A090, 3A991.p, and 4A994.l.
This rule provides additional guidance for export clearance of these .z
items, as well as 3A090 and 4A090 to make it easier for exporters and
recipients outside the United States to identify these items, and for
the U.S. Government to have greater transparency into what items are
being exported. This AC/S IFR also revises Sec. Sec.
734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and (h)(2)(ii) and 742.6(a)(6) to remove the
criterion and add in their place the .z ECCNs.
Additional discussion about the addition of the .z paragraphs can
be found in section C.3 of this rule.
Additional Changes for ECCNs in the October 7 IFR
Topic 31: A commenter requested BIS change new ECCNs from 000
series to 900 series. This commenter noted that because they are U.S.
unilateral controls, BIS should change the ECCN numbers from 3A090,
3B090, 4A090, 4D990 to 3A990, 3B990, 4A990, 4D990. This same commenter
requested deleting the term ``specially designed'' in various places as
used in the ECCNs included in the October 7 IFR and replacing the use
of the term with other technical control parameters. This commenter
referenced documents from the Coordinating Committee for Multilateral
Export Controls (COCOM), including COCOM 1951 Administrative Principle
4, in supporting their position on the removal of ``specially
designed'' from these ECCNs.
BIS response: BIS does not agree. These items will be submitted to
the Wassenaar Arrangement for adoption as multilateral controls, so it
is appropriate that they are placed in the ``000'' series. BIS also
does not agree on the removal of ``specially designed.'' The term
``specially designed'' is needed in these ECCNs to define the intended
scope of the control. In addition, BIS notes COCOM has been defunct
since March 31, 1994.
Topic 32: A commenter noted that the WTOPs parameters need further
study in ECCNs 3A991.p, 4A003, and 4A994.b and .l.
BIS response: BIS does not see an inconsistency between ECCN
4A994.b and 4A994.l. ECCN 4A994.b captures computers using 64-bit or
greater processors, and 4A994.l captures processors with lower bit
rates. BIS agrees that some items could be captured under both 4A994.b
and 4A994.l but notes that there are computers that fall under 4A994.l
but not 4A994.b.
License Exception Eligibility for New Advanced Computing and
Semiconductor Manufacturing Items Under Sec. 740.2(a)(9)
Topic 33: A commenter noted the October 7 IFR's limitations on the
use of License Exception ENC are difficult to implement. The commenter
noted that many of the items affected were already eligible for License
Exception ENC, so removing license exception eligibility will be a
challenge for items ``listed elsewhere in the CCL which meet or exceed
the performance parameters of ECCN 3A090 or 4A090.'' This commenter
requested that BIS consider amending the rule to create ECCNs 5x090 and
5x092 or additional items paragraphs in existing ECCNs for 5x002 and
5x992 items that meet or exceed the performance parameters of ECCN
3A090 or 4A090. This would allow industry to set up more manageable
rules for their electronic inventory control and shipping systems.
BIS response: BIS agrees and addressed this with the addition of .z
``items'' paragraphs in nine ECCNs on the CCL, as described under the
BIS response to Topic 30.
Topic 34: A commenter requested confirmation that License Exception
Servicing and Replacement of parts and equipment (RPL) covers transfers
(in-country), or in the alternative that Sec. 740.2(a)(9) be expanded
to authorize License Exception Temporary imports, exports, reexports,
and transfers (in-country) (TMP). This commenter noted that the
exclusion of ``transfer (in-country)'' from the scope of Sec. 740.10
suggests that License Exception RPL would not cover in-country
movements that constitute a transfer (in-country) as defined in Sec.
734.16. Alternatively, this commenter requested that BIS expand the
scope of license exceptions available for Sec. 740.2(a)(9) to include
License Exception TMP, specifically Sec. 740.9(a)(6) which authorizes
exports, reexports, and transfers (in-country) for inspection, test,
calibration, and repair.
BIS response: Section 740.1(a) already specifies that any license
exception authorizing reexports also authorizes in-country transfers,
provided the terms and conditions for reexports under that license
exception are met. This includes License Exception RPL. This SME IFR
expands the number of license exceptions available for advanced compute
items in Sec. 740.2(a)(9)(ii) by adding License Exception TMP under
Sec. 740.9(a)(6) because this authorization is intended to work with
License Exception RPL.
Level of Complexity of New FDP Rules
Topic 35: A commenter noted that the new FDP rules create
significant complexity when manufacturing products outside the United
States using U.S.-origin technology, software, tools, or equipment. The
commenter noted that with the three new FDP rules, a non-U.S.
manufacturer using U.S. technology or software must now know or have
additional information about a number of things, including whether the
item: (1) involves one of thirty-eight new ``Footnote 4'' companies on
the Entity List; (2) is or contains an advanced IC that meets ECCN
3A090 or 4A090, or is their related software or
[[Page 73466]]
technology, and is ultimately destined for Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5; (3) will ultimately be used in a
``supercomputer'' in Macau or a destination specified in Country Group
D:5; or (4) will be used in the development or production of an item
that will ultimately be used in a ``supercomputer'' in Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5. Another commenter noted
that because of the complexity there will likely be some non-compliance
simply because foreign companies cannot understand or do not have
enough information to make proper determinations. This commenter noted
that this complexity will make compliance with the EAR difficult for
non-U.S. manufacturers, many of whom will not comply, not out of
maliciousness, but simple ignorance or misunderstanding.
BIS response: BIS agrees that with the addition of new FDP rules to
the EAR, foreign manufacturers have increased compliance burdens. In
adding new FDP rules, including the two new FDP rules and expanded
Entity List FDP rule added in the October 7 IFR, BIS has tried to be as
focused as possible. Accordingly, each FDP rule has its own criteria
that needs to be reviewed. Each FDP rule essentially poses a series of
questions or criteria; if one of the required questions or criteria is
determined to be inapplicable, that FDP rule can be ruled out as
governing the transaction. By taking this approach, many of the FDP
rules can be ruled out fairly quickly. However, if the questions as to
whether the criteria apply are answered in the affirmative, additional
questions need to be asked based on the criteria of the respective FDP
rule being reviewed to ultimately determine whether the foreign made
direct product is subject to the EAR. BIS included a model certificate
in the October 7 IFR to assist people in applying the FDP rules
included in the October 7 IFR. In this AC/S IFR, the model certificate
is broadened for use with all the FDP rules to ease the compliance
burden on foreign manufacturers. BIS has been conducting a robust
outreach program and updating its outreach materials on the BIS website
to address these types of issues. As noted above, the basic approach to
applying the FDP rules has been in the EAR for many years and has not
changed with respect to the need to answer a series of questions. What
is new is some of the additional criteria for the new FDP rules, in
particular the end user and end use-based criteria included in some of
the FDP rules. Once these additional criteria become familiar to
foreign manufacturers and incorporated into compliance programs, these
concerns should be reduced. BIS will conduct outreach on this
rulemaking to assist exporters as they develop experience with the new
controls.
Topic 36: A commenter noted that the FDP rules capturing least
sensitive items will lead to designing out U.S.-origin content.
Expanding the U.S. export control jurisdiction to less sensitive items
also drives foreign partners away from U.S. technology, software, and
tool suppliers, as those are the basis on which BIS hangs its expanded
jurisdiction. The commenter requested that the China-focused FDP rules
be narrowed to apply only to specific products that are listed on the
CCL with a license requirement to China, and should never apply to
EAR99 items or Anti-Terrorism (AT)-only controlled items.
BIS response: BIS does not agree that the scope of these FDP rules
should be further narrowed. BIS calibrated the scope of the commodities
controlled based on the current national security and foreign policy
concerns. Because many of these lower-level items may be technology
level agnostic, it is still warranted to keep them within the product
scope of the FDP rules.
Clarify Relationship Between FDP Rules and Other EAR License
Requirements
Topic 37: A commenter requested BIS clarify whether reexports or
exports from abroad of FDP items also must consider other EAR license
requirements in parts 742, 744, and 746.
BIS response: For a foreign-made product that is located outside of
the United States to be subject to the EAR, the foreign made product
would need to meet the criteria under one or more of the FDP rules
under Sec. 734.9 or be subject to the EAR because it exceeds the
applicable de minimis threshold. If the foreign-made item is not
subject to the EAR, then none of the other EAR license requirements
would be applicable. However, if the export from abroad or reexport of
the foreign-made item was subject to the EAR, then the other EAR
license requirements would need to also be taken into account. Because
the export from abroad or reexport would already require a license, the
impact of those other license requirements would primarily be
additional license review policies that may be applicable.
Need To Continuously Monitor the FDP Rules and revise license review
Policies as Needed
Topic 38: A commenter noted that BIS needs to continuously monitor
the effectiveness of the FDP rules, which are unilateral. The commenter
noted that if BIS cannot succeed at getting allies and partners to
agree to substantively similar controls, BIS should adopt a temporary
licensing policy that would authorize the provision of such services
and exports by U.S. persons for civil applications and if not otherwise
prohibited by the EAR and readily available from non-U.S. providers, in
both quantity and quality, as substitutes.
BIS response: BIS is continuously reviewing the FDP rules and will
make any appropriate changes as warranted based on activity involving
the adoption of multilateral and/or effective plurilateral controls, as
well as trends BIS may be seeing or hearing about the designing out of
U.S.-origin content.
Topic 39: One commenter raised issues related to the legality of
the amendments made in the FDP rule provisions.
BIS response: BIS has determined that these changes are consistent
with ECRA.
Topic 40: A commenter asked if a foreign-made item not otherwise
subject to the EAR is nonetheless subject to the EAR under the Entity
List FDP rule (Sec. 734.9(e)(2)) if it is shipped by an unlisted
entity to another unlisted entity for incorporation into a commodity
when the shipper knows all other components for the commodity had been
shipped by a Footnote 4 entity, but the foreign-made item will not be
incorporated into, or used to produce or develop, any commodity
produced, purchased or ordered by a listed entity. This same commenter
asked whether the answer would change if a Footnote 4 entity is a
shareholder, or if a Footnote 4 entity is a shareholder in the third-
party assembler/seller. Another commenter asked whether a Footnote 4
entity that profits from a transaction by and among unlisted entities,
but has no other role or involvement, is a party to the transaction
under Sec. 734.9(e)(2)(ii)(B).
BIS response: The answer to these types of scenarios would be fact-
specific. While the Footnote 4 entity described in these scenarios does
not necessarily fall under one of the illustrative examples of parties
to the transaction under Sec. 734.9(e)(2)(ii)(B), additional analysis
would be needed to determine whether the Footnote 4 entity was actually
a party to the transaction. For example, if the items will ultimately
be going to the Footnote 4 entity or ultimately for the Footnote 4
entity's use or if profits were obtained by the Footnote 4 entity
acting as a purchaser, or intermediate or ultimate consignee, then the
Footnote 4 entity would be considered a party to the transaction. In
scenarios where a person is not sure
[[Page 73467]]
whether the Footnote 4 entity would be considered a party to a
transaction, they may contact BIS to request additional guidance by
identifying all of the relevant information that they have regarding
the involvement of that party in the transaction.
Topic 41: A commenter asked whether BIS will consider providing
guidance as to what other activities may constitute a Footnote 4
entity's being a ``party'' to the transaction for purposes of the
Entity List FDP rule. We understand that the phrase ``e.g., as a
`purchaser,' `intermediate consignee,' `ultimate consignee,' or `end-
user,' '' as used in Sec. 734.9(e)(2)(ii)(B), signals that the list of
referenced parties is not exhaustive. However, the use of ``e.g.''
creates significant compliance uncertainty.
BIS response: BIS confirms that this commenter is correct that the
`e.g.' signifies that what follows is merely an illustrative list of
parties to the transaction. If an exporter, reexporter, or transferor
is determining whether an additional party that does not fill the role
of one of the illustrative parties identified, but otherwise appears to
be a party to the transaction, is a party to the transaction, they may
submit an advisory opinion request to BIS in which they describe the
role of that other party. BIS will advise if that party is considered a
party to the transaction.
Advanced Computing FDP Rule--Sec. 734.9(h)
Topic 42: A commenter requested BIS clarify the relationship
between Sec. 734.9(h) and Sec. 742.6 for ECCN 5A002 and License
Exception ENC. This commenter noted that the EAR should in the Advanced
Computing FDP, reference the license requirements under Sec. 742.15
Encryption items (EI) controls because this is important for
determining which additional EAR restrictions may be applicable. For
example, Sec. 740.2 restrictions may restrict the use of License
Exception ENC.
BIS response: This AC/S IFR adds .z `items' paragraphs to nine
ECCNs, including to ECCN 5A002.z and makes conforming changes to add
these .z ECCNs, such as 5A002.z, to Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) or
(h)(1)(ii)(B)(2), which is also responsive to this comment.
Topic 43: A commenter noted that the new Sec. 734.9(h) Advanced
computing FDP rule is not needed because it is already covered by pre-
existing Sec. 734.9(b) National Security FDP rule.
BIS response: BIS does not agree. There is some cross over between
these two FDP rules, but the Advanced Computing FDP rule extends to
certain items that the National Security FDP rule does not, so the
Advanced Computing FDP rule is necessary to address the national
security and foreign policy concerns included in the October 7 IFR.
Narrow the Scope of Sec. 744.23 Fabrication Controls
Topic 44: A commenter noted that Sec. 744.23 should only apply to
the direct end use of an item. This commenter noted as an example that
networking equipment used for the enterprise network of a semiconductor
or supercomputer manufacturer is not a direct use in the
``development,'' ``production,'' ``use,'' operation, installation
(including on-site installation), maintenance (checking), repair,
overhaul, or refurbishing of a ``supercomputer'' or IC as opposed to
design software, materials, or test equipment and should be excluded
from the license requirement.
BIS response: BIS agrees that if the item is not used in the
``development,'' ``production,'' operation, installation (including on-
site installation), maintenance (checking), repair, overhaul, or
refurbishing of a ``supercomputer,'' IC, or SME, as applicable, the
item would not be within the scope of Sec. 744.23. However, the
exporter would need to analyze the relationship between the activities
involving the enterprise network and any prohibited end uses to confirm
no license is required.
Topic 45: A commenter noted that resellers of supercomputers should
not meet the definition of a company that is involved in the
``development,'' ``production,'' ``use,'' operation, installation
(including on-site installation), maintenance (checking), repair,
overhaul, or refurbishing of a ``supercomputer'' under Sec. 744.23.
BIS response: BIS agrees and confirms in this AC/S IFR that the
mere act of selling a ``supercomputer'' is not within the prohibited
scope of Sec. 744.23, but selling a ``supercomputer'' with knowledge
that a violation of Sec. 744.23 has occurred, is about to occur, or is
intended to occur in connection with an item subject to the EAR could
be a violation of Sec. 764.2(e) of the EAR.
As-a-Service (IaaS) Solutions and the October 7 Controls
Topic 46: A commenter noted that PRC ``supercomputer'' controls may
be bypassed by as-a-Service (IaaS) solutions. The commenter noted that
the October 7 IFR limits engagements towards China ``supercomputer''
activity in China and may preclude some high-performance compute
capability to China. With the availability of IaaS solutions, however,
China compute workloads can be offloaded to computers located in other
states, possibly including those in the United States. This commenter
noted that without a multilateral end use/end user control, non-U.S.
states, even Wassenaar Arrangement partners, may give China
computational access to their equivalent ``supercomputers'' via an IaaS
arrangement. The commenter noted that while Sec. 744.6 provides
controls on U.S. persons for various situations involving PRC
semiconductor fabrication, there does not appear to be a parallel U.S.
person control for supercomputing.
This comment requests that BIS clarify intent regarding
supercomputing IaaS, particularly in light of previous Advisory
Opinions on computing IaaS, including January 2009: Application of EAR
to Grid and Cloud Computing Services, and January 2011: Cloud Computing
and Deemed Exports.
BIS response: BIS is also concerned regarding the potential for
China to use IaaS solutions to undermine the effectiveness of the
October 7 IFR controls and continues to evaluate how it may approach
this through a regulatory response. See section D question 1 of this
rule.
Information Needed From Other Parties To Comply With These Controls
Topic 47: A commenter noted that the burden to detect upgrades of
PRC computers into ``supercomputers'' is difficult because it is a
fluid moving target and that a PRC computer installation that does not
meet the threshold at one point may be quietly upgraded by the operator
(using 3rd party items) to exceed the ``supercomputer'' threshold
later. Exporters, reexporters, and transferors may not be able to rely
on static End Use Statements or similar certifications, due to this
``moving target'' characteristic and this may require exporters to
obtain End Use Statements to all PRC computer installations (regardless
of size) for every transaction, which presents a high burden. The
commenter notes this is a situation in which publishing a list of known
Sec. 744.23 supercomputer targets will result in compliance that is
more effective, more consistent, and less burdensome.
BIS response: BIS intends to continue to identify ``supercomputer''
related entities on the Entity List. BIS started this process in the
October 7 IFR and will continue adding more ``supercomputer'' entities
as they are
[[Page 73468]]
identified and approved for addition by the ERC to the Entity List. BIS
emphasizes that Sec. 744.23 and the expanded Sec. 744.6 both contain
``knowledge'' provisions. The compliance expectation is that exporters,
reexporters, and transferors will evaluate the information coming to
them in the normal course of business. Obtaining end-user statements is
a good compliance practice that BIS encourages, but BIS does not expect
that exporters, reexporters, or transferors will obtain these from
every computer user in China, so exporters, reexporters, and
transferors should look at all information they have to determine when
additional due diligence may be warranted.
Topic 48: A commenter requested that BIS confirm that the due
diligence specified in BIS FAQ, IV.A2, ``Appropriate due diligence
includes review of publicly available information, capability of items
to be provided or serviced, proprietary market data, and end-use
statements'' constitutes a reasonable level of due diligence in this
context, as well.
BIS response: BIS confirms here that the same type of due diligence
specified in BIS FAQ IV.A2 that applies for Sec. 744.6 also applies to
Sec. 744.23.
Permit License Exception Eligibility
Topic 49: A commenter requested BIS revise Sec. 744.23(c) to
permit the use of license exceptions specified in Sec. 740.2(a)(9) for
items lawfully exported or reexported prior to October 7, 2022.
BIS response: BIS does not agree. Not including License Exceptions
RPL and TMP in Sec. 744.23(c) will make the controls more effective
because of the importance of parts and components to continued
operation of items, which may have been received by indigenous
companies in China without a required license prior to the October 7
IFR. Based on the national security and foreign policy concerns
identified in the October 7 IFR, BIS would no longer support the use of
these EAR items in China.
Other Requested Clarifications to Sec. 744.23
Topic 50: A commenter requested BIS confirm that standalone data
storage equipment would not be considered a ``component'' subject to
Sec. 744.23(a)(1)(ii), which has been redesignated as paragraph
(a)(1)(ii)(B) in this SME IFR. This commenter noted that the data
storage equipment is self-contained and not physically incorporated
into a computer (e.g., it consists of a storage controller and an array
of storage drives in a separate enclosure).
BIS response: BIS does not agree. BIS does not consider standalone
data storage equipment classified as ECCN 5A002 to be controlled under
Sec. 744.23(a)(1)(ii), now redesignated as (a)(1)(ii)(B), because
standalone storage equipment is not a computer or component of a
computer. Standalone data storage equipment classified as ECCN 5A002 is
considered a ``component'' for purposes of Sec. 744.23(a)(1)(ii)(B).
This SME IFR clarifies this point by adding ``the incorporation into,
or the ``development'' or ``production'' of any ``component'' or
``equipment'' that will be used in, a ``supercomputer'' '' to make it
clear that Sec. 744.23(a)(1)(ii)(B) is intended to cover
``components'' of a separate computer going into a supercomputer, e.g.,
a chip going into a server which is going into a supercomputer.
Topic 51: A commenter requested that BIS clarify how broadly
exporters may interpret the term ``used'' in determining the product
scope under Sec. 744.23(a)(1), which has been redesignated as
paragraph (a)(1)(i) in this SME IFR. This commenter seeks confirmation
that their understanding is correct that any product that does not
contribute to the ``development'' and ``production'' of the product
would fall outside the scope of these controls. For example, storage
devices and networking devices may be present in a facility, but they
are not ``used'' for the specified end use, and therefore would not be
subject to control under this provision and can be exported without a
license. Other examples include so-called Facility Monitoring and
Control Systems (e.g., HVAC, clean room temperature, and chillers,
pumps and boilers, as well as so-called voltage sag correctors, which
provide protection for electric equipment from voltage variations).
BIS response: Section 744.23(a) specifies that the license
requirements apply when the item will be used in an end use described
under paragraph (a)(2)(i) or (ii) of this section, which has been
redesignated as paragraph (a)(1)(ii)(A) and (B) in this SME IFR. The
terms ``development'' and ``production'' encompass all of the items
used in those activities, so BIS takes an expansive view of what items
would be caught under those terms.
Topic 52: A commenter asked BIS to confirm whether the scope and
reach of Sec. 744.23(a)(2)(iii), which has been redesignated as
paragraph (a)(2)(i) in this SME IFR, apply equally to application of
the controls over the shipment from outside the United States of
foreign-origin items not subject to the EAR under the requirements of
Sec. 744.6(c)(2)(i) and (ii).
BIS response: For purposes of the ``U.S. person'' prohibition under
Sec. 744.6(c)(2)(i) and (ii), BIS will attempt to maintain consistent
approaches in interpreting Sec. Sec. 744.6(c)(2) and 744.23. BIS's
response to Topic 61 on Sec. 744.23, which lays out how BIS would
interpret Sec. 744.6(c)(2) for a similar fact pattern involving the
U.S. person control.
Topic 53: A commenter requested BIS clarify whether the controls
extend to projected future activity not yet started under Sec.
744.23(a)(2)(iii) and (iv), which have been redesignated as paragraphs
(a)(2)(i) and (ii) in this SME IFR. The commenter noted that there is
confusion regarding the proper tense of the rules and asks whether the
language as written includes aspirational production and development in
the future. BIS should clarify whether ``fabricates'' applies in the
context of a fabrication facility that has plans for future advanced
node production or whether the rule applies to current advanced node
production only.
BIS response: Aspirational development or production in the future
would raise a red flag that would require additional due diligence to
determine whether a license is required under Sec. 744.23(a)(2)(iii)
and (iv), which have been redesignated as paragraphs (a)(2)(i) and (ii)
in this SME IFR. This AC/S IFR adds a new red flag to provide
additional compliance guidance on these types of scenarios.
Entity List Changes for Footnote 4 Entities
Topic 54: A commenter noted that it is not clear what specific
activities involving expanded Entity List (Footnote 4) entities may be
prohibited, assuming the product scope is met, especially if the
activity does not involve providing any products to the Footnote 4
entity and the entity is not a party to the transaction between the
parties buying and providing the foreign-made item.
BIS response: The Entity List license requirements apply to
exports, reexports, and transfers (in-country) that are subject to the
EAR when a listed entity is a party to the transaction. This is also
the scope of the license requirement for the entities on the Entity
List with a footnote 4 designation, but because of the footnote 4
designation, the license requirement specified in Sec.
744.11(a)(2)(ii) (Footnote 4 entities) is also applicable, which
specifies a license is required for reexport, export from abroad, or
transfer
[[Page 73469]]
(in-country) of any foreign-produced item subject to the EAR pursuant
to Sec. 734.9(e)(2) of the EAR when an entity designated with footnote
4 on the Entity List in supp. no. 4 to this part is a party to the
transaction, or that will be used in the ``development'' or
``production'' of any ``part,'' ``component,'' or ``equipment''
produced, purchased, or ordered by any such entity. Section
744.11(a)(2)(ii) also includes a cross reference to Sec. 744.23 for
additional license requirements that may apply to these entities, so
the Sec. 744.23 license requirements also need to be taken into
account.
Topic 55: A commenter noted that Sec. 744.11 states that a license
is required for the incorporation of a foreign-made item into any
``part,'' ``component,'' or ``equipment,'' produced by a Footnote 4
entity. However, BIS does not specify if a license is needed for a
scenario in which a third-party procures parts, components, or
equipment made by a Footnote 4 entity and incorporates a foreign made
item into Footnote 4's product, and the procedure is not done on behalf
of the Footnote 4 entity, nor will the final product be destined for a
Footnote 4 entity. The commenter requests BIS release additional
clarification on whether license requirements apply to sales to third
parties assembling a mixture of foreign-made and Footnote 4 entity
components that are not destined for a footnote 4 entity.
BIS response: The license requirement under Sec. 744.11(a)(2)(ii)
extends to items that will be used in the ``development'' or
``production'' of any ``part,'' ``component,'' or ``equipment''
produced by any such entity. Therefore, in a scenario in which a third-
party procures items produced by a Footnote 4 entity and adds to it
using a foreign-made item, the license requirements would still apply
in that scenario to that foreign-made item because even if the Footnote
4 entity is not subsequently receiving the items or receiving
compensation from the third-party that used its item, the further
processing using the foreign-made item would be part of the larger
``production'' process of the Footnote 4 entity.
Topic 56: A commenter requested BIS revise the 28 Entity List
footnote entries to address an inconsistency in the license requirement
by inserting ``for additional license requirements for Foreign-Direct
Product)'' after ``(See Sec. 734.9(e) and 744.11 of the EAR).''
BIS response: BIS does not agree that a change needs to be added to
these entities. The Footnote 4 text provides additional context on the
meaning and scope of this parenthetical phrase included in the 28
entities.
Requested Changes or Clarifications to ``Supercomputers'' Definition in
Sec. 772.1
Topic 57: A commenter requested BIS clarify what is intended by
closely coupled compute cores in Note 2 of the ``supercomputers''
definition. Specifically, the commenter asks BIS to clarify whether
``closely coupled compute cores'' refers to a system in which all
hardware and software components are linked together and dependent on
one another and whether the type of interconnect is relevant to this
analysis.
BIS response: Note 2 of the ``supercomputer'' definition is meant
to provide a general statement of scope of a typical supercomputer. It
is not intended to impose additional requirements beyond the main
definition. By using the term ``closely coupled compute cores,'' BIS
intended to note that supercomputers typically have thousands of cores
working in parallel in the same location and connected by a high-speed
interconnect such as Infiniband or Ethernet. BIS also intended to make
clear that computers that are connected together through the internet
over long distances are not the type of computer that would meet the
definition of ``supercomputer.''
Topic 58: A commenter requested that BIS identify the items of real
concern regarding the ``supercomputer'' end use. Hitting the threshold
of ``supercomputer'' is not difficult, and when triggered under the
October 7 IFR, even items included in 5A992 will be prohibited. The
commenter noted that could prohibit even a standard laptop from being
shipped if it is somehow being ``used'' in a supercomputer.
BIS response: BIS does not agree that the area of concern for
supercomputers was not adequately identified in the October 7 IFR and
the definition of ``supercomputer'' in Sec. 772.1. The definition
includes clear technical parameters for the types of supercomputers
that are of concern. Specifically, a computing ``system'' having a
collective maximum theoretical compute capacity of 100 or more double-
precision (64-bit) petaflops or 200 or more single-precision (32-bit)
petaflops within a 41,600 ft\3\ or smaller envelope. The definition
includes Note 1 and 2 to further clarify the types of computers of
concern. The preamble of the October 7 IFR identified the national
security and foreign policy concerns associated with a computer system
that can operate at these levels.
Requested Changes or Clarifications to Other Definitions
Topic 59: A commenter noted that the definition of ``transfer (in-
country)'' should not cover in-country movements to effectuate repair
services. This commenter noted that in considering whether an in-
country movement constitutes a change in end user, this commenter
believes that an entity performing repairs or otherwise servicing an
item is not an ``end user'' as defined in part 772 of the EAR.
Specifically, the repair/service company is not the party that
ultimately uses the item, but is instead taking an action on behalf of
the user and specifically for the purpose of returning the repaired
item to the user. As a service/repair company does not fall within the
scope of an end user under the EAR, temporary in-country movements to
or from repair/service companies should not constitute a change in end
user.
BIS response: This commenter's understanding of the scope of
transfer (in-country) is not correct and is inconsistent with long-
standing agency interpretation of the scope of transfer (in-country).
The person that receives the item is changing the end use of the item
by using the item for a repair or servicing of the item, or, in the
case of destruction, for destroying the item. The definition of end
user includes the phrase ``ultimately uses the item,'' but does not
specify that the item needs to be used for its intended end use.
Someone repairing or servicing an item is using the item for a
different purpose. Someone that is destroying an item is using the item
for a specific purpose--the destruction of the item. Even transferring
the item to another party for storage (a type of end use) would be
considered a change in end use and end user because that other party
would be using the item by storing it for future use by another party.
BIS notes that one exception to this would be if another party came to
service or destroy an item at the location of the authorized end user,
such as coming to repair or to destroy a machine tool that would not be
considered a transfer (in-country), provided the authorized end user
maintained possession and control of the item at their facility. For
most transfers (in-country), such as when an item is received under a
BIS license and needs to be transferred (in-country) to a repair
center, paragraph (a)(6) of License Exception TMP is used to authorize
the transfer (in-country) to a repair facility and License Exception
RPL is used to authorize the transfer (in-country) back to the original
party. However, for the part 744 end use and end user controls,
[[Page 73470]]
License Exceptions TMP and RPL are not available, so a license is
required for that activity. Lastly, BIS adds that if the item had been
received with no license requirement (i.e., No License Required (NLR))
or under authorization of a license exception that did not have terms
specific to end use or end user, such as License Exception GBS (not
applicable for China, but included as an example), then a transfer (in-
country) to a repair center would not require an authorization,
provided there were no parts 744 or 746 license requirements applicable
that applied to transfers (in-country). BIS also highlights that
because the RS license requirement under Sec. 744.6(a)(6) extends to
transfers (in-country) for the items controlled for RS in this AC/S IFR
and SME IFR that an EAR authorization is required for all transfers
(in-country) of items subject to the EAR unless the original
authorization also authorizes subsequent transfers (in-country), e.g.,
if a 3A090.a item was received under a BIS license by an ultimate
consignee listed on the license and was being transferred within China
to authorized end users on the license.
Appropriateness of the Scope of U.S. Person Control
Topic 60: A commenter noted that the October 7 IFR is overly broad,
particularly with respect to the prohibitions on U.S. person
``support'' for certain semiconductor manufacturing activities in Sec.
744.6(c)(2). In the absence of clear scoping restrictions, these broad
controls create difficulty for U.S. companies and individuals trying to
comply and make it almost impossible for them to understand what they
can and cannot do.
BIS response: This AC/S IFR has narrowed the scope of Sec. 744.6
where warranted to better focus the controls on activities of national
security concern. This rule has also clarified the scope of ``U.S.
person'' activities that are caught, which incorporates FAQs previously
published on the BIS website. Additional discussion of amendments to
Sec. 744.6 can be found in Section C.4 of this rule.
Topic 61: A commenter noted that a ``U.S. person'' should not have
to obtain a license under Sec. 744.23(a)(2)(iv) because an item could
potentially be used in an end use of concern. This commenter asked why
a U.S. person with no knowledge of a proscribed activity, but with
knowledge of a non-proscribed activity for a dual use computer or IC,
should be required to seek a license involving a non-U.S.-origin item,
simply because of a BIS theory, based on no knowledge, that the
activity ``could involve'' WMD use.
BIS response: The ``U.S. person'' would have a ``knowledge'' under
Sec. 744.6(c)(2)(iv), now redesignated as Sec. 744.6(c)(2)(ii), that
the CCL Category 3, B, C, D, or E item was for use for ``development''
or ``production'' of integrated circuits at a ``facility,'' which this
SME IFR updates to ``of an entity headquartered in either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5.'' When this SME IFR and AC/
S IFR use the term ``headquartered'' in these two rules, it includes
parent entities. China's use of ICs in WMD-related activities warrants
imposition of a higher level of affirmative duty to ``know'' in order
to not be subject to a license requirement.
``U.S. Person'' Control Due Diligence Requirements, as Well as Certain
Limitations on Foreign Companies Identifying People by Nationality
Topic 62: Some commenters noted that requiring positive knowledge
is a burden shift for an end use control. This commenter noted that the
Sec. 744.6(c)(2)(iv)-(vi) requirement represents an unprecedented
burden shift. Whereas BIS has previously required that companies not
engage in willful blindness or ignorance regarding the end use of their
exports, this component of the rule effectively mandates diligence via
a licensing requirement.
BIS response: BIS does not agree with these commenters that the
control requiring positive knowledge is unprecedented. For example,
Sec. 744.3(a)(3) (which has been in the EAR for about 19 years)
imposes a license requirement for all items subject to the EAR when the
exporter, reexporter, or transferor has ``knowledge'' that the item
subject to the EAR ``will be used in the design, ``development,''
``production,'' operation, installation (including on-site
installation), maintenance (checking), repair, overhaul, or
refurbishing of any rocket systems or unmanned aerial vehicles in or by
a country listed in Country Group D:4, but you are unable to determine
the characteristics (i.e., range capabilities) of the rocket systems or
unmanned aerial vehicles, or whether the rocket systems or unmanned
aerial vehicles, regardless of range capabilities, will be used in a
manner prohibited under paragraph (a)(2) of this section.'' A more
recent example that was added in 2014 to part 746 under Sec.
746.5(a)(1)(i) specifies that a license is required to export,
reexport, or transfer (in-country) any item subject to the EAR listed
in supplement no. 2 to this part and items specified in ECCNs 0A998,
1C992, 3A229, 3A231, 3A232, 6A991, 8A992, and 8D999 when you ``know''
that the item will be used directly or indirectly in exploration for,
or production of, oil or gas in Russian deepwater (greater than 500
feet) or Arctic offshore locations or shale formations in Russia or
Belarus, or are unable to determine whether the item will be used in
such projects.
Topic 63: A commenter noted that for the first time, BIS has used
the EAR to inform all U.S. persons around the globe that certain
specific activities of U.S. persons are regulated because they could
support prohibited WMD activities in China. This commenter noted that
the regulated activities all involve shipping, transmitting,
transferring (in-country), or servicing, or facilitating the shipment,
transmission, or transfer (in-country), of certain items that are ``not
subject to the EAR'' to or within China.
BIS response: BIS does not agree. The regulated activities are
consistent with other regulated activities under Sec. 744.6 and the
activities are being regulated because they could support prohibited
WMD activities in China and Macau.
Topic 64: A commenter noted that many foreign employers do not
track whether persons are U.S. persons, which will make it harder to
comply with these U.S. person controls. The application of these new
controls will be complicated, as U.S. person status is not widely
maintained by non-U.S. employers. These new controls raise certain
specific practical implementation concerns.
BIS response: BIS does not agree that a ``U.S. person'' restriction
applies to a non-U.S. person entity (e.g., a foreign corporation) that
employs the U.S. person, unless the entity had knowledge of the
individual's U.S. person status and that the individual was in
violation of an applicable U.S. person control. While a corporation may
not track the U.S. person status of its personnel, a natural person
would be positioned to ``know'' whether they were a ``U.S. person.''
U.S. Person Control Impact on U.S. Persons Working Outside the U.S. and
on Innovation
Topic 65: A commenter noted that without clarification as to the
scope of what U.S. person activities constitute support for the
development of certain advanced semiconductors and associated
technologies in China, Sec. 744.6(c)(2) will have a chilling effect on
U.S. academic collaborations with universities in China as well as on
U.S. university recruitment of highly
[[Page 73471]]
qualified students and researchers from China in the semiconductor
field. This may detrimentally impact U.S. leadership and
competitiveness in the advanced semiconductor sector. Another commenter
noted that the U.S. person control may result in companies not hiring
U.S. persons. This commenter noted that despite added clarifications
from BIS regarding the scope of these restrictions, the relevant
provisions continue to be mired in uncertainty. Companies,
consequently, may choose to interpret the U.S. persons provisions
broadly, and needlessly restrict their U.S. person employees and
contractors from engaging in a number of business-critical functions,
which prevents such persons from participating fully in company
operations. In any event, U.S. person individuals can often be readily
replaced by non-U.S. person individuals without impeding the shipment
of non-EAR items to a covered fabrication facility.
BIS response: The intent of the October 7 IFR and this AC/S IFR and
SME IFR is to impose controls as focused as possible in addressing the
ongoing U.S. national security and foreign policy concerns discussed in
these rules. BIS does not intend the new controls to chill research by
U.S. universities or undercut U.S. technological leadership where such
activity does not present national security or foreign policy concerns.
With its initial FAQs on the October 7 IFR, BIS clarified the intended
scope of the ``U.S. persons'' controls. This AC/S IFR adds those
clarifications to the EAR. In addition, this AC/S IFR clarifies that
the scope of Sec. 744.6 does not include information or software that
would otherwise be excluded from the EAR based on the exclusion
criteria under part 734, e.g., under Sec. 734.7 Published and Sec.
734.8 ``Technology'' or ``software'' that arises during, or results
from, fundamental research, as well as specifying this in Sec.
744.6(d)(1)(ii). BIS does not intend for the October 7 IFR controls to
result in foreign companies not wanting to hire ``U.S. persons.'' BIS
believes the clarifications made to Sec. 744.6 in this AC/S IFR and
SME IFR should reduce these concerns. The U.S. person changes made in
this rule are discussed in Section C.4.
Topic 66: A commenter noted that the U.S. person control has broad
applicability to many people outside the U.S. and could be
discriminatory to them. It is important for BIS to take into account
that many individuals located abroad fall within the definition of
``U.S person'' even if they have never lived in the United States or
are currently permanently residing outside of the U.S. and these
individuals should not be singled out due to their citizenship, which
can lead to discrimination and other claims under the laws of certain
countries.
BIS response: The intent of the October 7 IFR was to be as focused
as possible in addressing ongoing U.S. national security and foreign
policy concerns. Being a ``U.S. person'' has many benefits, but also
certain responsibilities that go along with being a ``U.S. person,''
such as not being involved in specified activities that are of concern
for WMD reasons as specified under Sec. 744.6. The U.S. Department of
Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Controls (OFAC) also has certain
responsibilities and restrictions that go along with being a U.S.
person, so BIS also directs commenters in this area to review the
applicable OFAC controls on U.S. persons that may be applicable.
Whether To Use Export, Reexport, and Transfer (In-Country) Controls or
a U.S. Person Control To Address This National Security Issue
Topic 67: A commenter requested that the new restrictions on
semiconductor manufacturing be implemented solely through BIS's
traditional jurisdiction over exports, reexports, and transfers (in-
country) of items subject to the EAR, rather than a new, untested, and
overly broad restriction on U.S. person ``support'' activities.
BIS response: The national security and foreign policy concerns
addressed in the October 7 IFR required that BIS use its full set of
regulatory tools under the EAR, which included using CCL-based
controls, end-use controls, and end-user controls. For the end-use
controls, BIS used both a standard end-use control and expanded the
``U.S. person'' control to appropriately address its concerns. This AC/
S IFR and SME IFR have focused and clarified the scope of both
Sec. Sec. 744.6 and 744.23.
Provide More Information on Restricted U.S. Person Activities
Topic 68: A commenter requested BIS amend the list of controlled
activities to specify whether additional business processes are
controlled or not. This commenter noted that doing so will decrease
compliance delays arising from ambiguous language. For example, it is
not clear if restrictions apply to a U.S. person that processes product
payments but does not conduct physical transfer of subject items.
BIS response: This AC/S IFR adds paragraph (c)(3) (Scope of
activities of ``U.S. persons'' that require a license under Sec.
744.6(c)(2) of the EAR), including sub-paragraph (c)(3)(i) that
provides greater specificity on the ``U.S. person'' activities that are
caught, consistent with the FAQs posted on the BIS website on January
25, 2023 on the scope of the ``U.S. persons'' control in Sec.
744.6(c)(2). This AC/S IFR adds paragraph (c)(3)(ii) (Due diligence) to
provide compliance guidance for this ``U.S. person'' control, and adds
paragraph (d)(1) (Exclusion of certain administrative and clerical
activities) to add greater specificity on the ``U.S. person''
activities that are excluded.
U.S. Persons Giving Up U.S. Citizenship or Permanent Residency in Order
To Participate in PRC Innovation Efforts
Topic 69: A commenter noted that some U.S. persons may give up
their U.S. nationality to help China build advanced semiconductors, and
they would be compensated by the PRC government to obtain a third
country passport. This commenter noted in this scenario that the now-
former U.S. persons' spouses may still be U.S. citizens, so these
persons will be able to return to the United States when they retire
after making money in China. This commenter believes this is a very
clear loophole in the October 7 IFR.
BIS response: The October 7 IFR and this AC/S IFR and SME IFR used
the various export control tools that BIS has under its jurisdiction to
address U.S. national security and foreign policy concerns. BIS
included an expanded ``U.S. person'' control because of its concerns
that these types of items that are being used by China are part of
their WMD programs. BIS highly discourages any ``U.S. person'' from
relinquishing U.S. nationality to help China engage in military
advancement and human rights violations. BIS does not have regulatory
authority over immigration matters, so BIS is not positioned to respond
to that aspect of the comment. However, being a U.S. citizen or legal
permanent resident of the U.S. has certain benefits and legal rights
that are not afforded to foreign persons. BIS cautions anyone that is
considering giving up their U.S. nationality for purposes of work in
the advanced semiconductor industry in China to weigh those
considerations carefully and not assume they would be able to return to
the United States following participation in activities contrary to
U.S. national security and foreign policy interests. BIS also notes
that a person who relinquished their U.S. nationality would become a
foreign person for purposes of ERC assessment.
[[Page 73472]]
Meaning and Scope of `Support' Under U.S. Person Control in Sec.
744.6(b)(6)
Topic 70: A commenter noted that the exact definition of
``support'' is not clear under the October 7 IFR. BIS should consider
reconfiguring certain definitions to factor in business processes in
the logistics sector. This commenter requested that BIS publish
additional guidance on how logistics firms can understand and apply
``support'' requirements to their supply chains without inducing severe
operational disruptions.
BIS response: The term `support' is defined for purposes of Sec.
744.6 under paragraph (b)(6). BIS also notes that the term `support' is
not a new term added in the October 7 IFR. However, based on the
comments received in response to the October 7 IFR, BIS agrees that
additional clarifications should be made on what types of activities
involving `support' are excluded, such as certain logistics activities.
This AC/S IFR states here that for logistics companies, the prohibited
act is the actual delivery, by shipment, transmittal, or transfer (in-
country), of the item and the act of authorizing the same.
Topic 71: A commenter noted that Sec. 744.6 prohibits U.S. persons
from providing ``support'' for WMD-related end uses and Sec. 744.6(c)
provides that certain specified activities by U.S. persons involving
items not subject to the EAR used in semiconductor fabrication could
involve ``support'' for a prohibited WMD-related end use, but it does
not say that these specified activities are the only activities by U.S.
persons related to semiconductor fabrication that are considered
prohibited ``support'' for WMD-related end uses.
BIS response: This commenter misses the intent of the phrase
``which could involve `support' for the [WMD]-related end uses set
forth in paragraph (b) of this section'' in the introductory text of
Sec. 744.6(c)(2). The prohibition under Sec. 744.6(c)(2) is limited
to the exhaustive listing of `support' activities defined under Sec.
744.6(b)(6). The phrase ``which could involve'' is an acknowledgement
that in certain cases these activities described under Sec.
744.6(c)(2) may not involve WMD-related activities, but BIS believes
that there is a significant possibility that in Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5 such end-uses could involve WMD-related
activities. In cases in which a ``U.S. person'' believes the prohibited
activity does not involve a WMD-related activity, the ``U.S. person''
can set forth its reasoning in the license application.
Topic 72: A commenter asked BIS to confirm whether expediting a
part or component shipment with a supplier or vendor, by a ``U.S.
person,'' is within the scope of the controls in Sec. 744.6 or Sec.
744.23 if there is knowledge that such a part or component will be
exported, reexported, or transferred to a covered fabrication facility.
Another commenter noted that it is unclear whether the reference to
``support'' in Sec. 744.6(c)(2) incorporates all of the definitions of
``support'' under Sec. 744.6(b)(6) in the activities that are
prohibited under Sec. 744.6(c)(2).
BIS response: For the comment regarding expediting a part or
component, whether that activity is captured would depend on whether
the act was limited to a U.S. person conducting administrative or
clerical activities or otherwise implementing a decision already
approved by other persons, consistent with Sec. 744.6(d)(1)(i), added
in this rule. In addition, the reference to ``support'' in Sec.
744.6(c)(2) incorporates all of the definitions of ``support'' under
Sec. 744.6(b)(6) in the activities that are prohibited under Sec.
744.6(c)(2).
BIS Has Experience With Regulating Facilitating, but Should Adopt a
Definition That Is Narrower Than That Used by OFAC
Topic 73: A commenter noted that restrictions on exports of
services by U.S. persons are traditionally administered by OFAC, which
has accordingly developed a framework of guidance and authorizations
over time to facilitate the implementation of these restrictions. Some
commenters noted that the scope of ``facilitate'' should be narrower
under EAR than under the OFAC sanctions. These commenters noted that
while BIS and OFAC share some overlapping jurisdiction, the underlying
statutory authorities for the EAR and the OFAC regulations are no
longer aligned--the current EAR is legally framed by ECRA, not the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). These commenters
noted that this distinction underscores that controls on
``facilitation'' or ``facilitating'' enacted by BIS under the authority
of the EAR or ECRA must be more limited than controls imposed by OFAC
under IEEPA's broad authority.
BIS response: BIS has long experience with regulating activity
using the term facilitating as Section 744.6 has been in the EAR since
the early 1990s. Use of this term under the EAR is specific to BIS, and
other interpretations from other agencies are not applicable under the
EAR. Moreover, BIS interpretations should not be applied to the
regulations of any other export control agencies, such as OFAC.
Questions on the use of OFAC regulations terminology should be directed
to OFAC.
Topic 74: A commenter requested BIS adopt the definition of
`facilitation' as, ``Authorizing, servicing, and conducting support on
the production of advanced nodes.'' Another commenter requested that
facilitating should be replaced with the term authorizing if that is
what is really intended, noting that BIS guidance indicates that
``facilitating'' such activities means ``authorizing'' such activities.
Without such an amendment, U.S. persons can be unnecessarily cut out
from fully engaging in the business of their employer.
BIS response: The term `facilitation' in the context of Sec.
744.6(b)(6)(iii) has broader application than to just paragraph (c)(2),
so it would not be appropriate to adopt the suggested definitions.
Authorizing is an important part of the scope of facilitating, but
there are additional activities that fall under facilitating that also
need to be caught, so removing facilitating and adding in its place
authorizing is not accepted.
Meaning and Scope of Definition of `Production'
Topic 75: A commenter requested that BIS provide an exact
definition of ``production'' because it is not clear under the October
7 IFR.
BIS response: ``Production'' is a foundational EAR term that is
already defined in Sec. 772.1. The term is also defined and used in
the multilateral export control regimes. As a result, there should be
no ambiguity in how the term is used and no need for an additional
definition for this term.
Meaning and Scope of Definition of `Servicing'
Topic 76: A commenter requested that BIS provide an exact
definition of ``servicing'' because it is not clear under the October 7
IFR.
BIS response: The term servicing has been used in the EAR for many
decades and in various EAR provisions, such as under License Exception
RPL under Sec. Sec. 740.10 and 764.2(e), and in General Prohibition 10
under Sec. 736.2(b)(10). This term is intended to have an expansive
meaning and BIS believes it is well understood in the context of the
EAR. For example, in the context of License Exception RPL, servicing
means inspection, testing, calibration or repair, including overhaul
and reconditioning (see Sec. 740.10(b)(2)(i)). BIS has also provided
guidance through FAQs on the October 7 IFR on what U.S. person
activities are captured by servicing for
[[Page 73473]]
purposes of Sec. 744.6. BIS interprets the meaning of servicing in the
context of Sec. 744.6 consistent with the expansive definition
provided under License Exception RPL.
Scope of Information Covered Under the ``U.S. Person'' Control
Topic 77: Commenter requests that BIS clarify the scope of ``any
item not subject to the EAR'' in Sec. 744.6(c)(2) to specifically
exclude technology and software that is published and/or that arises
during or results from fundamental research. Another commenter is
concerned that, without further clarification from BIS regarding the
scope of ``support'' and ``facilitating,'' these terms could be
interpreted to include core university activities such as training and
teaching students and researchers from China in the United States. This
commenter requests that BIS expand FAQ IV.A2 to further clarify that
these terms do not include training and teaching of students and
researchers from China in the United States.
BIS response: BIS agrees. As noted above, this AC/S IFR in
responding to these comments clarifies that the scope of Sec.
744.6(c)(2) does not include information or software that would
otherwise be excluded from the EAR based on the exclusion criteria
under part 734, e.g., under Sec. 734.7 Published and Sec. 734.8
``Technology'' or ``software'' that arises during, or results from,
fundamental research, which this AC/S IFR specifies in Sec.
744.6(d)(1)(ii).
Exclude Certain Activities When Employer Has a BIS Authorization To
Engage in Those Activities
Topic 78: A commenter requested BIS issue guidance that activities
of U.S. persons in support of licensed activities by their employer are
excluded from the scope of the controls. It would be unfortunate for a
U.S. person to unintentionally violate the EAR because the items
subject to the EAR that they are exporting or reexporting subject to a
BIS license happen to include an item that was not subject to the EAR,
such as bundled software or a spare part.
BIS response: BIS clarifies here in this AC/S IFR that existing BIS
licenses would also cover such ``U.S. person'' activities as described
in the commenter's scenario. BIS cautions that if the activity being
provided goes outside the scope of the BIS license, then a separate
analysis of that ``U.S. person'' activity must be conducted.
C. Expansion of Export Controls on Advanced Computing Items and
Supercomputers
This section describes the specific EAR revisions adopted in this
IFR, which expand and refine the October 7 IFR with respect to advanced
computing items and supercomputers, and addresses the national security
concerns that led to an expansion of the country scope for these
commodities and related software and technology.
Overview of EAR Changes
This AC/S IFR revises ECCN 3A090 to remove paragraph a, including
paragraphs a.1 through a.4, and adds in its place a simplified control
paragraph. Those changes, as well as a conforming change to ECCN
3A991.p, are discussed below in section C.1 of this rule. This rule
also introduces License Exception Notified Advanced Computing (NAC),
which is discussed in section C.2. In response to public comments, the
rule also replaces the criteria ``any other item on CCL that meet or
exceed the performance parameters of 3A090 or 4A090'' by positively
identifying those ECCNs in new .z paragraphs, along with various
conforming changes related to the new .z paragraphs in other parts of
the EAR. The public comments on this issue are described in section B
under Topics 19-24; additional details about those changes, and the
accompanying conforming changes including to the Automated Export
System (AES), can be found in section C.3.
In addition, this rule broadens the country scope for the Regional
Stability controls to destinations specified in Country Groups D:1,
D:4, and D:5 in supplement no. 1 to part 740 that are not also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6 and amends the licensing policy,
as described in section C.4. Section C.5 discusses clarifications to
the scope of ``U.S. person'' and end-use controls related to
supercomputers and advanced computing items. Section 744.23 is expanded
to capture PRC operations outside of China in light of ongoing national
security concerns related to diversion and misuse of items subject to
the EAR; those changes are discussed in section C.6. As discussed in
section C.7, this rule adds ECCNs 3A991.p and 4A994.l to License
Exception Consumer Communication Device (CCD).
As discussed in section C.8, this rule also broadens the country
scope with respect to the advanced computing FDP rule to destinations
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5 that are not also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6. Section C.9 describes changes
clarifying that the model certificate published in the October 7 IFR
may be used for all FDP rules. Section C.10 discusses changes to
enhance compliance, including the addition of five new red flags to
assist with compliance, including adding a red flag for enhanced FDP
guidance for recognizing ``direct products.'' The addition of one new
TGL is described in section C.11. Additional corrections and
clarifications made in this rule are described in section C.12.
Lastly, BIS requests specific comments on several issues, which are
listed and described in section D.
National Security and Foreign Policy Considerations for Expanding
Controls and Country Scope
As noted earlier in the rule, these advanced or frontier AI
capabilities, such as large dual-use AI foundation models with
capabilities of concern are particularly problematic because their use
can lead to improved design and execution of WMD and advanced
conventional weapons. Military decision-making aided by these AI models
can improve speed, accuracy, planning, and logistics. The use of such
items in development and deployment of these AI models would further
China's goals of surpassing the military capability of the United
States and its allies, a goal noted in the February 6, 2023 Annual
Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community. That same report
indicated that ``China is rapidly expanding and improving its
artificial intelligence (AI) and big data analytics capabilities, which
could expand beyond domestic use.'' These national security concerns
were paramount in the issuance of this AC/S IFR.
Consistent with the national security and foreign policy concerns
described in the October 7 IFR, BIS is updating the EAR to enhance
effectiveness of the controls in addressing these ongoing concerns.
Following the implementation of the controls last year, BIS continued
to study and assess their effectiveness. This rule strengthens and
improves those controls by addressing the national security
considerations that have come to light through open-source reporting,
public comments, and the intelligence community. Through this process,
BIS learned that certain additional ICs could provide nearly comparable
AI model training capability as those controlled in the October 7 IFR
BIS also seeks to further impair diversion channels through third
countries, particularly those with AI commercial and research ties to
the PRC.
[[Page 73474]]
In addition, credible open source reporting identified PRC
companies using foreign subsidiaries to purchase chips subject to EAR
controls, and accessing and operating datacenters located outside of
the PRC with the ICs subject to EAR controls. Moreover, BIS is also
concerned about certain additional ICs, which in turn can be used to
train frontier AI models that have the most significant potential for
advanced warfare applications, including unmanned intelligent combat
systems, enhanced battlefield situational awareness and decision
making, multidomain operations, automatic target recognition,
autopiloting, missile fusion, precise guidance for hypersonic
platforms, and cyber attacks. Accordingly, to address these issues, BIS
is making several changes to the rule.
First, to prevent technical workarounds, BIS is adding a
performance density parameter to the original control and including a
new structure for the control. A performance density parameter prevents
the workaround of simply purchasing a larger number of smaller
datacenter AI chips which, if combined, would be equally powerful as
restricted chips.
Second, to address PRC operations inside and outside of China and
Macau seeking to acquire advanced ICs through transshipment and
diversion, and accessing datacenters with advanced ICs, the rule
expands controls to destinations in country groups D:1, D:4, and D:5
that are not also in Country Groups A:5 or A:6. Additionally, the rule
also adds two new end use controls to prevent circumvention of the
controls. Moreover, in section D, this rule is also soliciting comment
from Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) providers and other
stakeholders on additional regulations in this area, including know
your customer requirements that can be adopted to address uses that
present a national security or foreign policy concern.
Third, because advanced-ICs have varying capabilities implicating
national security concerns, with this rule, BIS is controlling a wider
scope of advanced- ICs through adoption of a tiered approach. Thus,
first, for the most powerful data-center ICs (as described in ECCN
3A090.a), which are of the greatest national security and foreign
policy concern, BIS is imposing a license requirement to any
destination specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are not
also in Country Groups A:5 or A:6. Second, for advanced-ICs that are
less powerful but could be used to train large-scale AI systems by a
sufficiently well-resourced actor (as described in ECCN 3A090.b, as
well as certain 3A090.a commodities) BIS is providing license exception
NAC for destinations in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, but use of
such license exception will require pre-notification of the export or
reexport to Macau or a destination specified in Country Group D:5.
This AC/S IFR also adds a new red flag to assist semiconductor
fabrication facilities' additional compliance with the advanced
computing FDP rule as described under section C.10.A.
1. Revision of ECCN 3A090 and Conforming Change to 3A991.p
A. Revisions to 3A090 control parameters to ensure ICs for AI
training are controlled.
In ECCN 3A090, this AC/S IFR revises the ``items'' paragraph in the
List of Items Controlled section to remove paragraph a, including
paragraphs a.1 through a.4, and adds in its place a simplified
paragraph .a and .b. The revised 3A090.a control parameter will control
ICs with one or more digital processing units having either: (1) a
`total processing performance' of 4800 or more, or (2) a `total
processing performance' of 1600 or more and a `performance density' of
5.92 or more. The new ECCN 3A090.b will control ICs with one or more
digital processing units having either: (1) a `total processing
performance' of 2400 or more and less than 4800 and a `performance
density' of 1.6 or more and less than 5.92, or (2) a `total processing
performance' of 1600 or more and a `performance density' of 3.2 or more
and less than 5.92. See Technical Notes to ECCN 3A090 for calculating
`total processing performance' and `performance density.' Together,
these paragraphs expand the scope of control as compared to the October
7 IFR. This action is necessary to ensure that ICs below the October 7
ECCN 3A090 parameters that were still useful for training advanced AI
with military applications would be controlled.
To more precisely control the types of ICs presenting the concerns
described above in section C of this rule, ICs that meet certain
performance thresholds described in Note 2 are not subject to 3A090
controls. Thus, no license is required for these ICs under 3A090;
however, such ICs may require a license under another ECCN.
The scope of this control is calibrated through the addition of
several Notes to ECCN 3A090 and a new license exception, the former
discussed below in sections C.1.B, C.1.C, and C.1.F and the latter
discussed in section C.2. BIS excludes from ECCN 3A090 ICs that (1) are
not designed or marketed for use in datacenters, and (2) do not have a
`total processing performance' of 4800 or more (see Note 2). As
discussed in section C.2 of this rule, License Exception NAC provides a
path for prior notification to BIS when exporting or reexporting
eligible items to the PRC and Macau. The notification requirements do
not apply for transfers (in-country) within the PRC and Macau. Eligible
items for License Exception NAC are defined as those ICs under ECCN
3A090.b (including ICs that are designed or marketed for use in a data
center) and specific ICs under 3A090.a (not designed or marketed for
use in a data center).
B. Addition of exclusion for `non-datacenter integrated circuits'
from the expanded 3A090 control parameter.
In ECCN 3A090, this AC/S IFR adds a new Note 2 to 3A090 to specify
that 3A090 does not apply to non-datacenter integrated circuits that
are (a) not designed or marketed for use in datacenters; and (b) do not
have a `total processing performance' of 4800 or more. In response to
this AC/S IFR, BIS seeks comments on how to refine these parameters to
more granularly cover additional ICs that would not raise concerns for
use in training large-scale AI systems. See section D question 6 of
this rule.
The purpose of this Note 2 is to ensure that as implementation
occurs in the future, the expanded ECCN 3A090.a and .b control
parameters do not increasingly control certain non-datacenter ICs.
C. Revisions to technical notes for clarity.
This AC/S IFR also makes several revisions to the Technical Notes
to address the various comments that BIS received noting that there are
multiple ways to calculate the TOPS calculations and identifying that
the criteria provided in the Technical Notes included in the October 7
IFR under ECCN 3A090 were not adequate for a consistent interpretation
on how to calculate the TOPS calculation. BIS agreed that revisions
were needed. This AC/S IFR revises the five technical notes for
clarity. Most importantly, this AC/S IFR replaces bits x TOPS with
`Total processing performance' (`TPP') values and defines clear,
objective criteria that can be used to calculate the `TPP' value.
In ECCN 3A991, this AC/S IFR amends Technical Note for 3A991.p,
paragraph 3, to conform with the changes to the Technical Notes to ECCN
3A090.
D. Expanded license requirement.
[[Page 73475]]
This AC/S IFR also revises the License Requirements section for the
RS license requirement that applies to the entire ECCN 3A090 to expand
the scope of the destination-based license requirements by removing
China and Macau and adding in its place any destination specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that is not also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6. This expanded license requirement is warranted
because of the potential diversion concern for these activities of
concern in or with Macau or a destination specified in Country Group
D:5. However, for destinations to or within destinations not specified
in Country Group D:5 (except Macau), license applications will
generally be reviewed under a presumption of approval license review
policy under Sec. 742.6(b)(10) paragraph (b)(10)(ii) (License review
policy for paragraph (a)(6)(iii)). See section C.4 for fuller
description of the license review policies that will be applicable to
these destinations referenced in this paragraph.
This AC/S IFR also adds a cross reference in the RS control in ECCN
3A090 to see Sec. 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the EAR.
E. Addition of Note 3 to 3A090 and adding Related Controls cross
references from related ECCNs.
This AC/S IFR, as a conforming change for the addition of Note 3 to
3A090, adds a Related Controls reference to Note 3 to 3A090 in ECCNs
3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z,
5A992.z, 5D002.z, or 5D992.z.
2. Addition of License Exception Notified Advanced Computing (NAC) for
Consumer-Grade ICs With AI Capabilities
In Sec. 740.8, which prior to the effective date of this rule was
reserved, this AC/S IFR adds new license exception NAC. This license
exception is for ICs under ECCN 3A090.b (i.e., ICs designed or marketed
for use in datacenters) and non-datacenter ICs under 3A090.a (i.e., ICs
not designed or marketed for use in datacenters and that do have a
`total processing performance' of 4800 or more). NAC is available for
exports, reexports, and transfers in or within Country Groups D:1, D:4,
or D:5 with different requirements applicable to Macau and destinations
specified in Country Group D:5. The purpose of the notification
process, which is only required for exports and reexports to Macau or
destinations specified in Country Group D:5, is to provide BIS and its
interagency export controls partners the opportunity to evaluate the
national security risk posed by ICs that fall within this parameter.
This license exception as specified under the paragraph (a)
(Eligibility requirements) will authorize export, reexport, and
transfer (in-country) of any item classified in ECCNs 3A090, 4A090,
3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z,
or 5D992.z, except for items designed or marketed for use in a
datacenter and meeting the parameters of 3A090.a. License Exception NAC
authorizes exports, reexports, or transfers (in-country) to any
destination specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, provided the
applicable criteria specified under paragraphs (a) and (b) are met. For
exports and reexports to Macau or destinations specified in Country
Group D:5, in addition to meeting the criteria under paragraphs (a) and
(b), the notification requirements under paragraph (c) of License
Exception NAC must all be met. The notification requirement does not
apply to exports or reexports to any destination specified in Country
Groups D:1 or D:4 (other than Macau or destinations also specified in
Country Group D:5) nor does it apply to transfers (in-country) to any
destination.
Paragraph (a)(1) (Written purchase order) requires that any export
or reexport authorized under License Exception NAC must be made
pursuant to a written purchase order, except for commercial samples
which are not subject to this purchase order requirement. Written
purchase orders are not required for transfers (in-country). Exports,
reexports, or transfers (in-country) to or within any other destination
identified under Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 are authorized under
License Exception NAC, provided the applicable criteria under
paragraphs (a) and (b) are met.
Paragraph (a)(2) (Notification to BIS) specifies that for exports
or reexports to Macau or a destination specified in Country Group D:5,
you must notify BIS prior to exporting or reexporting, according to the
procedures set forth in paragraph (c) of License Exception NAC.
Paragraph (a)(2) specifies that if you intend to engage in multiple
exports or reexports after the signing of the purchase order, you need
only notify BIS prior to the first export or reexport. Paragraph (a)(2)
is not required for transfers (in-country) within Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5.
Paragraph (b) (Restrictions) apply to all exports, reexports, or
transfers (in-country) authorized under License Exception NAC.
Paragraph (b)(1) (Prohibited end uses and end users) specifies that
License Exception NAC is not able to overcome any part 744 or 746
license requirements, except for a license required under Sec.
744.23(a)(3) for reexports or exports to any destination other than
those specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 (excluding any
destination also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6) for an entity
that is headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a destination specified in Country
Group D:5. The restriction under paragraph (b)(2) (`Military end use'
or `military end user') specifies that no exports, reexports, or
transfers (in-country) may be made under License Exception NAC to or
for a `military end use' as defined in Sec. 744.21(f) or `military end
user' as defined in defined in Sec. 744.21(g). This `military end use'
or `military end use' restriction applies to a broader country scope
than those prohibited under Sec. Sec. 744.17 and 744.21.
Paragraph (c) (Prior notification procedures) specifies the
notification requirements that must be followed prior to making any
export or reexport to Macau or a destination specified in Country Group
D:5 under License Exception NAC. Paragraph (c)(1) (Procedures)
specifies the requirement to make this notification prior to using
License Exception NAC as well as what Blocks need to be completed in
SNAP-R for submitting a notification request. You do not need to submit
a commodity classification determination from BIS with your
notification, but doing so will be helpful in limiting any concerns
associated with the technical nature of the item because BIS will
already be familiar with the item's performance characteristics if it
has conducted a classification review.
Paragraph (c)(2) (Action by BIS) specifies that BIS intends during
the 25-calendar day review period to review the notification together
with the other export control agencies. Paragraph (c)(3) (Status of
pending NAC notification requests) describes the process for entities
to follow in BIS's System for Tracking Export License Applications
(STELA) (https://snapr.bis.doc.gov/stela) to obtain the status of a
pending NAC notification or verify the status in BIS's Simplified
Network Applications Processing Redesign (SNAP-R) System. Paragraph
(c)(3) also specifies that if no objection to a NAC notification is
raised, STELA will, on the twenty-fifth calendar day following the date
of registration, provide a confirmation of that fact and a NAC
confirmation number to be submitted in AES. Paragraph (c)(3) also
indicates that if the NAC notification is not approved, on the twenty-
fifth calendar day following
[[Page 73476]]
the date of registration, STELA will provide you with confirmation if
you cannot use License Exception NAC.
BIS intends to post an announcement on the BIS website once
entities may submit License Exception NAC notifications with the goal
that License Exception NAC requests may be submitted prior to the
effective date of this rule.
This AC/S IFR, as a conforming change for the addition of License
Exception NAC, adds a NAC paragraph to the List-Based License Exception
section under ECCNs 3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, and 5D992.z.
3. Replacing Criteria for Any Other Item on CCL That Meet or Exceed the
Performance Parameters of 3A090 or 4A090 by Positively Identifying
Those ECCNs and Adopting .z Paragraphs
The October 7 IFR under Sec. 742.6(a)(6), along with other
provisions in the October 7 IFR, used the criteria ``or identified
elsewhere on the CCL that meet or exceed the performance parameters of
ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090.'' As described above, commenters on the October 7
IFR raised significant concerns that this type of catch-all text
deviated from the common structure of the CCL under supplement no. 1 to
part 774 of the EAR, would be burdensome and possibly unimplementable
for many exporters, reexporters, and transferors, and would lead to
confusion regarding the appropriate classification and control of items
on the CCL. Commenters strongly encouraged BIS to adopt a more
conventional approach to implementing these changes by either adding
new ECCNs to control those additional items that would otherwise meet
or exceed the performance parameters of ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090, or by
identifying a positive list of additional ECCNs that may warrant this
additional control on the CCL and then creating separate ``items''
level paragraphs in each of these respective ECCNs.
After reviewing the concerns raised by the commenters, BIS agrees
that a more conventional structure is needed for imposing this aspect
of the October 7 IFR. Accordingly, BIS is identifying a positive list
of the nine additional ECCNs for which BIS has determined also have
performance characteristics or functions that meet or exceed the
performance parameters of ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090 and is adding a new
``items'' level paragraph in the List of Items Controlled section of
each of these nine ECCNs by adding .z paragraphs to each. This AC/S IFR
makes several changes to the EAR to implement this important change to
the October 7 IFR. For ease of reference these changes are described
here under four types of changes: (1) adding .z paragraphs to nine
ECCNs; (2) revising Related Controls for 3A090, 3A991, 4A090, 4A994 and
the nine ECCNs to cross reference each other to assist with
classification; (3) making other EAR conforming changes needed because
of the addition of .z paragraphs; and (4) changing export clearance
requirements to increase transparency of .z, 3A090, and 4A090
shipments.
A. Adding .z paragraphs to nine ECCNs.
This final rule revises nine ECCNs 3A001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005,
5A002, 5A004, 5A992, 5D002, and 5D992 to address overlapping controls
with ECCNs 3A090, 4A090, 3A991.p and 4A994.l by adding .z paragraphs to
each of these nine ECCNs. These changes are intended to make it easier
for exporters, reexporters, and transferors to identify these items
subject to controls added in the October 7 IFR and to more easily
distinguish these items from other items controlled under these same
nine ECCNs. Each .z paragraph uses the same structure, but there are
differences in the .z paragraphs because the overlapping controls with
3A090 and 4A090, as well as 3A991.p and 4A994.l, are not the same for
each of the nine ECCNs. Despite the differences in the text used for
each .z paragraph, the commonality in the paragraphs' structure should
assist understanding. Some of the .z paragraphs are limited to one
paragraph, but others such as ECCN 5A002 have several paragraphs under
the .z paragraph. BIS is adopting the .z structure because no ECCN
currently has a .z ``items'' level paragraph. Similar to the structure
used with the .x and .y paragraphs for the ``600 series,'' 9x515, and
0x5zz ECCNs, using a common ``items'' paragraph designation will make
it easier for exporters, reexporters, and transferors to identify these
items, as well as for the U.S. Government to identify these items under
these nine ECCNs.
For each ECCN this rule revises to add a .z paragraph, this rule
reserves the items level paragraph from where the items paragraph ended
prior to this AC/S IFR becoming effective up through paragraph .y. For
example under ECCN 5A002, this rule revises 5A002 to reserve paragraphs
.f through .y. This rule does the same in each of the other eight ECCNs
that are being revised to add the .z paragraphs, but depending on how
many items paragraphs each ECCN had before the effective date of this
AC/S IFR, different paragraphs are reserved.
BIS includes as an illustrative example some of the .z paragraphs
from ECCN 5A002 that this AC/S IFR adds. The introductory text of the
5A002.z paragraph identifies ``Other commodities, as follows'' and then
includes additional control parameters to identify these .z
commodities. ECCN 5A002, because of the complexity of the ECCN and the
overlapping controls with 3A090 and 4A090, has several .z subparagraphs
that are tied to the other ``items'' paragraphs in 5A002. For example,
5A002.z.1 controls commodities that are described in 5A002.a and that
also meet or exceed the performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090.
Similarly, 5A002.z.2 controls commodities that are described in 5A002.b
and that also meet or exceed the performance parameters in 3A090 or
4A090. Some of the other relevant ECCNs have a simpler and shorter
structure and may be limited to a single .z paragraph. However,
regardless of how many .z paragraphs are added, each .z paragraph
functions the same way because it references an item that is described
elsewhere in the same ECCN that also meets or exceeds the performance
parameters in 3A090, 4A090, 3A991.p, or 4A994.l, as applicable and
specified in the respective .z paragraph. By classifying these items in
their own .z paragraph, it will be easier for exporters, reexporters,
and transferors to identify these items and the additional controls and
other restrictions that are applicable to them.
In ECCN 3A001, this AC/S IFR reserves paragraphs j. through y. and
adds paragraphs z.1 through .4 to the ``items'' paragraph in the List
of Items Controlled section and makes the following conforming changes
by adding certain 3A001.z items to the NS1, RS1, MT1 and NP1 Controls
paragraphs and adding a RS control that applies to items controlled by
3A001.z for destinations specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5.
This AC/S IFR adds 3A001.z to the exclusion on using License Exception
LVS.
In ECCN 4A003, this AC/S IFR reserves paragraphs h. through y. and
adds paragraphs .z.1 through .z.4 in the List of Items Controlled
section and makes a corresponding change to the Reason for Control
section by adding a RS control for items controlled by 4A003.z for
destinations specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5. This AC/S
IFR adds 4A003.z to the exclusion on using License Exception LVS. This
AC/S IFR also adds a new Note to List Based License Exception in ECCN
4A003 to specify that the related equipment specified under ECCN
4A003.g, z.2, or z.4 are eligible for
[[Page 73477]]
License Exception GBS if three conditions are met. The related
equipment must be exported, reexported, or transferred (in-country) as
part of a computer system, the computer system must either be
designated as NLR or eligible for License Exception APP, and the
related equipment must be eligible for License Exception APP.
In ECCN 4A004, this AC/S IFR reserves paragraphs d. through y. and
adds paragraph .z in the List of Items Controlled section and makes a
corresponding change to the Reasons for Control section by adding a RS
control that applies to items controlled by 4A004.z (1) for
destinations specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are not
also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6 and (2) to or with any
destination not specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 when the
export, reexport or transfer (in-country) includes an ultimate
consignee or end user headquartered in a destination in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, or D:5 that is not also specified in Country Groups A:5 or
A:6. This AC/S IFR adds 4A004.z to the exclusion on using License
Exception LVS.
In ECCN 4A005, this AC/S IFR revises the heading to add the
parenthetical phrase ``(see List of Items Controlled).'' This AC/S IFR
revises the phrase that referenced ``[T]he list of items controlled is
contained in the ECCN heading'' in the ``Items'' paragraph in the List
of Items Controlled section to add the phrase ``except for the
commodities controlled under 4A005.z.'' This rule reserves paragraphs
a. through .y, adds paragraph .z, and makes a corresponding change to
the Reasons for Control section to add a RS control that applies to
items controlled by 4A005.z for destinations specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are not also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. This AC/S IFR also adds 4A005.z to the exclusion on using
License Exception ACE.
BIS notes that although the general restriction on the use of
license exceptions under Sec. 740.2(a)(9)(ii) and the terms and
conditions of certain list-based license exceptions, such as LVS or
GBS, or the terms of License Exception STA, would preclude the use of
these EAR license exceptions for destinations specified in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, that are not also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6, that this AC/S IFR as an additional safeguard still adds
exclusions for the new .z paragraphs for these ECCNs as an additional
reminder to exporters, reexporters, and transferors that these license
exceptions are not available for .z items for these destinations.
In ECCN 5A002, this AC/S IFR reserves paragraphs f. through y. and
adds paragraphs .z.1 through .5 in the List of Items Controlled section
and makes the following conforming changes by adding a RS control that
applies to items controlled by 5A002.z for destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are not also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6. This AC/S IFR also adds 5A002.z to the exclusion on
using License Exceptions LVS and ENC.
In ECCN 5A992, this AC/S IFR reserves paragraphs d. through y. and
adds paragraphs .z.1 and .2 in the List of Items Controlled section and
makes a corresponding change to the Reasons for Control section by
revising the RS control that applies for 5A992.z items destined to or
within destinations specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that
are not also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6.
In ECCN 5A004, this AC/S IFR reserves paragraphs c. through y. and
adds paragraphs .z.1 and .2 in the List of Items Controlled section and
makes the following conforming change by adding a RS control that
applies to items controlled by 5A004.z for destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are not also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6. This AC/S IFR also adds 5A004.z to the exclusion on
using License Exceptions LVS and ENC.
In ECCN 5D002, this AC/S IFR reserves paragraphs e. through y. and
adds paragraphs .z.1 through .9 in the List of Items Controlled section
and makes the following conforming change by adding a RS control that
applies to items controlled by 5D002.z for destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are not also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6. This AC/S IFR also adds 5D002.z to the exclusion on
using License Exception ENC.
In ECCN 5D992, this AC/S IFR reserves paragraphs d. through y. and
adds paragraph .z in the List of Items Controlled section and makes a
corresponding change to the Reasons for Control section by revising the
RS control that applies for destinations specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, or D:5 that are not also specified in Country Groups A:5 or
A:6.
B. Revising Related Controls for 3A090, 4A090, 5E001, and the Nine
ECCNs to cross reference each other to assist with classification.
BIS includes Related Controls paragraphs in the List of Items
Controlled section of ECCNs to alert persons classifying items of
related controls that may be applicable. This rule revises the Related
Controls paragraphs in ECCNs 3A090 and 4A090 to add references to the
nine ECCNs that this final rule adds .z paragraphs to, as applicable.
Because the cross over that is being addressed is not identical for
each of these nine ECCNs with .z paragraphs added, the revisions to the
Related Controls paragraphs are not identical in all cases.
In ECCN 3A001, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCN
3A090.
In ECCN 3A090, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also 3A001.z,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, and 5D992.z.
In ECCN 3A991, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCNs
5A002.z, 5A004.z, and 5A992.z.
In ECCN 4A003, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCN
4A090.
In ECCN 4A004, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCN
4A090.
In ECCN 4A005, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCN
4A090.
In ECCN 4A090, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCNs
4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, and
5D992.z.
In ECCN 4A994, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCNs
4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, and 5A992.z.
In ECCN 5A002, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCNs
3A090 and 4A090.
In ECCN 5A004, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCNs
3A090 and 4A090.
In ECCN 5A992, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCNs
3A090 and 4A090.
In ECCN 5D002, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCNs
3D001.z and 4D001.z.
In ECCN 5D992, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCNs
3D001.z and 4D001.z.
In ECCN 5E001, this AC/S IFR adds a reference to see also ECCN
3A001.z.
C. Other EAR conforming changes needed because of addition of .z
paragraphs.
This AC/S IFR makes various changes to other ECCNs and other parts
of the EAR to make conforming changes where needed as a result of the
addition of the .z items paragraphs to the nine ECCNs 3A001, 4A003,
4A004, 4A005, 5A002, 5A004, 5A992, 5D002, and 5D992.
These changes are made to ensure that certain provisions that
currently apply for other items controlled under these nine ECCNs are
not narrowed or expanded as a result of the addition of the .z
paragraphs. In other cases, specific ``items'' paragraphs from these
[[Page 73478]]
nine ECCNs are identified in other provisions where in certain cases,
it was needed to also add in references to ensure the same provisions
will apply to the .z paragraphs. Because some of the nine ECCNs include
ECCNs, such as 5A002 and 5D002, which are referenced in various other
provisions of the EAR, this AC/S IFR needed to make various conforming
changes to these other ECCNs and parts of the EAR. Although this
appears to be extensive revision, the intent in most cases is to ensure
that the scope of the controls prior to this AC/S IFR generally does
not change. The changes are described below in the order they appear in
the EAR.
Conforming Changes in Part 734
In Sec. 734.4(b)(2), this AC/S IFR removes ECCNs 5A992.c and
5D992.c and adds in their place ECCNs 5A992 and 5D992. These
requirements are intended to apply to the entire ECCNs, so these
changes are needed to account for the addition of .z to 5A992 and
5D992.
In Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2), this AC/S IFR
revises these two paragraphs to remove the phrase ``elsewhere on the
CCL and meets the performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090'' and adds a
more specific reference to ``meeting the performance parameters in
ECCNs 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, or
5A992.z.'' By adding this more specific reference tied to the new .z
paragraphs, this AC/S IFR will make it easier for foreign manufacturers
to comply with this aspect of the Advanced Computing Foreign Direct
Product (FDP) rule and to more easily apply the de minimis provisions.
Conforming Changes in Part 740
In Sec. 740.2 Restrictions on all License Exceptions, this AC/S
IFR revises the general restriction on the use of license exceptions
under paragraph (a)(9)(ii), which will now be paragraph (a)(9)(ii)(B)
because of the revisions made in this SME IFR, to remove the phrase
``elsewhere on the CCL which meets or exceeds the performance
parameters in ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090'' and adds in its place the more
specific reference to ``specified in ECCNs 3A001.z; 3D001 (for
``software'' for commodities controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090), 3E001 (for
``technology'' for commodities controlled by 3A001.z); 4A003.z;
4A004.z; 4A005.z; 4D001 (for ``software'' for commodities controlled by
4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z); 4E001 (for ``technology'' for
commodities controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z); 5A002.z;
5A004.z; 5A992.z; 5D002.z; 5D992.z; 5E002 (for ``technology'' for
commodities controlled by 5A002.z or 5A004.z); ``software'' specified
by 5D002 (for 5A002.z or 5A004.z commodities); 5E992 (for
``technology'' for commodities controlled by 5A992.z or ``software''
controlled by 5D992.z).'' By adding this more specific reference tied
to the new .z paragraphs, this AC/S IFR will make it easier for
exporters, reexporters, and transferors to know when this general
restriction will apply on the use of license exceptions. In the
introductory text of paragraph (a)(9)(ii), this AC/S IFR adds a
reference to new License Exception NAC by adding the phrase ``NAC,
under the provisions of Sec. 740.8.''
In addition to amending Sec. 740.2(a)(9) to prohibit the use of
license exceptions for certain ECCNs, including those with a .z
paragraph, BIS also notes restrictions for certain license exceptions
as a reminder for exporters. In Sec. 740.7 Computers (APP), this AC/S
IFR adds a reference to 4A003.z.2 or z.4 after the reference to 4A003.g
in paragraph (b)(1) to remind exporters that this restriction on the
use of License Exception APP will also apply when a commodity that is
described in 4A003.g is controlled under 4A003.z.2 or .z.4.
In Sec. 740.16 Additional permissive reexports (APR), this AC/S
IFR revises paragraphs (a)(2) and (b)(2)(ii) to add a reference to
3A001.z to ensure that the restrictions under 3A001.b.2 or b.3 will
continue to apply when a commodity described under one of those two
``items'' paragraphs is controlled under 3A001.z.
In Sec. 740.17 Encryption Commodities, Software and Technology
(ENC), this AC/S IFR makes several conforming changes to ensure the
intended scope of this license exception is not changed as a result of
the addition of the .z ``items'' paragraphs:
Under the fifth sentence of the introductory text to Sec. 740.17,
this AC/S IFR removes the reference to 5A992.c and 5D992.c and adds in
its place a reference to 5A992 and 5D992.
Under paragraph (b)(1) to Sec. 740.17, this AC/S IFR adds a
reference after 5A002.a to 5A002.z.1 and removes the reference to
5A992.c and 5D992.c and adds in its place a reference to 5A992 and
5D992. BIS could have added a reference to 5D992.z, but because ECCN
5D992 only includes ``items'' paragraphs .c and .z, it was simpler to
add a reference to 5D992.
Under paragraph (b)(2)(i)(D) to Sec. 740.17, this AC/S IFR after
5A002.c adds a reference to 5A002.z.3 to ensure the intended scope of
this provision is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z
``items'' paragraph.
Under the Note to paragraph (b)(2) to Sec. 740.17, this AC/S IFR
adds after ECCN 5A002.b a reference to 5A002.z.2 and after 5D002.b a
reference to 5D002.z.5 to ensure the intended scope of this provision
is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z ``items''
paragraph.
Under (b)(3) introductory text to Sec. 740.17, this AC/S IFR
removes 5A992.c and 5D992.c and adds in their place references to 5A992
and 5D992. BIS could have added a reference to 5D992.z, but because
ECCN 5D992 only includes ``items'' paragraphs .c and .z, it was simpler
to add a reference to 5D992.
Under (b)(3)(i) introductory text to Sec. 740.17, this AC/S IFR
after 5A002.a adds a reference to 5A002.z.1 to ensure the intended
scope of this provision is not changed as a result of the addition of
the .z ``items'' paragraph.
Under paragraph (b)(3)(iii)(B) to Sec. 740.17, this AC/S IFR after
5D002.a.3.b adds a reference to 5D002.z.4, and after 5D002.c.3.b adds a
reference to 5D002.z.9 to ensure the intended scope of this provision
is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z ``items''
paragraph.
Under paragraph (b)(3)(iv) to Sec. 740.17, this AC/S IFR after
5A002.b adds a reference to 5A002.z.2, and after 5D002.b adds a
reference to 5D002.z.5 to ensure the intended scope of this provision
is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z ``items''
paragraph.
Under paragraph (e)(3) second sentence to Sec. 740.17, this AC/S
IFR removes the reference to 5A992.c and 5D992.c and adds in its place
a reference to 5A992 and 5D992. BIS could have added a reference to
5D992.z, but because ECCN 5D992 only includes ``items'' paragraphs .c
and .z, it was simpler to add a reference to 5D992.
Under paragraph (f)(1) to Sec. 740.17, this AC/S IFR adds after
5A004.a a reference to 5A004.z.1 and z.2, after 5D002.a.3.a a reference
to 5D002.z.3 and z.8 to ensure the intended scope of this provision is
not changed as a result of the addition of the .z ``items'' paragraph.
Conforming Changes in Parts 742, 746, and 748
In Sec. 742.6 Regional stability, this AC/S IFR revises paragraph
(a)(6)(i), to remove the phrases beginning with ``5A992 (that meet or
exceed the performance parameters of ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090)'' and
``5D992 (that meet or exceed the performance parameters of ECCNs 3A090
or 4A090).'' Also in paragraph (a)(6)(iii), this AC/S IFR removes the
phrase ``elsewhere on the CCL that meet or exceed the performance
parameters of ECCNs
[[Page 73479]]
3A090 or 4A090'' and in its place references the nine .z ECCNs
``3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z,
5D002.z, or 5D992.z.'' As noted and requested by several commenters,
having a positive listing of relevant ECCNs will significantly ease the
burden on exporters, reexporters, and transferors and the controls will
be easier to implement.
In Sec. 746.8 Sanctions against Russia and Belarus, this AC/S IFR
adds .c after 5A992 and 5D992. This AC/S IFR makes this change to
ensure that 5A992.z and 5D992.z commodities and software will not be
within the scope of this exclusion.
In Sec. 742.15 (Encryption items), this AC/S IFR revises the third
sentence of paragraph (a)(1) to remove the .c after 5A992.c and 5D992.c
to ensure the scope of requirement is not changed by the addition of
5A992.z and 5D992.z.
In Sec. 746.10 `Luxury Goods' Sanctions Against Russia and Belarus
and Russian and Belarusian Oligarchs and Malign Actors, this AC/S IFR
adds .c after 5A992 and 5D992. This AC/S IFR makes this change to
ensure that 5A992.z and 5D992.z commodities and software will not be
within the scope of this exclusion.
In 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, this AC/S IFR
revises the VEU entry for ``Advanced Micro Devices China, Inc.'' in
China to remove the reference to 4A003 and add in its place the more
specific reference to 4A003.b through .g to ensure that the currently
approved scope of this VEU entry does not change because of the
addition of 4A003.z. In addition, this AC/S IFR revises the entry for
``Shanghai Huahong Grace Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation'' in
China to remove the reference to 5A002 and add in its place the more
specific reference to 5A002.a through .e; remove the reference to 5A004
and add in its place a more specific reference to 5A004.a through .b;
and remove 5A992 and adds in its place a reference to 5A992.c. Also in
supplement no. 7 to part 748, this AC/S IFR revises the heading of the
supplement to add the parenthetical phrase ``(in-country)'' after the
term ``transfer'' for clarity on the scope of the VEU authorizations
under this supplement and for consistency with other EAR the
provisions, such as the definition of ``transfer (in-country).''
Conforming Changes to Sec. Sec. 770.2 and 772.1
In Sec. 770.2 Item interpretations, this AC/S IFR after 4A003.g
adds a reference to 4A003.z.2 and .z.4 in paragraph (l)(2) to ensure
the intended scope of this provision is not changed as a result of the
addition of the .z ``items'' paragraph.
In Sec. 772.1 Definitions of terms as used in the Export
Administration Regulations (EAR), this AC/S IFR revises Note 1 to the
term ``specially designed,'' to add the parenthetical phrase ``(except
for .z)'' after ECCNs 5A992 and 5D992 to ensure the intended scope of
this provision is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z
``items'' paragraph.
In ECCNs 3D001, 3E001, 4D001, 4E001, 5D002 5E002, and 5E992, this
AC/S IFR revises the License Requirement section of each of these nine
ECCNs to add related ``software'' and ``technology'' controls for the
new .z items added to the nine ECCNs 3A001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005, 5A002,
5A004, 5A992, 5D002, and 5D992 to impose the same license requirements
on the related ``software'' and ``technology'' as applies to the .z
commodities this AC/S IFR adds.
Conforming Changes to the CCL
In ECCN 3D001, this AC/S IFR revises the TSR paragraph in the List
Based License Exceptions section to add after ECCN 3A001.b.8 a
reference to 3A001.z to ensure the intended scope of this provision is
not changed as a result of the addition of the .z ``items'' paragraph.
In ECCN 3E001, this AC/S IFR revises the TSR paragraph in the List
Based License Exceptions section to add after ECCNs 3A001.b.8,
3A001.e.4, 3A001.b.2, and 3A001.b.3 references to 3A001.z after each of
these items paragraphs to ensure the intended scope of this provision
is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z ``items''
paragraph. Also in ECCN 3E001 under the Special Conditions for STA
section, this AC/S IFR adds after ECCN 3A001.b.2 and .b.3 a reference
to 3A001.z to ensure the intended scope of this provision is not
changed as a result of the addition of the .z ``items'' paragraph. Also
in Note 2 in the ``items'' paragraph in the List of Items Controlled
section, this rule adds after 3A001.a.3 and .14 a reference to 3A001.z
to ensure the intended scope of this provision is not changed as a
result of the addition of the .z ``items'' paragraph.
In Note 3 to Category 4--Computers, this AC/S IFR after 5A002.a
adds a reference to 5A002.z.1 and z.6, and after 5A004.b adds a
reference to 5A004.z; after 5D002.c.3 adds references to 5D002.z.6,
5D002.z.8, and z.9. These changes are made to ensure the intended scope
of this provision is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z
``items'' paragraph.
In the Technical Note paragraph 2 in the TECHNICAL NOTE ON
``ADJUSTED PEAK PERFORMANCE'' (``APP'') at the end Category 4--
Computers, this AC/S IFR after 4A003.c adds a reference to 4A003.z.1
and z.3 to ensure the intended scope of this provision is not changed
as a result of the addition of the .z ``items'' paragraph.
In Note 3 to Category 5--Telecommunications and ``Information
Security'' Part 1--Telecommunications, this AC/S IFR after 5A002.a adds
a reference to 5A002.z.1 and z.6; after 5A004.b adds a reference to
5A004.z; after 5D002.c.1 adds a reference to 5D002.z.6; and after
5D002.c.3 adds a reference to 5D002.z.8 and z.9 to ensure the intended
scope of this note is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z
``items'' paragraph.
In Note 3 (Cryptography Note) to Category 5--Telecommunications and
``Information Security'' Part 2--``Information Security,'' to ensure
the intended scope of this note is not changed as a result of the
addition of the .z ``items'' paragraph, this AC/S IFR after 5D002.a.1
adds 5D002.z.1; after 5D002.b adds 5D002.z.5; and after 5D002.c.1 adds
5D002.z.6 . In addition, under the N.B. to Note 3 (Cryptography Note),
this AC/S IFR removes 5A992.c and 5D992.c and adds in their place 5A992
and 5D992. BIS could have added a reference to 5A992.z and 5D992.z, but
because ECCNs 5A992 and 5D992 only include ``items'' paragraphs .c and
.z, it was simpler to add references to 5A992 and 5D992.
In ECCN 5B002 under ``items'' paragraph .b in the List of Items
Controlled section, this AC/S IFR after 5D002.a adds a reference to
5D002.z.1 through z.4 and after 5D002.c adds a reference to 5D002.z.6
through z.9 to ensure the intended scope of this provision is not
changed as a result of the addition of the .z ``items'' paragraph.
In ECCN 5E002, this AC/S IFR under ``items'' paragraph a in the
List of Items Controlled section after 5D002.a adds a reference to
5D002.z.1 through .z.3, and after 5D002.c adds a reference to 5D002.z.6
through .z.8. Also in the Note to 5E002.a, this AC/S IFR after
5D002.a.3.b adds a reference to 5D002.z.4; and after 5D002.c.3.b adds a
reference to 5D002.z.9. Lastly under `items'' paragraph b in the List
of Items Controlled section, this AC/S IFR after 5A002.b adds a
reference to 5A002.z.2. All of these changes are made to ECCN 5E002 to
ensure the intended scope of
[[Page 73480]]
these provisions is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z
``items'' paragraph.
In ECCN 5E992, this AC/S IFR revises ``items'' paragraph b in the
List of Items Controlled section to remove 5D992.c and add in its place
5D992. BIS could have added a reference to 5D992.z, but because ECCN
5D992 only includes an ``items'' paragraph .c and .z, it was simpler to
add a reference to 5D992.
In ECCN 9A004, this AC/S IFR under ``items'' paragraph d in the
List of Items Controlled section, after 3A001.b.1.a.4 adds a reference
to 3A001.z (if also described in 3A001.b.1.a.4), after 5A002.c adds a
reference to 5A002.z.3, and after 5A002.e adds a reference to 5A002.z.5
and z.10 to ensure the intended scope of these provisions is not
changed as a result of the addition of the .z ``items'' paragraph.
In ECCN 9A515 under Note 2 to 9A515.d and .e, this AC/S IFR after
3A001.a adds a reference to 3A001.z to ensure the intended scope of
this note is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z
``items'' paragraph. In addition, under ``items'' paragraph x.4 in the
List of Items Controlled section, this rule after 3A001.e.4 adds a
reference to 3A001.z, after 3A001.b.4 adds a reference to 3A001.z; and
under ``items'' paragraph x.6 after 3A001.b.8 adds a reference to
3A001.z. All of these changes to ECCN 9A515 are made to ensure the
intended scope of these provisions is not changed as a result of the
addition of the .z ``items'' paragraph.
Conforming Changes to Supp. No. 6 to Part 774
In supplement no. 6 to part 774--Sensitive List, this AC/S IFR
revises paragraphs: (3)(i) to add after 3A001.b.2 the parenthetical
phrase ``(including those described under 3A001.b.2 that are controlled
by 3A001.z)''; (3)(ii) to add after 3A001.b.3 the parenthetical phrase
``(including those described under 3A001.b.3 that are controlled by
3A001.z);'' (3)(iv) to add after 3A001.b.3 the phrase ``equipment
described under 3A001.b.2 or 3A001.b.3 that are controlled under
3A001.z'' and after 3A002.g.1 to add the phrase ``and equipment
described under 3A002.g.2 that are controlled under 3A002.z;'' and
lastly under (3)(v) after 3A001.b.3, adds the phrase ``equipment
described under 3A001.b.2 or 3A001.b.3 that are controlled under
3A001.z'' and after 3A002.g.1 adds the phrase ``and equipment described
under 3A002.g.2 that are controlled under 3A002.z.'' All of these
changes to the Sensitive List are made to ensure the intended scope of
these provisions is not changed as a result of the addition of the .z
``items'' paragraph.
D. Export clearance changes to increase transparency of .z, 3A090,
and 4A090 shipments.
i. Identification of .z items in AES. The identification of items
under .z paragraphs will assist exporters, reexporters, and transferors
by having a distinct classification of these items under these nine
ECCNs, which will assist companies in reducing their compliance burdens
and keeping better track of these items. For all shipments to China,
regardless of dollar value, an Electronic Export Information (EEI)
filing is required in AES for any items classified under an ECCN on the
CCL pursuant to the requirement under Sec. 758.1(b)(10), which
includes the nine ECCNs that this rule adds .z paragraphs to, unless
authorized under License Exception GOV under Sec. 740.11. The
mandatory EEI filing requirement in AES is important for transparency
into which CCL items are being shipped to China. However,
classification information filed in AES is at the ECCN level and does
not include the ``items'' level classification. One exception to this
practice is in the case of end-item firearms for exporters who wish to
use the EEI filing in AES as the method for submitting conventional
arms reporting to BIS instead of submitting separate reports to BIS.
They do so by entering the items level classification as the first text
to appear in the Commodity description block in the EEI filing in AES.
The benefit for exporters would be undermined if they are not
allowed to identify in the EEI filing in AES the .z items level
classification because their shipments to a destination specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding any destination also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, could potentially be stopped if
someone from the U.S. Government had questions as to whether, for
example, the item was classified under ECCN 5A002.a or under 5A002.z.
The U.S. Government also has an interest in being able to easily
identify the .z items in the EEI filing data in AES. The solution to
this problem, to benefit both exporters and the U.S. Government, BIS
applies the successful model that has been used for identifying end-
item firearms in the EEI data in AES by adopting a similar type of
requirement for these .z paragraphs for EEI filings in AES. In Sec.
758.1 (The Electronic Export Information (EEI) Filing to the Automated
Export System (AES)), this rule adds a new paragraph (g)(5) (Exports of
.z items that meet or exceed the performance parameters of ECCN 3A090
or 4A090). New paragraph (g)(5) imposes a requirement for identifying
.z items by ``items'' level classification in the EEI filing in AES.
New paragraph (g)(5) specifies that for any export of .z items
controlled under ECCNs 3A001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005, 5A002, 5A004, 5A992,
5D002, or 5D992 in addition to any other required data for the
associated EEI filing, the EEI filer must include the items paragraph
classification (i.e., .z), when applicable, for ECCNs 3A001.z, 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, or 5A992.z, 5D002.z, or 5D992.z. as
the first text to appear in the Commodity description block in the EEI
filing in AES.
ii. Identification of 3A090, 4A090, and .z commodities on the
commercial invoice. In Sec. 758.6, this AC/S IFR revises paragraph
(a)(2) to expand the list of ECCNs that an exporter must incorporate as
an integral part of the commercial invoice. Prior to this final rule
becoming effective, this requirement was limited to ECCN(s) for any
9x515 or ``600 series'' ``items'' being shipped (i.e., exported in
tangible form). This AC/S IFR adds 3A090 and 4A090, and the seven
commodity .z ECCNs 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z,
5A004.z, and 5A992.z, to the requirement. This AC/S IFR does not add
ECCNs 5D002.z and 5D992.z to Sec. 758.6 because these exports would
typically be done in an intangible format. However, even when EEI is
not required to be filed in AES for an intangible export, BIS still
encourages exporters, as a good compliance practice, to identify the .z
classification for ECCN 5D002.z and 5D992.z on the commercial invoice
when applicable. For the nine ECCNs with a .z paragraph, the
requirement to include the classification only applies to commodities
classified under the .z paragraphs. If the commodity is classified
under any other items paragraph in one of those nine .z ECCNs, then the
requirement under Sec. 758.6(a)(2) is not applicable. This AC/S IFR
also specifies that the requirement for identifying ECCN 3A090 includes
identifying the commodity as either 3A090.a or .b.
BIS is adding this additional export clearance requirement to
increase the transparency of these items for entities receiving these
items overseas. In particular, with the foreign direct product rules
from the October 7 IFR also tied to these ECCNs, it will assist foreign
manufacturers and other parties to be able to more easily identify when
they receive a 3A090, 4A090, or a 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, or 5A992.z ECCN item. BIS is aware that companies
outside the United States have
[[Page 73481]]
requested in the past on several occasions that BIS broaden the
requirement under Sec. 758.6(a)(2) to require additional ECCNs to be
included on the commercial invoice to assist them and reduce their
burden. There were also a significant number of comments in response to
the October 7 IFR that expressed concern that the burdens being imposed
in particular on reexporters may lead to a designing out of U.S.-origin
content, so broadening this requirement for U.S. exporters to assist
foreign manufacturers is a tangible way that BIS can reduce the burden
on reexporters, while at the same time helping to improve the
effectiveness of the October 7 IFR by ensuring greater transparency for
these items. BIS does not anticipate any change in the burden for
exporters as a result of this expanded requirement.
4. Expansion of RS License Requirements, and Adoption of Additional
Presumption of Approval License Review Policy With Certain Exclusions
That Will Be Presumption of Denial
A. Expansion of RS license requirement from China and Macau to
include Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5.
In Sec. 742.6 Regional stability, the AC/S IFR revises paragraph
(a)(6) (RS requirement that applies to advanced computing and
semiconductor manufacturing items) to reflect the expanded scope of
this paragraph for certain items. BIS is revising paragraph (a)(6)(i)
to remove references to 3A090 and 4A090 and the associated software and
technology, adding .z items created by this AC/S IFR, and imposing a
license requirement for these items under new paragraph (a)(6)(iii)
(Exports, reexports, transfers (in-country) to or within destinations
specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5, excluding destinations
also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6). This AC/S IFR adds these
items under a separate paragraph (a)(6)(iii) because of the expanded
country scope of destinations in Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5 that
are not also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, which will apply
to these items. The broader country scope license requirement for these
items identified under paragraph (a)(6)(iii) is warranted to address
diversion concerns from these destinations specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 (excluding destinations also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6) to China and Macau. BIS notes that these additional
countries are members of Country Group D:1, D:4, or D:5 because of
concerns related to national security or missile technology
proliferation, or as countries subject to a U.S. arms embargo,
respectively. A fuller description of the national security concerns
that led to these changes can be found in section C of this rule,
including a description of the different license review policies that
apply to some of these additional Country Group D:1, D:4, or D:5
destinations compared to China and Macau. See section C.4 for the
description of the license review policies.
Also, in Sec. 742.6(a)(6), the AC/S IFR removes Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(ii) (Deemed exports) and redesignates that paragraph as
(a)(6)(iv), as described further below under Section C.3.B. In
addition, this AC/S IFR removes the former license requirement under
paragraph (a)(6)(i) that applied to exports from abroad originating in
either China or Macau, and adds that under paragraph (a)(6)(ii),
including adding references to the .z items this AC/S IFR adds to the
EAR, consistent with Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and (h)(2)(ii) of the
EAR. This AC/S IFR redesignates this text also under paragraph
(a)(6)(ii) because BIS is not expanding the country scope of the FDP
rules under Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and (h)(2)(ii) of the EAR. This
AC/S IFR also removes paragraph (a)(6)(ii) (which this SME IFR
redesignated as (a)(6)(iii) and this AC/S IFR redesignates as
(a)(6)(iv)), as described further below under section C.3.B). Also, in
Sec. 742.6, this rule redesignates the introductory text of paragraph
(b)(10) (Advanced computing and semiconductor manufacturing items) as
new paragraph (b)(10)(i) (License review policy for paragraphs
(a)(6)(i) and (ii)) to specify the license review policy that applies
to those two new paragraphs. This AC/S IFR specified that such license
applications will be reviewed consistent with license review policies
in Sec. 744.23(d) of the EAR, except applications will be reviewed on
a case-by-case basis if no license would be required under part 744 of
the EAR rule.
This AC/S IFR also adds a new paragraph (b)(10)(ii) (License review
policy for paragraph (a)(6)(iii)) to specify license applications for
items specified in paragraph (a)(6)(iii) to or within destinations not
specified in Country Group D:5 (except Macau) will be reviewed on a
presumption of approval basis, unless the export, reexport, or transfer
(in-country) is to an entity headquartered in or whose ultimate parent
company is headquartered in, either Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5, in which case license applications will be reviewed
under a presumption of denial. This AC/S IFR also specifies that
license applications for items to or within Macau or destinations
specified in Country Group D:5 for items specified in paragraph
(a)(6)(iii) will be reviewed under a presumption of denial.
In conformity to the changes described above, this AC/S IFR also
revises ECCNs 3A001, 3D001, 3E001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005, 5A002, 5A004,
and 5D002 to add a RS license requirement and a reference to
destinations specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 (excluding
destinations specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6). Similarly, the RS
license requirement in ECCNs 3A090, 4A090, 5A992, and 5D992 is revised
to remove the reference to ``China and Macau'' and to add in its place
a reference to destinations specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or
D:5 (excluding destinations specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6).
B. Exclusion of deemed exports and deemed reexports.
This AC/S IFR removes Sec. 742.6(a)(6)(iii) that, prior to the
effective date of this SME IFR, specified that deemed exports and
deemed reexports were excluded from the license requirements under
paragraph (a)(6) and redesignates this paragraph as paragraph
(a)(6)(iv). See section D question 4 for specific public comments BIS
is seeking on the application of deemed exports and deemed reexports.
5. Clarifications for ``U.S. Person'' End Use Control
A. Clarification of the scope of ``U.S. persons'' activities
controlled under Sec. 744.6(c)(2) with the addition of new paragraph
(c)(3).
This AC/S IFR revises paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (ii) to broaden the
country scope of those controls from Macau and China to apply to Macau
and destinations specified in Country Group D:5 when you know the item
will be used in the ``development'' or ``production'' of ICs at a
facility of an entity headquartered in or whose ultimate parent company
is headquartered in, either Macau or a destination specified in Country
Group D:5.
This AC/S IFR also adds a paragraph (c)(3) (Scope of activities of
``U.S. persons'' that require a license under Sec. 744.6(c)(2) of the
EAR) to clarify the scope of activities that are caught under Sec.
744.6(c)(2)(i) through (iii). This clarification, partially codifying
previously issued guidance from BIS through Frequently Asked Questions
for the October 7 IFR, addresses questions received regarding the types
of activities of ``U.S. persons'' that are intended to be
[[Page 73482]]
caught and are subject to the paragraph (c)(2)(i) through (iii) license
requirements. This AC/IFR adds paragraph (c)(3)(i) to specify that the
``U.S. persons'' controls in Sec. 744.6(c)(2) apply to persons who
meet the criteria under paragraph (c)(3)(i)(A), (B), or (C).
The persons subject to the license requirements under paragraph
(c)(3)(i)(A) are ``U.S. persons'' that authorize the shipment,
transmittal, or transfer (in-country) of items not subject to the EAR,
under paragraph (c)(3)(i)(B) are ``U.S. persons'' that conduct the
delivery, by shipment, transmittal, or transfer in-country, of items
not subject to the EAR, and under paragraph (c)(3)(i)(C) are ``U.S.
person'' that service, including maintaining, repairing, overhauling,
or refurbishing items not subject to the EAR.
This AC/S IFR also adds paragraph (c)(3)(ii) (Due diligence) to
illustrate the type of due diligence that should be undertaken when
reviewing a transaction for purposes of Sec. 744.6(c)(2)(i) through
(iii). ``U.S. persons'' should conduct due diligence to determine
whether the end use for the item not subject to the EAR involves the
``development'' or ``production'' of ``advanced-node integrated
circuits versus other legacy ICs.'' Paragraph (c)(3)(ii) provides
examples of what appropriate due diligence may include, including
guidance for how to resolve potential red flags.
Lastly, this AC/S IFR adds a new paragraph (d)(1) (Exclusion of
certain administrative and clerical activities and information
otherwise excluded), which includes adding new paragraph (d)(1)(i)
(Exclusion of Certain administrative and clerical activities) to
specify the types of ``U.S. person'' activities that are excluded from
the controls in Sec. 744.6. This AC/S IFR also adds new paragraph
(d)(1)(ii) that clarifies that the scope of Sec. 744.6(c)(2) does not
include information or software that would otherwise be excluded from
the EAR based on the exclusion criteria under part 734, e.g., under
Sec. 734.7 Published and Sec. 734.8 ``Technology'' or ``software''
that arises during, or results from, fundamental research. This AC/S
IFR also adds paragraph (d)(1)(iii) to add an exclusion of law
enforcement and intelligence operations of the U.S. Government to
specify the ``U.S. persons'' criteria in Sec. 744.6(c)(2)(i)-(iii) do
not extend to ``U.S. persons'' conducting law enforcement and
intelligence operations of the U.S. Government.
B. Addition of guidance for submitting license applications for
``U.S. persons'' activities.
In supplement no. 2 to part 748--Unique Application and Submission
Requirements, this rule adds a new paragraph (s) (``U.S. person''
support activities that require a license under Sec. 744.6), to
provide guidance on how to apply for a license application for ``U.S.
person'' activities that require a license application under Sec.
744.6. The guidance, codifying and expanding upon previously issued BIS
Frequently Asked Questions on this issue, is under new paragraph (s).
The provision specifies that applicants should use the reexport
designation on the SNAP-R form and in the ``Additional Information''
section of the license application, they should note that a license is
required for the transaction under Sec. 744.6 of the EAR. The guidance
also specifies that in the special purpose field, the applicant should
describe the specific activity the ``U.S. person'' is engaged in that
requires a license. In addition, the guidance specifies the applicant
should provide the ECCN of the technology or item or, if unknown, use
EAR99 (regardless of whether the items are subject to the EAR), as well
as a complete explanation of the activity in supplemental
documentation.
In Sec. 748.8 (Unique application and submission requirements),
this rule makes a conforming change to add a new paragraph (d) (U.S.
person support activities that require a license under Sec. 744.6).
This rule also, as additional conforming changes with the existing
supplement no. 2 to part 748, adds paragraphs (s) (Exports of firearms
and certain shotguns temporarily in the United States); (t) (``600
Series Major Defense Equipment''); and (z) (Semiautomatic firearms
controlled under ECCN 0A501.a). Paragraphs (s), (t), and (z) were
included in supplement no. 2 to part 748, but were inadvertently
omitted from the text in Sec. 748.8, so this rule corrects that
oversight.
6. Expansion of Sec. 744.23 To Add Two Additional End-Use license
Requirements
A. Addition of end-use control for Macau and D:5 headquartered
(headquartered in or whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in
Macau or Country Group D:5), companies when located outside of D:1,
D:4, or D:5.
In Sec. 744.23 ``Supercomputer'' and semiconductor manufacturing
end use, this rule expands the scope of the end-use controls under this
section by adding two new end-use controls. First, this AC/S IFR adds
under paragraph (a)(3)(i) a new advanced computing end-use control
which will apply to any item subject to the EAR and specified in ECCN
3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z,
5A992.z, 5D002.z, or 5D992.z. A license will be required under
paragraph (a)(3)(i) for the export, reexport, or transfer (in-country)
to or within any destination not specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4,
or D:5 (excluding any destination also specified in Country Groups A:5
or A:6) of commodities identified in ECCNs 3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, or 5D002.z, or
5D992.z when the exporter, reexporter, or transferor has ``knowledge''
at the time of the export, reexport, or transfer (in-country) that item
is destined for any entity that is headquartered in, or whose ultimate
parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5. This additional end-use control is
needed to ensure that the national security objectives of the October 7
IFR and this AC/S IFR are not undermined by Macau, PRC or other Country
Group D:5 entities setting up cloud or data servers in other countries
to allow these headquartered companies of concern to continue to train
their AI models in ways that would be contrary to U.S. national
security interests. This expanded end-use control is intended to target
entities of concern, such as a PRC-headquartered cloud or data server
provider located outside of China in a destination other than Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding any destination also specified in
Country Groups A:5 or A:6. The license requirements under this end-use
control apply to destinations in Country Group A:5 and A:6 and any
other destination not specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5.
B. Addition of end-use control for ``production'' of advanced
computing items in any destination worldwide when using certain direct
products exported from Macau or a destination specified in Country
Group.
This AC/S IFR adds an additional end-use control for the items
identified under paragraph (a)(3)(ii) to specify an end-use control
applies to any ``technology'' subject to the EAR and specified in ECCN
3E001 (for 3A090) ``technology'' when the technology meets all of the
following: the technology is developed by an entity headquartered in or
whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5; the technology is subject
to the EAR pursuant to the FDP rule in Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and
(h)(2)(ii) of the EAR; and the technology is for the reexport or
transfer (in-country) from or within Macau or a
[[Page 73483]]
destination specified in Country Group D:5to any destination worldwide
of 3E001. The FDP rule requirement highlighted above is intended to
better ensure the intent of these two FDP rules are not able to be
circumvented by trying to conduct these types of activities outside of
Macau or destinations specified in Country Group D:5 by entities
headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or a destination specified in Country Group D:5.
C. Expansion of Country Scope to conform to broader country scope
included in this AC/S IFR.
This AC/S IFR as a conforming change also revises paragraphs
(a)(1)(ii)(A) and (B) and (a)(2)(i) and (ii) to remove China and add in
its place the broader country scope of Macau and any destination
specified in Country Group D:5.
D. Revision of Supercomputer end-use control.
This AC/S IFR revises paragraph (a)(1)(ii)(A) and (B) to broaden
the destination scope of the supercomputer end-use control by replacing
``China or Macau'' with ``Macau or a destination specified in Country
Group D:5.''
7. Addition of ECCNs 3A991.p .z, 4A994.l, or .z to License Exception
CCD
In Sec. 740.19 Consumer communications devices (CCD), this final
rule adds a new paragraph (b)(17) to add commodities described under
3A991.p or 4A994.l, as commodities eligible for License Exception CCD.
ECCNs 3A991.p and 4A994.l were not included in the October 7 IFR. BIS
determined it is warranted to add these commodities as eligible
commodities under License exception CCD because these ECCNs are for
low-level items and are in line with other items identified as eligible
for License Exception CCD. This AC/S IFR as a conforming change also
revises paragraph (b)(16) to remove the period and add a semi-colon and
the word ``and'' after the semi-colon to reflect the addition of new
paragraph (b)(17).
8. Broadening the Country Scope of the Advanced Computing FDP Rule
In Sec. 734.9(h) (Advanced computing FDP rule), this AC/S IFR
broadens the country scope of the advanced computing FDP rule by
revising paragraph (h)(2) (Destination or end use scope of the advanced
computing FDP rule). Specifically, BIS revises paragraphs (h)(2)(i) and
(ii) by removing ``PRC or Macau'' and adding in its place a
``destination specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding
any destination also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6.'' Under
revised paragraph (h)(2)(i) the country scope also extends worldwide
when the ``direct product'' is to or for an entity headquartered in or
whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Groups D:5. This AC/IFR also adds a
new Note to paragraph (h)(2) to clarify that the requirements apply
when any of these headquartered in or whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, companies are a party to the transaction involving
the foreign-produced item, e.g., as a ``purchaser,'' ``intermediate
consignee,'' ``ultimate consignee,'' or ``end-user.'' Additional
corrections and clarifications to this section are described in Section
C.11.A of this rule.
9. Clarification That Model Certificate May Be Used for All Foreign
Direct Product (FDP) Rules
In supplement no. 1 to part 734--Model Certification for Purposes
of Advanced Computing FDP rule, this AC/S IFR revises the heading to
Model Certification for Purposes of the FDP rules, and revises
paragraph (a) of that supplement to clarify that the model
certification may be used for any of the FDP rules under Sec. 734.9.
This AC/S IFR revises paragraph (a) to clarify that the model
certificate may be provided by any entity in a supply chain or to an
exporter, reexporter, or transferor of the item. In addition, this rule
adds an example to improve public understanding that the model
certification may flow more than one way (forward or backwards) in a
supply chain.
This AC/S IFR also revises paragraph (b) (model criteria), to
revise the introductory text of paragraph (b) and the text of paragraph
(b)(2) to make the model certification applicable for any of the FDP
rules under Sec. 734.9. New paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (ix) to
provide model criteria for any of the FDP rules that is applicable to
their scenario.
This AC/S IFR removes paragraph (b)(3) because the substance of
paragraph (b)(3) is already addressed under paragraph (b)(2).
This AC/S IFR also redesignates paragraph (b)(4) as (3) and revises
the newly redesignated paragraph to make a conforming edit to add the
phrase ``or exporter(s), reexporter(s), or transferor(s)'' to clarify
that the model certification can flow in either direction in a supply
chain. This AC/S IFR also revises Note 1 to paragraph (b) to clarify
that the model certification can flow from the exporter, reexporter, or
transferor to another entity in the supply chain or may flow the other
way from a consignee back to an exporter, reexporter, or transferor in
the supply chain. The purpose of the model certification is to enhance
awareness of the potential applicability of the FDP rules in supply
chains, so there is flexibility for how entities use the model
certification between different entities involved in supply chains to
help achieve that objective.
10. Changes To Enhance and Assist With Compliance
A. Addition of five new red flags to assist with compliance.
In supplement no. 3 to part 732--BIS's ``Know Your Customer''
Guidance and Red Flags, this AC/S IFR adds five new red flags that are
intended to provide additional compliance guidance to assist exporters,
reexporters, and transferors as part of their compliance programs for
the October 7 IFR. Several commenters on the October 7 IFR requested
BIS add red flags to the EAR that have applicability for the types of
transactions involving items from the October 7 IFR, similar to what
was done when the ``600 series'' military items were moved to the EAR
under Export Control Reform. BIS agreed with the commenters and adds
five new red flags to assist exporters, reexports, and transfers
identify potential red flags.
New red flag 15 identifies a scenario where, prior to the October 7
IFR, a customer's website or other marketing materials indicated that
the company had advertised or otherwise indicated its capability for
``developing'' or ``producing'' ``advanced-node integrated circuits.''
This type of activity would raise a red flag and require additional due
diligence.
New red flag 16 is a variant of some of the red flags regarding a
mismatch between what a customer says an item would be used for, and
the item's traditional use. New red flag 16 provides a similar type of
example but makes it specific to items intended for the ``development''
or ``production'' of ``advanced-node integrated circuits.''
New red flag 17 identifies a scenario where the customer is
``known'' to ``develop'' or ``produce'' items for companies located in
Macau or a destination specified in Country Group D:5 that are involved
with supercomputers, which would also trigger a red flag under the EAR.
This type of scenario may be indicative that the items that are being
``developed'' or ``produced'' may be for use in supercomputers and
warrants additional due diligence.
[[Page 73484]]
New red flag 18 addresses how exporters, reexporters, or
transferors should evaluate anticipated future capabilities, which was
another issue about which commenters sought additional compliance
guidance, in particular the end-use controls under Sec.
744.23(a)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii), which have been redesignated as
paragraph (a)(1)(i)(A) and (B) and (a)(2)(i) in this SME IFR. New red
flag 18 specifies that in scenarios where a customer has indicated
intent to ``develop'' or ``produce'' supercomputers or integrated
circuits in Macau or a destination specified in Country Group D:5 in
the future that would otherwise be restricted under Sec.
744.23(a)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii), redesignated as paragraphs
(a)(1)(i)(A) and (B) and (a)(2)(i), raises a red flag under the EAR.
New red flag 19 addresses how semiconductor fabrication facilities
can identify when they receive an order from a destination in Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 or worldwide from an entity headquartered in or
whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5 where the item to be
produced is likely a ``direct product'' that will be subject to the EAR
under Sec. 734.9(h). Red flag 19 is part of BIS's efforts to provide
guidance to semiconductor fabrication facilities trying to develop
enhanced FDP guidance for recognizing ``direct products.''
Specifically, BIS is adding this new red flag 19 to better assist any
semiconductor fabrication facility that is or will be producing, for a
company headquartered in or whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a destination specified in Country
Group D:5 an IC, or a computer, ``electronic assembly,'' or
``component'' that incorporates an IC that meets certain specified
criteria under Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2) that
there is a high degree of likelihood (``knowledge'') that the ``direct
product'' that is or will be ``produced'' is within the product scope
of Sec. 734.9(h). This criteria specifies that if the item that is or
will be produced is an IC, or a computer, ``electronic assembly,'' or
``component'' that incorporates more than 50 billion transistors and
high-bandwidth memory (HBM), it raises a red flag that there is a high
degree of likelihood that a license is required under the EAR for
reexport or export from abroad of that ``direct product'' if destined
to any destination in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 excluding
destinations also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6 unless the red
flag is resolved. BIS emphasizes here in this AC/S IFR that red flag 19
is only applicable if the entity has ``knowledge'' the criteria of the
red flag 19 are met. If the entity does not have ``knowledge'' that the
transaction would otherwise meet the criteria under red flag 19, then
this red flag is not applicable.
A reexporter or transferor may take additional steps as part of
their compliance program to attempt to resolve the red flag, e.g.,
obtaining additional information from the entity requesting the item to
be produced, in order to determine whether the item being produced is
outside the scope of Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2).
The addition of red flag 19 in this rule includes adding a Technical
note to (b)19, which will provide technical guidance on how to
calculate the red flag criteria under red flag 19. A reexporter or
transferor may also submit a license to BIS to ask for assistance in
determining whether the foreign item to be produced, is subject to the
EAR as a ``direct product'' on the basis of the Sec. 734.9(h), but BIS
encourages semiconductor fabrication facilities to try to resolve these
red flags themselves before applying for a license. Direct products
that are subject to the EAR under paragraphs (h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and
(h)(1)(ii)(B)(2) of Sec. 734.9 require a license under the EAR for
reexport or export from abroad of that direct product if destined to
any destination specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4 or D:5 that is not
also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6. BIS notes that this red
flag 19 can be overcome with positive ``knowledge'' of the
classification of the item that is or will be produced, provided the
semiconductor fabrication facility has positively determined that the
item that is or will be produced is not an item identified under
paragraph (h)(1)(i)(B)(2) or (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2), then that foreign made
product is not subject to the EAR on the basis of Sec. 734.9(h).
BIS is also interested in soliciting additional public comments in
this area of identifying ways to assist semiconductor fabrication
facility compliance in recognizing ``direct products.'' See section D
of this rule for the additional comments BIS is interested in receiving
in this area.
11. Changes To Minimize the Impact on Supply Chains--Adoption of TGL--
Advanced Computing Items
In supplement no. 1 to part 736--General Orders, this AC/S IFR,
revises paragraph (d) (General Order No. 4) to add a new paragraph
(d)(2) (TGL--Advanced computing items). The new TGL for advanced
computing items will overcome the license requirements specified in
Sec. 742.6(a)(6)(iii), provided the terms and conditions under
paragraphs (d)(3) through (5) are met. This AC/S IFR adds new paragraph
(d)(2)(i) (Product scope) to specify the items that may be authorized
under this new TGL. These items are limited to the items subject to the
EAR that are specified in ECCNs 3A001.z; 3A090; 3D001 (for ``software''
for commodities controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 3E001 (for
``technology'' for commodities controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 4A003.z;
4A004.z; 4A005.z; 4A090; 4D001 (for ``software'' for commodities
controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z); 4D090; 4E001 (for
``technology'' for commodities controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
4A090 or ``software'' specified by 4D001 (for 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and
4A005.z), 4D090); 5A002.z; 5A004.z; 5A992.z; 5D002.z; 5D992.z; 5E002
(for ``technology'' for commodities controlled by 5A002.z or 5A004.z or
``software'' specified by 5D002 (for 5A002.z or 5A004.z commodities));
or 5E992 (for ``technology'' for commodities controlled by 5A992.z or
``software'' controlled by 5D992.z).
The TGL--Advanced computing items is limited to the end use scope
specified in paragraphs (d)(2)(ii) (End-use scope). Paragraph (d)(2)(i)
has a different product scope than the original TGL that was included
in the October 7 IFR, but is otherwise similar in the scope of activity
authorized, although the destination scope is broader. Paragraph
(d)(2)(ii) requires that the recipient (1) is located in, but not
headquartered in or whose ultimate parent company is not headquartered
in, a destination specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 that is
not also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6. The end-use scope of
this paragraph authorizes entities to continue or engage in
integration, assembly (mounting), inspection, testing, quality
assurance, and distribution of items covered by items specified in
paragraph (d)(2)(i) provided the items are for ultimate end use (1)
outside of destinations specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5,
excluding destinations also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, and
(2) by entities that are not headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent
company is not headquartered in, Macau or Country Group D:5.
This AC/S IFR, as additional conforming changes to the TGL
revisions made in the SME IFR, revises the introductory text of
paragraph (d) (General Order No. 4) to add a reference to paragraph
(d)(2) that this AC/S IFR adds. This AC/S IFR also revises
[[Page 73485]]
paragraph (d)(3) (Validity date) to add a sentence to specify the
validity date for paragraph (d)(2). The TGL under paragraph (d)(1)
(added in this SME IFR) of supplement no. 1 to part 736 and the TGL
under paragraph (d)(2) (added in this AC/S IFR) of supplement no. 1 to
part 736 will both expire on December 31, 2025, approximately a 2-year
validity period. This AC/S IFR also revises paragraph (d)(4) (End-use
and end-user restrictions) to revises paragraph (d)(4)(i) (Restrictions
related to part 744) to add a reference to new paragraph (d)(2). This
AC/S IFR under paragraph (d)(4)(ii) (Indigenous production)
redesignates the text added in this SME IFR as new paragraph
(d)(4)(ii)(A) and adds a new paragraph (d)(4)(ii)(B) to impose a
similar restriction on indigenous production, but specific to the new
TGL--Advanced computing items added under paragraph (d)(2).
12. Additional Corrections and Clarifications
A. Conforming changes to headings for the Foreign Direct Product
(FDP) rules for clarity and consistency with advanced computing rule.
In Sec. 734.9, this AC/S IFR also revises paragraph (a) to: add
the paragraph heading (Definitions and model certification);
redesignate the existing Definitions text as new paragraph (a)(1)
(Definitions); and move and redesignate existing paragraph (h)(3) as
new paragraph (a)(2) (Model certification). This rule also makes
conforming changes to reflect that the model certification may be used
for any of the FDP rules in Sec. 734.9 instead of being limited for
use with the advanced computing FDP rule under Sec. 734.9(h).
In Sec. 734.9 (Foreign Direct Product (FDP) Rules), this AC/S IFR
makes conforming changes to the headings of paragraphs (b)(1)(ii),
(c)(1)(ii), (d)(1)(ii), (f)(1)(ii), and (g)(1)(ii) by removing the
heading '' ``Direct product'' of a complete plant or `major component'
of a plant'' and adding in its place the heading ``Product of a
complete plant or `major component' of a plant that is a ``direct
product''.'' This change is made to conform these paragraph headings to
the headings used in the advanced computing rule for paragraphs
(e)(1)(i)(B), (e)(2)(i)(B), (h)(1)(ii), and (i)(1)(i)(B) of Sec.
734.9.
In Sec. 734.9, this AC/S IFR, as a clarifying change, revises the
first sentence of the introductory text of the section, and paragraphs
(e)(1)(i)(B), (e)(2)(i)(B), (f)(1)(ii)(A), (g)(1)(ii), and (i)(1)(ii)
to remove the term `plant' and add in its place the more precise term
`complete plant.' This AC/S IFR makes this change, so the term
`complete plant' is used consistently throughout the section. For
purposes of this section, prior to publication of this rule, BIS
interpreted the term `plant' and `complete plant' the same, so this is
not a substantive change, but is intended to reduce any confusion
regarding whether the two formulations of the term have different
meanings. Additional changes were made throughout the section to ensure
that the complete plant provisions are identical.
In Sec. 734.3 (Items subject to the EAR), this AC/S IFR makes a
conforming change to paragraphs (a)(4) and (5) to remove the reference
to Sec. 736.2(b)(3) and add in its place a reference to Sec. 734.9.
Also in Sec. 734.3, this AC/S IFR as a conforming change to Sec.
734.9, revises paragraph (a)(5) to remove the term ``direct products''
and add in its place the term products, so it reads certain foreign-
produced products and adds the phrase ``that is a ``direct product'' of
specified ``technology'' or ``software'' '' after the phrase products
of a complete plant or major component of plant. This change is made to
conform with the other clarifications made on this under Sec. 734.9.
B. Clarifying changes.
In supplement no. 1 to part 774--Commerce Control List, this AC/S
IFR revises four ECCNs as follows:
In ECCN 4A090, this AC/S IFR revises ``items'' paragraph (a) in the
List of Items Controlled section, to add the words ``meets or,'' to
make it clear that this control parameter applies to computers,
``electronic assemblies,'' and ``components'' containing integrated
circuits, any of which meets or exceeds the performance parameters of
ECCN 3A090.a.
In ECCN 4A994, this AC/S IFR revises ``items'' paragraph (l) in the
List of Items Controlled section, to add the words ``meets or,'' to
make it clear that this control parameter applies to computers,
``electronic assemblies,'' and ``components,'' n.e.s., containing
integrated circuits, any of which meets or exceeds the performance
parameters of ECCN 3A991.p.
In ECCNs 5A992 and 5D992, this AC/S IFR revises the Country Chart
column in the License Requirements section in both of these ECCNs to
revise ``RS'' control to specify the RS control applies to .z items in
these ECCNs and the license requirement applies to or within
destinations specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5 that are not
also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, along with adding a cross
reference to see Sec. 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the EAR. This change is made
for consistency with the other ECCNs that reference Sec. 742.6(a)(6),
which specify China and Macao.
C. Conforming changes to ECCNs to not undermine deemed export and
deemed reexport exclusion.
This AC/S IFR revises two ECCNs: 4D001 and 4E001 to make conforming
changes to ensure these National Security (NS) controlled software and
technology controls do not undermine the intent of the deemed export
and deemed reexport exclusion under Sec. 742.6(a)(6)(iv). This AC/S
IFR does this by adding exclusions where needed to each of these NS
controlled ECCNs to exclude the relevant software and technology from
these ECCNs that are associated with ECCNs 4A090 and 4D090. This
software and technology were intended to be excluded from these NS
controls but were inadvertently not excluded in the October 7 IFR. To
correct this oversight, this rule makes the following changes to two
ECCNs:
In ECCN 4D001, this rule revises ``items'' paragraph (a) in the
List of Items Controlled section to add an exclusion for 4D090 for the
software controlled under 4D001.a.
In ECCN 4E001, this rule revises the NS control column the License
Requirements section to exclude technology for 4A090 or ``software''
specified by ECCN 4D090 from the NS control under 4E001.
D. Typographical, grammatical, and other conforming corrections.
In Sec. 732.2(b) introductory text, this AC/S IFR makes a
conforming change to the third sentence that referenced supplement no.
1 to part 734 which, prior to September 1, 2016, described several
practical examples describing publicly available technology and
software that are outside the scope of the EAR. These examples were
removed from the EAR on September 1, 2016, and are now found on the BIS
website, but the needed conforming change was not made at that time to
this paragraph (b). Subsequently, the October 7 IFR added a new
supplement no. 1 to part 734, but also inadvertently did not update
this reference to supplement no. 1 to part 734 in Sec. 732.2(b).
However, in the context of this paragraph, supplement no. 1 to part 734
should no longer be referenced and instead a reference to the FAQ
guidance on the BIS website at https://www.bis.doc.gov should replace
this text. This rule revises the third sentence to make this change and
adds a cross reference by adding a new fourth sentence to inform the
public to See the FAQs under the heading, EAR Definitions, Technology
and Software, Fundamental Research, and Patents FAQs, for where the
[[Page 73486]]
guidance can be found on the BIS website. This rule also makes this
same type of conforming change to Sec. 734.2(a)(1).
In Sec. 734.9, this AC/S IFR revises paragraph (h)(3) to make a
grammatical correction to remove an unneeded ``s'' from the word
``items.'' As described above, this rule also redesignates paragraph
(h)(3) as new paragraph (a)(2).
D. BIS Seeks Public Comments on the Following Additional Questions
In addition to welcoming comments on the topics and BIS responses
and description of the regulatory changes described above under
sections A through C, BIS in this AC/S IFR also specifically seeks
comments on the following questions:
1. Addressing access to ``development'' at an infrastructure as a
service (IaaS) provider by customers to develop or with the intent to
develop large dual-use AI foundation models with potential capabilities
of concern, such as models exceeding certain thresholds of parameter
count, training compute, and/or training data. This AC/S IFR seeks
public comments on what additional regulations or other requirements
may be warranted to address this national security concern relating to
AI. BIS also seeks input from IaaS providers on the feasibility for
them in complying with additional regulations in this area, how they
would identify whether a customer is ``developing'' or ``producing'' a
dual-use AI foundation model, and what actions would be needed to
address this national security concern while minimizing the business
process changes that would be required to comply with these
regulations.
2. Developing technical solutions to exempt items otherwise
classified under ECCNs 3A090 and 4A090. This AC/S IFR seeks public
comments on proposed technical solutions that limit items specified
under ECCN 3A090 or 4A090 from being used in conjunction with large
numbers of other such items in ways that enable training large dual-use
AI foundation models with capabilities of concern. Such items could
then be exempted from these ECCNs. An example approach would be to
limit a product that contains a set of ICs, including ECCN 3A090 AI
accelerators, CPUs, and network interface cards--which could form a
high-bandwidth domain including up to e.g., 256 AI accelerators, from
communicating outside the product or set beyond 1 GB/s in at least one
of the input or output direction. In one possible implementation of
this concept, each device in the set might provide a cryptographic
signature to other devices in the set, and then have a tamperproof
silicon root-of-trust in each device that would hold the private keys
for the cryptographic signatures. This approach could constrain a 3A090
item from being used to train large dual-use AI foundation models with
capabilities of concern, while allowing AI training capabilities at a
small or medium scale. In particular, the AC/S IFR seeks specific
technical proposals that would be difficult to circumvent; comments on
the timeline and costs to bring such proposals to market; and comments
on the demand for such ICs and products. The AC/S IFR also seeks
additional proposals for exemptions involving hardware-based technical
solutions that create the ability to limit training of large dual-use
AI foundation models with capabilities of concern.
3. Identifying ways to assist semiconductor fabrication facility
compliance in recognizing ``direct products.'' As discussed further
under section C.10 above, this AC/S IFR adds new red flag 19 in
supplement no. 3 to part 732 of the EAR to assist any facility where
``production'' of ``advanced node ICs'' occurs to follow guidance to
recognize ``direct products.'' New red flag 19 will assist
semiconductor fabrication facilities to more easily identify ``direct
products'' that they are or will be producing that are subject to the
EAR on the basis of the FDP rule. In order to be most effective, this
enhanced FDP guidance or any additional guidance that is developed
needs to identify criteria that (1) are already ``knowable'' or easily
determined by the semiconductor fabrication facilities and (2) should
be highly indicative of an IC that will meet the FDP scope under Sec.
734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2). BIS believes that the
criteria added under new red flag 19 meets this two-part test and will
assist semiconductor manufacturing facilities to more easily identify
their regulatory obligations under the EAR. However, in addition to the
criteria BIS included in new red flag 19 in supplement no. 3 to part
732, BIS also seeks any refinements to those criteria or alternative
criteria that would better achieve those two objectives.
4. Deemed exports and deemed reexports. BIS specifically seeks
public comment on the applicability of deemed exports and deemed
reexports in Sec. 742.6(a)(6)(iv). Commenters are asked to provide
feedback regarding the impact of this provision on their business and
operations, in particular, what if any impact companies would
experience if a license were required for deemed exports and deemed
reexports. Commenters are also asked to provide guidance on what, if
any, practices are utilized to safeguard technology and intellectual
property and the role of foreign person employees in obtaining and
maintaining U.S. technology leadership.
5. Control parameters under 3A090, in particular Note 2 to 3A090.
In response to this AC/S IFR, BIS seeks comments on how to refine the
parameters under ECCN 3A090 to more granularly cover only ICs that
would raise concerns for use in training large-scale AI systems and to
and to more specifically define ICs not designed or marketed for us in
datacenters.
6. Definition of headquartered companies. BIS seeks comments on the
definition entities headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent company
is headquartered in, either Macau or a destination specified in Country
Group D:5, including comments on the ability to access information
required to assess the status of a foreign party and any other factors
that would support the policy goal of limiting access to advanced
computing capability by Macau parties or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5 parties.
7. BIS is interested in receiving public comments in response to
this AC/S IFR on the technical parameters included in the definition of
``supercomputer'' and how those relate to the end-use control under
Sec. 744.23(a)(1). BIS is particularly interested in whether the
definition of ``supercomputer'' may result increasingly in commercial
datacenters falling under the definition of ``supercomputer'' and the
end-use control under Sec. 744.23(a)(1). BIS welcomes comments on the
definition of ``supercomputer,'' as well on what additional criteria
could be added to Sec. 744.23(a)(1) to better focus the control to
ensure that supercomputers used to support foreign government agencies
would be caught under the end-use control, but other datacenters
strictly involved in the commercial sector would not be covered.
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) (codified, as
amended, at 50 U.S.C. 4801-4852). ECRA provides the legal basis for
BIS's principal authorities and serves as the authority under which BIS
issues this rule.
Rulemaking Requirements
1. Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and 14094 direct agencies to
assess all costs
[[Page 73487]]
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 and 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
interim final rule has been designated a ``significant regulatory
action'' under Executive Order 12866.
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 involves the following OMB-approved collections of
information subject to the PRA:
0694-0088, ``Multi-Purpose Application,'' which carries a
burden hour estimate of 29.4 minutes for a manual or electronic
submission;
0694-0096 ``Five Year Records Retention Period,'' which
carries a burden hour estimate of less than 1 minute;
0694-0122, ``Licensing Responsibilities and Enforcement;''
and
0607-0152 ``Automated Export System (AES) Program,'' which
carries a burden hour estimate of 3 minutes per electronic submission.
This AC/S IFR will affect the collection under control number 0694-
0088, for the multipurpose application because of the addition of the
notification requirement for exports and reexports to China in order to
use new License Exception Notified Advanced Computing (NAC) under Sec.
740.8 that this rule adds to the EAR. BIS estimates that the new
License Exception NAC notification will result in an increase of 3,000
multi-purpose applications submitted annually to BIS and an increase of
950 burden hours under this collection. BIS also anticipates the
submission annually of 200 license applications as a result of the
revision to license requirements included in this AC/S IFR, but because
the original estimate that was included in the October 7 IFR (i.e.,
that BIS estimates that these new controls under the EAR imposed by the
October 7 IFR would result in an increase of 1,700 license applications
submitted annually to BIS) was higher than the actual number of license
applications BIS has received over the first year of the October IFR
changes being in place, BIS does not anticipate any changes in these
estimates as a result of the changes include in this AC/S IFR for
license applications submitted to BIS as a result of this AC/S IFR with
the one exception of the increase in burden hours for the License
Exception NAC notifications, which was not accounted for in the October
7 IFR because License Exception NAC was not part of the EAR at that
time.
This AC/S IFR will affect the information collection under control
number 0607-0152, for filing EEI in AES because this rule adds Sec.
758.1(g)(5) to impose a requirement for identifying .z items by
``items'' level classification in the EEI filing in AES. This change is
not anticipated to result in a change in the burden under this
collection because filers are already required to provide a description
in the Commodity description block in the EEI filing in AES. This
regulation also involves a collection previously approved by the OMB
under control number 0694-0122, ``Licensing Responsibilities and
Enforcement'' because this rule under the revision to Sec. 758.6(a)(2)
will require the ECCN(s) for any 3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z,
4A005.z, 4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z to be included on the
commercial invoice, similar to the previous requirement to include the
``600 series'' and 9x515 ECCNs on the commercial invoice. BIS does not
anticipate a change in the total burden hours associated with the PRA
and OMB control number 0694-0122 as a result of this rule.
Additional information regarding these collections of information--
including all background materials--can be found at https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain by using the search function to enter
either the title of the collection or the OMB Control Number.
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 ECRA (50 U.S.C. 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. While section 1762 of ECRA
provides sufficient authority for such an exemption, this action is
also independently exempt from these APA requirements because it
involves a military or foreign affairs function of the United States (5
U.S.C. 553(a)(1)).
5. Because a notice of proposed rulemaking and an opportunity for
public comment are not required to be given for this rule by 5 U.S.C.
553, or by 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 Parts 732 and 748
Administrative practice and procedure, Exports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
15 CFR Part 734
Administrative practice and procedure, Exports, Inventions and
patents, Research, Science and technology.
15 CFR Parts 740 and 758
Administrative practice and procedure, Exports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
15 CFR Part 742
Exports, Terrorism.
15 CFR Part 744
Exports, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Terrorism.
15 CFR Parts 746 and 774
Exports, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
15 CFR Parts 736, 770, and 772
Exports.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, parts 732, 734, 736, 740,
742, 744, 746, 748, 758, 770, 772, and 774 of the Export Administration
Regulations (15 CFR parts 730 through 774) are amended as follows:
PART 732--STEPS FOR USING THE EAR
0
1. The authority citation for part 732 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.; 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
2. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 732.2 is amended by revising
paragraph (b) introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 732.2 Steps regarding scope of the EAR.
* * * * *
(b) Step 2: Publicly available technology and software. This step
is relevant for both exports and reexports. Determine if your
technology or
[[Page 73488]]
software is publicly available as defined and explained at part 734 of
the EAR. The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) website at https://www.bis.doc.gov contains several practical examples describing publicly
available technology and software that are outside the scope of the EAR
under the FAQ section of the website. See the FAQs under the heading,
EAR Definitions, Technology and Software, Fundamental Research, and
Patents FAQs at https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/compliance-training/export-administration-regulations-training/1554-ear-definitions-faq/file. The examples are illustrative, not comprehensive.
Note that encryption software classified under ECCN 5D002 on the
Commerce Control List (refer to supplement no.1 to part 774 of the EAR)
is subject to the EAR even if publicly available, except for publicly
available encryption object code software classified under ECCN 5D002
when the corresponding source code meets the criteria specified in
Sec. 740.13(e) of the EAR. The following also remains subject to the
EAR: ``software'' or ``technology'' for the production of a firearm, or
firearm frame or receiver, controlled under ECCN 0A501, as referenced
in Sec. 734.7(c) of the EAR.
* * * * *
0
3. Effective November 17, 2023, supplement no. 3 to part 732 is amended
by adding paragraphs (b)15 through 19 to read as follows:
Supplement No. 3 to Part 732--BIS's ``Know Your Customer'' Guidance and
Red Flags
* * * * *
(b) * * *
15. The customer's website or other marketing materials prior to
October 7, 2022, indicated that the company had advertised or
otherwise indicated its capability for ``developing'' or
``producing'' ``advanced-node integrated circuits.''
16. The customer has made representations that the items in
question are not intended for use in the ``development'' or
``production'' of ``advanced-node integrated circuits,'' but the
items that are being requested to be exported, reexported, or
transferred (in-country) to this customer are typically exclusively
or predominantly used for the production of ``advanced-node
integrated circuits.''
17. The customer is ``known'' to ``develop'' or ``produce''
items for companies located in Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5 that are involved with ``supercomputers.''
18. The exporter has ``knowledge'' indicating this customer
intends to ``develop'' or ``produce'' ``supercomputers'' or
integrated circuits in the future that would otherwise be restricted
under Sec. 744.23(a)(1)(i) or (a)(2)(i).
19. The exporter has ``knowledge'' that it is or seeks to be
producing at a facility where ``production'' of ``advanced node
ICs'' occur, for a company headquartered in either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5, an integrated circuit,
or a computer, ``electronic assembly,'' or ``component'' that will
incorporate (A) more than 50 billion transistors and (B) high-
bandwidth memory (HBM). This raises a red flag that needs to be
resolved or a license may be required under the EAR for reexport or
export from abroad of that direct product if destined to Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5 (see supplement no. 1 to
part 774 and part 742 of the EAR for the CCL-based license
requirements for items identified under Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2)
and (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2) of the EAR), absent a determination that the
item being produced is outside the product scope of these paragraphs
under Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(2) and (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2).
Technical note to (b)19: To calculate the number of transistors
within a die, a foundry has two options. First, the foundry may take
the transistor density of the process node used to manufacture the
die and multiply this density by the area of the die. This number
may be significantly higher than the true transistor count, but if
the result is below the relevant transistor threshold, then the
foundry can be confident that the die in question will not exceed
that threshold. Second, to adjudicate edge cases, the foundry may
use standard design verification tools to estimate the number of
(both active and passive) transistors on the die using the GDS file.
Regardless of approach, if the foundry has knowledge that multiple
chiplets will be included in a single package, then the foundry
should estimate the aggregate number of transistors in any chiplets
the foundry is responsible for manufacturing. A foundry does not
need to count the transistors of chiplets that it is not responsible
for manufacturing itself.
PART 734--SCOPE OF THE EXPORT ADMINISTRATION REGULATIONS
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4. Effective November 17, 2023, the authority citation for part 734 is
revised 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.; E.O. 12938, 59 FR 59099, 3 CFR, 1994 Comp., p.
950; E.O. 13020, 61 FR 54079, 3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 219; E.O. 13026,
61 FR 58767, 3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 228; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3
CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 783; E.O. 13637, 78 FR 16129, 3 CFR, 2014 Comp.,
p. 223; Notice of November 8, 2022, 87 FR 68015, 3 CFR, 2022 Comp.,
p. 563.
0
5. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 734.2 is amended by revising the
last sentence of paragraph (a)(1) and adding three sentences at the end
of the paragraph to read as follows:
Sec. 734.2 Subject to the EAR.
(a) * * *
(1) * * * Publicly available technology and software not subject to
the EAR are described in Sec. Sec. 734.7, 734.8, and 734.10. The
Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) website at https://www.bis.doc.gov contains several practical examples describing publicly
available technology and software that are outside the scope of the EAR
under the FAQ section of the website. See the FAQs under the heading,
EAR Definitions, Technology and Software, Fundamental Research, and
Patents FAQs. The examples are illustrative, not comprehensive.
* * * * *
0
6. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 734.3 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(4) and (5) to read as follows:
Sec. 734.3 Items subject to the EAR.
(a) * * *
(4) Certain foreign-produced ``direct products'' of specified
``technology'' and ``software,'' as described in Sec. 734.9 of the
EAR; and
Note to paragraph (a)(4): Certain foreign-manufactured items
developed or produced from U.S.-origin encryption items exported
pursuant to License Exception ENC are subject to the EAR. See Sec.
740.17(a) of the EAR.
(5) Certain foreign-produced products of a complete plant or any
major component of a plant that is a ``direct product'' of specified
``technology'' or ``software'' as described in Sec. 734.9 of the EAR.
* * * * *
0
7. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 734.4 is amended by revising
paragraph (b)(2) to read as follows:
Sec. 734.4 De minimis U.S. content.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) The U.S.-origin encryption items are classified under ECCNs
5A992, 5D992, or 5E992.b.
* * * * *
0
8. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 734.9 is amended by:
0
a. Revising the first sentence of the introductory text and paragraph
(a), the headings for paragraphs (b)(1)(ii), (c)(1)(ii), and
(d)(1)(ii), revising paragraphs (e)(1)(i)(B), (e)(2)(i)(B), the heading
for paragraph (f)(1)(ii), and revising paragraphs (f)(1)(ii)(A),
(g)(1)(ii), (h)(1)(i)(B)(2), (h)(1)(ii)(B)(2), and (h)(2)(i) and (ii);
0
b. Adding a note to paragraph (h)(2);
0
c. Removing paragraph (h)(3); and
0
d. Revising paragraph (i)(1)(ii).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 734.9 Foreign-Direct Product (FDP) Rules.
Foreign-produced items located outside the United States are
subject to
[[Page 73489]]
the EAR when they are a ``direct product'' of specified ``technology''
or ``software,'' or are produced by a complete plant or `major
component' of a plant that itself is a ``direct product'' of specified
``technology'' or ``software.'' * * *
(a) Definitions and model certification--(1) Definitions. The terms
defined in this paragraph are specific to Sec. 734.9 of the EAR. These
terms are indicated by single quotation marks. Terms that are in double
quotation marks are defined in part 772 of the EAR.
(i) Major component. A major component of a plant located outside
the United States means ``equipment'' that is essential to the
``production'' of an item, including testing ``equipment.''
(ii) [Reserved]
(2) Model certification. Exporters, reexporters, and transferors
may obtain a written certification from a supplier that asserts an item
being provided would be subject to the EAR if future transactions meet
the destination or end user scope of one or more of the Foreign Direct
Product (FDP) rules under Sec. 734.9. The model certificate described
by BIS in supplement no. 1 to part 734 is not required under the EAR,
but through its provision, the certificate may assist exporters,
reexporters, and transferors with the process of resolving potential
red flags regarding whether an item is subject to the EAR based on
Sec. 734.9. The model certificate provided by BIS contemplates
signature by an official or designated employee of the certifying
company and inclusion of all the information described in paragraph (b)
of supplement no. 1 to part 734. While this certificate is expected to
be useful for a company to understand the application of the EAR to an
item, BIS does not view this as the only step to be completed during a
company's due diligence process. See supplement no. 1 to part 734 and
supplement no. 3 to part 732 of the EAR.
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or `major component' of a plant
that is a ``direct product.'' * * *
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or `major component' of a plant
that is a ``direct product.'' * * *
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or `major component' of a plant
that is a ``direct product.'' * * *
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) * * *
(B) Product of a complete plant or `major component' of a plant
that is a ``direct product.'' A foreign-produced item meets the product
scope of this paragraph if the foreign-produced item is produced by any
complete plant or `major component' of a plant that is located outside
the United States, when the complete plant or `major component' of a
plant, whether made in the U.S. or a foreign country, itself is a
``direct product'' of U.S.-origin ``technology'' or ``software'' that
is specified in ECCN 3D001, 3D991, 3E001, 3E002, 3E003, 3E991, 4D001,
4D993, 4D994, 4E001, 4E992, 4E993, 5D001, 5D991, 5E001, or 5E991 of the
CCL.
* * * * *
(2) * * *
(i) * * *
(B) Product of a complete plant or `major component' of a plant
that is a ``direct product.'' A foreign-produced item meets the product
scope of this paragraph if the foreign-produced item is produced by any
complete plant or `major component' of a plant that is located outside
the United States, when the complete plant or `major component' of a
plant, whether made in the U.S. or a foreign country, itself is a
``direct product'' of U.S.-origin ``technology'' or ``software'' that
is specified in ECCN 3D001, 3D991, 3E001, 3E002, 3E003, 3E991, 4D001,
4D993, 4D994, 4E001, 4E992, 4E993, 5D001, 5D002, 5D991, 5E001, 5E002,
or 5E991 of the CCL.
(f) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or `major component' of a plant
that is a ``direct product.'' * * *
(A) A foreign-produced item meets the product scope of this
paragraph if the foreign-produced item is produced by any complete
plant or `major component' of a plant that is located outside the
United States, when the complete plant or `major component' of a plant,
whether made in the United States or a foreign country, itself is a
``direct product'' of U.S.-origin ``technology'' or ``software'' that
is specified in any ECCN in product groups D or E of the CCL; and
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or `major component' of a plant
that is a ``direct product.'' A foreign-produced item meets the product
scope of this paragraph if the foreign-produced item is produced by any
complete plant or `major component' of a plant that is located outside
the United States, when the complete plant or `major component' of a
plant, whether made in the United States or a foreign country, itself
is a ``direct product'' of U.S.-origin ``technology'' or ``software''
that is specified in any ECCN in product groups D or E in any
categories of the CCL.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) * * *
(B) * * *
(2) An integrated circuit, computer, ``electronic assembly,'' or
``component'' specified in ECCN 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, or 5A992.z.
(ii) * * *
(B) * * *
(2) An integrated circuit, computer, ``electronic assembly,'' or
``component'' specified in ECCN 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, or 5A992.z.
* * * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Destined to a destination specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4,
or D:5, excluding any destination also specified in Country Groups A:5
or A:6, or will be incorporated into any ``part,'' ``component,''
``computer,'' or ``equipment'' not designated EAR99 that is destined to
a destination specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding
any destination also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, or
worldwide to an entity headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent
company is headquartered in, either Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5; or
(ii) ``Technology'' ``developed'' by an entity headquartered in, or
whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5, for the ``production'' of a
mask or an integrated circuit wafer or die.
Note to paragraph (h)(2): These end-use requirements under
paragraph (h) apply when any entity headquartered in, or whose
ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or
destination specified in Country Group D:5, is a party to any
transaction involving the foreign-produced item, e.g., as a
``purchaser,'' ``intermediate consignee,'' ``ultimate consignee,''
or ``end-user.''
(i) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Product of a complete plant or `major component' of a plant
that is a ``direct product.'' A foreign-produced
[[Page 73490]]
item meets the product scope of this paragraph if the foreign-produced
item is produced by any complete plant or `major component' of a plant
that is located outside the United States, when the complete plant or
`major component' of a plant, whether made in the United States or a
foreign country, itself is a ``direct product'' of U.S.-origin
``technology'' or ``software'' that is specified in ECCN 3D001, 3D991,
3E001, 3E002, 3E003, 3E991, 4D001, 4D994, 4E001, 4E992, 4E993, 5D001,
5D002, 5D991, 5E001, 5E002, or 5E991 of the CCL.
* * * * *
0
9. Effective November 17, 2023, supplement no. 1 to part 734 is revised
to read as follows:
Supplement No. 1 to Part 734--Model Certification for Purposes of the
FDP Rule
(a) General. This supplement is included in the EAR to assist
exporters, reexporters, and transferors in determining whether the
items being exported, reexported, or transferred (in-country) are
subject to the EAR based on one or more of the Foreign Direct
Product (FDP) rules under Sec. 734.9. The model certificate
provided by BIS in supplement no. 1 to this part is not required
under the EAR, but through its provision, the certificate may assist
exporters, reexporters, and transferors with the process of
resolving potential red flags regarding whether an item is subject
to the EAR based on one or more of the FDP rules under Sec. 734.9.
The model certificate provided in this supplement by BIS
contemplates signature by an official or designated employee of the
certifying company and inclusion of the information described in
paragraph (b) of this supplement. The certificate may be provided by
any entity in a supply chain or by an exporter, reexporter, or
transferor of the item. For example, the certificate may be provided
by an exporter, reexporter, or transferor to any other entity later
in a supply chain. Similarly, any entity later in a supply chain may
request a certificate from an exporter, reexporter, or transferor
earlier in a supply chain. Any certification relied on for this part
must be retained pursuant to recordkeeping provisions in part 762 of
the EAR. Obtaining the certification set forth in this supplement
no. 1 to part 734 does not relieve exporters, reexporters and
transferors of their obligation to exercise due diligence in
determining whether items are subject to the EAR, including by
following the ``Know Your Customer'' guidance in supplement no. 3 to
part 732 of the EAR.
(b) Model criteria. A certification will be most useful if it
meets the criteria described in this supplement and if it contains
at least the following information:
(1) The certification must be signed by an organization official
specifically authorized to certify the document as being accurate
and complete. The certifying official attests that the information
herein supplied in response to this paragraph is complete and
correct to the best of his/her ``knowledge.''
(2) The organization [INSERT NAME OF THE CERTIFYING OFFICIAL'S
COMPANY] has reviewed the criteria for the foreign direct product
(FDP) rules under Sec. 734.9 the U.S. Export Administration
Regulations (EAR) (15 CFR 730-774) and attests that from the
certifying official's ``knowledge'' of the item, [INSERT A
DESCRIPTION OF THE ITEMS], provided to [INSERT NAME OF THIS
CUSTOMER], are subject to the EAR if future transactions are within
the country/destination and/or end use scope or end-user scope of
one or more of the following FDP rules [include whichever ones are
applicable]:
(i) Country scope of Sec. 734.9(b)(2), i.e., exported or
reexported to or transferred within a destination listed in Country
Group D:1, E:1, or E:2 (see supplement no.1 to part 740 of the EAR);
(ii) Country scope of Sec. 734.9(c)(2), i.e., exported or
reexported to or transferred within a destination listed in Country
Group D:5, E:1, or E:2 (see supplement no.1 to part 740 of the EAR);
(iii) Country scope of Sec. 734.9(d)(2), i.e., exported or
reexported to or transferred within a destination listed in Country
Group D:1, D:3, D:4, D:5, E:1, or E:2 (see supplement no.1 to part
740 of the EAR);
(iv) End-user scope of Sec. 734.9(e)(1)(ii) or (e)(2)(ii) for a
Footnote 1 or Footnote 4 entity, respectively (see supplement no. 4
to part 744);
(v) Destination scope of Sec. 734.9(f)(2), i.e., exported or
reexported to or transferred within Russia, Belarus, or the
temporarily occupied Crimea region of Ukraine or will be
incorporated into or used in the ``production'' or ``development''
of any ``part,'' ``component,'' or ``equipment'' specified in any
ECCN on the CCL or in supplement no. 6 or 7 to part 746 of the EAR
and produced in or destined to Russia, Belarus, or the temporarily
occupied Crimea region of Ukraine;
(vi) End-user scope of Sec. 734.9(g)(2) for a Footnote 3 entity
(see supplement no. 4 to part 744);
(vii) Destination and end-use scope of Sec. 734.9(h)(2), i.e.,
the foreign-produced item is: destined to a destination specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding any destination also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, or will be incorporated into
any ``part,'' ``component,'' ``computer,'' or ``equipment'' not
designated EAR99 that is destined to a destination specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding any destination also
specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, or worldwide to an entity
headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent company is headquartered
in, either a destination specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or
D:5, excluding any destination also specified in Country Groups A:5
or A:6; or technology developed by an entity headquartered in, or
whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Country
Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5, excluding any destination also specified in
Country Groups A:5 or A:6, for the ``production'' of a mask or an
integrated circuit wafer or die;
(viii) Country and end-use scope of Sec. 734.9(i)(2), i.e.,
used in the design, ``development,'' ``production,'' operation,
installation (including on-site installation), maintenance
(checking), repair, overhaul, or refurbishing of, a
``supercomputer'' located in or destined to Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5; or incorporated into, or used in the
``development,'' or ``production,'' of any ``part,'' ``component,''
or ``equipment'' that will be used in a ``supercomputer'' located in
or destined to Macau or a destination specified in Country Group
D:5;
(ix) Destination scope of Sec. 734.9(j)(2), i.e., is destined
to Iran or will be incorporated into or used in the ``production''
or ``development'' of any ``part,'' ``component,'' or ``equipment,''
including any modified or designed ``components,'' ``parts,''
``accessories,'' and ``attachments'' therefor, identified in
supplement no. 7 to part 746 of the EAR or is specified in any ECCN
on the CCL in Categories 3 through 5 or 7 of the CCL that is located
in or destined to Iran; and
(3) My organization affirms its commitment to comply with all
applicable requirements under the EAR.
[INSERT NAME(S) OF CONSIGNEE(S) OR EXPORTER(S), REEXPORTERS), OR
TRANSFERORS AS APPLICABLE].
[INSERT DATE(S) SIGNED]
Note 1 to paragraph (b): When multiple consignees engaged in a
production process (or other type of collaborative activity, such as
joint development) will be exporting, reexporting, transferring, or
receiving items subject to the EAR, a single model certification
statement for multiple consignees may be used.
(c) Additional information. Because this is only a model
certification, parties to the transaction may add additional
elements to the certification and/or use it for multiple purposes as
part of their compliance program. For example, if a company has ten
affiliated companies in a multi-step supply chain, instead of
obtaining a model certification for each export, reexport, or
transfer (in-country), the exporter, reexporter, or transferor may
request all ten parties to sign the certification, if appropriate,
which may further reduce the burden on parties participating in the
supply chain.
PART 736--GENERAL PROHIBITIONS
0
10. The authority citation for part 736 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.; E.O. 12938, 59 FR 59099, 3 CFR, 1994 Comp., p.
950; E.O. 13020, 61 FR 54079, 3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 219; E.O. 13026,
61 FR 58767, 3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 228; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3
CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 783; E.O. 13338, 69 FR 26751, 3 CFR, 2004 Comp.,
p. 168; Notice of November 8, 2022, 87 FR 68015 (November 10, 2022);
Notice of May 8, 2023, 88 FR 30211 (May 10, 2023).
0
11. Effective November 17, 2023, to January 1, 2026, supplement no. 1
to part 736 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (d) introductory text;
0
b. Adding paragraph (d)(2); and
0
c. Revising paragraphs (d)(3) and (4).
[[Page 73491]]
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Supplement No. 1 to Part 736--General Orders
* * * * *
(d) General Order No. 4. Exports, reexports, or transfers (in-
country) authorized under the Temporary General Licenses (TGL)
specified under paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of this supplement must
also comply with the terms and conditions under paragraphs (d)(3)
through (5) of this supplement.
* * * * *
(2) TGL--Advanced computing items. This TGL only overcomes the
license requirements described in Sec. 742.6(a)(6)(iii) of EAR
when:
(i) Product scope. The items subject to the EAR that are
specified in ECCNs 3A001.z; 3A090; 3D001 (for ``software'' for
commodities controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 3E001 (for ``technology''
for commodities controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 4A003.z; 4A004.z;
4A005.z; 4A090; 4D001 (for ``software'' for commodities controlled
by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z); 4D090; 4E001 (for ``technology''
for commodities controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090 or
``software'' specified by 4D001 (for 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z),
4D090); 5A002.z; 5A004.z; 5A992.z; 5D002.z; 5D992.z; 5E002 (for
``technology'' for commodities controlled by 5A002.z or 5A004.z or
``software'' specified by 5D002 (for 5A002.z or 5A004.z
commodities)); or 5E992 (for ``technology'' for commodities
controlled by 5A992.z or ``software'' controlled by 5D992.z) of the
Commerce Control List (CCL); and
(ii) End-use scope. Any item identified under the paragraph
(d)(2)(i) of this supplement, may be exported, reexported, or
transferred (in-country) to or within a destination specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 (and not specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A6) when the recipient is located in but is not headquartered
or whose ultimate parent company is not headquartered in Macau or
Country Group D:5 to continue or engage in integration, assembly
(mounting), inspection, testing, quality assurance, and distribution
of items covered by items specified in paragraph (d)(2)(i) for the
ultimate end use of these items outside of destinations specified in
Country Groups D:1, D:4, or D:5 (and not specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A6) by entities not headquartered or whose ultimate parent
company is not headquartered in Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5.
(3) Validity date. The TGLs under paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of
this supplement expire on December 31, 2025.
(4) End-use and end-user restrictions--(i) Restrictions related
to part 744 of the EAR. The TGL under paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of
this supplement does not overcome the license requirements of Sec.
744.11 or Sec. 744.21 of the EAR when an entity listed in
supplements no. 4 or 7 to part 744 is a party to the transaction as
described in Sec. 748.5(c) through (f) of the EAR, or when there is
knowledge of any other prohibited end use or end user (other than
the Sec. 744.23 provisions specified above in the TGL).
(ii) Indigenous production. (A) The TGL under paragraph (d)(1)
of this supplement cannot be used for the indigenous ``development''
or ``production'' of Category 3B tools in either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5, i.e., where the
``part,'' ``component,'' or ``equipment'' is ``developed'' or
``produced'' at the direction of an entity that is headquartered in,
or whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau
or a destination specified in Country Group D:5.
(B) The TGL under paragraph (d)(2) of this supplement cannot be
used for the indigenous ``development'' or ``production'' of any
item identified under paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this supplement where
the ``part,'' ``component,'' or ``equipment'' is ``developed'' or
``produced'' at the direction of an entity that is headquartered in,
or whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau
or a destination specified in Country Group D:5.
* * * * *
PART 740--LICENSE EXCEPTIONS
0
12. The authority citation for part 740 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.; 22 U.S.C. 7201 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.
0
13. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 740.2 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(9)(ii) introductory text and (a)(9)(ii)(B) to read as
follows:
Sec. 740.2 Restrictions on all License Exceptions.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(9) * * *
(ii) The item is identified in paragraph (a)(9)(ii)(A) or (B) of
this section, is being exported, reexported, or transferred (in-
country) to or within a destination specified in Country Group D:1,
D:4, or D:5, excluding any destination also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6, and the license exception is other than: TMP, restricted to
eligibility under the provisions of Sec. 740.9(a)(6); NAC, under the
provisions of Sec. 740.8; RPL, under the provisions of Sec. 740.10,
including Sec. 740.10(a)(3)(v), which prohibits exports and reexports
of replacement parts to a destination specified in Country Group E:1
(see supplement no. 1 to this part)); GOV, restricted to eligibility
under the provisions of Sec. 740.11(b); or TSU under the provisions of
Sec. 740.13(a) and (c). Items restricted to eligibility only for the
foregoing license exceptions are:
* * * * *
(B) An integrated circuit, ``electronic assembly'' or ``component''
or related software or technology specified in ECCNs 3A001.z; 3D001
(for ``software'' for commodities controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 3E001
(for ``technology'' for commodities controlled by 3A001.z); 4A003.z;
4A004.z; 4A005.z; 4D001 (for ``software'' for commodities controlled by
4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z); and 4E001 (for ``technology'' for
commodities controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z); 5A002.z; 5A004.z;
5A992.z; 5D002.z; 5D992.z; 5E002 (for ``technology'' for commodities
controlled by 5A002.z or 5A004.z); ``software'' specified by 5D002 (for
5A002.z or 5A004.z commodities)); 5E992 (for ``technology'' for
commodities controlled by 5A992.z or ``software'' controlled by
5D992.z).
* * * * *
0
14. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 740.7 is amended by revising
paragraph (b)(1) to read as follows:
Sec. 740.7 Computers (APP).
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) Related equipment controlled under ECCN 4A003.g, z.2, or z.4
may not be exported or reexported under this license exception when
exported or reexported separately from eligible computers authorized
under this license exception.
* * * * *
0
15. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 740.8 is added to read as
follows:
Sec. 740.8 Notified Advanced Computing (NAC).
(a) Eligibility requirements. License Exception NAC permits the
export, reexport, and transfer (in-country) of any item classified in
ECCN 3A090, 4A090, 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z,
5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, or 5D992.z, except for items designed or
marketed for use in a datacenter and meeting the parameters of 3A090.a.
License Exception NAC authorizes exports, reexports, and transfers (in-
country) to or within any destination specified in Country Groups D:1
or D:4, and transfers (in-country) within Macau or any destination
specified in Country Group D:5, provided your export, reexport, or
transfer (in-country) meets all of the applicable criteria identified
under paragraph (b) of this section. The notification requirements do
not apply for transfers (in-country). License Exception NAC also
permits exports and reexports to Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5, or to an entity headquartered in, or with an
ultimate parent headquartered in, Macau or a destination specified in
[[Page 73492]]
Country Group D:5, of these items, provided your export or reexport
meets all of the applicable criteria identified under paragraphs (b)
and (c) of this section, as applicable:
(1) Written purchase order. The export or reexport is made pursuant
to a written purchase order unless specifically excepted in this
section. Exports or reexports of commercial samples are not subject to
this purchase order requirement, but such transactions are obligated to
comply with paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(2) Notification to BIS. Prior to any exports or reexports to Macau
or a destination specified in Country Group D:5, the exporter or
reexporter must notify BIS in accordance with the procedures set forth
in paragraph (c) of this section. For multiple exports or reexports,
the exporter or reexporter need only notify BIS prior to the first
export or reexport. A notification under this paragraph is not required
for transfers (in-country) within Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5. BIS will provide further information on the
notification process in policy guidance.
(b) Restrictions. License Exception NAC may not be used for
restricted activities under paragraph (b)(1) or (2) of this section.
(1) Prohibited end uses and end users. No exports, reexports, or
transfers (in-country) may be made under License Exception NAC that are
subject to a license requirement under part 744 or 746 of the EAR,
except for a license required under Sec. 744.23(a)(3) for reexports or
exports to any destination other than those specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, or D:5 (excluding any destination also specified in Country
Groups A:5 or A:6) for an entity that is headquartered in, or whose
ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5; and
(2) `Military end use' or `military end user.' No exports,
reexports, or transfers (in-country) may be made under License
Exception NAC to or for a `military end use,' as defined in Sec.
744.21(f), or `military end user,' as defined in Sec. 744.21(g).
(c) Prior notification procedures--(1) Procedures. At least twenty-
five calendar days prior to exports or reexports to or within Macau or
a destination specified in Country Group D:5, you must provide prior
notification under License Exception NAC by submitting a completed
application in SNAP-R in accordance with Sec. 748.1 of the EAR. The
following blocks must be completed, as appropriate: Blocks 1, 2, 3, 4,
5 (by marking box 5 ``Other''), 9, 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22 (a), (e),
(f), (g), (h), (i), (j), 22(d), 23, 24, and 25 according to the
instructions described in supplement no. 1 to part 748 of the EAR. Box
9 under special purpose must include NAC.
(2) Action by BIS. If the information provided is complete, BIS
will inform you within twenty-five calendar days of notification if you
may use License Exception NAC. Note that the fact that you have been
advised by BIS that you can use License Exception NAC does not exempt
you from other licensing requirements under the EAR, such as those
based on ``knowledge'' of a prohibited end use or end user as
referenced in general prohibition five (part 736 of the EAR) and set
forth in part 744 of the EAR.
(3) Status of pending NAC notification requests. You must log into
BIS's System for Tracking Export License Applications (STELA) (https://snapr.bis.doc.gov/stela) for status of your pending NAC notification or
to verify the status in BIS's Simplified Network Applications
Processing Redesign (SNAP-R) System. STELA will provide the date the
NAC notification is registered. STELA will, on the twenty-fifth
calendar day following the date of registration, provide a confirmation
of the fact that you can use License Exception NAC and a NAC
confirmation number to be submitted in AES or provide you with
confirmation if you cannot use License Exception NAC. In addition, BIS
may provide such confirmation by email, telephone, fax, courier
service, or other means.
0
16. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 740.16 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(2) and (b)(2)(ii) to read as follows:
Sec. 740.16 Additional permissive reexports (APR).
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(2) The commodities being reexported are not controlled for NP, CB,
MT, SI, or CC reasons; described in ECCNs 0A919, 3A001.b.2, b.3 (except
those that are being reexported for use in civil telecommunications
applications), or .z, 6A002, or 6A003; or commodities classified under
a 0x5zz ECCN; and
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) Commodities in 3A001.b.2, b.3 (except those that are being
reexported for use in civil telecommunications applications), or .z;
* * * * *
0
17. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 740.17 is amended by revising
the fifth sentence of the introductory text and revising paragraphs
(b)(1), (b)(2)(i)(D), the note to paragraph (b)(2), paragraphs (b)(3)
introductory text (retaining note), (b)(3)(i) introductory text,
(b)(3)(iii)(B), and (b)(3)(iv), the second sentence of paragraph (e)(3)
introductory text, and revising paragraph (f)(1) to read as follows:
Sec. 740.17 Encryption Commodities, Software and Technology (ENC).
* * * Items described in paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(3)(i),
(b)(3)(ii) or (b)(3)(iv) of this section that meet the criteria set
forth in Note 3 to Category 5--Part 2 of the Commerce Control List (the
``mass market'' note) are classified under ECCN 5A992 or 5D992
following self-classification or classification by BIS and are no
longer subject to ``EI'' and ``NS'' controls. * * *
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) Immediate authorization. This paragraph (b)(1) authorizes the
exports, reexports, and transfers (in-country) of the associated
commodities self-classified under ECCNs 5A002.a, z.1, or 5B002, and
equivalent or related software therefor classified under 5D002, except
any such commodities, software, or components described in paragraph
(b)(2) or (3) of this section, subject to submission of a self-
classification report in accordance with Sec. 740.17(e)(3) of the EAR.
Items described in this paragraph (b)(1) that meet the criteria set
forth in Note 3 to Category 5--Part 2 of the Commerce Control List (the
``mass market'' note) are classified as ECCN 5A992 or 5D992 following
self-classification or classification by BIS and are removed from
``EI'' and ``NS'' controls.
(2) * * *
(i) * * *
(D) Quantum cryptography. ECCN 5A002.c, z.3, or 5D002 ``quantum
cryptography'' commodities or software;
* * * * *
Note to paragraph (b)(2): Commodities, components, and software
classified under ECCNs 5A002.b, z.2, or 5D002.b or z.5, for the
``cryptographic activation'' of commodities or software specified by
paragraph (b)(2) of this section are also controlled under paragraph
(b)(2) of this section.
(3) Classification request required for specified commodities,
software, and components. Thirty (30) days after a classification
request is submitted to BIS in accordance with paragraph (d) of this
section and subject to the reporting requirements in paragraph (e) of
this section, this paragraph authorizes exports, reexports, and
transfers (in-country) of the items submitted for
[[Page 73493]]
classification, as further described in this paragraph (b)(3), to any
end user, provided the item does not perform the functions, or
otherwise meet the specifications, of any item described in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section. Items described in paragraph (b)(3)(ii) or (iv)
of this section that meet the criteria set forth in Note 3 to Category
5--Part 2 of the CCL (the ``mass market'' note) are classified under
ECCN 5A992 or 5D992 following classification by BIS.
* * * * *
(i) Non-``mass market'' ``components,'' toolsets, and toolkits.
Specified components classified under ECCN 5A002.a, or z.1, and
equivalent or related software classified under ECCN 5D002 that do not
meet the criteria set forth in Note 3 to Category 5--Part 2 of the CCL
(the ``mass market'' note) and are not described by paragraph (b)(2) or
(b)(3)(ii) of this section, as follows:
* * * * *
(iii) * * *
(B) Digital forensics and investigative tools. Items specified in
ECCNs: 5A004.b, z.3; 5D002.a.3.b or z.4; or 5D002.c.3.b or z.9 in
supplement no. 1 to part 774 of the EAR.
(iv) ``Cryptographic activation'' commodities, components, and
software. Commodities, components, and software classified under ECCNs
5A002.b, z.2, or 5D002.b or z.5, where the product or cryptographic
functionality is not otherwise described in paragraph (b)(2) or
(b)(3)(i) of this section.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(3) * * * Specifically, this reporting requirement applies to
``mass market'' encryption components and `executable software' that
meet the criteria of the Cryptography Note--Note 3 to Category 5--Part
2 of the CCL (``mass market'' note) and are classified under ECCN 5A992
or 5D992 following self-classification, as well as to non-``mass
market'' encryption commodities and software that remain classified in
ECCN 5A002, 5B002, or 5D002 following self-classification, provided
these items are not further described by paragraph (b)(2) or (3) of
this section.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(1) ``Cryptanalytic items,'' classified in ECCN 5A004.a, z.1 or
z.2, 5D002.a.3.a, c.3.a, z.3, or z.8, or 5E002;
* * * * *
0
18. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 740.19 is amended by revising
paragraphs (b) introductory text and (b)(16) and adding paragraph
(b)(17) to read as follows:
Sec. 740.19 Consumer communications devices (CCD).
* * * * *
(b) Eligible commodities and software. Commodities and ``software''
in paragraphs (b)(1) through (17) of this section are eligible for
export, reexport, or transfer (in-country) under this section to and
within Cuba, Russia, and Belarus.
* * * * *
(16) Consumer ``software'' (except ``encryption source code'')
classified under ECCNs 4D994, 5D991 or 5D992.c or designated EAR99 to
be used for equipment described in paragraphs (b)(1) through (17) of
this section; and
(17) Commodities described under 3A991.p or 4A994.l.
* * * * *
PART 742--CONTROL POLICY--CCL BASED CONTROLS
0
19. The authority citation for part 742 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.; 22 U.S.C. 3201 et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 2139a; 22
U.S.C. 7201 et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 7210; Sec. 1503, Pub. L. 108-11, 117
Stat. 559; E.O. 12058, 43 FR 20947, 3 CFR, 1978 Comp., p. 179; E.O.
12851, 58 FR 33181, 3 CFR, 1993 Comp., p. 608; E.O. 12938, 59 FR
59099, 3 CFR, 1994 Comp., p. 950; E.O. 13026, 61 FR 58767, 3 CFR,
1996 Comp., p. 228; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p.
783; Presidential Determination 2003-23, 68 FR 26459, 3 CFR, 2004
Comp., p. 320; Notice of November 8, 2022, 87 FR 68015 (November 10,
2022).
0
20. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 742.6 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(6) and (b)(10) to read as follows:
Sec. 742.6 Regional stability.
(a) * * *
(6) RS requirement that applies to advanced computing and
semiconductor manufacturing items--(i) Exports, reexports, transfers
(in-country) to or within Macau or Country Group D:5. A license is
required for items specified in ECCNs 3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to p,
3B002.b and c; and associated software and technology in 3D001 (for
3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to p, 3B002.b and c), 3D002 (for 3B001a.4, c,
d, f.1.b, k to p, 3B002.b and c), and 3E001 (for 3B001a.4, c, d, f.1.b,
k to p, 3B002.b and c) being exported, reexported, or transferred (in-
country) to or within Macau or a destination specified in Country Group
D:5 in supplement no. 1 to part 740 of the EAR.
(ii) Exports from abroad originating in either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5. A license is also required
for the export from abroad originating in either Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5 to any destination worldwide excluding
any destination also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6, of 3E001
(for 3A090) technology developed by an entity headquartered in, or
whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5 that is the direct product
of software subject to the EAR and is for the ``production'' of
commodities identified in ECCNs 3A090, 4A090, 3A001.z, 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, or 5A992.z, consistent with Sec.
734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and (h)(2)(ii) of the EAR.
(iii) Exports, reexports, transfers (in-country) to or within
destinations specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, and D:5, excluding
destinations also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6. A license is
required for items specified in ECCNs 3A001.z; 3A090; 3D001 (for
``software'' for commodities controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 3E001 (for
``technology'' for commodities controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090); 4A003.z;
4A004.z; 4A005.z; 4A090; 4D001 (for ``software'' for commodities
controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z); 4D090 (for ``software''
for commodities controlled by 4A090); 4E001 (for ``technology'' for
commodities controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090 or
``software'' specified by 4D001 (for 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z),
4D090 (for ``software'' for commodities controlled by 4A090)); 5A002.z;
5A004.z; 5A992.z; 5D002.z; 5D992.z; 5E002 (for ``technology'' for
commodities controlled by 5A002.z or 5A004.z or ``software'' specified
by 5D002 (for 5A002.z or 5A004.z commodities)); or 5E992 (for
``technology'' for commodities controlled by 5A992.z or ``software''
controlled by 5D992.z) being exported, reexported, or transferred (in-
country) to or within a destination specified in Country Groups D:1,
D:4, and D:5, excluding destinations also specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6, in supplement no. 1 to part 740 of the EAR.
(iv) Deemed exports and reexports. The license requirements in
paragraphs (a)(6)(i) through (iii) of this section do not apply to
deemed exports or deemed reexports.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(10) Advanced computing and semiconductor manufacturing items--(i)
License review policy for paragraphs (a)(6)(i) and (ii) of this
section. License applications for items specified in
[[Page 73494]]
paragraphs (a)(6)(i) and (ii) of this section will be reviewed
consistent with license review policies in Sec. 744.23(d) of the EAR,
except applications will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis if no
license would be required under part 744 of the EAR.
(ii) License review policy for paragraph (a)(6)(iii) of this
section. License applications for items specified in paragraph
(a)(6)(iii) of this section to or within destinations not specified in
Country Group D:5 (except Macau) will be reviewed on a presumption of
approval basis, unless the export, reexport, or transfer (in-country)
is to an entity headquartered in, whose ultimate parent company is
headquartered in, either Macau or a destination specified in Country
Group D:5, in which case license applications will be reviewed under a
presumption of denial. License applications for items to or within
Macau or destinations specified in Country Group D:5 for items
specified in paragraph (a)(6)(iii) will be reviewed under a presumption
of denial.
* * * * *
0
21. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 742.15 is amended by revising
the third, fourth, and fifth sentences of paragraph (a)(1) to read as
follows:
Sec. 742.15 Encryption items.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(1) * * * Following classification or self-classification, items
that meet the criteria of Note 3 to Category 5--Part 2 of the Commerce
Control List (the ``mass market'' note), are classified under ECCN
5A992 or 5D992 and are no longer subject to this Section (see Sec.
740.17 of the EAR). Before submitting a license application, please
review License Exception ENC to determine whether this license
exception is available for your item or transaction. For exports,
reexports, or transfers (in-country) of encryption items that are not
eligible for a license exception, you must submit an application to
obtain authorization under a license or an Encryption Licensing
Arrangement.
* * * * *
PART 744--CONTROL POLICY: END-USER AND END-USE BASED
0
22. The authority citation for part 744 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.; 22 U.S.C. 3201 et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 2139a; 22
U.S.C. 7201 et seq.; 22 U.S.C. 7210; E.O. 12058, 43 FR 20947, 3 CFR,
1978 Comp., p. 179; E.O. 12851, 58 FR 33181, 3 CFR, 1993 Comp., p.
608; E.O. 12938, 59 FR 59099, 3 CFR, 1994 Comp., p. 950; E.O. 13026,
61 FR 58767, 3 CFR, 1996 Comp., p. 228; E.O. 13099, 63 FR 45167, 3
CFR, 1998 Comp., p. 208; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp.,
p. 783; E.O. 13224, 66 FR 49079, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 786; Notice
of November 8, 2022, 87 FR 68015, 3 CFR, 2022 Comp., p. 563; Notice
of September 7, 2023, 88 FR 62439 (September 11, 2023).
0
23. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 744.6 is amended by revising
paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (ii) and adding paragraphs (c)(3) and (d)(1)
to read as follows:
Sec. 744.6 Restrictions on specific activities of ``U.S. persons.''
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) ``Development'' or ``production'' of ``advanced-node ICs.'' To
or within Macau or a destination specified in Country Group D:5, any
item not subject to the EAR that you know will be used in the
``development'' or ``production'' of integrated circuits at a
``facility'' of an entity headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent
company is headquartered in, either Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5 where ``production'' of ``advanced-node integrated
circuits'' occurs;
(ii) Category 3 items for ``development'' or ``production'' of
``advanced-node ICs.'' To or within Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5, any item not subject to the EAR and meeting the
parameters of any ECCN in Product Groups B, C, D, or E in Category 3 of
the CCL that you know will be used in the ``development'' or
``production'' of integrated circuits at a ``facility'' of an entity
headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in,
either Macau or a destination specified in Country Group D:5 where
``production'' of integrated circuits occurs, but you do not know
whether ``production'' of ``advanced-node integrated circuits'' occurs
at such ``facility'';
* * * * *
(3) Scope of activities of ``U.S. persons'' that require a license
under paragraph (c)(2) of this section. (i) Controlled activities. The
U.S. persons controls in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) through (iii) of this
section apply to persons who:
(A) Authorize the shipment, transmittal, or transfer (in-country)
of items not subject to the EAR and described in paragraphs (c)(2)(i)
through (iii) of this section;
(B) Conduct the delivery, by shipment, transmittal, or transfer
(in-country), of items not subject to the EAR described in paragraphs
(c)(2)(i) through (iii) of this section; or
(C) Service, including maintaining, repairing, overhauling, or
refurbishing items not subject to the EAR described in paragraphs
(c)(2)(i) through (iii) of this section.
(ii) Due diligence. Appropriate due diligence includes but is not
limited to review of publicly available information, capability of
items to be provided, proprietary market data, and end-use statements.
``U.S. persons'' should conduct due diligence to assess whether the
item is for the ``development'' or ``production'' of ``advanced-node
integrated circuits'' at a ``facility'' of an entity headquartered in,
or whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5, consistent with paragraphs
(c)(2)(i) through (iii) of this section. As set forth in paragraph
(c)(2)(ii), for items specified in Category 3B, 3C, 3D, or 3E ECCNs,
license requirements may apply even when the ``U.S. person'' does not
know whether the activity is for the ``development'' or ``production''
of ``advanced-node integrated circuits.'' In addition, some of the
exclusions may require due diligence, such as those in paragraphs
(d)(3) and (5) of this section. ``U.S. persons'' should follow the
``Know Your Customer'' guidance in supplement no. 3 to part 732 of the
EAR. ``U.S. persons'' can also submit Advisory Opinion requests to BIS
pursuant to Sec. 748.3(c) of the EAR for guidance on specific
fabrication facilities. To submit an Advisory Opinion request, email
[email protected].
(d) * * *
(1) Exclusion of certain administrative and clerical activities and
information otherwise excluded--(i) Exclusion of certain administrative
and clerical activities. Given the policy objective of these controls,
the ``U.S. persons'' criteria in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) through (iii) of
this section do not extend to ``U.S. persons'' conducting
administrative or clerical activities (e.g., arranging for shipment or
preparing financial documents) or otherwise implementing a decision to
approve a restricted shipment, transmittal, or in-country transfer, or
to activities of ``U.S. persons'' that are not directly related to the
provision or servicing of specific items to the ``development'' or
``production'' of ``advanced-node integrated circuits.''
(ii) Exclusion of information otherwise excluded under the EAR
under part 734. The exclusion of certain activities specified in
paragraph (c)(3) of this section only applies to paragraph (c)(2) of
this section, and does not, for example, limit the scope of paragraph
[[Page 73495]]
(b) of this section or apply to other uses of the term facilitate or
facilitation found elsewhere in the EAR. The scope of paragraph (c)(2)
of this section does not include information or software that would
otherwise be excluded from the EAR based on the exclusion criteria
under part 734, e.g., under Sec. 734.7 (entitled ``Published'') Tand
Sec. 734.8 ``Technology'' or ``software'' that arises during, or
results from, fundamental research.
(iii) Exclusion of law enforcement and intelligence operations of
the U.S. Government. Given the policy objective of these controls, the
``U.S. persons'' criteria in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) through (iii) of this
section do not extend to ``U.S. persons'' conducting law enforcement
and intelligence operations of the U.S. Government.
* * * * *
0
24. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 744.23 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(1)(ii) and (a)(2) and adding paragraph (a)(3) to read as
follows:
Sec. 744.23 ``Supercomputer'' and semiconductor manufacturing end
use.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Destination and end-use scope. (A) The ``development,''
``production,'' operation, installation (including on-site
installation), maintenance (checking), repair, overhaul, or
refurbishing of a ``supercomputer'' located in or destined to Macau or
a destination specified in Country Group D:5 of supplement no. 1 to
part 740 of the EAR; or
(B) The incorporation into, or the ``development'' or
``production'' of any ``component'' or ``equipment'' that will be used
in a ``supercomputer'' located in or destined to Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5.
(2) ``Advanced-node ICs''--(i) Any item at a ``production''
``facility'' of ``advanced-node ICs.'' Any items subject to the EAR
when you know the items will be used in the ``development'' or
``production'' of ICs destined to a ``facility'' located in Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5 where ``production'' of
``advanced-node ICs'' occurs.
(ii) Category 3 items to a ``facility'' where the technology node
is unknown. Any item subject to the EAR specified in an ECCN in Product
Groups B, C, D, or E in Category 3 of the CCL when you know the item
will be used in the ``development'' or ``production'' of ICs destined
to a ``facility'' located in Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5 where ``production'' of integrated circuits occurs,
but you do not know whether ``production'' of ``advanced-node ICs''
occurs at such ``facility.''
(3) Advanced computing items. (i) Any item subject to the EAR and
specified in ECCN 3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090,
5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, or 5D992.z destined to any
destination other than those specified in Country Groups D:1, D:4, or
D:5 (excluding any destination also specified in Country Groups A:5 or
A:6) for an entity that is headquartered in, or whose ultimate parent
company is headquartered in, either Macau or a destination specified in
Country Group D:5 (e.g., a PRC-headquartered cloud or data server
provider located in a destination not otherwise excluded).
(ii) ECCN 3E001 (for 3A090) ``technology'' when it meets all of the
following:
(A) The technology is developed by an entity headquartered in, or
whose ultimate parent company is headquartered in, either Macau or a
destination specified in Country Group D:5;
(B) The ``technology'' is subject to the EAR pursuant to the
foreign direct product rule in Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and
(h)(2)(ii) of the EAR;
(C) The ``technology'' is for reexport or transfer (in-country)
from or within a destination specified in Country Group D:1, D:4, D:5,
excluding any destination also specified in Country Groups A:5 or A:6,
to any destination worldwide; and
(D) The ``technology'' is for the ``production'' of commodities or
software specified in ECCN 3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, or 5A992.z.
Note 1 to paragraph (a)(3)(ii): This paragraph (a)(3)(ii)
includes items subject to the EAR pursuant to the foreign direct
product rule in Sec. 734.9(h)(1)(i)(B)(1) and (h)(2)(ii) of the
EAR.
* * * * *
PART 746--EMBARGOES AND OTHER SPECIAL CONTROLS
0
25. Effective November 17, 2023, the authority citation for part 746 is
revised 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.; 22 U.S.C. 287c; Sec 1503, Pub. L. 108-11, 117
Stat. 559; 22 U.S.C. 2151 note; 22 U.S.C. 6004; 22 U.S.C. 7201 et
seq.; 22 U.S.C. 7210; E.O. 12854, 58 FR 36587, 3 CFR, 1993 Comp., p.
614; E.O. 12918, 59 FR 28205, 3 CFR, 1994 Comp., p. 899; E.O. 13222,
66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 783; E.O. 13338, 69 FR 26751, 3
CFR, 2004 Comp., p 168; Presidential Determination 2003-23, 68 FR
26459, 3 CFR, 2004 Comp., p. 320; Presidential Determination 2007-7,
72 FR 1899, 3 CFR, 2006 Comp., p. 325; Notice of May 810, 2023, 88
FR 30211 (May 10, 2023).
0
26. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 746.8 is amended by revising
paragraph (a) introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 746.8 Sanctions against Russia and Belarus.
(a) License requirements. For purposes of paragraphs (a)(1) and (2)
of this section, commodities specified under ECCN 5A991, and
commodities and software classified under ECCNs 5A992.c or 5D992.c that
have been `classified in accordance with Sec. 740.17' do not require a
license to or within Russia or Belarus for the following civil end-
users: wholly-owned U.S. subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices;
joint ventures between two or more U.S. companies, including the
wholly-owned subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of such joint
ventures; joint ventures between U.S. companies and companies
headquartered in countries from Country Group A:5 and A:6 in supplement
no. 1 to part 740 of the EAR, including the wholly-owned subsidiaries,
branches, or sales offices of such joint ventures; wholly-owned
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of companies headquartered in
countries from Country Group A:5 and A:6 in supplement no. 1 to part
740; or joint ventures between two or more companies headquartered in
Country Group A:5 and A:6 in supplement no. 1 to part 740, including
the wholly-owned subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of such joint
ventures.
* * * * *
0
27. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 746.10 is amended by revising
paragraph (a) introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 746.10 `Luxury Goods' Sanctions Against Russia and Belarus and
Russian and Belarusian oligarchs and malign actors.
(a) License requirements. For purposes of paragraphs (a)(1) and (2)
of this section, commodities specified under ECCN 5A991, and
commodities and software classified under ECCNs 5A992.c or 5D992.c that
have been `classified in accordance with Sec. 740.17' do not require a
license to or within Russia or Belarus for the following civil end-
users: wholly-owned U.S. subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices;
joint ventures between two or more U.S. companies, including the
wholly-owned subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of such joint
ventures; joint ventures between U.S. companies and companies
headquartered in countries from Country Group A:5 and A:6 in
[[Page 73496]]
supplement no. 1 to part 740 of the EAR, including the wholly-owned
subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of such joint ventures;
wholly-owned subsidiaries, branches, or sales offices of companies
headquartered in countries from Country Group A:5 and A:6 in supplement
no. 1 to part 740; or joint ventures between two or more companies
headquartered in Country Group A:5 and A:6 in supplement no. 1 to part
740, including the wholly-owned subsidiaries, branches, or sales
offices of such joint ventures.
* * * * *
PART 748--APPLICATIONS (CLASSIFICATION, ADVISORY, AND LICENSE) AND
DOCUMENTATION
0
28. Effective November 17, 2023, the authority citation for part 748 is
revised 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.; 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, 2023, 88 FR 55549 (August 16, 2023).
0
29. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 748.8 is amended by adding
paragraphs (d), (s), (t), and (z) to read as follows:
Sec. 748.8 Unique application and submission requirements.
* * * * *
(d) U.S. person support activities that require a license under
Sec. 744.6.
* * * * *
(s) Exports of firearms and certain shotguns temporarily in the
United States.
(t) ``600 Series Major Defense Equipment.''
* * * * *
(z) Semiautomatic firearms controlled under ECCN 0A501.a.
0
30. Effective November 17, 2023, supplement No. 2 to part 748 is
amended by adding paragraph (d) to read as follows:
Supplement No. 2 to Part 748--Unique Application and Submission
Requirements
* * * * *
(d) ``U.S. person'' support activities that require a license
under Sec. 744.6 of the EAR. Use SNAP-R for submitting a license
application for ``U.S. person'' activities. Applicants should use
the reexport designation on the SNAP-R form and include in the
``Additional Information'' section of the license application that a
license is required for the transaction under Sec. 744.6 of the
EAR. In the special purpose field, specify the specific activities
the ``U.S. person'' is engaged. The applicant should provide, as
relevant: the ECCN of the technology or item or, if unknown, use the
EAR99 designation (regardless of whether the items being dealt with
are subject to the EAR); and a complete explanation of the activity
in supplemental documentation.
* * * * *
0
31. Effective November 17, 2023, supplement no. 7 to part 748 is
amended by revising the heading and the entries for ``Advanced Micro
Devices China, Inc'' and ``Shanghai Huahong Grace Semiconductor
Manufacturing Corporation'' under ``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 (In-Country), and Eligible Destinations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eligible items (by
Country Validated end-user ECCN) Eligible destination Federal Register
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
China (People's Republic Advanced Micro 3D002, 3D003, 3E001 Advanced Micro 75 FR 25763, 5/10/
of). Devices China, Inc. (limited to Devices (Shanghai) 10.
``technology'' for Co., Ltd., 76 FR 2802, 1/18/
items classified Buildings 33 (Unit 11.
under 3C002 and 1), 46, 47, 48 & 78 FR 3319, 1/16/
3C004 and 49, River Front 13.
``technology'' for Harbor, Zhangjiang 81 FR 40785, 6/23/
use during the Hi-Tech Park, No. 16.
International 1387 Zhang Dong 88 FR [INSERT PAGE
Technology Roadmap Road, Pudong NUMBER], 10/25/23.
for Semiconductors District, Shanghai,
(ITRS) process for China 201203.
items classified AMD Technology
under ECCNs 3B001 Development
and 3B002), 3E002 (Beijing) Co.,
(limited to Ltd., North and
``technology'' for South Buildings,
use during the ITRS RaycomInfotech,
process for items Park Tower C, No. 2
classified under Science Institute
ECCNs 3B001 and South Rd., Zhong
3B002), 3E003.e Guan Cun, Haidian
(limited to the District, Beijing,
``development'' and China 100190.
``production'' of
integrated circuits
for commercial
applications),
4D001 and 4E001
(limited to the
``development'' of
products under ECCN
4A003.b through .g).
AMD Products (China) ...................
Co. Ltd., North and
South Buildings,
RaycomInfotech Park
Tower C, No. 2
Science Institute
South Rd., Zhong
Guan Cun, Haidian
District, Beijing,
China 100190.
* * * * * *
Shanghai Huahong 1C350.c.4, Shanghai Huahong 78 FR 32981, 6/3/
Grace Semiconductor 1C350.d.14, 2B230, Grace Semiconductor 13. 88 FR [INSERT
Manufacturing 2B350.d.2, Manufacturing PAGE NUMBER], 10/
Corporation. 2B350.g.3, Corporation--HFab 25/23.
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.a Manufacturing
through .e, 5A004.a Corporation--HFab
through .b, or 1, 1188 Chuanqiao
5A992.c that have Road, Pudong,
been successfully Shanghai 201206
reviewed under the China.
encryption review
process specified
in Sections
740.17(b)(2) or
740.17(b)(3) of the
EAR).
[[Page 73497]]
Shanghai Huahong ...................
Grace Semiconductor
Manufacturing
Corporation--GFab1,
1399 Zuchongzhi
Road, Zhangjiang Hi-
Tech Park, Shanghai
201203 China.
* * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 758--EXPORT CLEARANCE REQUIREMENTS
0
32. The authority citation for part 758 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.; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p.
783.
0
33. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 758.1 is amended by adding
paragraph (g)(5) to read as follows:
Sec. 758.1 The Electronic Export Information (EEI) Filing to the
Automated Export System (AES).
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(5) Exports of .z items that meet or exceed the performance
parameters of ECCN 3A090 or 4A090. This paragraph (g)(5) imposes a
requirement for identifying .z items by ``items'' level classification
in the EEI filing in AES. For any export of .z items controlled under
ECCNs 3A001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005, 5A002, 5A004, 5A992, 5D002, or 5D992
in addition to any other required data for the associated EEI filing,
you must include the items paragraph classification (i.e., .z), when
applicable, as the first text to appear in the Commodity description
block in the EEI filing in AES.
* * * * *
0
34. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 758.6 is amended by revising
paragraph (a)(2) to read as follows:
Sec. 758.6 Destination control statement and other information
furnished to consignees.
(a) * * *
(2) The ECCN(s) for any 3A001.z, 3A090, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 9x515 or ``600 series'' ``items''
being shipped (i.e., exported in tangible form). For the seven ECCNs
with a .z paragraph, the requirement to include the classification only
applies to commodities classified under the .z paragraphs. If the
commodity is classified under any other paragraph in one of those seven
ECCNs, then the requirement under this paragraph is not applicable. For
ECCN 3A090, identify the commodity as either 3A090.a or .b.
* * * * *
PART 772--DEFINITIONS OF TERMS
0
35. The authority citation for part 772 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.; E.O. 13222, 66 FR 44025, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p.
783.
0
36. Effective November 17, 2023, Sec. 772.1 is amended by revising the
last sentence in note 1 to the definition for ``specially designed'' to
read as follows:
Sec. 772.1 Definitions of terms as used in the Export Administration
Regulations (EAR).
* * * * *
Specially designed. * * *
NOTE 1: * * * For purposes of ``specially designed,'' ECCNs
0B505.c, 0B999, 0D999, 1B999, 1C992, 1C995, 1C997, 1C999, 3A991, 4A994,
5A992 (except for .z), 5D992 (except for .z), 6A998 (except for .b),
and 9A991 are treated as ECCNs controlled exclusively for AT reasons.
* * * * *
PART 774--THE COMMERCE CONTROL LIST
0
37. The authority citation for 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
38. Effective November 17, 2023, supplement no. 1 to part 774 is
amended by:
0
a. Revising ECCNs 3A001, 3A090, 3A991, 3D001, 3E001;
0
b. Revising Note 3 to Category 4--Computers;
0
c. Revising ECCNs 4A003, 4A004, 4A005, 4A090, 4A994, 4D001, and 4E001;
0
d. Revising Technical Note paragraph 2 in the TECHNICAL NOTE ON
``ADJUSTED PEAK PERFORMANCE'' (``APP'') at the end Category 4--
Computers;
0
e. Revising the Note 3. to Category 5--Telecommunications and
``Information Security'' Part 1--Telecommunications introductory text;
0
f. Revising ECCN 5E001;
0
g. Revising Note 3 and the N/B. to Note 3 (Cryptography Note) to
Category 5--Telecommunications and ``Information Security'' Part 2--
``Information Security''; and
0
h. Revising ECCNs 5A002, 5A992, 5A004, 5B002, 5D002, 5D992, 5E002,
5E992, 9A004, and 9A515.
The revisions read as follows:
Supplement No. 1 to Part 774--The Commerce Control List
* * * * *
3A001 Electronic items as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
Reason for Control: NS, RS, MT, NP, AT
Country chart (see supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to ``Monolithic Microwave NS Column 1.
Integrated Circuit'' (``MMIC'')
amplifiers in 3A001.b.2 and discrete
microwave transistors in 3A001.b.3,
except those 3A001.b.2 and b.3 items
being exported or reexported for use in
civil telecommunications applications.
NS applies to entire entry, except 3A001.z NS Column 2.
[[Page 73498]]
RS applies ``Monolithic Microwave RS Column 1.
Integrated Circuit'' (``MMIC'')
amplifiers in 3A001.b.2 and discrete
microwave transistors in 3A001.b.3,
except those 3A001.b.2 and b.3 items
being exported or reexported for use in
civil telecommunications applications.
RS applies to 3A001.z..................... To or within destinations
specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
MT applies to 3A001.a.1.a and .z when MT Column 1.
usable in ``missiles''; and to
3A001.a.5.a and .z when ``designed or
modified'' for military use, hermetically
sealed and rated for operation in the
temperature range from below -54 [deg]C
to above +125 [deg]C.
NP applies to pulse discharge capacitors NP Column 1.
in 3A001.e.2 and superconducting
solenoidal electromagnets in 3A001.e.3
that meet or exceed the technical
parameters in 3A201.a and 3A201.b,
respectively.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
Reporting Requirements: See Sec. 743.1 of the EAR for reporting
requirements for exports under 3A001.b.2 or b.3 under License
Exceptions, and Validated End-User authorizations.
License Requirements Note: See Sec. 744.17 of the EAR for
additional license requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and an arithmetic logic unit
with an access width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ``information security'' functionality, and associated
``software'' and ``technology'' for the ``production'' or
``development'' of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A for MT, NP or 3A001.z; N/A for ``Monolithic Microwave
Integrated Circuit'' (``MMIC'') amplifiers in 3A001.b.2 and discrete
microwave transistors in 3A001.b.3, except those that are being
exported or reexported for use in civil telecommunications
applications.
Yes for:
$1500: 3A001.c
$3000: 3A001.b.1, b.2 (exported or reexported for use in civil
telecommunications applications), b.3 (exported or reexported for
use in civil telecommunications applications), b.9, .d, .e, .f, and
.g.
$5000: 3A001.a (except a.1.a and a.5.a when controlled for MT),
.b.4 to b.7, and b.12.
GBS: Yes for 3A001.a.1.b, a.2 to a.14 (except .a.5.a when controlled
for MT), b.2 (exported or reexported for use in civil
telecommunications applications), b.8 (except for ``vacuum
electronic devices'' exceeding 18 GHz), b.9., b.10, .g, and .h, and
.i.
NAC: Yes, for 3A001.z; N/A for all other 3A001 commodities.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be used to ship any item in
3A001.b.2 or b.3, except those that are being exported or reexported
for use in civil telecommunications applications, to any of the
destinations listed in Country Group A:5 or A:6 (See Supplement No.
1 to part 740 of the EAR).
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See Category XV of the USML for certain
``space-qualified'' electronics and Category XI of the USML for
certain ASICs, `transmit/receive modules,' or `transmit modules'
``subject to the ITAR'' (see 22 CFR parts 120 through 130). (2) See
also 3A090 (including Note 4 to 3A090), 3A101, 3A201, 3A611, 3A991,
and 9A515.
Related Definitions: `Microcircuit' means a device in which a number
of passive or active elements are considered as indivisibly
associated on or within a continuous structure to perform the
function of a circuit. For the purposes of integrated circuits in
3A001.a.1, 5 x 10\3\ Gy(Si) = 5 x 10\5\ Rads (Si); 5 x 10\6\ Gy
(Si)/s = 5 x 10\8\ Rads (Si)/s.
Items:
a. General purpose integrated circuits, as follows:
Note 1: Integrated circuits include the following types:
--``Monolithic integrated circuits'';
--``Hybrid integrated circuits'';
--``Multichip integrated circuits'';
--Film type integrated circuits, including silicon-on-sapphire
integrated circuits'';
--``Optical integrated circuits'';
--``Three dimensional integrated circuits'';
--``Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuits'' (``MMICs'').
a.1. Integrated circuits designed or rated as radiation hardened
to withstand any of the following:
a.1.a. A total dose of 5 x 10\3\ Gy (Si), or higher;
a.1.b. A dose rate upset of 5 x 10\6\ Gy (Si)/s, or higher; or
a.1.c. A fluence (integrated flux) of neutrons (1 MeV
equivalent) of 5 x 10\13\ n/cm\2\ or higher on silicon, or its
equivalent for other materials;
Note: 3A001.a.1.c does not apply to Metal Insulator
Semiconductors (MIS).
a.2. ``Microprocessor microcircuits,'' ``microcomputer
microcircuits,'' microcontroller microcircuits, storage integrated
circuits manufactured from a compound semiconductor, analog-to-
digital converters, integrated circuits that contain analog-to-
digital converters and store or process the digitized data, digital-
to-analog converters, electro-optical or ``optical integrated
circuits'' designed for ``signal processing'', field programmable
logic devices, custom integrated circuits for which either the
function is unknown or the control status of the equipment in which
the integrated circuit will be used in unknown, Fast Fourier
Transform (FFT) processors, Static Random-Access Memories (SRAMs),
or `non-volatile memories,' having any of the following:
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.a.2, `non-volatile
memories' are memories with data retention over a period of time
after a power shutdown.
a.2.a. Rated for operation at an ambient temperature above 398 K
(+125 [deg]C);
a.2.b. Rated for operation at an ambient temperature below 218 K
(-55 [deg]C); or
a.2.c. Rated for operation over the entire ambient temperature
range from 218 K (-55 [deg]C) to 398 K (+125 [deg]C);
Note: 3A001.a.2 does not apply to integrated circuits designed
for civil automobile or railway train applications.
a.3. ``Microprocessor microcircuits'', ``microcomputer
microcircuits'' and microcontroller microcircuits, manufactured from
a compound semiconductor and operating at a clock frequency
exceeding 40 MHz;
Note: 3A001.a.3 includes digital signal processors, digital
array processors and digital coprocessors.
a.4. [Reserved]
a.5. Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) and Digital-to-Analog
Converter (DAC) integrated circuits, as follows:
a.5.a. ADCs having any of the following:
a.5.a.1. A resolution of 8 bit or more, but less than 10 bit,
with a ``sample rate'' greater than 1.3 Giga Samples Per Second
(GSPS);
a.5.a.2. A resolution of 10 bit or more, but less than 12 bit,
with a ``sample rate'' greater than 600 Mega Samples Per Second
(MSPS);
a.5.a.3. A resolution of 12 bit or more, but less than 14 bit,
with a ``sample rate'' greater than 400 MSPS;
a.5.a.4. A resolution of 14 bit or more, but less than 16 bit,
with a ``sample rate'' greater than 250 MSPS; or
a.5.a.5. A resolution of 16 bit or more with a ``sample rate''
greater than 65 MSPS;
N.B.: For integrated circuits that contain analog-to-digital
converters and store or process the digitized data see 3A001.a.14.
[[Page 73499]]
Technical Notes: For the purposes of 3A001.a.5.a:
1. A resolution of n bit corresponds to a quantization of 2\n\
levels.
2. The resolution of the ADC is the number of bits of the
digital output that represents the measured analog input. Effective
Number of Bits (ENOB) is not used to determine the resolution of the
ADC.
3. For ``multiple channel ADCs'', the ``sample rate'' is not
aggregated and the ``sample rate'' is the maximum rate of any single
channel.
4. For ``interleaved ADCs'' or for ``multiple channel ADCs''
that are specified to have an interleaved mode of operation, the
``sample rates'' are aggregated and the ``sample rate'' is the
maximum combined total rate of all of the interleaved channels.
a.5.b. Digital-to-Analog Converters (DAC) having any of the
following:
a.5.b.1. A resolution of 10-bit or more but less than 12-bit,
with an `adjusted update rate' of exceeding 3,500 MSPS; or
a.5.b.2. A resolution of 12-bit or more and having any of the
following:
a.5.b.2.a. An `adjusted update rate' exceeding 1,250 MSPS but
not exceeding 3,500 MSPS, and having any of the following:
a.5.b.2.a.1. A settling time less than 9 ns to arrive at or
within 0.024% of full scale from a full scale step; or
a.5.b.2.a.2. A `Spurious Free Dynamic Range' (SFDR) greater than
68 dBc (carrier) when synthesizing a full scale analog signal of 100
MHz or the highest full scale analog signal frequency specified
below 100 MHz; or
a.5.b.2.b. An `adjusted update rate' exceeding 3,500 MSPS;
Technical Notes: For the purposes of 3A001.a.5.b:
1. `Spurious Free Dynamic Range' (SFDR) is defined as the ratio
of the RMS value of the carrier frequency (maximum signal component)
at the input of the DAC to the RMS value of the next largest noise
or harmonic distortion component at its output.
2. SFDR is determined directly from the specification table or
from the characterization plots of SFDR versus frequency.
3. A signal is defined to be full scale when its amplitude is
greater than -3 dBfs (full scale).
4. `Adjusted update rate' for DACs is:
a. For conventional (non-interpolating) DACs, the `adjusted
update rate' is the rate at which the digital signal is converted to
an analog signal and the output analog values are changed by the
DAC. For DACs where the interpolation mode may be bypassed
(interpolation factor of one), the DAC should be considered as a
conventional (non-interpolating) DAC.
b. For interpolating DACs (oversampling DACs), the `adjusted
update rate' is defined as the DAC update rate divided by the
smallest interpolating factor. For interpolating DACs, the `adjusted
update rate' may be referred to by different terms including:
input data rate
input word rate
input sample rate
maximum total input bus rate
maximum DAC clock rate for DAC clock input.
a.6. Electro-optical and ``optical integrated circuits'',
designed for ``signal processing'' and having all of the following:
a.6.a. One or more than one internal ``laser'' diode;
a.6.b. One or more than one internal light detecting element;
and
a.6.c. Optical waveguides;
a.7. `Field programmable logic devices' having any of the
following:
a.7.a. A maximum number of single-ended digital input/outputs of
greater than 700; or
a.7.b. An `aggregate one-way peak serial transceiver data rate'
of 500 Gb/s or greater;
Note: 3A001.a.7 includes:
--Complex Programmable Logic Devices (CPLDs);
--Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs);
--Field Programmable Logic Arrays (FPLAs);
--Field Programmable Interconnects (FPICs).
N.B.: For integrated circuits having field programmable logic
devices that are combined with an analog-to-digital converter, see
3A001.a.14.
Technical Notes: For the purposes of 3A001.a.7:
1. Maximum number of digital input/outputs in 3A001.a.7.a is
also referred to as maximum user input/outputs or maximum available
input/outputs, whether the integrated circuit is packaged or bare
die.
2. `Aggregate one-way peak serial transceiver data rate' is the
product of the peak serial one-way transceiver data rate times the
number of transceivers on the FPGA.
a.8. [Reserved]
a.9. Neural network integrated circuits;
a.10. Custom integrated circuits for which the function is
unknown, or the control status of the equipment in which the
integrated circuits will be used is unknown to the manufacturer,
having any of the following:
a.10.a. More than 1,500 terminals;
a.10.b. A typical ``basic gate propagation delay time'' of less
than 0.02 ns; or
a.10.c. An operating frequency exceeding 3 GHz;
a.11. Digital integrated circuits, other than those described in
3A001.a.3 to 3A001.a.10 and 3A001.a.12, based upon any compound
semiconductor and having any of the following:
a.11.a. An equivalent gate count of more than 3,000 (2 input
gates); or
a.11.b. A toggle frequency exceeding 1.2 GHz;
a.12. Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) processors having a rated
execution time for an N-point complex FFT of less than (N
log2 N)/20,480 ms, where N is the number of points;
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.a.12, when N is equal
to 1,024 points, the formula in 3A001.a.12 gives an execution time
of 500 [mu]s.
a.13. Direct Digital Synthesizer (DDS) integrated circuits
having any of the following:
a.13.a. A Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC) clock frequency of
3.5 GHz or more and a DAC resolution of 10 bit or more, but less
than 12 bit; or
a.13.b. A DAC clock frequency of 1.25 GHz or more and a DAC
resolution of 12 bit or more;
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.a.13, the DAC clock
frequency may be specified as the master clock frequency or the
input clock frequency.
a.14. Integrated circuits that perform or are programmable to
perform all of the following:
a.14.a. Analog-to-digital conversions meeting any of the
following:
a.14.a.1. A resolution of 8 bit or more, but less than 10 bit,
with a ``sample rate'' greater than 1.3 Giga Samples Per Second
(GSPS);
a.14.a.2. A resolution of 10 bit or more, but less than 12 bit,
with a ``sample rate'' greater than 1.0 GSPS;
a.14.a.3. A resolution of 12 bit or more, but less than 14 bit,
with a ``sample rate'' greater than 1.0 GSPS;
a.14.a.4. A resolution of 14 bit or more, but less than 16 bit,
with a ``sample rate'' greater than 400 Mega Samples Per Second
(MSPS); or
a.14.a.5. A resolution of 16 bit or more with a ``sample rate''
greater than 180 MSPS; and
a.14.b. Any of the following:
a.14.b.1. Storage of digitized data; or
a.14.b.2. Processing of digitized data;
N.B. 1: For analog-to-digital converter integrated circuits see
3A001.a.5.a.
N.B. 2: For field programmable logic devices see 3A001.a.7.
Technical Notes: For the purposes of 3A001.a.14:
1. A resolution of n bit corresponds to a quantization of 2\n\
levels.
2. The resolution of the ADC is the number of bits of the
digital output of the ADC that represents the measured analog input.
Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) is not used to determine the
resolution of the ADC.
3. For integrated circuits with non- interleaving ``multiple
channel ADCs'', the ``sample rate'' is not aggregated and the
``sample rate'' is the maximum rate of any single channel.
4. For integrated circuits with ``interleaved ADCs'' or with
``multiple channel ADCs'' that are specified to have an interleaved
mode of operation, the ``sample rates'' are aggregated and the
``sample rate'' is the maximum combined total rate of all of the
interleaved channels.
b. Microwave or millimeter wave items, as follows:
Technical Note: For purposes of 3A001.b, the parameter peak
saturated power output may also be referred to on product data
sheets as output power, saturated power output, maximum power
output, peak power output, or peak envelope power output.
b.1. ``Vacuum electronic devices'' and cathodes, as follows:
Note 1: 3A001.b.1 does not control ``vacuum electronic devices''
designed or rated for operation in any frequency band and having all
of the following:
a. Does not exceed 31.8 GHz; and
b. Is ``allocated by the ITU'' for radio-communications
services, but not for radio-determination.
Note 2: 3A001.b.1 does not control non-``space-qualified''
``vacuum electronic devices'' having all the following:
a. An average output power equal to or less than 50 W; and
[[Page 73500]]
b. Designed or rated for operation in any frequency band and
having all of the following:
1. Exceeds 31.8 GHz but does not exceed 43.5 GHz; and
2. Is ``allocated by the ITU'' for radio-communications
services, but not for radio-determination.
b.1.a. Traveling-wave ``vacuum electronic devices,'' pulsed or
continuous wave, as follows:
b.1.a.1. Devices operating at frequencies exceeding 31.8 GHz;
b.1.a.2. Devices having a cathode heater with a turn on time to
rated RF power of less than 3 seconds;
b.1.a.3. Coupled cavity devices, or derivatives thereof, with a
``fractional bandwidth'' of more than 7% or a peak power exceeding
2.5 kW;
b.1.a.4. Devices based on helix, folded waveguide, or serpentine
waveguide circuits, or derivatives thereof, having any of the
following:
b.1.a.4.a. An ``instantaneous bandwidth'' of more than one
octave, and average power (expressed in kW) times frequency
(expressed in GHz) of more than 0.5;
b.1.a.4.b. An ``instantaneous bandwidth'' of one octave or less,
and average power (expressed in kW) times frequency (expressed in
GHz) of more than 1;
b.1.a.4.c. Being ``space-qualified''; or
b.1.a.4.d. Having a gridded electron gun;
b.1.a.5. Devices with a ``fractional bandwidth'' greater than or
equal to 10%, with any of the following:
b.1.a.5.a. An annular electron beam;
b.1.a.5.b. A non-axisymmetric electron beam; or
b.1.a.5.c. Multiple electron beams;
b.1.b. Crossed-field amplifier ``vacuum electronic devices''
with a gain of more than 17 dB;
b.1.c. Thermionic cathodes, designed for ``vacuum electronic
devices,'' producing an emission current density at rated operating
conditions exceeding 5 A/cm\2\ or a pulsed (non-continuous) current
density at rated operating conditions exceeding 10 A/cm\2\;
b.1.d. ``Vacuum electronic devices'' with the capability to
operate in a `dual mode.'
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.b.1.d, `dual mode'
means the ``vacuum electronic device'' beam current can be
intentionally changed between continuous-wave and pulsed mode
operation by use of a grid and produces a peak pulse output power
greater than the continuous-wave output power.
b.2. ``Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuit'' (``MMIC'')
amplifiers that are any of the following:
N.B.: For ``MMIC'' amplifiers that have an integrated phase
shifter see 3A001.b.12.
b.2.a. Rated for operation at frequencies exceeding 2.7 GHz up
to and including 6.8 GHz with a ``fractional bandwidth'' greater
than 15%, and having any of the following:
b.2.a.1. A peak saturated power output greater than 75 W (48.75
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and including 2.9 GHz;
b.2.a.2. A peak saturated power output greater than 55 W (47.4
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 2.9 GHz up to and including 3.2 GHz;
b.2.a.3. A peak saturated power output greater than 40 W (46
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 3.2 GHz up to and including 3.7 GHz;
or
b.2.a.4. A peak saturated power output greater than 20 W (43
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 3.7 GHz up to and including 6.8 GHz;
b.2.b. Rated for operation at frequencies exceeding 6.8 GHz up
to and including 16 GHz with a ``fractional bandwidth'' greater than
10%, and having any of the following:
b.2.b.1. A peak saturated power output greater than 10 W (40
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 8.5 GHz;
or
b.2.b.2. A peak saturated power output greater than 5 W (37 dBm)
at any frequency exceeding 8.5 GHz up to and including 16 GHz;
b.2.c. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 3 W (34.77 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 16 GHz up to
and including 31.8 GHz, and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of
greater than 10%;
b.2.d. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 0.1 nW (-70 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 31.8 GHz up
to and including 37 GHz;
b.2.e. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 1 W (30 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 37 GHz up to
and including 43.5 GHz, and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of
greater than 10%;
b.2.f. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 31.62 mW (15 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 43.5 GHz
up to and including 75 GHz, and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of
greater than 10%;
b.2.g. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 10 mW (10 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 75 GHz up to
and including 90 GHz, and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of greater
than 5%; or
b.2.h. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 0.1 nW (-70 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 90 GHz;
Note 1: [Reserved]
Note 2: The control status of the ``MMIC'' whose rated operating
frequency includes frequencies listed in more than one frequency
range, as defined by 3A001.b.2.a through 3A001.b.2.h, is determined
by the lowest peak saturated power output control threshold.
Note 3: Notes 1 and 2 following the Category 3 heading for
product group A. Systems, Equipment, and Components mean that
3A001.b.2 does not control ``MMICs'' if they are ``specially
designed'' for other applications, e.g., telecommunications, radar,
automobiles.
b.3. Discrete microwave transistors that are any of the
following:
b.3.a. Rated for operation at frequencies exceeding 2.7 GHz up
to and including 6.8 GHz and having any of the following:
b.3.a.1. A peak saturated power output greater than 400 W (56
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and including 2.9 GHz;
b.3.a.2. A peak saturated power output greater than 205 W (53.12
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 2.9 GHz up to and including 3.2 GHz;
b.3.a.3. A peak saturated power output greater than 115 W (50.61
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 3.2 GHz up to and including 3.7 GHz;
or
b.3.a.4. A peak saturated power output greater than 60 W (47.78
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 3.7 GHz up to and including 6.8 GHz;
b.3.b. Rated for operation at frequencies exceeding 6.8 GHz up
to and including 31.8 GHz and having any of the following:
b.3.b.1. A peak saturated power output greater than 50 W (47
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 8.5 GHz;
b.3.b.2. A peak saturated power output greater than 15 W (41.76
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 8.5 GHz up to and including 12 GHz;
b.3.b.3. A peak saturated power output greater than 40 W (46
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 12 GHz up to and including 16 GHz;
or
b.3.b.4. A peak saturated power output greater than 7 W (38.45
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 16 GHz up to and including 31.8 GHz;
b.3.c. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 0.5 W (27 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 31.8 GHz up
to and including 37 GHz;
b.3.d. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 1 W (30 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 37 GHz up to
and including 43.5 GHz;
b.3.e. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 0.1 nW (-70 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 43.5 GHz;
or
b.3.f. Other than those specified by 3A001.b.3.a to 3A001.b.3.e
and rated for operation with a peak saturated power output greater
than 5 W (37.0 dBm) at all frequencies exceeding 8.5 GHz up to and
including 31.8 GHz;
Note 1: The control status of a transistor in 3A001.b.3.a
through 3A001.b.3.e, whose rated operating frequency includes
frequencies listed in more than one frequency range, as defined by
3A001.b.3.a through 3A001.b.3.e, is determined by the lowest peak
saturated power output control threshold.
Note 2: 3A001.b.3 includes bare dice, dice mounted on carriers,
or dice mounted in packages. Some discrete transistors may also be
referred to as power amplifiers, but the status of these discrete
transistors is determined by 3A001.b.3.
b.4. Microwave solid state amplifiers and microwave assemblies/
modules containing microwave solid state amplifiers, that are any of
the following:
b.4.a. Rated for operation at frequencies exceeding 2.7 GHz up
to and including 6.8 GHz with a ``fractional bandwidth'' greater
than 15%, and having any of the following:
b.4.a.1. A peak saturated power output greater than 500 W (57
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and including 2.9 GHz;
b.4.a.2. A peak saturated power output greater than 270 W (54.3
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 2.9 GHz up to and including 3.2 GHz;
[[Page 73501]]
b.4.a.3. A peak saturated power output greater than 200 W (53
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 3.2 GHz up to and including 3.7 GHz;
or
b.4.a.4. A peak saturated power output greater than 90 W (49.54
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 3.7 GHz up to and including 6.8 GHz;
b.4.b. Rated for operation at frequencies exceeding 6.8 GHz up
to and including 31.8 GHz with a ``fractional bandwidth'' greater
than 10%, and having any of the following:
b.4.b.1. A peak saturated power output greater than 70 W (48.45
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 8.5 GHz;
b.4.b.2. A peak saturated power output greater than 50 W (47
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 8.5 GHz up to and including 12 GHz;
b.4.b.3. A peak saturated power output greater than 30 W (44.77
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 12 GHz up to and including 16 GHz;
or
b.4.b.4. A peak saturated power output greater than 20 W (43
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 16 GHz up to and including 31.8 GHz;
b.4.c. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 0.5 W (27 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 31.8 GHz up
to and including 37 GHz;
b.4.d. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 2 W (33 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 37 GHz up to
and including 43.5 GHz, and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of
greater than 10%;
b.4.e. Rated for operation at frequencies exceeding 43.5 GHz and
having any of the following:
b.4.e.1. A peak saturated power output greater than 0.2 W (23
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 43.5 GHz up to and including 75 GHz,
and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of greater than 10%;
b.4.e.2. A peak saturated power output greater than 20 mW (13
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 75 GHz up to and including 90 GHz,
and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of greater than 5%; or
b.4.e.3. A peak saturated power output greater than 0.1 nW (-70
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 90 GHz; or
b.4.f. [Reserved]
N.B.:
1. For ``MMIC'' amplifiers see 3A001.b.2.
2. For `transmit/receive modules' and `transmit modules' see
3A001.b.12.
3. For converters and harmonic mixers, designed to extend the
operating or frequency range of signal analyzers, signal generators,
network analyzers or microwave test receivers, see 3A001.b.7.
Note 1: [Reserved]
Note 2: The control status of an item whose rated operating
frequency includes frequencies listed in more than one frequency
range, as defined by 3A001.b.4.a through 3A001.b.4.e, is determined
by the lowest peak saturated power output control threshold.
b.5. Electronically or magnetically tunable band-pass or band-
stop filters, having more than 5 tunable resonators capable of
tuning across a 1.5:1 frequency band (fmax/
fmin) in less than 10 ms and having any of the following:
b.5.a. A band-pass bandwidth of more than 0.5% of center
frequency; or
b.5.b. A band-stop bandwidth of less than 0.5% of center
frequency;
b.6. [Reserved]
b.7. Converters and harmonic mixers, that are any of the
following:
b.7.a. Designed to extend the frequency range of ``signal
analyzers'' beyond 90 GHz;
b.7.b. Designed to extend the operating range of signal
generators as follows:
b.7.b.1. Beyond 90 GHz;
b.7.b.2. To an output power greater than 100 mW (20 dBm)
anywhere within the frequency range exceeding 43.5 GHz but not
exceeding 90 GHz;
b.7.c. Designed to extend the operating range of network
analyzers as follows:
b.7.c.1. Beyond 110 GHz;
b.7.c.2. To an output power greater than 31.62 mW (15 dBm)
anywhere within the frequency range exceeding 43.5 GHz but not
exceeding 90 GHz;
b.7.c.3. To an output power greater than 1 mW (0 dBm) anywhere
within the frequency range exceeding 90 GHz but not exceeding 110
GHz; or
b.7.d. Designed to extend the frequency range of microwave test
receivers beyond 110 GHz;
b.8. Microwave power amplifiers containing ``vacuum electronic
devices'' controlled by 3A001.b.1 and having all of the following:
b.8.a. Operating frequencies above 3 GHz;
b.8.b. An average output power to mass ratio exceeding 80 W/kg;
and
b.8.c. A volume of less than 400 cm\3\;
Note: 3A001.b.8 does not control equipment designed or rated for
operation in any frequency band which is ``allocated by the ITU''
for radio-communications services, but not for radio-determination.
b.9. Microwave Power Modules (MPM) consisting of, at least, a
traveling-wave ``vacuum electronic device,'' a ``Monolithic
Microwave Integrated Circuit'' (``MMIC'') and an integrated
electronic power conditioner and having all of the following:
b.9.a. A `turn-on time' from off to fully operational in less
than 10 seconds;
b.9.b. A volume less than the maximum rated power in Watts
multiplied by 10 cm\3\/W; and
b.9.c. An ``instantaneous bandwidth'' greater than 1 octave
(fmax > 2fmin) and having any of the
following:
b.9.c.1. For frequencies equal to or less than 18 GHz, an RF
output power greater than 100 W; or
b.9.c.2. A frequency greater than 18 GHz;
Technical Notes: For the purposes of 3A001.b.9:
1. To calculate the volume in 3A001.b.9.b, the following example
is provided: for a maximum rated power of 20 W, the volume would be:
20 W x 10 cm\3\/W = 200 cm\3\.
2. The `turn-on time' in 3A001.b.9.a refers to the time from
fully-off to fully operational, i.e.,it includes the warm-up time of
the MPM.
b.10. Oscillators or oscillator assemblies, specified to operate
with a single sideband (SSB) phase noise, in dBc/Hz, less (better)
than -(126 + 20log10F-20log10f) anywhere
within the range of 10 Hz <= F <= 10 kHz;
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.b.10, F is the offset
from the operating frequency in Hz and f is the operating frequency
in MHz.
b.11. `Frequency synthesizer' ``electronic assemblies'' having a
``frequency switching time'' as specified by any of the following:
b.11.a. Less than 143 ps;
b.11.b. Less than 100 ms for any frequency change exceeding 2.2
GHz within the synthesized frequency range exceeding 4.8 GHz but not
exceeding 31.8 GHz;
b.11.c. [Reserved]
b.11.d. Less than 500 [mu]s for any frequency change exceeding
550 MHz within the synthesized frequency range exceeding 31.8 GHz
but not exceeding 37 GHz;
b.11.e. Less than 100 [mu]s for any frequency change exceeding
2.2 GHz within the synthesized frequency range exceeding 37 GHz but
not exceeding 75 GHz;
b.11.f. Less than 100 [mu]s for any frequency change exceeding
5.0 GHz within the synthesized frequency range exceeding 75 GHz but
not exceeding 90 GHz; or
b.11.g. Less than 1 ms within the synthesized frequency range
exceeding 90 GHz;
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.b.11, a `frequency
synthesizer' is any kind of frequency source, regardless of the
actual technique used, providing a multiplicity of simultaneous or
alternative output frequencies, from one or more outputs, controlled
by, derived from or disciplined by a lesser number of standard (or
master) frequencies.
N.B.: For general purpose ``signal analyzers'', signal
generators, network analyzers and microwave test receivers, see
3A002.c, 3A002.d, 3A002.e and 3A002.f, respectively.
b.12. `Transmit/receive modules,' `transmit/receive MMICs,'
`transmit modules,' and `transmit MMICs,' rated for operation at
frequencies above 2.7 GHz and having all of the following:
b.12.a. A peak saturated power output (in watts),
Psat, greater than 505.62 divided by the maximum
operating frequency (in GHz) squared [Psat > 505.62 W *
GHz\2\/fGHz\2\] for any channel;
b.12.b. A ``fractional bandwidth'' of 5% or greater for any
channel;
b.12.c. Any planar side with length d (in cm) equal to or less
than 15 divided by the lowest operating frequency in GHz [d <= 15cm
* GHz * N/fGHz] where N is the number of transmit or
transmit/receive channels; and
b.12.d. An electronically variable phase shifter per channel.
Technical Notes: For the purposes of 3A001.b.12:
1. A `transmit/receive module' is a multifunction ``electronic
assembly'' that provides bi-directional amplitude and phase control
for transmission and reception of signals.
2. A `transmit module' is an ``electronic assembly'' that
provides amplitude and phase control for transmission of signals.
3. A `transmit/receive MMIC' is a multifunction ``MMIC'' that
provides bi-directional amplitude and phase control for transmission
and reception of signals.
4. A `transmit MMIC' is a ``MMIC'' that provides amplitude and
phase control for transmission of signals.
[[Page 73502]]
5. 2.7 GHz should be used as the lowest operating frequency
(fGHz) in the formula in 3A001.b.12.c for transmit/
receive or transmit modules that have a rated operation range
extending downward to 2.7 GHz and below [d <= 15cm * GHz * N/2.7
GHz].
6. 3A001.b.12 applies to `transmit/receive modules' or `transmit
modules' with or without a heat sink. The value of d in 3A001.b.12.c
does not include any portion of the `transmit/receive module' or
`transmit module' that functions as a heat sink.
7. `Transmit/receive modules' or `transmit modules,' `transmit/
receive MMICs' or `transmit MMICs' may or may not have N integrated
radiating antenna elements where N is the number of transmit or
transmit/receive channels.
c. Acoustic wave devices as follows and ``specially designed''
``components'' therefor:
c.1. Surface acoustic wave and surface skimming (shallow bulk)
acoustic wave devices, having any of the following:
c.1.a. A carrier frequency exceeding 6 GHz;
c.1.b. A carrier frequency exceeding 1 GHz, but not exceeding 6
GHz and having any of the following:
c.1.b.1. A `frequency side-lobe rejection' exceeding 65 dB;
c.1.b.2. A product of the maximum delay time and the bandwidth
(time in ms and bandwidth in MHz) of more than 100;
c.1.b.3. A bandwidth greater than 250 MHz; or
c.1.b.4. A dispersive delay of more than 10 [micro]s; or
c.1.c. A carrier frequency of 1 GHz or less and having any of
the following:
c.1.c.1. A product of the maximum delay time and the bandwidth
(time in [micro]s and bandwidth in MHz) of more than 100;
c.1.c.2. A dispersive delay of more than 10 [micro]s; or
c.1.c.3. A `frequency side-lobe rejection' exceeding 65 dB and a
bandwidth greater than 100 MHz;
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.c.1, `frequency side-
lobe rejection' is the maximum rejection value specified in data
sheet.
c.2. Bulk (volume) acoustic wave devices that permit the direct
processing of signals at frequencies exceeding 6 GHz;
c.3. Acoustic-optic ``signal processing'' devices employing
interaction between acoustic waves (bulk wave or surface wave) and
light waves that permit the direct processing of signals or images,
including spectral analysis, correlation or convolution;
Note: 3A001.c does not control acoustic wave devices that are
limited to a single band pass, low pass, high pass or notch
filtering, or resonating function.
d. Electronic devices and circuits containing ``components,''
manufactured from ``superconductive'' materials, ``specially
designed'' for operation at temperatures below the ``critical
temperature'' of at least one of the ``superconductive''
constituents and having any of the following:
d.1. Current switching for digital circuits using
``superconductive'' gates with a product of delay time per gate (in
seconds) and power dissipation per gate (in watts) of less than
10-14 J; or
d.2. Frequency selection at all frequencies using resonant
circuits with Q-values exceeding 10,000;
e. High energy devices as follows:
e.1. `Cells' as follows:
e.1.a `Primary cells' having any of the following at 20 [deg]C:
e.1.a.1. `Energy density' exceeding 550 Wh/kg and a `continuous
power density' exceeding 50 W/kg; or
e.1.a.2. `Energy density' exceeding 50 Wh/kg and a `continuous
power density' exceeding 350 W/kg;
e.1.b. `Secondary cells' having an `energy density' exceeding
350 Wh/kg at 20 [deg]C;
Technical Notes:
1. For the purposes of 3A001.e.1, `energy density' (Wh/kg) is
calculated from the nominal voltage multiplied by the nominal
capacity in ampere-hours (Ah) divided by the mass in kilograms. If
the nominal capacity is not stated, energy density is calculated
from the nominal voltage squared then multiplied by the discharge
duration in hours divided by the discharge load in Ohms and the mass
in kilograms.
2. For the purposes of 3A001.e.1, a `cell' is defined as an
electrochemical device, which has positive and negative electrodes,
an electrolyte, and is a source of electrical energy. It is the
basic building block of a battery.
3. For the purposes of 3A001.e.1.a, a `primary cell' is a `cell'
that is not designed to be charged by any other source.
4. For the purposes of 3A001.e.1.b, a `secondary cell' is a
`cell' that is designed to be charged by an external electrical
source.
5. For the purposes of 3A001.e.1.a, `continuous power density'
(W/kg) is calculated from the nominal voltage multiplied by the
specified maximum continuous discharge current in ampere (A) divided
by the mass in kilograms. `Continuous power density' is also
referred to as specific power.
Note: 3A001.e does not control batteries, including single-cell
batteries.
e.2. High energy storage capacitors as follows:
e.2.a. Capacitors with a repetition rate of less than 10 Hz
(single shot capacitors) and having all of the following:
e.2.a.1. A voltage rating equal to or more than 5 kV;
e.2.a.2. An energy density equal to or more than 250 J/kg; and
e.2.a.3. A total energy equal to or more than 25 kJ;
e.2.b. Capacitors with a repetition rate of 10 Hz or more
(repetition rated capacitors) and having all of the following:
e.2.b.1. A voltage rating equal to or more than 5 kV;
e.2.b.2. An energy density equal to or more than 50 J/kg;
e.2.b.3. A total energy equal to or more than 100 J; and
e.2.b.4. A charge/discharge cycle life equal to or more than
10,000;
e.3. ``Superconductive'' electromagnets and solenoids,
``specially designed'' to be fully charged or discharged in less
than one second and having all of the following:
Note: 3A001.e.3 does not control ``superconductive''
electromagnets or solenoids ``specially designed'' for Magnetic
Resonance Imaging (MRI) medical equipment.
e.3.a. Energy delivered during the discharge exceeding 10 kJ in
the first second;
e.3.b. Inner diameter of the current carrying windings of more
than 250 mm; and
e.3.c. Rated for a magnetic induction of more than 8 T or
``overall current density'' in the winding of more than 300 A/mm\2\;
e.4. Solar cells, cell-interconnect-coverglass (CIC) assemblies,
solar panels, and solar arrays, which are ``space-qualified,''
having a minimum average efficiency exceeding 20% at an operating
temperature of 301 K (28[deg]C) under simulated `AM0' illumination
with an irradiance of 1,367 Watts per square meter (W/m\2\);
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.e.4, `AM0', or `Air
Mass Zero', refers to the spectral irradiance of sun light in the
earth's outer atmosphere when the distance between the earth and sun
is one astronomical unit (AU).
f. Rotary input type absolute position encoders having an
``accuracy'' equal to or less (better) than 1.0 second of arc and
``specially designed'' encoder rings, discs or scales therefor;
g. Solid-state pulsed power switching thyristor devices and
`thyristor modules', using either electrically, optically, or
electron radiation controlled switch methods and having any of the
following:
g.1. A maximum turn-on current rate of rise (di/dt) greater than
30,000 A/[micro]s and off-state voltage greater than 1,100 V; or
g.2. A maximum turn-on current rate of rise (di/dt) greater than
2,000 A/[micro]s and having all of the following:
g.2.a. An off-state peak voltage equal to or greater than 3,000
V; and
g.2.b. A peak (surge) current equal to or greater than 3,000 A;
Note 1: 3A001.g. includes:
--Silicon Controlled Rectifiers (SCRs)
--Electrical Triggering Thyristors (ETTs)
--Light Triggering Thyristors (LTTs)
--Integrated Gate Commutated Thyristors (IGCTs)
--Gate Turn-off Thyristors (GTOs)
--MOS Controlled Thyristors (MCTs)
--Solidtrons
Note 2: 3A001.g does not control thyristor devices and
`thyristor modules' incorporated into equipment designed for civil
railway or ``civil aircraft'' applications.
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.g, a `thyristor
module' contains one or more thyristor devices.
h. Solid-state power semiconductor switches, diodes, or
`modules', having all of the following:
h.1. Rated for a maximum operating junction temperature greater
than 488 K (215 [deg]C);
h.2. Repetitive peak off-state voltage (blocking voltage)
exceeding 300 V; and
h.3. Continuous current greater than 1 A.
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.h, `modules' contain
one or more solid-state power semiconductor switches or diodes.
Note 1: Repetitive peak off-state voltage in 3A001.h includes
drain to source voltage, collector to emitter voltage, repetitive
peak
[[Page 73503]]
reverse voltage and peak repetitive off-state blocking voltage.
Note 2: 3A001.h includes:
--Junction Field Effect Transistors (JFETs)
--Vertical Junction Field Effect Transistors (VJFETs)
--Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistors (MOSFETs)
--Double Diffused Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor
(DMOSFET)
--Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor (IGBT)
--High Electron Mobility Transistors (HEMTs)
--Bipolar Junction Transistors (BJTs)
--Thyristors and Silicon Controlled Rectifiers (SCRs)
--Gate Turn-Off Thyristors (GTOs)
--Emitter Turn-Off Thyristors (ETOs)
--PiN Diodes
--Schottky Diodes
Note 3: 3A001.h does not apply to switches, diodes, or
`modules', incorporated into equipment designed for civil
automobile, civil railway, or ``civil aircraft'' applications.
i. Intensity, amplitude, or phase electro-optic modulators,
designed for analog signals and having any of the following:
i.1. A maximum operating frequency of more than 10 GHz but less
than 20 GHz, an optical insertion loss equal to or less than 3 dB
and having any of the following:
i.1.a. A `half-wave voltage' (`V[pi]') less than 2.7 V when
measured at a frequency of 1 GHz or below; or
i.1.b. A `V[pi]' of less than 4 V when measured at a frequency
of more than 1 GHz; or
i.2. A maximum operating frequency equal to or greater than 20
GHz, an optical insertion loss equal to or less than 3 dB and having
any of the following:
i.2.a. A `V[pi]' less than 3.3 V when measured at a frequency of
1 GHz or below; or
i.2.b. A `V[pi]' less than 5 V when measured at a frequency of
more than 1 GHz.
Note: 3A001.i includes electro-optic modulators having optical
input and output connectors (e.g., fiber-optic pigtails).
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3A001.i, a `half-wave
voltage' (`V[pi]') is the applied voltage necessary to make a phase
change of 180 degrees in the wavelength of light propagating through
the optical modulator.
j. through y. [Reserved]
z. Any commodity described in 3A001 that meets or exceeds the
performance parameters in 3A090.
* * * * *
3A090 Integrated circuits as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: RS, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
RS applies to entire entry................ To or within destinations
specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
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
NAC: Yes, for 3A090.a, if the item is not designed or marketed for
use in datacenters and has a `total processing performance' of 4800
or more; yes, for 3A090.b, if the item is designed or marketed for
use in datacenters.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See ECCNs 3D001, 3E001, 5D002.z, and 5D992.z
for associated technology and software controls. (2) See ECCNs
3A001.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, and 5A992.z.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. Integrated circuits having one or more digital processing
units having either of the following:
a.1. a `total processing performance' of 4800 or more, or
a.2. a `total processing performance' of 1600 or more and a
`performance density' of 5.92 or more.
b. Integrated circuits having one or more digital processing
units having either of the following:
b.1. a `total processing performance' of 2400 or more and less
than 4800 and a `performance density' of 1.6 or more and less than
5.92, or
b.2. a `total processing performance' of 1600 or more and a
`performance density' of 3.2 or more and less than 5.92.
Note 1 to 3A090: Integrated circuits specified by 3A090 include
graphical processing units (GPUs), tensor processing units (TPUs),
neural processors, in-memory processors, vision processors, text
processors, co-processors/accelerators, adaptive processors, field-
programmable logic devices (FPLDs), and application-specific
integrated circuits (ASICs). Examples of integrated circuits are in
the Note to 3A001.a.
Note 2 to 3A090: 3A090 does not apply to items that are not
designed or marketed for use in datacenters and do not have a `total
processing performance' of 4800 or more. For integrated circuits
that are not designed or marketed for use in datacenters and that
have a `total processing performance' of 4800 or more, see license
exception NAC.
Note 3 to 3A090: For ICs that are excluded from ECCN 3A090 under
Note 2 or 3 to 3A090, those ICs are also not applicable for
classifications made under ECCNs 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, or 5D992.z because those
other CCL classifications are based on the incorporation of an IC
that meets the control parameters under ECCN 3A090 or otherwise
meets or exceeds the control parameters or ECCNs 3A090 or 4A090 .
See the Related Controls paragraphs of 3A001.z, 4A003.z, 4A004.z,
4A005.z, 4A090, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, 5A992.z, 5D002.z, or 5D992.z,
which reference back to Note 4 to 3A090.
Technical Notes:
1. `Total processing performance' (`TPP') is 2 x `MacTOPS' x
`bit length of the operation', aggregated over all processing units
on the integrated circuit.
a. For purposes of 3A090, `MacTOPS' is the theoretical peak
number of Tera (10\12\) operations per second for multiply-
accumulate computation (D = A x B + C).
b. The 2 in the `TPP' formula is based on industry convention of
counting one multiply-accumulate computation, D = A x B + C, as 2
operations for purpose of datasheets. Therefore, 2 x MacTOPS may
correspond to the reported TOPS or FLOPS on a datasheet.
c. For purposes of 3A090, `bit length of the operation' for a
multiply-accumulate computation is the largest bit-length of the
inputs to the multiply operation.
d. Aggregate the TPPs for each processing unit on the integrated
circuit to arrive at a total. `TPP' = TPP1 + TPP2 + . . . . + TPPn
(where n is the number or processing units on the integrated
circuit).
2. The rate of `MacTOPS' is to be calculated at its maximum
value theoretically possible. The rate of `MacTOPS' is assumed to be
the highest value the manufacturer claims in annual or brochure for
the integrated circuit. For example, the `TPP' threshold of 4800 can
be met with 600 tera integer operations (or 2 x 300 `MacTOPS') at 8
bits or 300 tera FLOPS (or 2 x 150 `MacTOPS') at 16 bits. If the IC
is designed for MAC computation with multiple bit lengths that
achieve different `TPP' values, the highest `TPP' value should be
evaluated against parameters in 3A090.
3. For integrated circuits specified by 3A090 that provide
processing of both sparse and dense matrices, the `TPP' values are
the values for processing of dense matrices (e.g., without
sparsity).
4. `Performance density' is `TPP' divided by `applicable die
area'. For purposes of 3A090, `applicable die area' is measured in
millimeters squared and includes all die area of logic dies
manufactured with a process node that uses a non-planar transistor
architecture.
* * * * *
3A991 Electronic devices, and ``components'' not controlled by
3A001.
License Requirements
Reason for Control: AT
[[Page 73504]]
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
License Requirements Note: See Sec. 744.17 of the EAR for
additional license requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and an arithmetic logic unit
with an access width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ``information security'' functionality, and associated
``software'' and ``technology'' for the ``production'' or
``development'' of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) For associated ``software'' for commodities in
this ECCN, see 3D991 and for associated ``technology for commodities
in this ECCN, see 3E991. (2) See also ECCNs 5A002.z, 5A004.z, and
5A992.z.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ``Microprocessor microcircuits'', ``microcomputer
microcircuits'', and microcontroller microcircuits having any of the
following:
a.1. A performance speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and an arithmetic
logic unit with an access width of 32 bit or more;
a.2. A clock frequency rate exceeding 25 MHz; or
a.3. More than one data or instruction bus or serial
communication port that provides a direct external interconnection
between parallel ``microprocessor microcircuits'' with a transfer
rate of 2.5 Mbyte/s;
b. Storage integrated circuits, as follows:
b.1. Electrical erasable programmable read-only memories
(EEPROMs) with a storage capacity;
b.1.a. Exceeding 16 Mbits per package for flash memory types; or
b.1.b. Exceeding either of the following limits for all other
EEPROM types:
b.1.b.1. Exceeding 1 Mbit per package; or
b.1.b.2. Exceeding 256 kbit per package and a maximum access
time of less than 80 ns;
b.2. Static random access memories (SRAMs) with a storage
capacity:
b.2.a. Exceeding 1 Mbit per package; or
b.2.b. Exceeding 256 kbit per package and a maximum access time
of less than 25 ns;
c. Analog-to-digital converters having any of the following:
c.1. A resolution of 8 bit or more, but less than 12 bit, with
an output rate greater than 200 million words per second;
c.2. A resolution of 12 bit with an output rate greater than 105
million words per second;
c.3. A resolution of more than 12 bit but equal to or less than
14 bit with an output rate greater than 10 million words per second;
or
c.4. A resolution of more than 14 bit with an output rate
greater than 2.5 million words per second;
d. Field programmable logic devices having a maximum number of
single-ended digital input/outputs between 200 and 700;
e. Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) processors having a rated
execution time for a 1,024 point complex FFT of less than 1 ms;
f. Custom integrated circuits for which either the function is
unknown, or the control status of the equipment in which the
integrated circuits will be used is unknown to the manufacturer,
having any of the following:
f.1. More than 144 terminals; or
f.2. A typical ``basic propagation delay time'' of less than 0.4
ns;
g. Traveling-wave ``vacuum electronic devices,'' pulsed or
continuous wave, as follows:
g.1. Coupled cavity devices, or derivatives thereof;
g.2. Helix devices based on helix, folded waveguide, or
serpentine waveguide circuits, or derivatives thereof, with any of
the following:
g.2.a. An ``instantaneous bandwidth'' of half an octave or more;
and
g.2.b. The product of the rated average output power (expressed
in kW) and the maximum operating frequency (expressed in GHz) of
more than 0.2;
g.2.c. An ``instantaneous bandwidth'' of less than half an
octave; and
g.2.d. The product of the rated average output power (expressed
in kW) and the maximum operating frequency (expressed in GHz) of
more than 0.4;
h. Flexible waveguides designed for use at frequencies exceeding
40 GHz;
i. Surface acoustic wave and surface skimming (shallow bulk)
acoustic wave devices (i.e., ``signal processing'' devices employing
elastic waves in materials), having either of the following:
i.1. A carrier frequency exceeding 1 GHz; or
i.2. A carrier frequency of 1 GHz or less; and
i.2.a. A frequency side-lobe rejection exceeding 55 Db;
i.2.b. A product of the maximum delay time and bandwidth (time
in microseconds and bandwidth in MHz) of more than 100; or
i.2.c. A dispersive delay of more than 10 microseconds;
j. Cells as follows:
j.1. Primary cells having an energy density of 550 Wh/kg or less
at 293 K (20 [deg]C);
j.2. Secondary cells having an energy density of 350 Wh/kg or
less at 293 K (20 [deg]C);
Note: 3A991.j does not control batteries, including single cell
batteries.
Technical Notes:
1. For the purposes of 3A991.j energy density (Wh/kg) is
calculated from the nominal voltage multiplied by the nominal
capacity in ampere-hours divided by the mass in kilograms. If the
nominal capacity is not stated, energy density is calculated from
the nominal voltage squared then multiplied by the discharge
duration in hours divided by the discharge load in Ohms and the mass
in kilograms.
2. For the purposes of 3A991.j, a `cell' is defined as an
electrochemical device, which has positive and negative electrodes,
and electrolyte, and is a source of electrical energy. It is the
basic building block of a battery.
3. For the purposes of 3A991.j.1, a `primary cell' is a `cell'
that is not designed to be charged by any other source.
4. For the purposes of 3A991.j.2, a `secondary cell' is a `cell'
that is designed to be charged by an external electrical source.
k. ``Superconductive'' electromagnets or solenoids ``specially
designed'' to be fully charged or discharged in less than one
minute, having all of the following:
Note: 3A991.k does not control ``superconductive''
electromagnets or solenoids designed for Magnetic Resonance Imaging
(MRI) medical equipment.
k.1. Maximum energy delivered during the discharge divided by
the duration of the discharge of more than 500 kJ per minute;
k.2. Inner diameter of the current carrying windings of more
than 250 mm; and
k.3. Rated for a magnetic induction of more than 8T or ``overall
current density'' in the winding of more than 300 A/mm\2\;
l. Circuits or systems for electromagnetic energy storage,
containing ``components'' manufactured from ``superconductive''
materials ``specially designed'' for operation at temperatures below
the ``critical temperature'' of at least one of their
``superconductive'' constituents, having all of the following:
l.1. Resonant operating frequencies exceeding 1 MHz;
l.2. A stored energy density of 1 MJ/M\3\ or more; and
l.3. A discharge time of less than 1 ms;
m. Hydrogen/hydrogen-isotope thyratrons of ceramic-metal
construction and rate for a peak current of 500 A or more;
n. Digital integrated circuits based on any compound
semiconductor having an equivalent gate count of more than 300 (2
input gates);
o. Solar cells, cell-interconnect-coverglass (CIC) assemblies,
solar panels, and solar arrays, which are ``space qualified'' and
not controlled by 3A001.e.4;
p. Integrated circuits, n.e.s., having any of the following:
p.1. A processing performance of 8 TOPS or more; or
p.2. An aggregate bidirectional transfer rate over all inputs
and outputs of 150 Gbyte/s or more to or from integrated circuits
other than volatile memories.
Technical Notes: For the purposes of 3A991.p:
1. This ECCN includes but is not limited to central processing
units (CPU), graphics processing units (GPU), tensor processing
units (TPU), neural processors, in-memory processors, vision
processors, text processors, co-processors/accelerators, adaptive
processors, and field-programmable logic devices (FPLDs).
2. TOPS is Tera Operations Per Second or 10\12\ Operations per
Second.
3. For purposes of 3A991.p, TOPS is 2 x `MacTOPS' aggregated
over all processing units on the integrated circuit.
a. For purposes of 3A991.p, `MacTOPS' is the theoretical peak
number of Tera (10[supcaret]12) operations per second for multiply-
accumulate computation (D = A x B + C).
[[Page 73505]]
b. The 2 in the formula is based on industry convention of
counting one multiply-accumulate computation, D = A x B + C, as 2
operations for purpose of datasheets. Therefore, 2 x `MacTOPS' may
correspond to the reported TOPS or FLOPS on a datasheet.
* * * * *
3D001 ``Software'' ``specially designed'' for the ``development'' or
``production'' of commodities controlled by 3A001.b to 3A002.h,
3A090, or 3B (except 3B991 and 3B992).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to ``software'' for commodities NS Column 1.
controlled by 3A001.b to 3A001.h, 3A002,
and 3B (except 3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k
to p, 3B002.b and c).
NS applies to ``software'' for commodities To or within destinations
controlled by 3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k specified in Country Group
to p, 3B002.b and c. D:5 of supplement no. 1 to
part 740 of the EAR or
Macau. See Sec.
742.4(a)(4) of the EAR.
RS applies to ``software'' for commodities To or within destinations
controlled by 3A001.z and 3A090. specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
Reporting Requirements
See Sec. 743.1 of the EAR for reporting requirements for exports
under License Exceptions, Special Comprehensive Licenses, and
Validated End-User authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
TSR: Yes, except for ``software'' ``specially designed'' for the
``development'' or ``production'' of Traveling Wave Tube Amplifiers
described in 3A001.b.8 having operating frequencies exceeding 18
GHz; or commodities specified in 3A001.z, 3A090, 3B001.a.4, c, d,
f.1.b, k to p, and 3B002.b and c.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be used to ship or transmit
``software'' ``specially designed'' for the ``development'' or
``production'' of equipment specified by 3A001.z, 3A090, 3A002.g.1,
3B001.a.4, a.2, c, d, f.1.b, k to p, or 3B002.b and c to any of the
destinations listed in Country Group A:6 (See Supplement No. 1 to
part 740 of the EAR).
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: N/A
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
The list of items controlled is contained in the ECCN heading.
* * * * *
3E001 ``Technology'' according to the General Technology Note for
the ``development'' or ``production'' of commodities controlled by
3A (except 3A980, 3A981, 3A991, 3A992, or 3A999), 3B (except 3B991
or 3B992) or 3C (except 3C992).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, MT, NP, RS, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to ``technology'' for NS Column 1.
commodities controlled by 3A001 (except
3A001.z), 3A002, 3A003, 3B001 (except
3B001 a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to p), 3B002
(except 3B002.b and c), or 3C001 to 3C006.
NS applies to ``technology'' for 3B001 To or within Macau or a
a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to p, 3B002.b and c. destination specified in
Country Group D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR. See Sec.
742.4(a)(4) of the EAR.
MT applies to ``technology'' for MT Column 1.
commodities controlled by 3A001 (except
for 3A001.z) or 3A101 for MT Reasons.
NP applies to ``technology'' for NP Column 1.
commodities controlled by 3A001 (except
3A001.z), 3A201, or 3A225 to 3A234 for NP
reasons.
RS applies to ``technology'' for Worldwide (See Sec.
commodities controlled in 3A090, when 742.6(a)(6)(ii).
exported from Macau or a destination
specified in Country Group D:5.
RS applies to ``technology'' for To or within destinations
commodities controlled by 3A001.z, 3A090. specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
RS applies to ``technology'' for To or within destinations
commodities controlled by 3B001.a.4, c, specified in Country Group
d, f.1.b, k to p, 3B002.b and c. D:5 of supplement no. 1 to
part 740 of the EAR or
Macau. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(i) of the EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
License Requirements Note: See Sec. 744.17 of the EAR for
additional license requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and an arithmetic logic unit
with an access width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ``information security'' functionality, and associated
``software'' and ``technology'' for the ``production'' or
``development'' of such microprocessors.
Reporting Requirements
See Sec. 743.1 of the EAR for reporting requirements for exports
under License Exceptions, Special Comprehensive Licenses, and
Validated End-User authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
TSR: Yes, except N/A for MT, and ``technology'' for the
``development'' or ``production'' of: (a) vacuum electronic device
amplifiers described in 3A001.b.8, having operating frequencies
exceeding 19 GHz; (b) solar cells, coverglass-interconnect-cells or
covered-interconnect-cells (CIC) ``assemblies'', solar arrays and/or
solar panels described in 3A001.e.4; (c) ``Monolithic Microwave
Integrated Circuit'' (``MMIC'') amplifiers in 3A001.b.2; (d)
discrete microwave transistors in 3A001.b.3; and (e) commodities
described in 3A001.z, 3A090, 3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to p, 3B002.b
and c.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be used to ship or transmit
``technology'' according to the General Technology Note for the
``development'' or ``production'' of equipment specified by ECCNs
3A002.g.1 or 3B001.a.2 to any of the destinations listed in Country
Group A:6 (See Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR). License
Exception STA may not be used to ship or transmit ``technology''
according to the General Technology Note for the ``development'' or
``production'' of
[[Page 73506]]
components specified by ECCN 3A001.b.2, b.3, commodities specified
in 3A001.z, 3A090, 3B001.a.4, c, d, f.1.b, k to p, or 3B002.b and c,
to any of the destinations listed in Country Group A:5 or A:6 (See
Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR).
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) ``Technology'' according to the General
Technology Note for the ``development'' or ``production'' of certain
``space-qualified'' atomic frequency standards described in Category
XV(e)(9), MMICs described in Category XV(e)(14), and oscillators
described in Category XV(e)(15) of the USML are ``subject to the
ITAR'' (see 22 CFR parts 120 through 130). See also 3E101, 3E201 and
9E515. (2) ``Technology'' for ``development'' or ``production'' of
``Microwave Monolithic Integrated Circuits'' (``MMIC'') amplifiers
in 3A001.b.2 is controlled in this ECCN 3E001; 5E001.d refers only
to that additional ``technology'' ``required'' for
telecommunications.
Related Definition: N/A
Items:
The list of items controlled is contained in the ECCN heading.
Note 1: 3E001 does not control ``technology'' for equipment or
``components'' controlled by 3A003.
Note 2: 3E001 does not control ``technology'' for integrated
circuits controlled by 3A001.a.3 to a.14 or .z, having all of the
following:
(a) Using ``technology'' at or above 0.130 [mu]m; and
(b) Incorporating multi-layer structures with three or fewer
metal layers.
Note 3: 3E001 does not apply to `Process Design Kits' (`PDKs')
unless they include libraries implementing functions or technologies
for items specified by 3A001.
Technical Note: For the purposes of 3E001 Note 3, a `Process
Design Kit' (`PDK') is a software tool provided by a semiconductor
manufacturer to ensure that the required design practices and rules
are taken into account in order to successfully produce a specific
integrated circuit design in a specific semiconductor process, in
accordance with technological and manufacturing constraints (each
semiconductor manufacturing process has its particular `PDK').
* * * * *
CATEGORY 4--COMPUTERS
* * * * *
Note 3: Commodities and ``software'' in ECCNs 4A005 and 4D004
that are also controlled in ECCNs 5A002.a, 5A002.z.1, 5A002.z.6,
5A004.a, 5A004.b, 5A004.z, 5D002.c.1, 5D002.c.3, 5D002.z.6,
5D002.z.8, or 5D002.z.9, remain controlled in Category 5--Part 2 by
those entries. Category 5--Part 2 does not apply to elements of
source code that implement functionality controlled by these
Category 4 ECCNs, or to any item subject to the EAR where Encryption
Item (EI) functionality is absent, removed or otherwise non-
existent.
* * * * *
4A003 ``Digital computers'', ``electronic assemblies'', and related
equipment therefor, as follows (see List of Items Controlled) and
``specially designed'' ``components'' therefor.
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, CC, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to 4A003.b and .c.............. NS Column 1.
NS applies to 4A003.g..................... NS Column 2.
RS applies to 4A003.z..................... To or within destinations
specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
CC applies to ``digital computers'' for CC Column 1.
computerized finger-print equipment.
AT applies to entire entry (refer to 4A994 AT Column 1.
for controls on ``digital computers''
with a APP >0.0128 but <=70 WT).
Note: For all destinations, except those countries in Country Group
E:1 or E:2 of Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR, no license is
required (NLR) for computers with an ``Adjusted Peak Performance''
(``APP'') not exceeding 70 Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT) and for
``electronic assemblies'' described in 4A003.c that are not capable
of exceeding an ``Adjusted Peak Performance'' (``APP'') exceeding 70
Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT) in aggregation, except certain transfers as
set forth in Sec. 746.3 (Iraq).
Reporting Requirements
Special Post Shipment Verification reporting and recordkeeping
requirements for exports of computers to destinations in Computer
Tier 3 may be found in Sec. 743.2 of the EAR.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: $5000; N/A for 4A003.b, .c, and .z.
GBS: Yes, for 4A003.g and ``specially designed'' ``parts'' and
``components'' therefor, exported separately or as part of a system.
APP: Yes, for computers controlled by 4A003.b, and ``electronic
assemblies'' controlled by 4A003.c, to the exclusion of other
technical parameters. See Sec. 740.7 of the EAR.
NAC: Yes, for 4A003.z; N/A for all other 4A003 commodities.
Note to List Based License Exceptions: Related equipment specified
under ECCN 4A003.g, z.2, or z.4 are eligible for License Exception
GBS if all the following conditions are met:
[squf] 1. The related equipment is exported, reexported, or
transferred (in-country) as part of a computer system,
[squf] 2. The computer system is either designated as NLR or
eligible for License Exception APP, and
[squf] 3. The related equipment is eligible for License Exception
APP.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See also ECCNs 4A090, 4A994 and 4A980. (2) See
also Note 4 to ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
Note 1: 4A003 includes the following:
--`Vector processors' (as defined in Note 7 of the ``Technical Note
on ``Adjusted Peak Performance'' (``APP'')'');
--Array processors;
--Digital signal processors;
--Logic processors;
--Equipment designed for ``image enhancement.''
Note 2: The control status of the ``digital computers'' and
related equipment described in 4A003 is determined by the control
status of other equipment or systems provided:
a. The ``digital computers'' or related equipment are essential
for the operation of the other equipment or systems;
b. The ``digital computers'' or related equipment are not a
``principal element'' of the other equipment or systems; and
N.B. 1: The control status of ``signal processing'' or ``image
enhancement'' equipment ``specially designed'' for other equipment
with functions limited to those required for the other equipment is
determined by the control status of the other equipment even if it
exceeds the ``principal element'' criterion.
N.B. 2: For the control status of ``digital computers'' or
related equipment for telecommunications equipment, see Category 5,
Part 1 (Telecommunications).
c. The ``technology'' for the ``digital computers'' and related
equipment is determined by 4E.
a. [Reserved]
b. ``Digital computers'' having an ``Adjusted Peak Performance''
(``APP'') exceeding 70 Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT);
c. ``Electronic assemblies'' ``specially designed'' or modified
to be capable of enhancing performance by aggregation of processors
so that the ``APP'' of the aggregation exceeds the limit in
4A003.b.;
Note 1: 4A003.c applies only to ``electronic assemblies'' and
programmable interconnections not exceeding the limit in 4A003.b
when shipped as unintegrated ``electronic assemblies.''
Note 2: 4A003.c does not control ``electronic assemblies''
``specially designed'' for a product or family of products whose
maximum configuration does not exceed the limit of 4A003.b.
d. to f. [Reserved]
N.B.: For ``electronic assemblies,'' modules or equipment,
performing analog-to-digital conversions, see 3A002.h.
[[Page 73507]]
g. Equipment ``specially designed'' for aggregating the
performance of ``digital computers'' by providing external
interconnections which allow communications at unidirectonal data
rates exceeding 2.0 Gbyte/s per link.
Note: 4A003.g does not control internal interconnection
equipment (e.g., backplanes, buses) passive interconnection
equipment, ``network access controllers'' or ``communication channel
controllers''.
h. through y. [Reserved]
z. Commodities specified in 4A003 that also meet or exceed the
performance parameters in 4A090.
4A004 Computers as follows (see List of Items Controlled) and
``specially designed'' related equipment, ``electronic assemblies''
and ``components'' therefor.
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry (except NS Column 2.
4A004.z).
RS applies to 4A004.z..................... To or within destinations
specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: $5000; N/A 4A004.z
GBS: N/A
NAC: Yes, for 4A004.z; N/A for all other 4A004 commodities.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See also ECCN 4A090. (2) See also Note 4 to
ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. `Systolic array computers';
b. `Neural computers';
c. `Optical computers'.
Technical Notes:
1. For the purposes of 4A004.a, `systolic array computers' are
computers where the flow and modification of the data is dynamically
controllable at the logic gate level by the user.
2. For the purposes of 4A004.b, `neural computers' are
computational devices designed or modified to mimic the behaviour of
a neuron or a collection of neurons, i.e., computational devices
which are distinguished by their hardware capability to modulate the
weights and numbers of the interconnections of a multiplicity of
computational components based on previous data.
3. For the purposes of 4A004.c, `optical computers' are
computers designed or modified to use light to represent data and
whose computational logic elements are based on directly coupled
optical devices.
d. through y. [Reserved]
z. Commodities that are described in 4A004 and that also meet or
exceed the performance parameters in 4A090.
4A005 ``Systems,'' ``equipment,'' and ``components'' therefor,
``specially designed'' or modified for the generation, command and
control, or delivery of ``intrusion software'' (see List of Items
Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry (except NS Column 1.
4A005.z).
RS applies to items controlled by 4A005.z. To or within destinations
specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
Reporting Requirements
See Sec. 743.1 of the EAR for reporting requirements for exports
under License Exceptions, and Validated End-User authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
APP: N/A
ACE: Yes, except to Country Group E:1 or E:2 and for 4A005.z. See
Sec. 740.22 of the EAR for eligibility criteria.
NAC: Yes, for 4A005.z; N/A for all other 4A005 commodities.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be used to ship items specified
by ECCN 4A005.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) Defense articles described in USML Category
XI(b), and software directly related to a defense article, are
``subject to the ITAR''; see Sec. 120.33(a)(4). (2) See also ECCNs
4A090. (3) See also Note 4 to ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
The list of items controlled is contained in the ECCN heading,
except for the commodities controlled under 4A005.z.
a. through y. [Reserved]
z. Commodities that are specified in 4A005 that also meet or
exceed the performance parameters in 4A090.
4A090 Computers as follows (see List of Items Controlled) and
related equipment, ``electronic assemblies,'' and ``components''
therefor.
License Requirements
Reason for Control: RS, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
RS applies to entire entry................ To or within destinations
specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
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
NAC: Yes, for 4A090, if the item incorporates a 3A090.a IC that is
not designed or marketed for use in datacenters and has a `total
processing performance' of 4800 or more, or if the 4A090 item
incorporates a 3A090.b IC, if the item is designed or marketed for
use in datacenters.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) For associated ``software'' for commodities in
this ECCN, see 4D090, 5D002.z, and 5D992.z and for associated
``technology'' for commodities in this ECCN, see 4E001. (2) Also
ECCNs 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, and 5A992.z. (3)
See also Note 4 to ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. Computers, ``electronic assemblies,'' and ``components''
containing integrated circuits, any of which meets or exceeds the
limit in 3A090.a.
Technical Note: For purposes of 4A090.a, computers include
``digital computers,'' ``hybrid computers,'' and analog computers.
b. [Reserved]
* * * * *
4A994 Computers, ``electronic assemblies'' and related equipment,
not controlled by 4A001 or 4A003, and ``specially designed''
``parts'' and ``components'' therefor (see List of Items
Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: AT
[[Page 73508]]
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
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
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) For associated ``software'' for commodities in
this ECCN, see 4D994 and for associated ``technology'' for
commodities in this ECCN, see 4E992. (2) See also ECCNs 4A003.z,
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 5A002.z, 5A004.z, and 5A992.z.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
Note 1: The control status of the ``digital computers'' and
related equipment described in 4A994 is determined by the control
status of other equipment or systems provided:
a. The ``digital computers'' or related equipment are essential
for the operation of the other equipment or systems;
b. The ``digital computers'' or related equipment are not a
``principal element'' of the other equipment or systems; and
N.B. 1: The control status of ``signal processing'' or ``image
enhancement'' equipment ``specially designed'' for other equipment
with functions limited to those required for the other equipment is
determined by the control status of the other equipment even if it
exceeds the ``principal element'' criterion.
N.B. 2: For the control status of ``digital computers'' or
related equipment for telecommunications equipment, see Category 5,
Part 1 (Telecommunications).
c. The ``technology'' for the ``digital computers'' and related
equipment is determined by 4E.
a. Electronic computers and related equipment, and ``electronic
assemblies'' and ``specially designed'' ``parts'' and ``components''
therefor, rated for operation at an ambient temperature above 343 K
(70 [deg]C);
b. ``Digital computers'', including equipment of ``signal
processing'' or image enhancement'', having an ``Adjusted Peak
Performance'' (``APP'') equal to or greater than 0.0128 Weighted
TeraFLOPS (WT);
c. ``Electronic assemblies'' that are ``specially designed'' or
modified to enhance performance by aggregation of processors, as
follows:
c.1. Designed to be capable of aggregation in configurations of
16 or more processors;
c.2. [Reserved];
Note 1: 4A994.c applies only to ``electronic assemblies'' and
programmable interconnections with a ``APP'' not exceeding the
limits in 4A994.b, when shipped as unintegrated ``electronic
assemblies''. It does not apply to ``electronic assemblies''
inherently limited by nature of their design for use as related
equipment controlled by 4A994.k.
Note 2: 4A994.c does not control any ``electronic assembly''
``specially designed'' for a product or family of products whose
maximum configuration does not exceed the limits of 4A994.b.
d. [Reserved];
e. [Reserved];
f. Equipment for ``signal processing'' or ``image enhancement''
having an ``Adjusted Peak Performance'' (``APP'') equal to or
greater than 0.0128 Weighted TeraFLOPS WT;
g. [Reserved];
h. [Reserved];
i. Equipment containing ``terminal interface equipment''
exceeding the limits in 5A991;
j. Equipment ``specially designed'' to provide external
interconnection of ``digital computers'' or associated equipment
that allows communications at data rates exceeding 80 Mbyte/s.
Note: 4A994.j does not control internal interconnection
equipment (e.g., backplanes, buses) passive interconnection
equipment, ``network access controllers'' or ``communication channel
controllers''.
k. ``Hybrid computers'' and ``electronic assemblies'' and
``specially designed'' ``parts'' and ``components'' therefor
containing analog-to-digital converters having all of the following
characteristics:
k.1. 32 channels or more; and
k.2. A resolution of 14 bit (plus sign bit) or more with a
conversion rate of 200,000 conversions/s or more.
l. Computers, ``electronic assemblies,'' and ``components,''
n.e.s., containing integrated circuits, any of which meets or
exceeds the limit of ECCN 3A991.p.
Technical Note: For the purposes of 4A994.l, computers include
``digital computers,'' ``hybrid computers,'' and analog computers.
* * * * *
4D001 ``Software'' as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, CC, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry, except NS Column 1.
4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z.
RS applies to ``software'' for commodities To or within destinations
controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and specified in Country Groups
4A005.z. D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
CC applies to ``software'' for CC Column 1.
computerized finger-print equipment
controlled by 4A003 for CC reasons.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
Reporting Requirements
See Sec. 743.1 of the EAR for reporting requirements for exports
under License Exceptions, and Validated End-User authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
TSR: Yes, except for ``software'' for the ``development'' or
``production'' of the following:
(1) Commodities with an ``Adjusted Peak Performance'' (``APP'')
exceeding 29 WT; or
(2) Commodities controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005 or
``software'' controlled by 4D004.
APP: Yes to specific countries (see Sec. 740.7 of the EAR for
eligibility criteria), except ``software'' for commodities
controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z.
ACE: (1) Yes for 4D001.a (for the ``development'', ``production'' or
``use'' of equipment or ``software'' specified in ECCN 4A005 or
4D004), except to Country Group E:1 or E:2. See Sec. 740.22 of the
EAR for eligibility criteria. (2) No for ``software'' for
commodities controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be used to ship or transmit
``software'' ``specially designed'' or modified for the
``development'' or ``production'' of equipment specified by ECCN
4A001.a.2 or for the ``development'' or ``production'' of ``digital
computers'' having an `Adjusted Peak Performance' (`APP') exceeding
29 Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT) to any of the destinations listed in
Country Group A:6 (See Supplement No.1 to part 740 of the EAR); and
may not be used to ship or transmit ``software'' specified in
4D001.a ``specially designed'' for the ``development'' or
``production'' of equipment specified by ECCN 4A003.z, 4A004.z, or
4A005 to any of the destinations listed in Country Group A:5 or A:6.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: N/A
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ``Software'' ``specially designed'' or modified for the
``development'' or ``production'', of equipment or ``software''
controlled by 4A001, 4A003, 4A004, 4A005 or 4D (except 4D090, 4D980,
4D993 or 4D994).
b. ``Software'', other than that controlled by 4D001.a,
``specially designed'' or modified for the ``development'' or
``production'' of equipment as follows:
b.1. ``Digital computers'' having an ``Adjusted Peak
Performance'' (``APP'') exceeding 24 Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT);
b.2. ``Electronic assemblies'' ``specially designed'' or
modified for enhancing performance by aggregation of processors so
that the ``APP'' of the aggregation exceeds the limit in 4D001.b.1.
* * * * *
4E001 ``Technology'' as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
[[Page 73509]]
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, MT, RS, CC, AT
Country chart (see Supp.
Control(s) No. 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry, except for NS Column 1.
technology for 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z,
4A090 or ``software'' specified by 4D001
(for 4A003.z, 4A004.z or 4A005.z), 4D090.
MT applies to ``technology'' for items MT Column 1.
controlled by 4A001.a and 4A101 for MT
reasons.
RS applies to ``technology'' for To or within destinations
commodities controlled by 4A003.z, specified in Country Groups
4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090 or ``software'' D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
specified by 4D001 (for 4A003.z, 4A004.z, supplement no. 1 to part
and 4A005.z), 4D090. 740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
CC applies to ``software'' for CC Column 1.
computerized finger-print equipment
controlled by 4A003 (except 4A003.z) for
CC reasons.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
Reporting Requirements
See Sec. 743.1 of the EAR for reporting requirements for exports
under License Exceptions, and Validated End-User authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for Description of All
License Exceptions)
TSR: Yes, except for the following:
(1) ``Technology'' for the ``development'' or ``production'' of
commodities with an ``Adjusted Peak Performance'' (``APP'')
exceeding 70 WT or for the ``development'' or ``production'' of
commodities controlled by 4A005 or ``software'' controlled by 4D004;
(2) ``Technology'' for the ``development'' of ``intrusion
software''; or
(3) ``Technology'' for the ``development'' or ``production'' of
commodities controlled by 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005.z, 4A090 or
``software'' specified by 4D001 (for 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and 4A005.z),
4D090 when destined to destinations in Country Group D:1, D:4, or
D:5 of supplement no. 1 to part 740 of the EAR.
APP: Yes to specific countries (see Sec. 740.7 of the EAR for
eligibility criteria). No, for ``technology'' for the
``development'' or ``production'' of commodities controlled by
4A003.z, or ``software'' specified by 4D001 (for 4A003.z) when
destined to destinations in Country Group D:1, D:4, or D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part 740 of the EAR.
ACE: Yes for 4E001.a (for the ``development'', ``production'' or
``use'' of equipment or ``software'' specified in ECCN 4A005 (except
4A005.z to destinations in Country Group D:1, D:4, or D:5) or 4D004)
and for 4E001.c, except to Country Group E:1 or E:2. See Sec.
740.22 of the EAR for eligibility criteria.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be used to ship or transmit
``technology'' according to the General Technology Note for the
``development'' or ``production'' of any of the following equipment
or ``software'': a. Equipment specified by ECCN 4A001.a.2; b.
``Digital computers'' having an `Adjusted Peak Performance' (`APP')
exceeding 70 Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT); or c. ``software'' specified
in the License Exception STA paragraph found in the License
Exception section of ECCN 4D001 to any of the destinations listed in
Country Group A:6 (See Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR); and
may not be used to ship or transmit ``technology'' specified in
4E001.a (for the ``development'', ``production'' or ``use'' of
equipment or ``software'' specified in ECCN 4A003.z, 4A004.z, 4A005,
4A090, or ``software'' specified by 4D001 (for 4A003.z, 4A004.z, and
4A005.z), 4D004, or 4D090); and 4E001.c to any of the destinations
listed in Country Group A:5 or A:6.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: N/A
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ``Technology'' according to the General Technology Note, for
the ``development'', ``production'', or ``use'' of equipment or
``software'' controlled by 4A (except 4A980 or 4A994 and ``use'' of
equipment controlled under 4A090 or ``software'' controlled under
4D001 (for 4A090)) or 4D (except 4D980, 4D993, 4D994 and ``use'' of
software controlled under 4D090).
b. ``Technology'' according to the General Technology Note,
other than that controlled by 4E001.a, for the ``development'' or
``production'' of equipment as follows:
b.1. ``Digital computers'' having an ``Adjusted Peak
Performance'' (``APP'') exceeding 24 Weighted TeraFLOPS (WT);
b.2. ``Electronic assemblies'' ``specially designed'' or
modified for enhancing performance by aggregation of processors so
that the ``APP'' of the aggregation exceeds the limit in 4E001.b.1.
c. ``Technology'' for the ``development'' of ``intrusion
software.''
Note 1: 4E001.a and 4E001.c do not apply to ``vulnerability
disclosure'' or ``cyber incident response''.
Note 2: Note 1 does not diminish national authorities' rights to
ascertain compliance with 4E001.a and 4E001.c.
* * * * *
TECHNICAL NOTE ON ``ADJUSTED PEAK PERFORMANCE'' (``APP'')
* * * * *
Technical Notes
* * * * *
2. Processor combinations share memory when any processor is
capable of accessing any memory location in the system through the
hardware transmission of cache lines or memory words, without the
involvement of any software mechanism, which may be achieved using
``electronic assemblies'' specified in 4A003.c, z.1, or z.3.
* * * * *
CATEGORY 5--TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND ``INFORMATION SECURITY''
Part 1--TELECOMMUNICATIONS
* * * * *
Notes:
* * * * *
3. Commodities in ECCN 5A001.j, and related ``software''
specified in 5D001.c (for 5A001.j) that are also controlled in ECCNs
5A002.a, 5A002.z.1, 5A002.z.6, 5A004.a, 5A004.b, 5A004.z, 5D002.c.1,
5D002.c.3, 5D002.z.6, 5D002.z.8, or z 5D002.z.9, remain controlled
in Category 5--Part 2 by those entries. Category 5--Part 2 does not
apply to elements of source code that implement functionality
controlled by these Category 5 Part 1 ECCNs, or to any item subject
to the EAR where Encryption Item (EI) functionality is absent,
removed or otherwise non-existent.
* * * * *
5E001 ``Technology'' as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, SL, AT
Country chart (see Supp.
Control(s) No. 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry................ NS Column 1.
SL applies to ``technology'' for the A license is required for
``development'' or ``production'' of all destinations, as
equipment, functions or features specified in Sec. 742.13
controlled by 5A001.f.1, or for the of the EAR. Accordingly, a
``development'' or ``production'' of column specific to this
``software'' controlled by ECCN 5D001.a control does not appear on
(for 5A001.f.1). the Commerce Country Chart
(Supplement No. 1 to Part
738 of the EAR).
Note to SL paragraph: This
licensing requirement does
not supersede, implement,
construe or limit the scope
of any criminal statute,
including, but not limited
to, the Omnibus Safe
Streets Act of 1968, as
amended.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
[[Page 73510]]
Reporting Requirements
See Sec. 743.1 of the EAR for reporting requirements for exports
under License Exceptions and Validated End-User authorizations.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for Description of All
License Exceptions)
TSR: Yes, except for exports or reexports to destinations outside of
those countries listed in Country Group A:5 (See Supplement No. 1 to
part 740 of the EAR) of ``technology'' controlled by 5E001 for the
``development'' or ``production'' of the following:
(1) Items controlled by 5A001.b.5, .h or .j;
(2) ``Software'' controlled by 5D001.a that is ``specially
designed'' for the ``development'' or ``production'' of equipment,
functions or features controlled by 5A001.b.5, 5A001.h, 5A001.j, or
5B001.a (for 5A001.j); or
(3) ``Software'' controlled by 5D001.c (for 5A001.j or 5B001.a (for
5A001.j)).
ACE: Yes, for 5E001.a (for 5A001.j, 5B001.a (for 5A001.j), 5D001.a
(for 5A001.j), or 5D001.c (for 5A001.j or 5B001.a (for 5A001.j)))
except to Country Group E:1 or E:2. See Sec. 740.22 of the EAR for
eligibility criteria.
Special Conditions for STA
STA: License Exception STA may not be used to ship or transmit
``technology'' according to the General Technology Note for the
``development'' or ``production'' of equipment, functions or
features specified by 5A001.b.3, .b.5 or .h; or for ``software'' in
5D001.a or .c, that is specified in the STA paragraph in the License
Exception section of ECCN 5D001 to any of the destinations listed in
Country Group A:6 (See Supplement No.1 to part 740 of the EAR); or
``technology'' specified in 5E001.a according to the General
Technology Note for the ``development'' or ``production'' of
equipment, functions or features specified by 5A001.j, 5B001.a (for
5A001.j), 5D001.a (for 5A001.j), 5D001.c (for 5A001.j or 5B001.a) to
any destinations listed in Country Group A:5 or A:6.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See also 5E101, 5E980 and 5E991. (2)
``Technology'' for ``development'' or ``production'' of ``Monolithic
Microwave Integrated Circuit'' (``MMIC'') amplifiers that meet the
control criteria given at 3A001.b.2 or .z (for commodities also
described in 3A001.b.2) is controlled in 3E001; 5E001.d refers only
to that additional ``technology'' ``required'' for
telecommunications.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ``Technology'' according to the General Technology Note for
the ``development'', ``production'' or ``use'' (excluding operation)
of equipment, functions or features, controlled by 5A001 or
``software'' controlled by 5D001.a or 5D001.e.
b. Specific ``technology'', as follows:
b.1. ``Technology'' ``required'' for the ``development'' or
``production'' of telecommunications equipment ``specially
designed'' to be used on board satellites;
b.2. ``Technology'' for the ``development'' or ``use'' of
``laser'' communication techniques with the capability of
automatically acquiring and tracking signals and maintaining
communications through exoatmosphere or sub-surface (water) media;
b.3. ``Technology'' for the ``development'' of digital cellular
radio base station receiving equipment whose reception capabilities
that allow multi-band, multi-channel, multi-mode, multi-coding
algorithm or multi-protocol operation can be modified by changes in
``software'';
b.4. ``Technology'' for the ``development'' of ``spread
spectrum'' techniques, including ``frequency hopping'' techniques.
Note: 5E001.b.4 does not apply to ``technology'' for the
``development'' of any of the following:
a. Civil cellular radio-communications systems; or
b. Fixed or mobile satellite Earth stations for commercial civil
telecommunications.
c. ``Technology'' according the General Technology Note for the
``development'' or ``production'' of any of the following:
c.1. [Reserved]
c.2. Equipment employing a ``laser'' and having any of the
following:
c.2.a. A transmission wavelength exceeding 1,750 nm;
c.2.b. [Reserved]
c.2.c. [Reserved]
c.2.d. Employing wavelength division multiplexing techniques of
optical carriers at less than 100 GHz spacing; or
c.2.e. Employing analog techniques and having a bandwidth
exceeding 2.5 GHz;
Note: 5E001.c.2.e does not control ``technology'' for commercial
TV systems.
N.B.: For ``technology'' for the ``development'' or
``production'' of non-telecommunications equipment employing a
``laser'', see Product Group E of Category 6, e.g., 6E00x
c.3. Equipment employing ``optical switching'' and having a
switching time less than 1 ms; or
c.4. Radio equipment having any of the following:
c.4.a. Quadrature-Amplitude-Modulation (QAM) techniques above
level 1,024; or
c.4.b. Operating at input or output frequencies exceeding 31.8
GHz; or
Note: 5E001.c.4.b does not control ``technology'' for equipment
designed or modified for operation in any frequency band which is
``allocated by the ITU'' for radio-communications services, but not
for radio-determination.
c.4.c. Operating in the 1.5 MHz to 87.5 MHz band and
incorporating adaptive techniques providing more than 15 dB
suppression of an interfering signal; or
c.5. [Reserved]
c.6. Mobile equipment having all of the following:
c.6.a. Operating at an optical wavelength greater than or equal
to 200nm and less than or equal to 400nm; and
c.6.b. Operating as a ``local area network'';
d. ``Technology'' according to the General Technology Note for
the ``development'' or ``production'' of ``Monolithic Microwave
Integrated Circuit'' (``MMIC'') amplifiers ``specially designed''
for telecommunications and that are any of the following:
Technical Note: For purposes of 5E001.d, the parameter peak
saturated power output may also be referred to on product data
sheets as output power, saturated power output, maximum power
output, peak power output, or peak envelope power output.
d.1. Rated for operation at frequencies exceeding 2.7 GHz up to
and including 6.8 GHz with a ``fractional bandwidth'' greater than
15%, and having any of the following:
d.1.a. A peak saturated power output greater than 75 W (48.75
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 2.7 GHz up to and including 2.9 GHz;
d.1.b. A peak saturated power output greater than 55 W (47.4
dBm) at any frequency exceeding 2.9 GHz up to and including 3.2 GHz;
d.1.c. A peak saturated power output greater than 40 W (46 dBm)
at any frequency exceeding 3.2 GHz up to and including 3.7 GHz; or
d.1.d. A peak saturated power output greater than 20 W (43 dBm)
at any frequency exceeding 3.7 GHz up to and including 6.8 GHz;
d.2. Rated for operation at frequencies exceeding 6.8 GHz up to
and including 16 GHz with a ``fractional bandwidth'' greater than
10%, and having any of the following:
d.2.a. A peak saturated power output greater than 10W (40 dBm)
at any frequency exceeding 6.8 GHz up to and including 8.5 GHz; or
d.2.b. A peak saturated power output greater than 5W (37 dBm) at
any frequency exceeding 8.5 GHz up to and including 16 GHz;
d.3. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 3 W (34.77 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 16 GHz up to
and including 31.8 GHz, and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of
greater than 10%;
d.4. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 0.1 nW (-70 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 31.8 GHz up
to and including 37 GHz;
d.5. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 1 W (30 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 37 GHz up to
and including 43.5 GHz, and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of
greater than 10%;
d.6. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 31.62 mW (15 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 43.5 GHz
up to and including 75 GHz, and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of
greater than 10%;
d.7. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 10 mW (10 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 75 GHz up to
and including 90 GHz, and with a ``fractional bandwidth'' of greater
than 5%; or
d.8. Rated for operation with a peak saturated power output
greater than 0.1 nW (-70 dBm) at any frequency exceeding 90 GHz;
e. ``Technology'' according to the General Technology Note for
the ``development'' or ``production'' of electronic devices and
circuits, ``specially designed'' for telecommunications and
containing ``components'' manufactured from ``superconductive''
materials, ``specially designed'' for operation at temperatures
[[Page 73511]]
below the ``critical temperature'' of at least one of the
``superconductive'' constituents and having any of the following:
e.1. Current switching for digital circuits using
``superconductive'' gates with a product of delay time per gate (in
seconds) and power dissipation per gate (in watts) of less than
10-14 J; or
e.2. Frequency selection at all frequencies using resonant
circuits with Q-values exceeding 10,000.
* * * * *
Category 5--Telecommunications and ``Information Security''
Part 2--``Information Security''
* * * * *
Note 3: Cryptography Note: ECCNs 5A002, 5D002.a.1, .b, .c.1,
z.1, z.5, and z.6, do not control items as follows:
* * * * *
N.B. to Note 3 (Cryptography Note): You must submit a
classification request or self-classification report to BIS for
certain mass market encryption commodities and software eligible for
the Cryptography Note employing a key length greater than 64 bits
for the symmetric algorithm (or, for commodities and software not
implementing any symmetric algorithms, employing a key length
greater than 768 bits for asymmetric algorithms described by
Technical note 2.b to 5A002.a or greater than 128 bits for elliptic
curve algorithms, or any asymmetric algorithm described by Technical
Note 2.c to 5A002.a) in accordance with the requirements of Sec.
740.17(b) of the EAR in order to be released from the ``EI'' and
``NS'' controls of ECCN 5A002 or 5D002. For mass market commodities
and software that do not require a self-classification report
pursuant to Sec. 740.17(b) and (e)(3) of the EAR, such items are
also released from ``EI'' and ``NS'' controls and controlled under
ECCN 5A992 or 5D992.
* * * * *
5A002 ``Information security'' systems, equipment and
``components,'' as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT, EI
Country chart (see Supp.
Control(s) No. 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry (except NS Column 1.
5A002.z).
RS applies to items controlled by 5A002.z. To or within destinations
specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
EI applies to entire entry................ Refer to Sec. 742.15 of
the EAR.
License Requirements Note: See Sec. 744.17 of the EAR for
additional license requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and an arithmetic logic unit
with an access width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ``information security'' functionality, and associated
``software'' and ``technology'' for the ``production'' or
``development'' of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: Yes: $500 for ``components,'' except for 5A002.z.
N/A for systems and equipment.
GBS: N/A
ENC: Yes for certain EI controlled commodities, see Sec. 740.17 of
the EAR for eligibility, except for 5A002.z.
NAC: Yes, for 5A002.z; N/A for all other 5A002 commodities.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) ECCN 5A002.a controls ``components''
providing the means or functions necessary for ``information
security.'' All such ``components'' are presumptively ``specially
designed'' and controlled by 5A002.a. (2) See USML Categories XI
(including XI(b)) and XIII(b) (including XIII(b)(2)) for controls on
systems, equipment, and components described in 5A002.d or .e that
are subject to the ITAR. (3) For ``satellite navigation system''
receiving equipment containing or employing decryption see 7A005,
and for related decryption ``software'' and ``technology'' see 7D005
and 7E001. (4) Noting that items may be controlled elsewhere on the
CCL, examples of items not controlled by ECCN 5A002.a.4 include the
following: (a) An automobile where the only `cryptography for data
confidentiality' having a `described security algorithm' is
performed by a Category 5--Part 2 Note 3 eligible mobile telephone
that is built into the car. In this case, secure phone
communications support a non-primary function of the automobile but
the mobile telephone (equipment), as a standalone item, is not
controlled by ECCN 5A002 because it is excluded by the Cryptography
Note (Note 3) (See ECCN 5A992.c). (b) An exercise bike with an
embedded Category 5--Part 2 Note 3 eligible web browser, where the
only controlled cryptography is performed by the web browser. In
this case, secure web browsing supports a non-primary function of
the exercise bike but the web browser (``software''), as a
standalone item, is not controlled by ECCN 5D002 because it is
excluded by the Cryptography Note (Note 3) (See ECCN 5D992.c). (5)
After classification or self-classification in accordance with Sec.
740.17(b) of the EAR, mass market encryption commodities that meet
eligibility requirements are released from ``EI'' and ``NS''
controls. These commodities are designated 5A992.c. (6) See also
ECCNs 3A090 (including Note 4 to ECCN 3A090), and 4A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. Designed or modified to use `cryptography for data
confidentiality' having a `described security algorithm', where that
cryptographic capability is usable, has been activated, or can be
activated by any means other than secure ``cryptographic
activation'', as follows:
a.1. Items having ``information security'' as a primary
function;
a.2. Digital communication or networking systems, equipment or
components, not specified in paragraph 5A002.a.1;
a.3. Computers, other items having information storage or
processing as a primary function, and components therefor, not
specified in paragraphs 5A002.a.1 or .a.2;
N.B.: For operating systems see also 5D002.a.1 and .c.1.
a.4. Items, not specified in paragraphs 5A002.a.1 to a.3, where
the `cryptography for data confidentiality' having a `described
security algorithm' meets all of the following:
a.4.a. It supports a non-primary function of the item; and
a.4.b. It is performed by incorporated equipment or ``software''
that would, as a standalone item, be specified by ECCNs 5A002,
5A003, 5A004, 5B002 or 5D002.
N.B. to paragraph a.4: See Related Control Paragraph (4) of this
ECCN 5A002 for examples of items not controlled by 5A002.a.4.
Technical Notes:
1. For the purposes of 5A002.a, `cryptography for data
confidentiality' means ``cryptography'' that employs digital
techniques and performs any cryptographic function other than any of
the following:
1.a. ``Authentication;''
1.b. Digital signature;
1.c. Data integrity;
1.d. Non-repudiation;
1.e. Digital rights management, including the execution of copy-
protected ``software;''
1.f. Encryption or decryption in support of entertainment, mass
commercial broadcasts or medical records management; or
1.g. Key management in support of any function described in
paragraphs 1.a to 1.f of this Technical Note paragraph 1.
2. For the purposes of 5A002.a, `described security algorithm'
means any of the following:
2.a. A ``symmetric algorithm'' employing a key length in excess
of 56 bits, not including parity bits;
2.b. An ``asymmetric algorithm'' where the security of the
algorithm is based on any of the following:
2.b.1. Factorization of integers in excess of 512 bits (e.g.,
RSA);
2.b.2. Computation of discrete logarithms in a multiplicative
group of a finite field of size greater than 512 bits (e.g., Diffie-
Hellman over Z/pZ); or
2.b.3. Discrete logarithms in a group other than mentioned in
paragraph 2.b.2 of this Technical Note in excess of 112 bits (e.g.,
Diffie-Hellman over an elliptic curve); or
2.c. An ``asymmetric algorithm'' where the security of the
algorithm is based on any of the following:
[[Page 73512]]
2.c.1. Shortest vector or closest vector problems associated
with lattices (e.g., NewHope, Frodo, NTRUEncrypt, Kyber, Titanium);
2.c.2. Finding isogenies between Supersingular elliptic curves
(e.g., Supersingular Isogeny Key Encapsulation); or
2.c.3. Decoding random codes (e.g., McEliece, Niederreiter).
Technical Note: An algorithm described by Technical Note 2.c.
may be referred to as being post-quantum, quantum-safe or quantum-
resistant.
Note 1: Details of items must be accessible and provided upon
request, in order to establish any of the following:
a. Whether the item meets the criteria of 5A002.a.1 to a.4; or
b. Whether the cryptographic capability for data confidentiality
specified by 5A002.a is usable without ``cryptographic activation.''
Note 2: 5A002.a does not control any of the following items, or
specially designed ``information security'' components therefor:
a. Smart cards and smart card `readers/writers' as follows:
a.1. A smart card or an electronically readable personal
document (e.g., token coin, e-passport) that meets any of the
following:
a.1.a. The cryptographic capability meets all of the following:
a.1.a.1. It is restricted for use in any of the following:
a.1.a.1.a. Equipment or systems, not described by 5A002.a.1 to
a.4;
a.1.a.1.b. Equipment or systems, not using `cryptography for
data confidentiality' having a `described security algorithm'; or
a.1.a.1.c. Equipment or systems, excluded from 5A002.a by
entries b. to f. of this Note; and
a.1.a.2. It cannot be reprogrammed for any other use; or
a.1.b. Having all of the following:
a.1.b.1. It is specially designed and limited to allow
protection of `personal data' stored within;
a.1.b.2. Has been, or can only be, personalized for public or
commercial transactions or individual identification; and
a.1.b.3. Where the cryptographic capability is not user-
accessible;
Technical Note to paragraph a.1.b.1 of Note 2: For the purposes
of 5A002.a Note 2.a.1.b.1,`personal data' includes any data specific
to a particular person or entity, such as the amount of money stored
and data necessary for ``authentication.''
a.2. `Readers/writers' specially designed or modified, and
limited, for items specified by paragraph a.1 of this Note;
Technical Note to paragraph a.2 of Note 2: `For the purposes of
5A002.a Note 2.a.2, `readers/writers' include equipment that
communicates with smart cards or electronically readable documents
through a network.
b. Cryptographic equipment specially designed and limited for
banking use or `money transactions';
Technical Note to paragraph b. of Note 2: For the purposes of
5A002.a Note 2.b,`money transactions' in 5A002 Note 2 paragraph b.
includes the collection and settlement of fares or credit functions.
c. Portable or mobile radiotelephones for civil use (e.g., for
use with commercial civil cellular radio communication systems) that
are not capable of transmitting encrypted data directly to another
radiotelephone or equipment (other than Radio Access Network (RAN)
equipment), nor of passing encrypted data through RAN equipment
(e.g., Radio Network Controller (RNC) or Base Station Controller
(BSC));
d. Cordless telephone equipment not capable of end-to-end
encryption where the maximum effective range of unboosted cordless
operation (i.e., a single, unrelayed hop between terminal and home
base station) is less than 400 meters according to the
manufacturer's specifications;
e. Portable or mobile radiotelephones and similar client
wireless devices for civil use, that implement only published or
commercial cryptographic standards (except for anti-piracy
functions, which may be non-published) and also meet the provisions
of paragraphs a.2 to a.4 of the Cryptography Note (Note 3 in
Category 5--Part 2), that have been customized for a specific civil
industry application with features that do not affect the
cryptographic functionality of these original non-customized
devices;
f. Items, where the ``information security'' functionality is
limited to wireless ``personal area network'' functionality
implementing only published or commercial cryptographic standards;
g. Mobile telecommunications Radio Access Network (RAN)
equipment designed for civil use, which also meet the provisions of
paragraphs a.2 to a.4 of the Cryptography Note (Note 3 in Category
5--Part 2), having an RF output power limited to 0.1W (20 dBm) or
less, and supporting 16 or fewer concurrent users;
h. Routers, switches, gateways or relays, where the
``information security'' functionality is limited to the tasks of
``Operations, Administration or Maintenance'' (``OAM'') implementing
only published or commercial cryptographic standards;
i. General purpose computing equipment or servers, where the
``information security'' functionality meets all of the following:
i.1. Uses only published or commercial cryptographic standards;
and
i.2. Is any of the following:
i.2.a. Integral to a CPU that meets the provisions of Note 3 in
Category 5--Part 2;
i.2.b. Integral to an operating system that is not specified by
5D002; or
i.2.c. Limited to ``OAM'' of the equipment; or
j. Items specially designed for a `connected civil industry
application', meeting all of the following:
j.1. Being any of the following:
j.1.a. A network-capable endpoint device meeting any of the
following:
j.1.a.1. The ``information security'' functionality is limited
to securing 'non-arbitrary data' or the tasks of ``Operations,
Administration or Maintenance'' (``OAM''); or
j.1.a.2. The device is limited to a specific 'connected civil
industry application'; or
j.1.b. Networking equipment meeting all of the following:
j.1.b.1. Being specially designed to communicate with the
devices specified by paragraph j.1.a. above; and
j.1.b.2. The ``information security'' functionality is limited
to supporting the `connected civil industry application' of devices
specified by paragraph j.1.a. above, or the tasks of ``OAM'' of this
networking equipment or of other items specified by paragraph j. of
this Note; and
j.2. Where the ``information security'' functionality implements
only published or commercial cryptographic standards, and the
cryptographic functionality cannot easily be changed by the user.
Technical Notes:
1. For the purposes of 5A002.a Note 2.j,`connected civil
industry application' means a network-connected consumer or civil
industry application other than ``information security'', digital
communication, general purpose networking or computing.
2. For the purposes of 5A002.a Note 2.j.1.a.1,`non-arbitrary
data' means sensor or metering data directly related to the
stability, performance or physical measurement of a system (e.g.,
temperature, pressure, flow rate, mass, volume, voltage, physical
location, etc.), that cannot be changed by the user of the device.
b. Being a `cryptographic activation token';
Technical Note: For the purposes of 5A002.b, a `cryptographic
activation token' is an item designed or modified for any of the
following:
1. Converting, by means of ``cryptographic activation'', an item
not specified by Category 5--Part 2 into an item specified by
5A002.a or 5D002.c.1, and not released by the Cryptography Note
(Note 3 in Category 5--Part 2); or
2. Enabling by means of ``cryptographic activation'', additional
functionality specified by 5A002.a of an item already specified by
Category 5--Part 2;
c. Designed or modified to use or perform ``quantum
cryptography'';
Technical Note: For the purposes of 5A002.c,''quantum
cryptography'' is also known as Quantum Key Distribution (QKD).
d. Designed or modified to use cryptographic techniques to
generate channelizing codes, scrambling codes or network
identification codes, for systems using ultra-wideband modulation
techniques and having any of the following:
d.1. A bandwidth exceeding 500 MHz; or
d.2. A ``fractional bandwidth'' of 20% or more;
e. Designed or modified to use cryptographic techniques to
generate the spreading code for ``spread spectrum'' systems, not
specified by 5A002.d, including the hopping code for ``frequency
hopping'' systems.
f. through y. [Reserved]
z. Other commodities, as follows:
z.1. Commodities that are described in 5A002.a and that also
meet or exceed the performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090;
z.2. Commodities that are described in 5A002.b and that also
meet or exceed the performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090;
z.3. Commodities that are described in 5A002.c and that also
meet or exceed the performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090;
z.4. Commodities that are described in 5A002.d and that also
meet or exceed the
[[Page 73513]]
performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090; or
z.5. Commodities that are described in 5A002.e and that also
meet or exceed the performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090.
5A992 Equipment not controlled by 5A002 (see List of Items
Controlled)
License Requirements
Reason for Control: RS, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
RS applies to items controlled by 5A992.z. To or within destinations
specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
License Requirements Note: See Sec. 744.17 of the EAR for
additional license requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and an arithmetic logic unit
with an access width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ``information security'' functionality, and associated
``software'' and ``technology'' for the ``production'' or
``development'' of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
NAC: Yes, for 5A992.z; N/A for all other 5A992 commodities.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: See also ECCNs 3A090 (including Note 4 to ECCN
3A090) and 4A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. [Reserved]
b. [Reserved]
c. Commodities classified as mass market encryption commodities
in accordance with Sec. 740.17(b) of the EAR.
d. through y. [Reserved]
z. Commodities that are described in 5A992.c and that also meet
or exceed the performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090.
* * * * *
5A004 ``Systems,'' ``equipment'' and ``components'' for defeating,
weakening or bypassing ``information security,'' as follows (see
List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT, EI
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry (except NS Column 1.
5A004.z).
RS applies to items controlled by 5A004.z. To or within destinations
specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
EI applies to entire entry................ Refer to Sec. 742.15 of
the EAR.
License Requirements Note: See Sec. 744.17 of the EAR for
additional license requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and an arithmetic logic unit
with an access width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ``information security'' functionality, and associated
``software'' and ``technology'' for the ``production'' or
``development'' of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: Yes: $500 for ``components,'' except for 5A004.z.
N/A for systems and equipment.
GBS: N/A
ENC: Yes for certain EI controlled commodities, except for 5A004.z.
See Sec. 740.17 of the EAR for eligibility.
NAC: Yes, for 5A004.z; N/A for all other 5A004 commodities.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) ECCN 5A004.a controls ``components'' providing
the means or functions necessary for ``information security.'' All
such ``components'' are presumptively ``specially designed'' and
controlled by 5A004.a. (2) See also ECCNs 3A090 (including Note 4 to
ECCN 3A090) and 4A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. Designed or modified to perform `cryptanalytic functions.'
Note: 5A004.a includes systems or equipment, designed or
modified to perform `cryptanalytic functions' by means of reverse
engineering.
Technical Note: For the purposes of 5A004.a,`cryptanalytic
functions' are functions designed to defeat cryptographic mechanisms
in order to derive confidential variables or sensitive data,
including clear text, passwords or cryptographic keys.
b. Items, not specified by ECCNs 4A005 or 5A004.a, designed to
perform all of the following:
b.1. `Extract raw data' from a computing or communications
device; and
b.2. Circumvent ``authentication'' or authorisation controls of
the device, in order to perform the function described in 5A004.b.1.
Technical Note: For the purposes of 5A004.b.1, `extract raw
data' from a computing or communications device means to retrieve
binary data from a storage medium, e.g., RAM, flash or hard disk, of
the device without interpretation by the device's operating system
or filesystem.
Note 1: 5A004.b does not apply to systems or equipment specially
designed for the ``development'' or ``production'' of a computing or
communications device.
Note 2: 5A004.b does not include:
a. Debuggers, hypervisors;
b. Items limited to logical data extraction;
c. Data extraction items using chip-off or JTAG; or
d. Items specially designed and limited to jail-breaking or
rooting.
c. through y. [Reserved]
z. Other commodities, as follows:
z.1. Commodities that are described in 5A004.a and that also
meet or exceed the performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090; or
z.2. Commodities that are described in 5A004.b and that also
meet or exceed the performance parameters in 3A090 or 4A090.
5B002 ``Information Security'' test, inspection and ``production''
equipment, as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry................ NS Column 1.
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
ENC: Yes for certain EI controlled equipment, see Sec. 740.17 of
the EAR for eligibility.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: N/A
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. Equipment ``specially designed'' for the ``development'' or
``production'' of equipment controlled by 5A002, 5A003, 5A004 or
5B002.b;
b. Measuring equipment ``specially designed'' to evaluate and
validate the ``information security'' functions of equipment
controlled by 5A002, 5A003 or 5A004, or of ``software'' controlled
by 5D002.a, z.1 through z.4, or 5D002.c or z.6 through z.9.
* * * * *
5D002 ``Software'' as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, AT, EI
[[Page 73514]]
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry (except NS Column 1.
5D002.z).
RS applies to ``software'' controlled by To or within destinations
5D002.z. specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
EI applies to ``software'' in 5D002.a.1, Refer to Sec. 742.15 of
a.3, .b, c.1 and c.3, for commodities or the EAR. Note: Encryption
``software'' controlled for EI reasons in software is controlled
ECCN 5A002, 5A004 or 5D002. because of its functional
capacity, and not because
of any informational value
of such software; such
software is not accorded
the same treatment under
the EAR as other
``software'; and for export
licensing purposes,
encryption software is
treated under the EAR in
the same manner as a
commodity included in ECCN
5A002.
License Requirements Note: See Sec. 744.17 of the EAR for
additional license requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and an arithmetic logic unit
with an access width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ``information security'' functionality, and associated
``software'' and ``technology'' for the ``production'' or
``development'' of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
TSR: N/A
ENC: Yes for certain EI controlled software, except for 5D002.z. See
Sec. 740.17 of the EAR for eligibility.
NAC: Yes, for 5D002.z; N/A for all other 5D002 software.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) After classification or self-classification in
accordance with Sec. 740.17(b) of the EAR, mass market encryption
software that meets eligibility requirements is released from ``EI''
and ``NS'' controls. This software is designated as 5D992.c. (2) See
also ECCNs 3D001.z and 4D001.z. (3) See also Note 4 to ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: 5D002.a controls ``software'' designed or
modified to use ``cryptography'' employing digital or analog
techniques to ensure ``information security.''
Items:
a. ``Software'' ``specially designed'' or modified for the
``development,'' ``production'' or ``use'' of any of the following:
a.1. Equipment specified by 5A002 or ``software'' specified by
5D002.c.1;
a.2. Equipment specified by 5A003 or ``software'' specified by
5D002.c.2; or
a.3. Equipment or ``software'', as follows:
a.3.a. Equipment specified by 5A004.a or ``software'' specified
by 5D002.c.3.a;
a.3.b. Equipment specified by 5A004.b or ``software'' specified
by 5D002.c.3.b;
b. ``Software'' having the characteristics of a `cryptographic
activation token' specified by 5A002.b;
c. ``Software'' having the characteristics of, or performing or
simulating the functions of, any of the following:
c.1. Equipment specified by 5A002.a, .c, .d or .e;
Note: 5D002.c.1 does not apply to ``software'' limited to the
tasks of ``OAM'' implementing only published or commercial
cryptographic standards.
c.2. Equipment specified by 5A003; or
c.3. Equipment, as follows:
c.3.a. Equipment specified by 5A004.a;
c.3.b. Equipment specified by 5A004.b.
Note: 5D002.c.3.b does not apply to ``intrusion software''.
d. [Reserved]
N.B.: See 5D002.b for items formerly specified in 5D002.d.
e. through y. [Reserved]
z. Other software, as follows:
z.1. Software that is described in 5D002.a.1, and that also meet
or exceed the performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090;
z.2. Software that is described in 5D002.a.2, and that also meet
or exceed the performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090;
z.3. Software that is described in 5D002.a.3a, and that also
meet or exceed the performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or
4D001 for 4A090;
z.4. Software that is described in 5D002.a.3.b, and that also
meet or exceed the performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or
4D001 for 4A090;
z.5. Software that is described in 5D002.b and that also meet or
exceed the performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090;
z.6 Software that is described in 5D002.c.1 and that also meet
or exceed the performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090;
z.7 Software that is described in 5D002.c.2 and that also meet
or exceed the performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090;
z.8 Software that is described in 5D002.c.3.a and that also meet
or exceed the performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090; or
z.9 Software that is described in 5D002.c.3.b and that also meet
or exceed the performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090.
5D992 ``Information Security'' ``software,'' not controlled by
5D002, as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: RS, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
RS applies to ``software'' controlled by To or within destinations
5D992.z. specified in Country Groups
D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
License Requirements Note: See Sec. 744.17 of the EAR for
additional license requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and an arithmetic logic unit
with an access width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ``information security'' functionality, and associated
``software'' and ``technology'' for the ``production'' or
``development'' of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
TSR: N/A
NAC: Yes, for 5D992.z; N/A for all other 5D992.z software.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) This entry does not control ``software''
designed or modified to protect against malicious computer damage,
e.g., viruses, where the use of ``cryptography'' is limited to
authentication, digital signature and/or the decryption of data or
files. (2) See also ECCNs 3D001.z and 4D001.z. (3) See also Note 4
to ECCN 3A090.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. [Reserved]
b. [Reserved]
c. ``Software'' classified as mass market encryption software in
accordance with Sec. 740.17(b) of the EAR.
d. through y. [Reserved]
z. Other software that is described in 5D992 and that also meet
or exceed the performance parameters in 3D001 for 3A090 or 4D001 for
4A090.
* * * * *
5E002 ``Technology'' as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, AT, EI
[[Page 73515]]
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry (except NS Column 1.
``technology'' for commodities controlled
by 5A002.z or 5A004.z or ``software''
specified by 5D002 (for 5A002.z or
5A004.z commodities).
RS applies to ``technology'' for To or within destinations
commodities controlled by 5A002.z or specified in Country Groups
5A004.z or ``software'' specified by D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
5D002 (for 5A002.z or 5A004.z supplement no. 1 to part
commodities). 740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
EI applies to ``technology'' in 5E002.a Refer to Sec. 742.15 of
for commodities or ``software'' the EAR.
controlled for EI reasons in ECCNs 5A002,
5A004 or 5D002, and to ``technology'' in
5E002.b.
License Requirements Notes:
(1) See Sec. 744.17 of the EAR for additional license requirements
for microprocessors having a processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more
and an arithmetic logic unit with an access width of 32 bit or more,
including those incorporating ``information security''
functionality, and associated ``software'' and ``technology'' for
the ``production'' or ``development'' of such microprocessors.
(2) When a person performs or provides technical assistance that
incorporates, or otherwise draws upon, ``technology'' that was
either obtained in the United States or is of U.S.-origin, then a
release of the ``technology'' takes place. Such technical
assistance, when rendered with the intent to aid in the
``development'' or ``production'' of encryption commodities or
software that would be controlled for ``EI'' reasons under ECCN
5A002, 5A004 or 5D002, may require authorization under the EAR even
if the underlying encryption algorithm to be implemented is from the
public domain or is not of U.S.-origin.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
TSR: N/A
ENC: Yes for certain EI controlled technology. See Sec. 740.17 of
the EAR for eligibility.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: See also 5E992. This entry does not control
``technology'' ``required'' for the ``use'' of equipment excluded
from control under the Related Controls paragraph or the Technical
Notes in ECCN 5A002 or ``technology'' related to equipment excluded
from control under ECCN 5A002.
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. ``Technology'' according to the General Technology Note for
the ``development,'' ``production'' or ``use'' of equipment
controlled by 5A002, 5A003, 5A004 or 5B002, or of ``software''
controlled by 5D002.a, z.1 through z.3, or 5D002.c, z.6 through z.8.
Note: 5E002.a does not apply to ``technology'' for items
specified by 5A004.b, z.3 or z.4, 5D002.a.3.b, z.4, or 5D002.c.3.b.
b. ``Technology'' having the characteristics of a `cryptographic
activation token' specified by 5A002.b, z.2.
Note: 5E002 includes ``information security'' technical data
resulting from procedures carried out to evaluate or determine the
implementation of functions, features or techniques specified in
Category 5--Part 2.
* * * * *
5E992 ``Information Security'' ``technology'' according to the
General Technology Note, not controlled by 5E002, as follows (see
List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
RS applies to ``technology'' for To or within destinations
commodities controlled by 5A992.z or specified in Country Groups
``software'' controlled by 5D992.z. D:1, D:4, and D:5 of
supplement no. 1 to part
740 of the EAR, excluding
any destination also
specified in Country Groups
A:5 or A:6. See Sec.
742.6(a)(6)(iii) of the
EAR.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
License Requirements Note: See Sec. 744.17 of the EAR for
additional license requirements for microprocessors having a
processing speed of 5 GFLOPS or more and an arithmetic logic unit
with an access width of 32 bit or more, including those
incorporating ``information security'' functionality, and associated
``software'' and ``technology'' for the ``production'' or
``development'' of such microprocessors.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
TSR: N/A
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: N/A
Related Definitions: N/A
Items:
a. [Reserved]
b. ``Technology'', n.e.s., for the ``use'' of mass market
commodities controlled by 5A992 or mass market ``software''
controlled by 5D992.
* * * * *
9A004 Space launch vehicles and ``spacecraft,'' ``spacecraft
buses'', ``spacecraft payloads'', ``spacecraft'' on-board systems or
equipment, terrestrial equipment, and air-launch platforms, and
``sub-orbital craft'', as follows (see List of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to 9A004.g, .u, .v, .w and .x.. NS Column 1.
AT applies to 9A004.g, .u, .v, .w, .x and AT Column 1.
.y.
License Requirement Note: 9A004.b through .f, and .h are controlled
under ECCN 9A515.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: N/A
GBS: N/A
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: (1) See also 9A104, 9A515, and 9B515. (2) See
ECCNs 9E001 (``development'') and 9E002 (``production'') for
technology for items controlled by this entry. (3) See USML
Categories IV for the space launch vehicles and XV for other
spacecraft that are ``subject to the ITAR'' (see 22 CFR parts 120
through 130).
Related Definition: N/A
Items:
a. Space launch vehicles;
b. ``Spacecraft'';
c. ``Spacecraft buses'';
d. ``Spacecraft payloads'' incorporating items specified by
3A001.b.1.a.4 or z (if also described in 3A001.b.1.a.4), 3A002.g,
5A001.a.1, 5A001.b.3, 5A002.c, z.3 or z.8, 5A002.e, z.5, 6A002.a.1,
6A002.a.2, 6A002.b, 6A002.d, 6A003.b, 6A004.c, 6A004.e, 6A008.d,
6A008.e, 6A008.k, 6A008.l or 9A010.c;
e. On-board systems or equipment, specially designed for
``spacecraft'' and having any of the following functions:
e.1. `Command and telemetry data handling';
Note: For the purpose of 9A004.e.1, `command and telemetry data
handling' includes bus data management, storage, and processing.
e.2. `Payload data handling'; or
Note: For the purpose of 9A004.e.2, `payload data handling'
includes payload data management, storage, and processing.
e.3. `Attitude and orbit control';
Note: For the purpose of 9A004.e.3, `attitude and orbit control'
includes sensing and actuation to determine and control the position
and orientation of a ``spacecraft''.
[[Page 73516]]
N.B.: Equipment specially designed for military use is ``subject
to the ITAR''. See 22 CFR parts 120 through 130.
f. Terrestrial equipment specially designed for ``spacecraft'',
as follows:
f.1. Telemetry and telecommand equipment ``specially designed''
for any of the following data processing functions:
f.1.a. Telemetry data processing of frame synchronization and
error corrections, for monitoring of operational status (also known
as health and safe status) of the ``spacecraft bus''; or
f.1.b. Command data processing for formatting command data being
sent to the ``spacecraft'' to control the ``spacecraft bus'';
f.2. Simulators ``specially designed'' for `verification of
operational procedures' of ``spacecraft''.
Technical Note: For the purposes of 9A004.f.2, `verification of
operational procedures' is any of the following:
1. Command sequence confirmation;
2. Operational training;
3. Operational rehearsals; or
4. Operational analysis.
g. ``Aircraft'' ``specially designed'' or modified to be air-
launch platforms for space launch vehicles or ``sub-orbital craft''.
h. ``Sub-orbital craft''.
i. through t. [RESERVED]
u. The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) being developed,
launched, and operated under the supervision of the U.S. National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
v. ``Parts,'' ``components,'' ``accessories'' and
``attachments'' that are ``specially designed'' for the James Webb
Space Telescope and that are not:
v.1. Enumerated or controlled in the USML;
v.2. Microelectronic circuits;
v.3. Described in ECCN 7A004 or 7A104; or
v.4. Described in an ECCN containing ``space-qualified'' as a
control criterion (See ECCN 9A515.x.4).
w. The International Space Station being developed, launched,
and operated under the supervision of the U.S. National Aeronautics
and Space Administration.
x. ``Parts,'' ``components,'' ``accessories'' and
``attachments'' that are ``specially designed'' for the
International Space Station.
y. Items that would otherwise be within the scope of ECCN
9A004.v or .x but that have been identified in an interagency-
cleared commodity classification (CCATS) pursuant to Sec. 748.3(e)
as warranting control in 9A004.y.
* * * * *
9A515 ``Spacecraft'' and related commodities, as follows (see List
of Items Controlled).
License Requirements
Reason for Control: NS, RS, MT, AT
Country chart (see Supp. No.
Control(s) 1 to part 738)
NS applies to entire entry, except .e and NS Column 1.
.y.
RS applies to entire entry, except .e and RS Column 1.
.y.
RS applies to 9A515.e..................... RS Column 2.
RS applies to 9A515.y, except to Russia China, Russia or Venezuela
for use in, with, or for the (see Sec. 742.6(a)(7)).
International Space Station (ISS),
including launch to the ISS.
MT applies to microcircuits in 9A515.d and MT Column 1.
9A515.e.2 when ``usable in'' ``missiles''
for protecting ``missiles'' against
nuclear effects (e.g., Electromagnetic
Pulse (EMP), X-rays, combined blast and
thermal effects). MT also applies to
9A515.h when the total impulse capacity
is equal to or greater than 8.41 x 10\5\
newton seconds.
AT applies to entire entry................ AT Column 1.
License Requirement Note: The Commerce Country Chart is not used for
determining license requirements for commodities classified in ECCN
9A515.a.1, .a.2, .a.3, .a.4, and .g. See Sec. 742.6(a)(9), which
specifies that such commodities are subject to a worldwide license
requirement.
List Based License Exceptions (See Part 740 for a Description of All
License Exceptions)
LVS: $1500
GBS: N/A
Special Conditions for STA
STA: (1) Paragraph (c)(1) of License Exception STA (Sec.
740.20(c)(1) of the EAR) may not be used for ``spacecraft'' in ECCNs
9A515.a.1, .a.2, .a.3, or .a.4, ``sub-orbital craft,'' or items in
9A515.g, unless determined by BIS to be eligible for License
Exception STA in accordance with Sec. 740.20(g) (License Exception
STA eligibility requests for certain 9x515 and ``600 series''
items). (2) License Exception STA may not be used if the
``spacecraft'' controlled in ECCN 9A515.a.1, .a.2, .a.3, or .a.4
contains a separable or removable propulsion system enumerated in
USML Category IV(d)(2) or USML Category XV(e)(12) and designated MT.
(3) Paragraph (c)(2) of License Exception STA (Sec. 740.20(c)(2) of
the EAR) may not be used for any item in 9A515.
List of Items Controlled
Related Controls: Spacecraft, launch vehicles and related articles
that are enumerated in the USML, and technical data (including
``software'') directly related thereto, and all services (including
training) directly related to the integration of any satellite or
spacecraft to a launch vehicle, including both planning and onsite
support, or furnishing any assistance (including training) in the
launch failure analysis or investigation for items in ECCN 9A515.a,
are ``subject to the ITAR.'' All other ``spacecraft,'' as enumerated
below and defined in Sec. 772.1, are subject to the controls of
this ECCN. See also ECCNs 3A001, 3A002, 3A991, 3A992, 6A002, 6A004,
6A008, and 6A998 for specific ``space-qualified'' items, 7A004 and
7A104 for star trackers, and 9A004 for the International Space
Station (ISS), the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), and
``specially designed'' ``parts'' and ``components'' therefor. See
USML Category XI(c) for controls on certain ``Monolithic Microwave
Integrated Circuit'' (``MMIC'') amplifiers. See ECCN 9A610.g for
pressure suits used for high altitude aircraft.
Related Definitions: `Microcircuit' means a device in which a number
of passive or active elements are considered as indivisibly
associated on or within a continuous structure to perform the
function of a circuit.
Items:
``Spacecraft'' and other items described in ECCN 9A515 remain
subject to the EAR even if exported, reexported, or transferred (in-
country) with defense articles ``subject to the ITAR'' integrated
into and included therein as integral parts of the item. In all
other cases, such defense articles are subject to the ITAR. For
example, a 9A515.a ``spacecraft'' remains ``subject to the EAR''
even when it is exported, reexported, or transferred (in-country)
with a ``hosted payload'' described in USML Category XV(e)(17)
incorporated therein. In all other cases, a ``hosted payload''
performing a function described in USML Category XV(a) always
remains a USML item. The removal of the defense article subject to
the ITAR from the spacecraft is a retransfer under the ITAR and
would require an ITAR authorization, regardless of the CCL
authorization the spacecraft is exported under. Additionally,
transfer of technical data regarding the defense article subject to
the ITAR integrated into the spacecraft would require an ITAR
authorization.
a. ``Spacecraft,'' including satellites, and space vehicles and
``sub-orbital craft,'' whether designated developmental,
experimental, research or scientific, not enumerated in USML
Category XV or described in ECCN 9A004.u or .w, that:
a.1. Have electro-optical remote sensing capabilities and having
a clear aperture greater than 0.35 meters, but less than or equal to
0.50 meters;
a.2. Have remote sensing capabilities beyond NIR (i.e., SWIR,
MWIR, or LWIR);
a.3. Have radar remote sensing capabilities (e.g., AESA, SAR, or
ISAR) having a center frequency equal to or greater than 1.0 GHz,
but less than 10.0 GHz and having a bandwidth equal to or greater
than 100 MHz, but less than 300 MHz;
a.4. Provide space-based logistics, assembly, or servicing of
another ``spacecraft''; or
[[Page 73517]]
a.5. Are not described in ECCN 9A515.a.1, .a.2, .a.3 or .a.4.
Note: ECCN 9A515.a includes commercial communications
satellites, remote sensing satellites, planetary rovers, planetary
and interplanetary probes, in-space habitats, and ``sub-orbital
craft,'' not identified in ECCN 9A004 or USML Category XV(a).
b. Ground control systems and training simulators ``specially
designed'' for telemetry, tracking, and control of the
``spacecraft'' controlled in paragraphs 9A004.u or 9A515.a.
c. [Reserved]
d. Microelectronic circuits (e.g., integrated circuits,
microcircuits, or MOSFETs) and discrete electronic components rated,
certified, or otherwise specified or described as meeting or
exceeding all the following characteristics and that are ``specially
designed'' for defense articles, ``600 series'' items, or items
controlled by ECCNs 9A004.v or 9A515:
d.1. A total dose of 5 x 10\5\ Rads (Si) (5 x 10\3\ Gy (Si));
d.2. A dose rate upset threshold of 5 x 10\8\ Rads (Si)/sec (5 x
10\6\ Gy (Si)/sec);
d.3. A neutron dose of 1 x 10\14\ n/cm\2\ (1 MeV equivalent);
d.4. An uncorrected single event upset sensitivity of 1 x
10-10 errors/bit/day or less, for the CR[Egrave]ME-MC
geosynchronous orbit, Solar Minimum Environment for heavy ion flux;
and
d.5. An uncorrected single event upset sensitivity of 1 x
10-10 errors/part or less for a fluence of 1 x 10\7\
protons/cm\2\ for proton energy greater than 50 MeV.
e. Microelectronic circuits (e.g., integrated circuits,
microcircuits, or MOSFETs) and discrete electronic components that
are rated, certified, or otherwise specified or described as meeting
or exceeding the characteristics in either paragraph e.1 or e.2, AND
``specially designed'' for defense articles controlled by USML
Category XV or items controlled by ECCNs 9A004.u or 9A515:
e.1. A total dose >=1 x 10\5\ Rads (Si) (1 x 10\3\ Gy(Si)) and
<5 x 10\5\ Rads (Si) (5 x 10\3\ Gy(Si)); and a single event effect
(SEE) (i.e., single event latchup (SEL), single event burnout (SEB),
or single event gate rupture (SEGR)) immunity to a linear energy
transfer (LET) >=80 MeV-cm\2\/mg; or
e.2. A total dose >=5 x 10\5\ Rads (Si) (5 x 10\3\ Gy (Si)) and
not described in 9A515.d.
Note 1 to 9A515.d and .e: Application specific integrated
circuits (ASICs), integrated circuits developed and produced for a
specific application or function, specifically designed or modified
for defense articles and not in normal commercial use are controlled
by Category XI(c) of the USML regardless of characteristics.
Note 2 to 9A515.d and .e: See 3A001.a and .z for controls on
radiation-hardened microelectronic circuits ``subject to the EAR''
that are not controlled by 9A515.d or 9A515.e.
f. Pressure suits (i.e., space suits) capable of operating at
altitudes 55,000 feet above sea level.
g. Remote sensing components ``specially designed'' for
``spacecraft'' described in ECCNs 9A515.a.1 through 9A515.a.4 as
follows:
g.1. Space-qualified optics (i.e., lens, mirror, membrane having
active properties (e.g., adaptive, deformable)) with the largest
lateral clear aperture dimension equal to or less than 0.35 meters;
or with the largest clear aperture dimension greater than 0.35
meters but less than or equal to 0.50 meters;
g.2. Optical bench assemblies ``specially designed'' for ECCN
9A515.a.1, 9A515.a.2, 9A515.a.3, or 9A515.a.4 ``spacecraft;'' or
g.3. Primary, secondary, or hosted payloads that perform a
function of ECCN 9A515.a.1, 9A515.a.2, 9A515.a.3, or 9A515.a.4
``spacecraft.''
h. Spacecraft thrusters using bi-propellants or mono-propellants
that provide thrust equal to or less than 150 lbf (i.e., 667.23 N)
vacuum thrust.
i. through w. [RESERVED]
x. ``Parts,'' ``components,'' ``accessories'' and
``attachments'' that are ``specially designed'' for defense articles
controlled by USML Category XV or items controlled by 9A515, and
that are NOT:
x.1. Enumerated or controlled in the USML or elsewhere within
ECCNs 9A515 or 9A004;
x.2. Microelectronic circuits and discrete electronic
components;
x.3. Described in ECCNs 7A004 or 7A104;
x.4. Described in an ECCN containing ``space-qualified'' as a
control criterion (i.e., 3A001.b.1, 3A001.e.4 or .z, 3A002.g.1,
3A991.o, 3A992.b.3, 6A002.a.1, 6A002.b.2, 6A002.d.1, 6A004.c and .d,
6A008.j.1, 6A998.b, or 7A003.d.2);
x.5. Microwave solid state amplifiers and microwave assemblies
(refer to ECCN 3A001.b.4 and .z for controls on these items);
x.6. Travelling wave tube amplifiers (refer to ECCN 3A001.b.8
and .z for controls on these items); or
x.7. Elsewhere specified in ECCN 9A515.y.
Note to 9A515.x: ``Parts,'' ``components,'' ``accessories,'' and
``attachments'' specified in USML subcategory XV(e) or enumerated in
other USML categories are subject to the controls of that paragraph
or category.
y. Items that would otherwise be within the scope of ECCN
9A515.x but that have been identified in an interagency-cleared
commodity classification (CCATS) pursuant to Sec. 748.3(e) as
warranting control in 9A515.y.
y.1. Discrete electronic components not specified in 9A515.e;
y.2. Space grade or for spacecraft applications thermistors;
y.3. Space grade or for spacecraft applications RF microwave
bandpass ceramic filters (Dielectric Resonator Bandpass Filters);
y.4. Space grade or for spacecraft applications hall effect
sensors;
y.5. Space grade or for spacecraft applications subminiature
(SMA and SMP) plugs and connectors, TNC plugs and cable and
connector assemblies with SMA plugs and connectors; and
y.6. Space grade or for spacecraft applications flight cable
assemblies.
* * * * *
0
39. Effective November 17, 2023, supplement no. 6 to part 774 is
amended by revising paragraphs (3)(i) introductory text, (3)(ii)
introductory text, and paragraphs (3)(iv) and (v) to read as follows:
Supplement No. 6 to Part 774--Sensitive List
* * * * *
(3) Category 3
(i) 3A001.b.2 (including those described under 3A001.b.2 that
are controlled by 3A001.z)--``Monolithic Microwave Integrated
Circuit'' (``MMIC'') amplifiers that are any of the following:
* * * * *
(ii) 3A001.b.3 (including those described under 3A001.b.3 that
are controlled by 3A001.z)--Discrete microwave transistors that are
any of the following:
* * * * *
(iv) 3D001--``Software'' ``specially designed'' for the
``development'' or ``production'' of equipment controlled under
3A001.b.2, 3A001.b.3, equipment described under 3A001.b.2 or
3A001.b.3 that are controlled under 3A001.z, 3A002.g.1, and
equipment described under 3A002.g.2 that are controlled under
3A002.z.
(v) 3E001--``Technology'' according to the General Technology
Note for the ``development'' or ``production'' of equipment
controlled under 3A001.b.2, 3A001.b.3, equipment described under
3A001.b.2 or 3A001.b.3 that are controlled under 3A001.z, 3A002.g.1,
and equipment described under 3A002.g.2 that are controlled under
3A002.z.
* * * * *
Thea D. Rozman Kendler,
Assistant Secretary for Export Administration.
[FR Doc. 2023-23055 Filed 10-18-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-33-P