Registration and licensing applications for the State Department’s Defense Export Control and Compliance System will be unavailable 6 a.m. to 8 a.m. EDT Aug. 24, an Aug. 20 notice said. The system will be down for scheduled maintenance, the State Department said, and users should save work in progress before the downtime commences.
The State Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls issued a notice Aug. 19 to industry on payment methods in the Defense Export Control and Compliance System. New or renewal registrants must include the DDTC Account Number 1900000128 with their registration fee payment information when using the Automated Clearing House (ACH) debit payment method, DDTC said. The registrant “will experience a payment failure if the DDTC Account Number is not used,” the notice said.
An Aug. 20 Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, Department of Agriculture and Department of Commerce virtual hearing on import competition in seasonal produce will include testimony from two Florida and three Georgia members of Congress, a representative of the office of a third Florida Congress member, Farm Bureau executives, and vegetable and berry farmers. It will also include trade groups and a company that oppose restrictions on Mexican produce, among them the Fresh Produce Association of the Americas, the San Diego Customs Brokers Association, and milk and corn exporters. The hearing is the second of two that were originally scheduled to take place in Florida and Georgia in April.
The White House announced a one-year extension of a national emergency that authorizes U.S. export control regulations, according to an Aug. 13 notice. The move renewed the authority authorized in a 2001 executive order on the continuation of U.S. export controls. The emergency declaration was to expire Aug. 17, 2020.
The Bureau of Industry and Security is seeking comments on an information collection related to submitting declarations to the International Atomic Energy Agency for nuclear materials, according to a notice released Aug. 14. The IAEA requires information on “nuclear-related items” that may be used for “peaceful nuclear purposes” but also can be part of a nuclear weapons program, the notice said. The declarations provide the IAEA with information about “additional aspects of the U.S. commercial nuclear fuel cycle,” including nuclear equipment manufacturing and trade in nuclear-related goods. Comments are due Oct. 16.
The U.S. and Slovenia issued a joint statement Aug. 13 on strengthening 5G security and increasing reviews of foreign direct investments involving critical technologies. The countries will “encourage ... reliable and trustworthy” 5G software and hardware suppliers and favor a “rigorous evaluation of suppliers and supply chains.” Both countries also committed to scrutinize foreign direct investments in “critical communication infrastructure … through a dedicated screening mechanism.” The U.S., which recently expanded the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. jurisdiction to review transactions involving critical technologies (see 2005110008), has said it wants to encourage other countries to more heavily scrutinize Chinese investment (see 2002260042).
CBP removed 22 reference and exemption codes from the Electronic Export Manifest Appendix I, the agency said in an Aug. 10 CSMS message.
The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs completed review of a Census Bureau rule to remove certain filing requirements for exporters shipping goods to Puerto Rico. The rule, which will be issued first as an advance notice of proposed rulemaking, stemmed from Puerto Rico's requests to remove the requirements, which it said were burdensome (see 2006030043). OIRA received the rule May 22 and completed its review Aug 10.
CBP issued an Aug. 11 guidance on the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s renewed and revised list of export restrictions on personal protective equipment (see 2008060061). The guidance highlights the restrictions and exemptions announced by FEMA, and said CBP will continue to help review controlled exports.
The State Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ Defense Export Control and Compliance System will be unavailable 6-8 a.m. EDT Aug. 10 for maintenance, DDTC said. In addition, DDTC’s advisory opinion, commodity jurisdiction and user management applications will be unavailable 11 p.m. EDT Aug. 7 to 1 a.m. EDT Aug. 8. DDTC is encouraging users to make sure their work in progress is saved before the scheduled maintenance.