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The US denied about 30 per cent of all export licence applications for China last year. Photo: Shutterstock

US approved 70 per cent of export licence applications from China in 2022

  • Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security Alan Estevez said that just over 30 per cent of applications were denied or returned-without-action
  • The new restrictions were designed to address concerns related to the production of advanced semiconductors, according to Estevez

The US Commerce Department and other government agencies approved about 69.9 per cent of export licence applications involving China in the 2022 budget year, according to written testimony made public ahead of a US House hearing on Tuesday.

Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security Alan Estevez will tell the House Foreign Affairs Committee that the US government denied or returned-without-action approximately 30.1 per cent of such licence applications.

“Approvals of any licences involving [China] are not loopholes in our controls,” Estevez said, adding “licence applications for [China] had an average processing time of approximately 77 days, which was significantly longer than the average processing time of approximately 40 days for all cases”.

US adds Chinese entities linked to ‘spy balloon’ to export blacklist

At the hearing titled “Combating the Generational Challenge of CCP Aggression”, Estevez will tell lawmakers China “remains a huge focus of our enforcement efforts, and we will continue to prioritise this work in the coming year”.

The Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) has more than 639 China-based parties on its trade blacklist, known as the Entity List, and over 155 of those were added during the Biden administration, Estevez said.

Companies on the Entity List are restricted from receiving US-origin goods and technology.

The Commerce Department also maintains the Unverified List that requires checks for US technology use. Estevez said BIS conducted about 1,151 end-use checks in around 54 countries, where approximately 75 per cent of checks were considered favourable.

He defended the restrictions, especially on semiconductors.

“These changes are designed to address concerns related to the production of advanced semiconductors,” Estevez said. “These controls are not intended to stop production of legacy semiconductors, and these controls are not tools of economic protectionism. They are national security and foreign policy tools.”

BIS warned in October that unverified users could be moved to the more restrictive Entity List.

Estevez said it removed 25 of 28 entities from the unverified list after checks in late 2022. “This cooperation continues in 2023, but we are continuing to monitor cooperation closely,” Estevez said.

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