By Ryan Morgan
March 24, 2023 Updated: March 24, 2023
The seal of the Department of Commerce is pictured in Washington, on March 10, 2017. (Eric Thayer/Reuters)
President Joe Biden’s
administration has added 14 Chinese companies to
an export precautions list, requiring U.S. exporters to more closely document
their business transactions before shipping goods to the Chinese firms listed.
The U.S. Department of
Commerce added these Chinese firms to its Unverified List (UVL) on Thursday after
commerce officials were unable to verify certain aspects of these foreign
business entities, such as how items exported to these firms are ultimately
used.
The Chinese entities
added to the UVL include:
1.
Airpart
Consolidated Trading
2.
ECOM
International (HK) Co., Ltd.
3.
Guangzhou
Trusme Electronics Technology Co., Ltd.
4.
HK
P&W Industry Co. Ltd. (HKPW)
5.
Jet-Prop
International Forwarding (HK) Ltd.
6.
Kesina
Services
7.
Lightstar
Technology Ltd.
8.
Shandong
Yuehaitongxin Keji Ltd.
9.
Shengwei
Technology Co., Ltd.
10. Small Leopard Electronics Co., Ltd.
11. Solar Way (Hong Kong) Ltd.
12. Sunway Technology Electronics Ltd.
13. USETA Tech (HK) Ltd.
14. Winners Global Trading Co.
As suggested by their
inclusion on the UVL, information is limited for several of these businesses.
A web page of the
Hong Kong Trade Development Council indicates Airpart Consolidated Trading
deals primarily with the import and export of aircraft components. The names of
several of the other listed entities suggest they deal with electronics and
other technology components.
“It is critical that [the
Bureau of Industry and Security] is able to conduct end-use checks to determine
compliance with U.S. export control rules,” said DOC Assistant Secretary For
Export Enforcement Matthew S. Axelrod. “Where we cannot verify the bona
fides of foreign parties, we will continue to add parties to the Unverified
List to place restrictions on future export transactions and prevent the
diversion of U.S. items.”
The listing could
potentially start a 60-day clock that could trigger even tougher penalties for
the Chinese firms.
“Enforcing our export
controls is a crucial part of protecting American national security,” U.S.
Deputy Secretary of Commerce Don Graves said in a statement following
the new listings. “We are committed to using all of the tools at our disposal
to establish how advanced U.S. technology is being used around the globe.”
US
Increasingly Wary of Chinese Firms
In addition to the 14
Chinese firms, the Commerce Department added five entities from the United Arab
Emirates, two entities from Germany, and a single entity each from Bulgaria,
Canada, Indonesia, Israel, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, and Singapore to the UVL on
Thursday.
Inclusion on the UVL does
not necessarily mean that U.S. exporters cannot engage in business transactions
with the listed foreign entities or that there are specific articulable
national security or foreign policy concerns associated with those foreign
entities. The Commerce Department said inclusion on the UVL is also not meant
to serve as a sanction against any particular country or government,
particularly as entities from close trading nations like Canada, Germany, and
Israel have been added to the UVL.
Inclusion on the UVL
does, however, mean that U.S. businesses that carry out transactions with these
listed foreign entities must complete extra documentation, including obtaining
a statement from authorized officials of the listed foreign entities.
Though the Commerce
Department insists that inclusion on the UVL is not necessarily a punitive
measure, the Chinese Embassy in Washington condemned the decision to include
the Chinese firms on the list. The Chinese Embassy said “China strongly
deplores and firmly opposes” the Commerce Department’s actions against the 14
Chinese firms. The embassy also said the action was a continuation of U.S.
efforts to “abuse export control measures” and use “state power to suppress and
contain foreign companies.
“The U.S. side should
immediately stop its wrong practices,” the Chinese embassy added. “China will
take necessary measures to resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and
interests of Chinese companies.”
The decision to add these
14 Chinese entities to the UVL comes as U.S. officials have expressed increased
concerns about the national security threats posed by Chinese entities
operating in the U.S. or transacting business with U.S. partners and customers.
The Commerce Department added these 14 Chinese firms to the UVL on the same day
lawmakers questioned the CEO of the Chinese-owned TikTok app about how the
social media platform stores and handles U.S. user data, and shared concerns
that the app serves as a tool for the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to
surveil Americans.
NTD News reached out to
the Chinese Embassy in Washington for additional comment, but they did not
respond before this article was published.
Reuters contributed to this
article.
From NTD News
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