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Final Rule

Export Administration Regulations: Removal of License Requirements for Certain Spacecraft and Related Items for Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom

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This is a final rule published in the Federal Register by Commerce Department, Industry and Security Bureau. Final rules have completed the public comment process and establish legally binding requirements.

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When does it take effect?

This document has been effective since October 23, 2024.

Why it matters: This final rule amends regulations in multiple CFR parts.

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Document Details

Document Number2024-23932
TypeFinal Rule
PublishedOct 23, 2024
Effective DateOct 23, 2024
RIN0694-AJ85
Docket IDDocket No. 241004-0263
Text FetchedYes

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Full Document Text (4,944 words · ~25 min read)

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<RULE> DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE <SUBAGY>Bureau of Industry and Security</SUBAGY> <CFR>15 CFR Parts 742 and 774</CFR> <DEPDOC>[Docket No. 241004-0263]</DEPDOC> <RIN>RIN 0694-AJ85</RIN> <SUBJECT>Export Administration Regulations: Removal of License Requirements for Certain Spacecraft and Related Items for Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom</SUBJECT> <HD SOURCE="HED">AGENCY:</HD> Bureau of Industry and Security, Department of Commerce. <HD SOURCE="HED">ACTION:</HD> Final rule. <SUM> <HD SOURCE="HED">SUMMARY:</HD> In this final rule, the Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) amends the Export Administration Regulations (EAR) by removing controls for certain spacecraft and related items for exports and reexports to Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom. These spacecraft and related items involve remote sensing or space-based logistics, assembly, or servicing. Taking into account the close relations with these three allied countries, including in space collaboration, as well as their inclusion in the National Technology and Industrial Base (NTIB), this final rule removes the license requirement for these countries for these spacecraft and related items. </SUM> <EFFDATE> <HD SOURCE="HED">DATES:</HD> This rule is effective October 23, 2024. </EFFDATE> <FURINF> <HD SOURCE="HED">FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:</HD> For technical questions, contact Joseph A. Cristofaro, Director, Sensors, Aerospace and Marine Division, Office of National Security Controls, Bureau of Industry and Security, U.S. Department of Commerce, at (202)-482-2440 or by email: <E T="03">Joseph.Cristofaro@bis.doc.gov.</E> For general questions, contact Regulatory Policy Division, Office of Exporter Services, Bureau of Industry and Security, U.S. Department of Commerce at 202-482-2440 or by email: <E T="03">RPD2@bis.doc.gov.</E> </FURINF> <SUPLINF> <HD SOURCE="HED">SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:</HD> <HD SOURCE="HD1">I. Background</HD> <HD SOURCE="HD2">A. National Space Council Direction To Review Space Export Controls</HD> On December 20, 2023, the National Space Council convened to discuss U.S. leadership in space. The Department of State and the Department of Commerce (Commerce) were subsequently tasked to “conduct a review of space export controls to enable a globally competitive U.S. space industrial base while protecting our national security and foreign policy interests” (see The White House FACT SHEET: Strengthening U.S. International Space Partnerships released on December 20, 2023). The changes being made in the final rule will better enable a globally competitive U.S. space industrial base while protecting our national security and foreign policy interests for exports and reexports to Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom. <HD SOURCE="HD2">B. Commerce Response to the National Space Council Directed Review of Space Export Controls</HD> This final rule is part of Commerce's regulatory response to this direction from the National Space Council to review relevant export controls and processes to better enable a globally competitive U.S. space industrial base while protecting our national security and foreign policy interests. This final rule makes important changes to EAR spacecraft and related items controls to better rationalize the controls and facilitate collaboration with three close allies of the United States and participants in the NTIB (10 U.S.C. 4801(1)), namely Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom. Specifically, the changes in this rule will better enable a globally competitive U.S. space industrial base while protecting our national security and foreign policy interests by facilitating license-free trade in certain remote sensing and space-based logistics, assembly, and servicing spacecraft and technology with these close allies. This final rule removes Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom from the worldwide license requirement for such items and makes conforming changes to Export Control Classification Numbers (ECCNs) 9A515 and 9E515. In so doing, this final rule builds upon an interim final rule published on April 19, 2024 (89 FR 28594), which removed certain license requirements for Australia and the United Kingdom, and more closely aligned treatment of those countries with that of Canada, by streamlining space commerce with all three nations. This final rule represents just one line of effort in Commerce's response to the National Space Council direction to review space export controls, including this final rule being published concurrently with a Commerce interim final rule, <E T="03">“Export Administration Regulations: Revisions to Space-Related Export Controls”</E> (RIN 0694-AJ87) and a Commerce proposed rule “ <E T="03">Export Administration Regulations: Revisions to Space-Related Export Controls, Including Addition of License Exception Commercial Space Activities (CSA)”</E> (RIN 0694-AH66) that build on advanced notices of proposed rulemaking published on March 8, 2019 (84 FR 8485 and 84 FR 8486). <HD SOURCE="HD1">II. Changes to the EAR</HD> <HD SOURCE="HD2">A. Removing Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom, From a Worldwide License Requirement for Certain Spacecraft and Related Items</HD> In 15 CFR 742.6 (Regional stability), this final rule revises paragraph (a)(9) ( <E T="03">Special RS Column 1 license requirement applicable to certain spacecraft and related items),</E> which prior to this final rule imposed a worldwide license requirement for spacecraft and related items classified under ECCN 9A515.a.1, a.2, a.3, a.4, .g, and ECCN 9E515.f. These spacecraft and related items involve remote sensing or space-based logistics, assembly, or servicing, and so prior to this final rule were subject to a worldwide license requirement, including for exports and reexports to Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom. However, taking into account the close relations with the U.S. and these three allied countries, including in space collaboration as well as with the U.S. defense industrial base, as demonstrated by their inclusion in the NTIB, this final rule removes the license requirement for such items when destined to these countries. The removal of such license requirements for Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom aligns the EAR's requirements with interagency licensing practice, as BIS has not denied a license application for such items to these three allied countries in the past five years. BIS estimates the removal of this license requirement for Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom under § 742.6(a)(9) will result in a reduction of 90 license applications being submitted to BIS annually. <HD SOURCE="HD2">B. Conforming Changes for Removal of License Requirement for Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom</HD> This final rule makes two conforming changes to other parts of the EAR to reflect the removal of the license requirement for Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom under § 742.6(a)(9) for spacecraft and related items classified under ECCN 9A515.a.1, a.2, a.3, a.4, .g, and ECCN 9E515.f. Specifically, in supplement no. 1 to part 774—Commerce Control List, this final rule revises ECCNs 9A515 and 9E515. This final rule revises the License Requirement Note in ECCNs 9A515 and 9E515 to reflect that this final rule removes Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom from the scope of the worldwide license requirement described in the License Requirement Note included in each of these respective ECCNs, as described further in section II.A and B. The License Requirement Note in ECCN 9A515 specifies that the Commerce Country Chart in supplement no. 1 to part 738 is not used for determining license requirements for commodities classified in ECCN 9A515.a.1, a.2, a.3, a.4, and .g. The License Requirement Note in ECCN 9A515 includes a second sentence that directs exporters and reexporters to see § 742.6(a)(9), which specifies that such commodities are subject to a worldwide license requirement. This final rule revises the second sentence of the License Requirement Note in ECCN 9A515 to add the phrase “except to Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom,” to specify that exports and reexports to these countries now excluded from the scope of this worldwide license requirement. The License Requirement Note in ECCN 9E515 specifies that the Commerce Country Chart is not used for determining license requirements for “technology” classified ECCN 9E515.f. The License Requirement Note in ECCN 9E515 includes a second sentence that directs exporters and reexporters to see § 742.6(a)(9), which specifies that such “technology” is subject to a worldwide license requirement. This final rule revises the second sentence of the License Requirement Note in ECCN 9E515 to add the phrase “except to Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom,” to specify that exports and reexports to these countries are now excluded from the scope of this worldwide license requirement. <HD SOURCE="HD3">Export Control Reform Act of 2018</HD> 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. In particular, and as noted elsewhere, Section 1753 of ECRA (50 U.S.C. 4812) authorizes the regulation of exports, reexports, and transfers (in-country) of items subject to U.S. jurisdiction. Further, Section 1754(a)(1)-(16) of ECRA (50 U.S.C. 4813(a)(1)-(16)) authorizes, <E T="03">inter alia,</E> the establishment of a list of controlled items; the prohibition of unauthorized exports, reexports, and transfers (in-country); the requirement of licenses or other authorizations for exports, reexports, and transfers (in-country) of controlled items; app ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Preview showing 10k of 35k characters. Full document text is stored and available for version comparison. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
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