Committee Documents Online 107th Congress
Major Provisions: The Export
Administration Act of 2001
September 6, 2001
I. GENERAL AUTHORITY & ADVISORY COMMITTEES
- Authorizes the Secretary of Commerce (the Secretary) to identify items
subject to export controls.
- Requires the Secretary to keep the public fully informed regarding export
control policy.
- Authorizes the Secretary to appoint Export Control Advisory Committees,
with membership drawn from U.S. industry and government, to provide technical
advice regarding export control policy.
- Authorizes the President to establish a President's Technology Export
Council to advise him on the implementation, operation, and effectiveness of
the export control system.
II. NATIONAL SECURITY CONTROLS
In General
- Authorizes the President to impose national security controls to restrict
items that would contribute to the military potential of countries in a manner
detrimental to U.S. national security; to stem the proliferation of weapons of
mass destruction; and to deter acts of international terrorism.
- Directs the Secretary, with the concurrence of the Secretary of Defense,
to identify items to be included on a National Security Control List. Among
the risk factors to be considered in establishing the list are the
characteristics of the item, the threat to the United States from misuse or
diversion of the item, and the effectiveness of national security controls on
the item. Requires the Secretary to periodically review and, with the
concurrence of the Secretary of Defense, make adjustments to the list.
- Establishes a country tiering system under which countries are assigned to
one of a range of tiers for each controlled item or group of items.
- Authorizes national security controls, based on the end use or end user,
on any item that could materially contribute to the proliferation of weapons
of mass destruction.
- Grants the President enhanced authority to control any item, regardless of
its mass-market or foreign availability status, if he determines that removing
controls on the item would constitute a significant threat to U.S. national
security.
Mass-Market and Foreign Availability Status
- Allows the Secretary to remove controls on an item that has been
determined to have foreign availability or mass-market status. Requires the
Secretary to make foreign availability or mass-market status determinations
within 6 months of receiving a petition for such status.
- Directs the Secretary, in determining foreign availability status, to
consider criteria such as the item's availability from sources outside the
United States, its price, and whether it is available in sufficient quantity
to render controls ineffective. Authorizes the President to set aside a
foreign availability determination if he finds that the absence of controls on
that item would constitute a threat to the national security of the United
States and controls would advance the national security interests of the
United States, or that there is a high probability that the foreign
availability status will be eliminated through international negotiations.
- Directs the Secretary, in determining mass-market status, to consider
criteria such as the item's production and availability for sale, its
distribution, its conduciveness to commercial shipping, and its usage for its
normal intended purpose without modification. Authorizes the President to set
aside a mass-market determination if he finds that the absence of controls on
that item would constitute a serious threat to the national security of the
United States and controls would advance the national security interests of
the United States.
- Creates an Office of Technology Evaluation responsible for gathering,
coordinating, and analyzing information for foreign availability and mass
market determinations.
III. FOREIGN POLICY CONTROLS
In General
- Authorizes the President to impose foreign policy controls on items in
order to promote U.S. foreign policy objectives; to promote international
peace, stability, and respect for human rights; and to deter and punish acts
of international terrorism.
- Provides that national security or foreign policy controls may be imposed
on items listed on the control list of a multilateral export control regime or
to fulfill U.S. international obligations or commitments.
- Prohibits foreign policy controls on exports subject to existing
contracts.
- Prohibits foreign policy controls on other countries' export of items
containing U.S. parts or components unless the export is to a country that has
repeatedly provided for support for acts of international terrorism.
Procedures for Imposing Controls
- Sets forth mandatory criteria for the imposition of foreign policy
controls, such as clearly stated, specific foreign policy objectives;
objective standards to evaluate the control's success or failure; an
assessment that the control's objective outweighs its costs; a narrow,
targeted scope; and an effort to minimize any adverse impact on humanitarian
efforts.
- Requires the President, 45 days prior to imposing a foreign policy
control, to publish for public comment his intent to impose the control.
Encourages the President to negotiate with the government of the targeted
country to resolve the reasons underlying the proposed control.
- Directs the President, prior to imposing a foreign policy control, to
submit a report to the Senate Banking Committee and the House International
Relations Committee assessing diplomatic and multilateral efforts relating to
the accomplishment of the foreign policy objective, the likely economic and
foreign policy impact of the proposed control, and likely costs compared to
the probable achievement of the objective.
- Terminates a foreign policy control after two years unless renewed by the
President after a period of public comment, with an exception for those
controls targeted against countries designated as supporting international
terrorism.
Controls Relating to Terrorism
- Requires controls on exports that make a significant contribution to the
military potential of countries determined by the Secretary of State to have
repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism.
IV. EXPORT LICENSING & DISPUTE RESOLUTION PROCEDURES
License Review Process
- Establishes criteria for review of license applications, including the
characteristics of the item, the threat to U.S. national security or foreign
policy interests, the destination country's tier designation, and the risk of
diversion or misuse.
- Directs the Secretary, within 9 days, to review applications for accuracy
and refer them to the Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, and the heads
of other appropriate departments.
- Requires each referral department, within 30 days, to provide a
recommendation either to approve or deny the license. Provides that a referral
department that fails to provide a recommendation within 30 days is deemed to
have no objection to the Secretary's decision.
- Sets forth exceptions from the stated time periods in specified
circumstances, including where the Secretary and applicant mutually agree to
delay, a prelicense check is required, or consultation with foreign
governments is required.
- Requires the Secretary, if agreement exists among the referral
departments, to notify the exporter of the decision to approve or deny the
license application.
Interagency Dispute Resolution Process
- Establishes an interagency dispute resolution process for license
applications for which no agreement exists.
- Provides an initial level of review by an interagency committee chaired by
the Secretary's representative who has the authority to decide, after
considering the position of other agencies, application approval or denial.
- Directs the President to establish additional levels of review that
provide for decision-making based on majority vote of participating
departments and agencies. Establishes that any decision may be appealed to the
next level of review, with final appeal to the President, at the request of a
Senate-confirmed official.
Overall Resolution Period
- Requires the application resolution process to be completed or referred to
the President within 90 days of the date of the application's initial
referral.
V. INTERNATIONAL ARRANGEMENTS, PENALTIES, &
ENFORCEMENT
International Arrangements
- Encourages U.S. participation in new and existing multilateral export
control regimes
- Directs the President to take steps to enhance multilateral export control
regimes by including in them features such as full membership, effective
enforcement and compliance, periodic meetings among high-level
representatives, a common list of controlled items and regular updates
thereto, harmonization of license approval procedures and treatment of certain
countries, and agreement to prevent undercutting of regime member controls.
- Requires the Secretary to publish information on each multilateral export
control regime relating to its purpose, members, policy, controlled items, and
other related matters.
- Directs the President to issue regulations prohibiting the participation
of U.S. persons in boycotts imposed by a foreign country against a country
that is friendly to the United States.
Penalties
- Establishes criminal and civil penalties for export control violations.
- Provides criminal penalties for individuals of up to $1 million or 10
times the value of the export, whichever is greater, per violation, and up to
10 years' imprisonment per violation. Provides criminal penalties for
corporations of up to $5 million or 10 times the value of the export,
whichever is greater, per violation.
- Requires individuals or corporations convicted of criminal violations to
forfeit the property that was the subject of the violation, and any properties
used to aid the violation.
- Authorizes the Secretary to impose civil penalties of up to $500,000 per
violation and to deny export privileges for violations.
- Requires the President to impose sanctions on persons that contribute to
the proliferation of missiles and items on the Missile Technology Control
Regime (MTCR) Annex.
- Requires the President to impose sanctions on persons that contribute to
the proliferation or development of chemical or biological weapons.
Enforcement
- Directs the Secretary to target post-shipment verifications (PSVs) against
exports involving the greatest risk to national security.
- Requires the Secretary to deny a license to any end-user who refuses to
allow post-shipment verifications. Permits the Secretary to deny future
exports of an item to any country that refuses to allow post-shipment
verifications.
- Authorizes funding for the Bureau of Export Administration of the
Department of Commerce, with significant additional resources for enforcement
programs:
- $3.5 million to hire 20 new employees to implement a best practices
program for freight forwarders;
- $4.5 million to hire 10 new investigators to conduct end-user
verifications;
- $5.0 million to enhance the end-use verification program;
- $5.0 million for upgrading the computer licensing and enforcement system;
- $2.0 million to hire additional license review officers; and
- $2.0 million to train license review officers, auditors, and
investigators.
Authority
- Terminates the authority granted by the Act unless the President provides
Congress with a detailed report on the implementation of the legislation and
of export controls in general, and either provides Congress with legislative
reform proposals in connection with that report or certifies to Congress that
no such reforms are necessary.