Skip to content
Longterm Wiki
Back

Credibility Rating

4/5
High(4)

High quality. Established institution or organization with editorial oversight and accountability.

Rating inherited from publication venue: Bureau of Industry and Security

BIS is the primary U.S. agency regulating export of advanced semiconductors and AI hardware; its rules directly shape global compute access and are central to AI governance discussions around compute controls.

Metadata

Importance: 52/100guidance documenthomepage

Summary

The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) homepage covers U.S. export control regulations, including semiconductor export restrictions, Section 232 national security investigations, and enforcement actions. It serves as the central hub for guidance on technology export controls, including recent actions limiting semiconductor manufacturing equipment exports to China and penalties for violations.

Key Points

  • BIS enforces export controls on semiconductors and advanced technologies with direct national security implications, including restrictions on exports to China.
  • Section 232 investigations are ongoing for semiconductors, critical minerals, and other strategic technologies affecting U.S. national security.
  • Recent enforcement includes a $252 million penalty against Applied Materials for illegally exporting semiconductor manufacturing equipment.
  • BIS revised its license review policy for semiconductors exported to China in January 2026, tightening controls on AI-relevant compute hardware.
  • The Export Administration Regulations (EAR) framework governs which technologies require licenses and which destinations/entities are restricted.

Cited by 1 page

PageTypeQuality
AI-Driven Concentration of PowerRisk65.0

Cached Content Preview

HTTP 200Fetched Mar 15, 20264 KB
Homepage | Bureau of Industry and Security An official website of the United States government

 Here's how you know Official websites use .gov 
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

 Secure .gov websites use HTTPS 
A lock ( Lock Locked padlock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

 Skip to main content Advancing national security through technology leadership and vigilant export controls

 Learn About BIS Quick links

 Export Administration Regulations 
 Classify your item 
 Country guidance 
 Submit a confidential lead or tip 
 Consolidated Screening List 
 Office of Information and Communications Technology and Services (OICTS) 
 Special Issues

 Suspension Related to Cuban-Owned Banks 

 Effective March 4, 2026, BIS has suspended the availability of License Exception Support for the Cuban People (SCP) under § 740.21(b)(1) for any export, reexport, or transfer involving the deposit of foreign funds into a Cuban‑owned bank. BIS determined that such transactions present an unacceptable risk of primarily benefiting the Cuban government and its military or intelligence services. This suspension does not apply to transactions that avoid Cuban banks, such as those routed through third‑country financial institutions, nor to shipments already en route by March 4, 2026, if completed by April 3, 2026. Exporters remain responsible for ensuring full compliance with § 740.21 and all SCP conditions before proceeding.

 SCP Gas/Petroleum/Banks FAQ 
 Cuba Export Control Guidance 

 
 Exports of U.S.-Origin Gas and Petroleum Products to Cuba 

 BIS has updated its guidance regarding the availability of License Exception SCP for exports and reexports of U.S.-origin gas and other petroleum products to eligible Cuban private sector entities and to individual Cuban consumers. Certain transactions that meet SCP terms may be authorized without a license, and applications that otherwise qualify will be returned without action with instruction to use the exception. Exporters are responsible for ensuring that all SCP conditions are met and should carefully review § 740.21 before proceeding. 

 SCP Gas/Petroleum/Banks FAQ 
 Cuba Export Control Guidance 

 
 Section 232 Investigations 

 The Secretary of Commerce initiated investigations under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 to determine the effects on the national security of imports of the following: 

 Copper 
 Timber and Lumber 
 Semiconductors 
 Pharmaceuticals  
 Trucks 
 Critical Minerals 
 Commercial Aircraft 
 Polysilicon 
 Unmanned Aircraft Systems 
 Wind Turbines 
 Medical Products 
 Robotics and Industrial Machinery 
 
 The posted Section 232 Inclusion Requests and their requested HTSUS Classifications can be found on Docket BIS-2025-0023 on Regulations.gov.

 Section 232 Investigations Homepage 

 Section 232 Inclusions Processes 

 
 Read the latest Ne

... (truncated, 4 KB total)
Resource ID: 152eb0e573a57ec7 | Stable ID: MDBmZWRmZD