Title 50 › Chapter CHAPTER 58— - EXPORT CONTROL REFORM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - AUTHORITY AND ADMINISTRATION OF CONTROLS › § 4817
Creates a regular, government-wide process led by the President to find "emerging and foundational" technologies that matter for U.S. national security but are not already listed as certain critical technologies. The process must use many kinds of input, including public sources, classified intelligence, reviews by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, and advice from the Emerging Technology and Research Advisory Committee. It must look at how these technologies are developing abroad, how controls would affect U.S. tech development, whether controls would really stop foreign access, and must include a public notice-and-comment period. The Commerce Secretary must put export controls on the technologies found, using the Export Administration Regulations. Controls can be interim (for example, telling someone a license is required) or formal rules. The level of control may require licenses, and must at least require a license for exports to countries under a U.S. embargo. License reviews follow existing executive-order procedures and can use intelligence from the Director of National Intelligence. Some technologies cannot be controlled here if another law bars it. Certain common business transactions (like selling finished products to customers, routine services, some equipment transfers, buying parts from a foreign supplier, or standard-setting contributions) may be allowed without a license. The State Department should ask multilateral export-control groups to add these technologies; if a group does not act within 3 years, U.S. agencies can decide whether to keep unilateral controls. The Commerce Secretary must report results every 180 days to CFIUS and to key Congressional committees. The advisory committee must advise the process, identify tech likely to develop in 5 or 10 years, meet at least every 120 days with agency reps, and have at least half its members cleared for classified material. Nothing here limits other export-control laws like the Arms Export Control Act or the Atomic Energy Act.
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War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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50 U.S.C. § 4817
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73