Harvard and UW Beg for Tariff Waivers on Chinese Quantum Gear
Published Date: 6/16/2025
Notice
Summary
The University of Washington, Harvard University, and South Dakota School of Mines want to bring in super high-tech scientific instruments from China without paying import taxes. These tools will help them study cutting-edge materials and quantum tech that aren’t made in the U.S. If you have thoughts, speak up by July 7, 2025, before the government decides on duty-free entry.
Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 5 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
University of Washington Seeks Duty-Free Lasers
The University of Washington applied to import femtosecond lasers with ultrahigh power from China for studying two-dimensional materials and semiconductors. The application was accepted by the Commissioner of Customs on March 12, 2025, and requests duty-free entry because the applicant says no equivalent instruments are manufactured in the United States.
Harvard Applies to Import Narrow Linewidth Laser
Harvard University applied to import a narrow linewidth laser from China to use in a dual-species atom array for quantum information processing. The application was accepted by the Commissioner of Customs on March 25, 2025, and requests duty-free entry because the applicant states there are no U.S.-manufactured instruments of the same general category.
South Dakota School Seeks 2D Material Stage Duty-Free
The South Dakota School of Mines and Technology applied to import a 2D material transfer stage with an optical microscope from China for work on exciton-polariton interactions in 2D heterostructures. The application was accepted by the Commissioner of Customs on March 3, 2025, and requests duty-free entry on the basis that no similar instruments are made in the United States.
Rice University Requests Erbium Vacuum System Duty-Free
William Marsh Rice University applied to import an Erbium vacuum system from China to develop quantum simulation technologies and study quantum matter. The application, accepted by the Commissioner of Customs on March 21, 2025, requests duty-free entry on the grounds that no equivalent U.S.-manufactured instruments exist in the same general category.
Caltech Seeks Duty-Free Narrow Linewidth Laser
The California Institute of Technology applied to import a narrow linewidth laser system from China to run quantum science experiments with cesium-133 atoms for deep quantum circuits and error-corrected quantum simulation. The application was accepted by the Commissioner of Customs on April 25, 2025, and requests duty-free entry because the applicant asserts no similar instruments are manufactured domestically.
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