Trade

BIS Entity List Update: Over Half of Newly Listed Entities Are Chinese

12 MIN READ
ABSTRACT

The U.S. Department of Commerce's Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) published a final rule adding entities to the Entity List on September 12, 2025. The rule adds 32 entities across multiple countries and regions, with over half being Chinese entities, based on BIS's determination that these entities participated in or may participate in activities contrary to U.S. national security or foreign policy interests.

The U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) published a final rule, “Adding Entities to the Entity List and Modifying Entries,” effective September 12, 2025. The rule adds 32 entities across multiple countries and regions to the Entity List, with over half being Chinese entities. Once added to the Entity List, these entities face strict export control restrictions: all exports, re-exports, or domestic transfers of items subject to the Export Administration Regulations (EAR) require BIS licenses. BIS applies “Presumption of Denial” or “Case-by-Case Review” policies, making license approval extremely difficult.

I. Main Content of the Final Rule

The final rule makes three key modifications to the Entity List:

  1. Adds 32 new entities to the Entity List for participation in activities contrary to U.S. national security or foreign policy interests, with over half being Chinese entities or their overseas branches.

  2. Updates information on one existing entity, removing two addresses of Russia’s Intertech Rus LLC.

  3. Corrects spelling errors in 27 existing entries involving entities from Belarus (3), China (11), Iran (1), Pakistan (1), Russia (9), and Turkey (2).

II. New Listings and Reasons (by Destination)

China (23 entities):

  1. National Time Service Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences: Listed for acquiring and attempting to acquire U.S.-origin items to support China’s military and defense-related space activities and quantum technology capabilities.

  2. Beijing Fudan Microelectronics, Shanghai Fudan Microelectronics, Shenzhen Fudan Microelectronics, Shanghai Fuku Hikari Micro Systems, Shanghai Fuwei Quick Digital Technology, Shanghai Hualing Integrated Circuit Technology, and Shanghai Fudan Microelectronics (Hong Kong): Listed for acquiring U.S.-origin products to support China’s military modernization, advanced computing, and integrated circuit manufacturing, supplying China’s military, government, and security agencies. Shanghai Fudan Microelectronics and Shanghai Hualing were Footnote 4-designated for involvement in high-performance computing chip production, including AI applications, with Shanghai Fudan Microelectronics previously supplying technology to Russian military users.

  3. Huake Logistics (HK), Huake Supply Chain (HK), Shenzhen Xinlikang Supply Chain Management: Listed for participating in transfers of dual-use items to sanctioned entities including the Iranian military.

  4. Aerospace Information Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Sciences: Listed for affiliation with companies supporting China’s high-altitude balloon program.

  5. Jimei Semiconductor Technology (Wuxi), Jicun Semiconductor Technology (Shanghai): Listed for acquiring U.S.-origin semiconductor manufacturing equipment for listed entities without BIS authorization.

  6. Beijing Tianyi Huiyuan Biotechnology, Beijing Qiao Ke Biotechnology, Sangon Bioengineering (Shanghai): Listed for transferring U.S.-origin items to the PLA Academy of Military Sciences posing unacceptable risk.

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  1. Shanghai Suchen Information Technology, Hong Kong Suchen Information Technology: Listed for developing CAE software for China’s military-industrial complex, including listed clients.

  2. Changsha Nanfei Microelectronics, Changzhou Nanfei Microelectronics, Chengdu Nanfei Microelectronics, Shenzhen Nanfei Microelectronics: Listed for export control evasion and transfers to listed entities.

Singapore (1), Taiwan (1), India (1), Turkey (3), Iran (1), UAE (2)

For most newly listed entities, BIS requires licenses for all EAR-controlled items, with Footnote 3 and Footnote 4 designations extending controls to certain foreign-produced items containing U.S. technology.

The update demonstrates highly targeted precision against China’s high-tech sectors:

SectorEntitiesExamples
Semiconductors13Fudan Microelectronics group, Hualing IC, Jimei Semiconductor
Biotechnology3Tianyi Huiyuan, Qiao Ke, Sangon Bioengineering
Aerospace/Quantum2CAS Aerospace Research Institute, CAS Time Service Center
Industrial Software2Suchen Information Technology group
Supply Chain/Logistics3Huake Logistics, Xinlikang Supply Chain

This reflects the U.S. strategy of controlling China’s access to critical technologies. Footnote 4 restrictions extend the Foreign Direct Product Rule (FDPR) to additional advanced computing and semiconductor entities. Third-country transshipment routes are also being targeted, with entities in Singapore, Taiwan, Turkey, India, and UAE listed for alleged support to Iranian and Russian military procurement networks.

IV. Potential Impact

For Chinese Tech Enterprises: Immediate supply chain disruption for listed entities, with long-term acceleration of technology self-sufficiency.

For Global Supply Chains: All businesses dealing with listed entities must conduct rigorous due diligence and comply with EAR, increasing global trade compliance costs.

Future Trends: BIS is expected to employ increasingly precise export control measures targeting biotechnology, AI, and quantum technology sectors.

RESEARCH TEAM

OU Yingshi Partner

Ou Yingshi is a Partner at Long An (Guangzhou) Law Firm, Director of the Sanctions and Anti-Dumping/Anti-Subsidy Professional Committee at Long An Guangzhou, Director of the Sanctions and Anti-Dumping/Anti-Subsidy Business Department at Long An Guangzhou, Senior Researcher at the Long An Bay Area ASEAN Legal Research Center, a leading foreign-related lawyer in Guangzhou, and an emerging talent in foreign-related law in Guangdong Province. She is also one of the first lawyers selected for the "Lingyun Plan" for Outstanding Young Lawyers in Guangzhou. Attorney Ou has profound legal expertise in foreign-related fields. She has provided legal services involving overseas investment, export control and sanctions, anti-dumping, countervailing, international arbitration, foreign-related litigation, and foreign-related standing legal counsel for multiple large enterprises, especially automotive companies, earning consistent praise from clients. Attorney Ou has fully participated as lead counsel in multiple overseas investment projects for well-known manufacturing enterprises, covering countries and regions including Thailand, Mexico, Russia, Hong Kong, and Singapore. She has also served as lead counsel providing legal services for automobile export business for a well-known automotive company in Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia, and other ASEAN countries. Additionally, Attorney Ou excels in foreign-related litigation and international arbitration, serving as lead counsel in multiple foreign-related litigation cases and international arbitrations, actively safeguarding clients' legitimate rights and achieving ideal results. To date, Attorney Ou has established close cooperative relationships with many well-known law firms and outbound institutions worldwide, covering Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, Middle East, Central Asia, Europe, South Asia, Australia, Africa, Latin America, and North America, involving over 30 countries or regions. Client industries include but are not limited to intelligent connected vehicles, new energy, AI, drones, traditional manufacturing, and biomedical industries.

PAN Yetong Attorney

Pan Yetong is an attorney at Long An (Guangzhou) Law Firm, Vice Director and Secretary-General of the Sanctions and Anti-Dumping/Anti-Subsidy Professional Committee at Long An Guangzhou, and a Researcher at the Long An Bay Area ASEAN Legal Research Center. He is a leading foreign-related lawyer in Guangzhou and an emerging talent in foreign-related law in Guangdong Province. Attorney Pan has profound professional expertise in corporate governance, foreign-related compliance, intellectual property protection, and investment and acquisition. He has provided legal services involving overseas investment, export control and sanctions, data compliance, international arbitration, foreign-related litigation, and foreign-related standing legal counsel for multiple large enterprises. In corporate compliance, he has assisted multiple domestic enterprises with export control compliance, data compliance, and other foreign-related compliance projects, assisting enterprises with intellectual property layout and protection to help them move forward steadily on the international stage. In the investment and acquisition field, Attorney Pan has participated in providing legal services for multiple enterprise investment and financing projects, assisting enterprises in completing acquisition and equity transfer projects.