International Trade Law News /title <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> <meta name="verify-v1" content="6kFGcaEvnPNJ6heBYemQKQasNtyHRZrl1qGh38P0b6M=" /> <head> <title>International Trade Law News

March 15, 2010 

AAEI Issues "The Innovation Economy for America" Policy Paper

The American Association of Exporters and Importers (AAEI) has isssued a policy paper entitled “The Innovation Economy for America.” The paper, which was sent to all members of Congress last week, contains a series of ideas that, if adopted, would according to AAEI "greatly increase the likelihood that the next great company with innovative technology and products will be created in the United States and thrive in the global marketplace."

"Our leaders need to better understand what innovation really is," said AAEI President and CEO Marianne Rowden, who authored the document. "Innovation can take many forms now, from new products to new processes. If Congress can improve the business environment for our cutting-edge innovators, then it will have tilled the soil from which new ideas can propel the future of our economy."

The document describes the following four policy areas that will foster innovative thinking and invention:

1. Creating an Environment that is Conducive to and Protects Innovation

2. Implementing These Small and Medium Size Business Enterprises Initiatives and Priorities

  • Completing Free Trade Agreements with Colombia, Panama and Korea
  • Help Small and Medium Size Business Navigate U.S. Export Controls by providing assistance through the U.S. Small Business Administration and the U.S. Department of Commerce
  • Expand Export Financing Opportunities for SMEs
3. Promoting Exports by
  • Enacting Duty Drawback Simplification
  • Streamlining Export Controls
4. Lower Transaction Costs for Business by
  • Passing the Miscellaneous Trade Bill (H.R. 4380)
  • Finishing the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) and International Trade Data System (ITDS)
  • Economizing Homeland Security Costs (including C-TPAT, CCSP)
  • Harmonizing and Recognizing Authorized Economic Operator Programs
  • Promoting International Standards Setting Bodies
  • Enacting an Exclusive Forum for Trade-Related Disputes by passing a bill to expand the jurisdiction of hte U.S. Court of International Trade
  • Eliminating and Reducing User Fees

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March 11, 2010 

Secretary Locke Participates in White House Web Chat to Discuss National Export Initiative

Here is the video from today's White House chat session that Commerce Secretary Gary Locke held following the President's speech on the National Export Initiative. Questions were submitted via Twitter (@seclocke), Facebook and email. 


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Text of Executive Order on President's National Export Initiative

NEI Executive Order                                                            

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President Announces Details of National Export Initiative at Ex-Im Bank's Annual Conference

In a speech today at the Export-Import Bank of the United States' annual conference in Washington, DC, President Obama provided more details on the National Export Initiative (NEI) and his goal of doubling U.S. exports in the next five years that was announced in his State of the Union Speech in January.

The following is a summary the important points made in today's speech:

  • Four aims of NEI are (1) increasing export financing; (2) increasing export advocacy; (3) providing assistance for American businesses to locate, set up shop, and win in new markets; and (4) focusing on making sure American companies have free and fair access to those markets, including enforcing existing trade agreements.
  • Signed an Executive Order instructing the federal government to use every available federal resource in support of that mission. That order created an Export Promotion Cabinet, made up of the Secretaries of State, Treasury, Agriculture, Commerce and Labor, along with our U.S. Trade Representative, Small Business Administrator, the Export-Import Bank President, and other senior U.S. officials whose work impacts exports. That cabinet will convene its first meeting in April. 
  • Re-launched the President’s Export Council, the principal national advisory committee on international trade. Named Jim McNerney, the President and CEO of Boeing, as its chair; and Ursula Burns, the CEO of Xerox, as vice chair (White House announcement on these appointments here).
  • Export promotion efforts will extend throughout the Administration. Secretary Locke is issuing guidance to all senior government officials who have foreign counterparts on how they can best promote our exporters. Secretary Clinton is mobilizing a commercial diplomacy strategy, directing every one of our embassies to create a Senior Visitor Business Liaison who will manage our export advocacy efforts locally.
  • Will unleash a battery of comprehensive and coordinated efforts to promote new markets and new opportunities for American exporters. Will bring together the Ex-Im Bank, the SBA, the Departments of Commerce and Agriculture, and the Trade Development Agency to set up one-stop-shops across the country and in the 250 embassies and consulates abroad, to help American businesses gain a foothold in the fastest-growing markets with the most demand. And we’ll provide a comprehensive toolkit of services – from financing to counseling to promotion – to help potential exporters grow and expand.

  • Will increase funding for existing promotion efforts, including International Trade Administration at the Department of Commerce, and strengthen the USDA’s ability to connect farmers with new customers overseas.
  • Working to reform the U.S. Export Control System for strategic, high-tech industries, which will strengthen our national security. Will concentrate our efforts on enforcing controls on the export of our most critical technologies, making America safer while enhancing the competitiveness of key American industries. Have conducted a broad review of the Export Control System, and Secretary Gates will outline our reform proposal within the next couple weeks.
  • Regarding exports, the President announced two specific changes in export control laws that the Administration will work to implement:
  1. A new one-time online review process for products containing encryption that is intended to reduce the current 30 to 60 day review process to "30 minutes".
  2. Will eliminate unnecessary obstacles for exporting products to companies with dual-national and third-country-national employees by harmonizing the EAR and ITAR standards, making it easier for American and foreign companies to comply with U.S. export control requirements without diminishing national security. 
The video of the speech is below:


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    February 08, 2010 

    Sandler, Travis & Rosenberg Advisory: Finding a Willing Buyer Only One Part of the Export Process

    Finding a Willing Buyer Only One Part of the Export Process

    Exporters Looking to Boost Business Need to Mind Rules and Regulations Too

    The Obama administration is launching a government-wide effort to double U.S. exports over the next five years as part of a plan to increase domestic employment and boost the U.S. economy. However, companies looking to take advantage of the new National Export Initiative to break into new markets should be aware that shipping goods overseas comes with potential perils as well as opportunities.

    As part of the NEI, the federal government plans to increase its trade advocacy efforts, including educating U.S. companies about opportunities overseas, directly connecting them with new customers and advocating more forcefully for their interests. The NEI will also include a focus on improving access to export financing and helping to remove barriers that prevent U.S. companies from getting access to foreign markets. Only a very small percentage of U.S. companies currently export their products, and of those that do, 58% export to only one country. The Obama administration is looking to increase these figures in the expectation that doing so will also increase employment.

    However, warns Doug Jacobson, head of Sandler, Travis & Rosenberg’s export controls practice group, while increasing the number of U.S. companies that export and increasing trade promotion assistance are laudable goals, U.S. exporters must be aware that finding a willing buyer is only the first step in the exporting process.

    “In addition to taking the necessary steps to ensure they are paid for their goods, U.S. exporters must be aware of the wide range of U.S. regulatory and legal issues applicable to exports,” Jacobson said. “The benefits of exporting can be great for U.S. companies, but the penalties for violating export laws and regulations can be severe. ST&R often represents exporters in enforcement actions that learn of their export compliance obligations only after they receive an administrative subpoena from the Bureau of Industry and Security or the Office of Foreign Assets Control. Many of those violations could have been avoided if the exporters understood their export compliance obligations in advance.”

    Examples of the important compliance-related issues that U.S. exporters should be aware of when selling goods overseas include the following.

    Ultimate Destination. U.S. export restrictions and licensing requirements vary by the country of destination. Some countries are subject to comprehensive embargoes, while others are subject to targeted sanctions directed at certain individuals and companies.

    Jurisdiction and Classification of Goods. Proper jurisdiction and classification of goods under the Export Administration Regulations or the International Traffic in Arms Regulations is required to determine export licensing requirements and end-use and end-user restrictions for all products being exported from the U.S. In addition, the proper export classification is required to be declared in the Electronic Export Information filing that must be transmitted via the Automated Export System.

    Know Your Customer. To avoid engaging in transactions with parties that have been denied export privileges or are subject to U.S. sanctions, exporters should screen all customers and parties involved in the export against the government’s various restricted party lists.

    Anti-boycott Compliance. Boycott requests, which often contain the words “boycott” or “blacklist” or provisions prohibiting the importation of goods from certain countries, are often found in documents involving sales to the Middle East, including purchase orders, tenders, contracts, shipping requests and letters of credit. Certain boycott requests must be reported to the Bureau of Industry and Security.

    Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. The FCPA prohibits U.S. persons and their agents from making prohibited payments to foreign government officials to obtain and keep business.

    For more information on these issues, or how ST&R can help you increase your exports while remaining compliant with applicable laws and regulations, please contact Doug Jacobson at (202) 216-9307.

    You can also stay up-to-date on the latest developments on this issue by subscribing to ST&R’s WorldTrade\INTERACTIVE daily e-newsletter.

    Sandler, Travis & Rosenberg, P.A., is a customs and international trade law firm concentrating in assisting clients with the global movement of goods, ideas and personnel and the setting of global trade policy. Our affiliated consulting company, Sandler & Travis Trade Advisory Services Inc., is a leading provider of trade-related management and consulting services to government and industry. For more information about ST&R and STTAS, please visit our Web site.

    Reprinted with permission of Sandler, Travis & Rosenberg, P.A.

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    December 07, 2009 

    Presentations from 2009 National District Export Council Conference Posted Online

    The PowerPoint presentations from the 2009 National District Export Council (DEC) Conference that was held in Washington, DC from November 3-5 have now been posted on the DEC Conference's website here.

    The 2010 DEC Conference will be held in Detroit, Michigan and Windsor, Ontario from October 24 - 27, 2010.

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    December 02, 2009 

    Next NCITD Meeting to Feature Speakers on Incoterms and U.S. Customs Outbound Programs

    The next meeting of the National Council on International Trade Development (NCITD) will take place on December 9, 2009 in Washington, DC and will feature the following speakers:

    • Frank Reynolds, International Projects and U.S. Delegate to the Incoterms Revision. Topic: Incoterms
      Robert C. Rawls, Outbound Program Manager, US Customs and Border Protection CBP). Topic: CBP Outbound Programs
    • Best Practices Roundtable: Expanding U.S. Compliance Programs Globally
    For information on how to join NCITD or to attend the meeting, see www.ncitd.org or contact the NCITD Secretariat at 202-872-9280.

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    November 05, 2009 

    Congratulation to Winners of 2009 Presidential "E" and "E Star" Awards for Export Excellence

    Congratulations to the 21 companies and organizations that received the prestigious 2009 Presidential “E” and “E Star” Awards for export excellence today during a ceremony at the National District Export Council Conference at the Department of Commerce. Secretary of Commerce Locke presented the awards to the recipients.

    The “E” Award, which was created by President John F. Kennedy in 1961, is the highest U.S. government recognition any U.S. entity may receive for supporting export activity.

    The Presidential “E Star” Award, which was authorized by the Secretary of Commerce in 1969, recognizes continued superior performance in increasing or promoting exports. Only previous recipients of the "E" Award are eligible.

    The 2009 “E” Award recipients are:

    • Automation International Ltd., Houston, Texas;
    • Capstone Turbine Corporation, Chatsworth, Calif.;
    • Falcon Waterfree Technologies, Los Angeles, Calif.;
    • J.R. Potter & Associates, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio;
    • Kanawha Scales & Systems, Inc., Poca, W.Va.;
    • Lexington International, LLC, (HairMax), Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.;
    • MacNeil Automotive Products, Ltd., Downers Grove, Ill.;
    • Medtronic Inc., Minneapolis, Minn.;
    • Otis McAllister, San Francisco, Calif.;
    • Rust-Oleum Corporation, Vernon Hills, Ill.;
    • Sioux Corporation, Beresford, S.D.;
    • Southwest Windpower, Flagstaff, Ariz.;
    • The Produce Connection, Miami, Fla.;
    • Turbine Air Systems, Houston, Texas;
    • California Chamber of Commerce, Sacramento, Calif.;
    • Illinois SBDC and NAFTA Opportunity Centers, Peoria, Ill.;
    • West Virginia Development Office, International Division, Charleston, W.Va.

    The following companies are the 2009 “E Star” Award winners:

    • Dometic Environmental Corp., Pompano Beach, Fla.;
    • Valmont Industries, Inc., Omaha, Neb.;
    • BDP International, Philadelphia, Pa.;
    • Enterprise Florida, Orlando, Fla.
    Further information on the "E" and "E Star" Awards, including the application process, can be found here.

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