U.S. tightens controls on China imports of nuclear components

Reuters 

By Jessica Resnick-Ault

Last month, U.S. imposed tariffs on nearly $200 billion of Chinese imports and then threatened more levies if retaliated. then hit back with tariffs on about $60 billion of U.S. imports.

announced the controls a day after the said it had arrested and indicted a for on charges of economic espionage. Chinese operative Xu Yanjun also attempted to steal trade secrets from U.S. aviation and companies, the department said. rejected the allegations.

"The cannot ignore the national security implications of China's efforts to obtain outside of established processes of U.S.-China civil nuclear cooperation," U.S. of said in a statement.

Beginning last year, the led a review of China's efforts to obtain nuclear material, equipment and advanced technology from U.S. companies, government officials said in a conference call with reporters on Thursday. The review was prompted by China's accelerated efforts to acquire U.S. intellectual property to the detriment of U.S. businesses and military interests, they said.

The officials said the indictment in 2016 of a Chinese-American nuclear engineer, Allen Ho, was one of the factors that led to the review.

Ho, a naturalized U.S. citizen, pleaded guilty last year to conspiring to produce "special nuclear material" in China in violation of the U.S. Atomic Act. The state-owned (CGNPC) was also charged.

The new policy goes into immediate effect, and sets guidelines for reviewing all existing and future into China, the officials said. The vast majority of existing approved before Jan. 1, 2018 are unlikely to be altered, the officials said.

There will be a presumption of denial to new or extensions to existing authorisations related to the CGNPC, the energy department said. Officials declined to comment on whether China is already using this technology.

The development of nuclear technology to power small reactors in the Sea and for submarines and icebreakers are of concern, officials said. They also expressed concern about use of the technology in weapons.

The government is also concerned about diversion for use of technology by other countries, one of the officials said. They declined to comment on the specifics of these concerns.

U.S. nuclear exports to China amounted to $170 million in 2017, the officials said.

(Reporting by Jessica Resnick-Ault; editing by and Grant McCool)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, October 12 2018. 03:09 IST