[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 15, Volume 2]
[Revised as of January 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 15CFR768.10]

[Page 544-545]
 
                  TITLE 15--COMMERCE AND FOREIGN TRADE
 
  CHAPTER VII--BUREAU OF EXPORT ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
 
PART 768--FOREIGN AVAILABILITY DETERMINATION PROCEDURES AND CRITERIA--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 768.10  Removal of controls on less sophisticated items.

    Where the Secretary has removed national security controls on an 
item for foreign availability reasons, the Secretary will also remove 
controls on similar items that are controlled for national security 
reasons and whose functions, technological approach, performance 
thresholds, and other attributes that form the basis for national 
security export controls do not exceed the technical parameters of the 
item that BXA has decontrolled for foreign availability reasons.

     Supplement No. 1 to Part 768--Evidence of Foreign Availability

    This supplement provides a list of examples of evidence that the 
Bureau of Export Administration (BXA) has found to be useful in 
conducting assessments of foreign availability. A claimant submitting 
evidence supporting a claim of foreign availability should review this 
list for suggestions as evidence is collected. Acceptable evidence 
indicating possible foreign availability is not limited to these 
examples, nor is any one of these examples, usually, in and of itself, 
necessarily sufficient to meet a foreign availability criterion. A 
combination of several types of evidence for each criterion usually is 
required. A Foreign Availability Submission (FAS) should include as much 
evidence as possible on all four of the criteria listed below. BXA 
combines the submitted evidence with the evidence that it collects from 
other sources. BXA evaluates all evidence, taking into account factors 
that may include, but are not limited to: Information concerning the 
source of the evidence, corroborative or contradictory indications, and 
experience concerning the reliability or reasonableness of such 
evidence. BXA will assess all relevant evidence to determine whether 
each of the four criteria has been met. Where possible, all information 
should be in writing. If information is based on third party 
documentation, the submitter should provide such documentation to BXA. 
If information is based on oral statements a third party made, the 
submitter should provide a memorandum of the conversation to BXA if the 
submitter cannot obtain a written memorandum from the source. BXA will 
amend this informational list as it identifies new examples of evidence.
    (a) Examples of evidence of foreign availability:
    The following are intended as examples of evidence that BXA will 
consider in evaluating foreign availability. BXA will evaluate all 
evidence according to the provisions in Sec. 768.7(c) of this part in 
order for it to be used in support of a foreign availability 
determination. This list is illustrative only.
    (1) Available-in-fact:
    (i) Evidence of marketing of an item in a foreign country (e.g., an 
advertisement in the media of the foreign country that the item is for 
sale there);
    (ii) Copies of sales receipts demonstrating sales to foreign 
countries;
    (iii) The terms of a contract under which the item has been or is 
being sold to a foreign country;
    (iv) Information, preferably in writing, from an appropriate foreign 
government official that the government will not deny the sale of an 
item it produces to another country in accordance with its laws and 
regulations;
    (v) Information, preferably in writing, from a named company 
official that the company legally can and would sell an item it produces 
to a foreign country;
    (vi) Evidence of actual shipments of the item to foreign countries 
(e.g., shipping documents, photographs, news reports);
    (vii) An eyewitness report of such an item in operation in a foreign 
country, providing as much information as available, including where 
possible the make and model of the item and its observed operating 
characteristics;
    (viii) Evidence of the presence of sales personnel or technical 
service personnel in a foreign country;
    (ix) Evidence of production within a foreign country;

[[Page 545]]

    (x) Evidence of the item being exhibited at a trade fair in a 
foreign country, particularly for the purpose of inducing sales of the 
item to the foreign country;
    (xi) A copy of the export control laws or regulations of the source 
country, showing that the item is not controlled; or
    (xii) A catalog or brochure indicating the item is for sale in a 
specific country.
    (2) Foreign (non-U.S.) source:
    (i) Names of foreign manufacturers of the item including, if 
possible, addresses and telephone numbers;
    (ii) A report from a reputable source of information on commercial 
relationships that a foreign manufacturer is not linked financially or 
administratively with a U.S. company;
    (iii) A list of the components in the U.S. item and foreign item 
indicating model numbers and their sources;
    (iv) A schematic of the foreign item identifying its components and 
their sources;
    (v) Evidence that the item is a direct product of foreign technology 
(e.g., a patent law suit lost by a U.S. producer, a foreign patent);
    (vi) Evidence of indigenous technology, production facilities, and 
the capabilities at those facilities; or
    (vii) Evidence that the parts and components of the item are of 
foreign origin or are exempt from U.S. licensing requirements by the 
parts and components provision Sec. 732.4 of the EAR.
    (3) Sufficient quantity:
    (i) Evidence that foreign sources have the item in serial 
production;
    (ii) Evidence that the item or its product is used in civilian 
applications in foreign countries;
    (iii) Evidence that a foreign country is marketing in the specific 
country an item of its indigenous manufacture;
    (iv) Evidence of foreign inventories of the item;
    (v) Evidence of excess capacity in a foreign country's production 
facility;
    (vi) Evidence that foreign countries have not targeted the item or 
are not seeking to purchase it in the West;
    (vii) An estimate by a knowledgeable source of the foreign country's 
needs; or
    (viii) An authoritative analysis of the worldwide market (i.e., 
demand, production rate for the item for various manufacturers, plant 
capacities, installed tooling, monthly production rates, orders, sales 
and cumulative sales over 5-6 years).
    (4) Comparable quality:
    (i) A sample of the foreign item;
    (ii) Operation or maintenance manuals of the U.S. and foreign items;
    (iii) Records or a statement from a user of the foreign item;
    (iv) A comparative evaluation, preferably in writing, of the U.S. 
and foreign items by, for example, a western producer or purchaser of 
the item, a recognized expert, a reputable trade publication, or 
independent laboratory;
    (v) A comparative list identifying, by manufacturers and model 
numbers, the key performance components and the materials used in the 
item that qualitatively affect the performance of the U.S. and foreign 
items;
    (vi) Evidence of the interchangeability of U.S. and foreign items;
    (vii) Patent descriptions for the U.S. and foreign items;
    (viii) Evidence that the U.S. and foreign items meet a published 
industry, national, or international standard;
    (ix) A report or eyewitness account, by deposition or otherwise, of 
the foreign item's operation;
    (x) Evidence concerning the foreign manufacturers' corporate 
reputation;
    (xi) Comparison of the U.S. and foreign end item(s) made from a 
specific commodity, tool(s), device(s), or technical data; or
    (xii) Evidence of the reputation of the foreign item including, if 
possible, information on maintenance, repair, performance, and other 
pertinent factors.

  Supplement No. 2 to Part 768--Items Eligible for Expedited Licensing 
                          Procedures [Reserved]