Announcement
31 Dec 2010
December 31st, 2010 - The Chinese government released an annual list of goods requiring special import/export licensing.
Source
Number of interventions
2
1 certainly harmful
0 likely harmful
1 liberalising
2 in force
Implementation date
01 Jan 2011
Revocation date:
No revocation date
In December 2010, the Chinese government published a catalogue of goods classified as 'dual-use'. This indicates said goods are considered by the Chinese government to be usable for both civilian and ...
Implementation date
01 Jan 2011
Revocation date:
No revocation date
In addition to the other changes to the Chinese Ministry of Commerce's annual 'dual-use goods' catalogue. Four items were added to the list of exported goods, meaning that they would newly require a d...
31 Dec 2009
China: 2010 catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
31 Dec 2011
China: 2012 catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
31 Dec 2012
China: 2013 catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
31 Dec 2013
China: 2014 catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
31 Dec 2014
China: 2015 first catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
30 Jun 2015
China: 2015 second catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
31 Dec 2015
China: 2016 catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
31 Dec 2016
China: 2017 catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
31 Dec 2017
China: 2018 catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
31 Dec 2018
China: 2019 catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
31 Dec 2008
China: 2009 catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
31 Dec 2020
China: 2021 catalogue of 'dual-use' goods released
30 Dec 2022
China: 2023 dual-use catalogue for export and import licencing published
31 Dec 2021
China: 2022 dual-use catalogue for export and import licencing published
29 Dec 2023
China: 2024 dual-use catalogue for export and import licensing published
31 Dec 2024
China: 2025 dual-use catalogue for export and import licensing published
See all
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