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Export-control and trade-compliance data

DataSupplier·12 min read

Export controls and trade sanctions carry serious penalties, and compliance depends on current data. This guide covers export-control and trade-compliance data.

Why this data matters

Exporting controlled goods or dealing with restricted parties without authorisation breaches the law, with severe consequences. Compliance requires accurate, current control and party data.

The data landscape

  • Control lists: dual-use and military items.
  • Classifications: matching products to controls.
  • Restricted parties: denied and sanctioned entities.
  • Licences: authorisation requirements.

Currency is critical

Control lists and restricted-party lists change frequently, so freshness is essential, screening against stale data fails. Classification of products to controls is a specialist task.

Common use cases

Export screening and licensing, restricted-party screening, product classification, and trade-compliance programmes.

Sourcing considerations

Official sources (EU and national) are authoritative; specialist providers consolidate and update them. Provenance and timeliness are central, and personal data appears in party lists.

In a managed model

A managed partner can consolidate current control and party data for compliant screening.

Freshness is critical

Export-control breaches carry severe consequences, and control lists and restricted-party lists change frequently, so freshness is essential, screening against stale data fails. Product classification to controls is a specialist task.

Authoritative sources

Official EU and national sources are authoritative; specialist providers consolidate and update them. Provenance and timeliness are central, and personal data appears in party lists.

Key takeaways
  • Export-control breaches carry severe consequences.
  • Combine control lists, classifications, restricted parties and licences.
  • Lists change often; freshness is essential.
  • Official sources are authoritative; provenance and timeliness matter.

Sources & further reading

  • EU dual-use and export-control regulations.
  • National export-control authorities.
  • Restricted/denied party lists.
  • WCO and trade-classification references.
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