According to www.kharon.com, the U.S. Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) imposed a $252 million civil penalty on Applied Materials in early 2026 — the second-highest fine ever levied by the agency. The enforcement action was part of a coordinated wave targeting semiconductor supply chain actors, including settlements with Solventum, Exyte, Coastal PVA Technology, and Teledyne FLIR. All cases were announced within a span of months ending in May 2026, signaling an intensified regulatory posture.
Enforcement Targets and Violation Patterns
The BIS actions collectively exposed four recurring compliance failures: inaccurate Export Control Classification Number (ECCN) determinations; inadequate screening of subsidiaries and affiliates; insufficient due diligence on third-party intermediaries; and inconsistent interpretation of undefined terms in the Export Administration Regulations (EAR). For example, Applied Materials’ violations involved exports of deposition equipment to entities linked to China’s military end-use sector without required licenses. According to the report, BIS cited 173 unlicensed shipments across multiple jurisdictions between 2021 and 2025.
Solventum’s settlement included a $48.6 million penalty for misclassifying dual-use semiconductor manufacturing components destined for Russian-affiliated entities. Exyte agreed to pay $19.2 million after BIS found it failed to screen engineering subcontractors embedded in cleanroom construction projects for semiconductor fabs in Southeast Asia. Coastal PVA Technology settled for $8.3 million related to routed export transactions where the U.S. principal party in interest delegated licensing responsibility to foreign freight forwarders — a practice BIS now treats as a high-risk control gap.
Legal and Operational Implications
BIS’s legal theory emphasized strict liability for subsidiary conduct under the 50% / Affiliates Rule, which holds parent companies accountable for exports made by entities they own or control — directly or indirectly — at 50% or more. The agency also invoked the Military End Use (MEU) rule broadly, applying it to civilian semiconductor production facilities where end-users had documented ties to China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) or its defense industrial base.
“These cases reveal BIS is no longer focused solely on deliberate evasion — it’s auditing systemic process weaknesses: classification workflows, alias detection in vendor databases, and license suspension protocols during investigations.” — Ethan Woolley, Global Director of Strategy, Kharon
Practitioners face heightened obligations in routed exports: BIS now requires U.S. exporters to maintain real-time visibility into foreign agent licensing status and suspend shipments immediately upon notification of license revocation — even if the foreign agent claims continued validity. The report notes that three of the five settlements involved violations tied to routed transactions.
Industry Context and Precedent
This enforcement surge follows BIS’s October 2023 rule expanding controls on advanced logic chips, memory, and manufacturing equipment bound for China. Since then, over 280 entities have been added to the Entity List, including 117 semiconductor-related firms headquartered in China, Malaysia, and Vietnam. Parallel actions include the Department of Justice’s April 2026 indictment of two procurement managers from a Shanghai-based chip design house for smuggling EUV lithography parts — marking the first criminal prosecution under the Outbound Investment Security Program (OISP) framework.
Supply chain professionals must now treat EAR compliance as a continuous operational function — not a point-in-time legal review. According to Kharon’s analysis, firms with global semiconductor operations average 4.2 distinct export control jurisdictions per product line and maintain 11.7 active ECCN classifications per manufacturing site. These figures reflect growing complexity, not theoretical risk.
Source: www.kharon.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










