On September 21, 2020, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (“FEMA“) pushed back the submission deadline for comments related to the letter of attestation process for exports of certain personal protection equipment (“PPE“).  FEMA published the request for comments in July 2020 but reportedly did not receive any.  The export restrictions and letter of attestation process was created earlier this year in response to potential shortages of certain kinds of PPE as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.  Our previous blog posts on this topic can be found here , here, and here.   Comments will now be collected through October 21, 2020.  

Our previous blogs posts on trade restrictions imposed throughout the COVID-19 pandemic can be found here.  Baker McKenzie’s COVID-19 Product Import/Export Review (“COVID-19 PIER“), a multijurisdictional tracker for trade restrictions imposed worldwide, can be found here.

The authors acknowledges the assistance of Ryan Orange for the blog post.

Author

Ms. Contini focuses her practice on export controls, trade sanctions, and anti-boycott laws. This includes advising US and multinational companies on trade compliance programs, risk assessments, licensing, review of proposed transactions and enforcement matters. Ms. Contini works regularly with companies across a wide range of industries, including the pharmaceutical/medical device, oil and gas, and nuclear sectors.