Federal News
Congress Reviews AI Chip Export Approvals to China
March 16, 2026
Congressman Gregory W. Meeks and Senator Elizabeth Warren publicly criticized the Trump administration's approval of advanced AI chip sales to China, highlighting concerns over national security and economic risks. The Department of Commerce provided information on the first license approval for these sales, prompting calls for bipartisan legislation to restrict China's access to advanced U.S. technology. This development signals increased congressional scrutiny on export controls related to cutting-edge AI hardware.
- Procurement professionals should note potential tightening of export regulations affecting AI chip sales and technology transfers to China.
- Vendors like NVIDIA involved in advanced AI chip manufacturing may face evolving compliance requirements and licensing scrutiny.
- Agencies and contractors should prepare for possible legislative changes that could impact supply chain and international sales strategies.
- Organizations engaged in technology exports must engage with updated Department of Commerce guidelines and congressional oversight activities.
In December, we called on the Department of Commerce to follow the law and provide us information about the Trump administration’s approval of any sale of advanced AI chips to China. We’ve finally received information about the administration’s first license approval and are now more concerned than ever that the Trump administration is undercutting U.S. national security by approving this sale. Congress must pass bipartisan legislation to prevent China from obtaining our advanced technology in order to protect U.S. economic and national security.
— Congressman Gregory W. Meeks
Agencies
Department of Commerce, House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee
Vendors
NVIDIA