Burning Question: is the new ECJU Dual-use OGEL unusual – or just not something we’re used to seeing?


My prompt:

Read today’s Notice to Exporters: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/notice-to-exporters-202614-announcing-the-dual-use-ogel/nte-202614-announcing-the-dual-use-ogel . How unusual is using general licenses for dual-use goods? What alternatives do other major regulators (US, EU countries, Switzerland, Canada, Australia, Japan, etc.) use? Speak to me like I’m a professional but not an expert control expert.

Claude responds:

\What this notice actually does

The UK has published a new Open General Export Licence (OGEL) for dual-use goods. The mechanism here is the key thing to understand: a general licence is a pre-published, standing authorization that any exporter can use once they register, rather than something you apply for shipment-by-shipment. This new licence makes it easier for UK businesses to export to trusted partners without applying for individual licences for each shipment.

Two things stand out. First, it’s a consolidation — the new OGEL merges the EU member states Dual-Use OGEL and General Export Authorisation GEA001. Second, it expands coverage. Alongside destinations already covered by existing general licences (EU member states, the US, Japan, New Zealand, Australia, Canada), it adds South Korea, Singapore, Chile, Uruguay, and British Overseas Territories. The justification is notably data-driven: the additional destinations came from a review of historic licensing decisions showing these exports are consistently approved and present low risk, and the change could save exporters from applying for more than 500 individual licences each year.

How unusual is this? Not at all — it’s the global norm

Using general licences for dual-use goods is standard practice, not an exception. Essentially every major export-control regime runs a tiered system: individual licences for sensitive or risky transactions, and some form of general/bulk authorization for low-risk goods going to trusted destinations. The whole point is triage. The notice says this plainly: by channelling lower-risk exports to OGELs, the UK can focus expertise on the remainder where risks are highest.

So the concept is unremarkable. What’s mildly noteworthy here is the breadth — pushing this many destinations into a single consolidated standing licence, and doing it on an explicitly data-led “we keep approving these anyway” basis. That’s a deregulatory, efficiency-driven move, but the underlying tool is conventional.

What the other major regulators use

The vocabulary differs by jurisdiction but the architecture is the same everywhere. Here’s the map:

United States (BIS / EAR). The US doesn’t call them “general licences” — it uses License Exceptions. These are codified exceptions in the Export Administration Regulations that let you export without an individual licence if the item, destination, and end-use meet specified conditions. Relevant ones for dual-use trade among allies include STA (Strategic Trade Authorization, for close partners), GBS, and ENC (for encryption items). Same idea as an OGEL: pre-defined conditions, no case-by-case application.

European Union. The EU runs General Export Authorisations (EUGEAs) under the Dual-Use Regulation (2021/821). The most important is EU001, which covers most dual-use items going to a list of trusted destinations (US, Canada, Japan, Australia, etc.). The UK’s “GEA001” lineage you see in this notice is literally a holdover from when the UK was inside that EU framework — it’s the same instrument, now domesticated. Individual EU member states (Germany’s BAFA, France, the Netherlands, etc.) also issue their own national general authorisations on top of the EU-wide ones.

Switzerland. Uses Ordinary General Licences (OGL) and Extraordinary General Licences (EGL) under SECO, distinguishing destinations by trust level — same trusted-partner logic.

Canada. Uses General Export Permits (GEPs), standing permits published by Global Affairs Canada for specified goods/destinations, alongside individual permits.

Australia. Permits and the Australian Community concept under the Defence Trade Controls regime, plus general permissions; lower-risk trade with allies (notably under the AUKUS arrangements) is increasingly handled through broad authorizations rather than individual approvals.

Japan. METI operates bulk/general licences (including a “Special General Bulk Export Licence” and similar instruments) for trusted destinations under its catch-all and list-control system.

The pattern: named trusted-destination lists + standing authorizations + a registration or recordkeeping obligation + reserved individual licensing for sensitive cases. The UK notice fits this template exactly.

The one genuine catch worth flagging

“General” doesn’t mean “no compliance burden.” With OGELs and their equivalents, the obligation shifts from getting permission to proving you were entitled to use it. You have to register, confirm the goods and destination actually fall within scope, keep records, and be ready for inspection. The notice underlines this: you must register through SPIRE before using the licence, including stating where you’ll keep export records and where ECJU may inspect them. And the UK is now adding a new wrinkle — exporters get a unique licence reference that must be entered into the Customs Declarations System, bringing OGEL exports into line with the data captured on individual licences. That last part is a quiet tightening: more visibility into who’s using these standing licences and for what, even as the licences themselves get easier to use.

So the short version: general licensing for dual-use goods is the universal default among serious regulators, the UK is simply consolidating and broadening its version, and the trade-off is that the paperwork moves from the front end (applying) to the back end (registering, classifying correctly, and documenting).


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