BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Federal regulator to ban all Chinese labs from vetting US-bound d
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Wed, 6 May 2026 09:04:28 -0500
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Federal regulator to ban all Chinese labs from vetting US-bound devices over 
national security concerns  major supply chain shakeup will affect 75 percent 
of devices sold in the US

Date:
Tue, 05 May 2026 18:05:00 +0000

Chinese labs are set to lose their FCC testing accreditation after a 
unanimous commission vote.

Any device that emits a radio frequency requires FCC approval before being 
sold in the US, and currently 75% of devices bound for the US are tested in 
labs in China. Every lab in China and Hong Kong will lose its ability to 
certify products over fears China could compromise devices before they are 
shipped to the US.  The unanimous vote on April 30 2026 by
the FCC extends a previous ban on 15 state-owned or government-affiliated 
Chinese labs to apply to every lab in China. This means that up to 75% of 
devices bound for the US will need to be tested elsewhere. 

Many testing labs are located in China near manufacturing sites, making the 
logistics of transporting goods to testing laboratories far simpler. Of the 
FCC's 591 recognized testing labs, 126 are located in China. 

Some of the labs operate as subsidiaries of Western firms, meaning that there 
is some capacity for relocating testing facilities outside of China, or using 
existing facilities in the US, Europe, and Taiwan. However, this will likely 
incur additional transportation costs that may be passed on to the consumer. 

As Toms Hardware reports, FCC certification testing in China costs between 
$400 and $1,300, compared to $3,000 to $4,000 for testing in the US. FCC 
certification in Europe and Taiwan will also likely be more expensive than 
China, further increasing the cost of transportation.

While the vote is not final, and is subject to a public comment period 
expected to last 60 to 90 days, it raises big questions around how device 
manufacturers will change their supply chains to comply with the potential 
ban. There will, however, be a two-year grace period if the ban is passed, 
allowing manufacturers to adjust. 

While there is certainly rationale in questioning the integrity of 
electronics testing labs in China, especially state-owned firms, China is a 
dominant manufacturing hub for US electronics. If there are national security 
concerns over Chinese testing facilities, there are national security 
concerns over Chinese manufacturing facilities. 

FCC Chair Brendan Carr said the commission is considering a number of options 
to secure our networks from these bad actors.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/federal-regulator-to-ban-all-chinese-la
bs-from-vetting-us-bound-devices-over-national-security-concerns-major-supply-
chain-shakeup-will-affect-75-percent-of-devices-sold-in-the-us

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