Canada Gazette, Part I, Volume 160, Number 17: Order Amending the Export Control List
April 25, 2026
Statutory authority
Export and Import Permits Act
Sponsoring department
Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development
REGULATORY IMPACT ANALYSIS STATEMENT
(This statement is not part of the Order.)
Issues
The Government of Canada administers a system of permits that controls the export of sensitive goods and technologies. This system plays an important role in helping the Government advance international peace and security, honour Canada’s international agreements, and prevent harm to Canada. Controls must be updated from time to time to reflect advances in technology or changes in the use of goods and technology, or to address gaps in the export controls framework that could result in harm.
The Order Amending the Export Control List (proposed Order) would add new controls related to semiconductors and assemblies containing them as well as to advanced manufacturing, including controls on lithography equipment, epitaxial depositioning equipment, semiconductor manufacturing deposition equipment, boards containing field programmable logic devices, advanced computing integrated circuits and electronic assemblies, and specialized powders used in additive manufacturing.
The establishment of these new controls is necessary to address the growing risk that these items could be exported or diverted to uses contrary to Canada’s security and foreign policy interests. In recent years, rapid advances in high-performance computing and semiconductor manufacturing have increased the potential for these technologies to be used in the development of military systems, including artificial intelligence, aerospace, and precision weapons applications. In parallel with these advances, Canada, its partners and allies are contemplating and implementing national measures separate from traditional multilateral export controls. The proposed amendments to the Export Control List would ensure that Canada keeps pace with developments, prevents harmful transfers, and upholds its long-standing stance on safeguarding peace and security.
The proposed Order would also consolidate and streamline existing controls related to semiconductor manufacturing equipment so that they are easier to read and understand.
Background
Regulatory framework
The Export Control List (ECL) is a regulation made under the Export and Import Permits Act (EIPA). The ECL identifies specific goods and technologies that are controlled for export from Canada to other destinations. Exports of items controlled in the ECL may only be made under the authority of a permit issued by the Minister of Foreign Affairs to a resident of Canada.
Multilateral export control and non-proliferation regimes
The ECL is usually automatically amended through incorporation by reference to align with international arrangements made with partners in four multilateral export control and non-proliferation regimes designed to prevent the spread of weapons of mass destruction and related military capabilities and to provide a common framework for identifying sensitive goods and technologies and help ensure that national measures are coherent and effective.
The four regimes each have a distinct focus. The regimes are the Wassenaar Arrangement, which covers conventional arms and dual-use items;footnote 1 the Nuclear Suppliers Group, which covers nuclear materials, equipment, and technology; the Missile Technology Control Regime, which covers ballistic missile and drone delivery systems; and the Australia Group, which covers chemical and biological weapons–related items.
National controls
Because multilateral regimes operate by consensus, their ability to update control lists in a timely manner has sometimes been limited. Furthermore, the rapid evolution of sensitive technologies with potential military applications has heightened the need for more agile responses.
To address these challenges, Canada, together with allies and partners, has been introducing coordinated national controls outside the formal regime structures, ensuring that export control frameworks remain current and effective. For example, Canada amended the ECL in 2024 and 2025, adding new items under Group 5 (Miscellaneous Goods and Technology), which aligns the ECL with controls advanced by partners and allies in North America, Europe, the South Pacific, and Asia. These new controls govern the export of sensitive and emerging goods and technologies, including quantum computers and advanced semiconductor manufacturing equipment, 3D printing technologies, and high temperature coatings usable in military applications.
Semiconductor technologies and advanced manufacturing
Canada is now moving ahead alongside allies and partners to develop controls related to semiconductors and assemblies containing them, as well as to advanced manufacturing. These technologies are of concern because they underpin the production of leading-edge semiconductors and advanced manufactured components that can enhance military capabilities. Lithography and deposition equipment are critical to fabricating the smallest and fastest microprocessors, which are increasingly used in artificial intelligence, command-and-control, and surveillance systems. Boards and integrated circuits enable high-performance computing applications that can be applied to aerospace and weapons development. Specialized additive manufacturing powders facilitate the production of advanced parts with military or dual-use applications.
Objective
The objective of the proposed Order is to ensure that Canada’s export control framework keeps pace with — and controls the export of — rapidly evolving technologies that can be used for military purposes. By controlling the export of these goods and technologies, Canada seeks to prevent and deter their export to unauthorized end-users and their potential use in ways that could undermine international security. The proposed Order would also align Canada’s framework with those of allies and partners.
Description
The proposed Order would add the following goods and technologies related to semiconductors and assemblies containing them as well as advanced manufacturing to the ECL under Group 5, item 5506 (Miscellaneous Goods and Technology):
- Lithography equipment: Equipment used in semiconductor manufacturing to transfer intricate circuit patterns onto silicon wafers, which is a critical step in making microchips.
- Epitaxial depositioning equipment: Equipment used in semiconductor manufacturing to grow a thin crystalline layer on top of a wafer. This equipment plays a key role in improving the performance of semiconductor devices.
- Semiconductor manufacturing deposition equipment: Equipment used to deposit ultra-thin layers of materials on wafers to build microscopic structures on semiconductors. This equipment is used to manufacture leading-edge processors.
- Boards containing field programmable logic devices: Circuit card assemblies, boards or modules that incorporate certain integrated circuits that can be reconfigured after manufacturing. These are often called field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs).
- Advanced computing integrated circuits and electronic assemblies: High performance integrated circuits (computer chips) as well as any computer or electronic assembly that contains them. This category targets only the most advanced microprocessors.
- Powders containing inoculants used in additive manufacturing: Powders used in 3D printing (additive manufacturing) that contain special additives (inoculants) used to form stronger, more reliable microstructures during metal printing. These powders can enable the manufacture of high-performance parts that otherwise would be controlled.
The effect of the proposed Order would be to require exporters of these goods and technologies to obtain a permit from Global Affairs Canada before exporting them from Canada. These controls would apply to exports of the physical goods as well as “technology” within the meaning of the EIPA, which includes technical data, technical assistance and information necessary for the development, production or use of an article included on the ECL.
The proposed Order would also consolidate and streamline Group 5 controls related to semiconductor manufacturing equipment so that they would be easier to understand and align with similar controls in ECL Group 1 (Dual Use).
Regulatory development
Consultation
As per long-standing practice, Global Affairs Canada engaged with a range of Canadian stakeholders to assess the potential impacts of the proposed controls. The Department consulted with the majority of stakeholders that would be affected, including more than 15 organizations across industry and academia, with representation from the semiconductor, aerospace and defence, advanced manufacturing, and artificial intelligence research communities. Taken together, consultations confirmed that the proposed controls are unlikely to result in significant impacts for Canadian businesses or research institutions given that the items are either minimally or not at all produced or manufactured domestically. Where applicable, feedback informed refinements to ensure that the controls remain targeted, proportionate, and consistent with measures being adopted by partner countries.
Some stakeholders also noted that firms from the United States might be constrained from exporting to Canada if Canada does not advance controls consistent with the proposed Order. Such constraint could have implications for research collaboration and business opportunities.
Indigenous engagement, consultation and modern treaty obligations
In accordance with the Cabinet Directive on the Federal Approach to Modern Treaty Implementation, an analysis was undertaken to determine whether the proposed Order would give rise to modern treaty implications. Global Affairs Canada conducted an initial assessment of the geographical scope and subject matter of the initiative related to modern treaties in effect and did not identify any potential modern treaty impacts.
Instrument choice
While the goods and technologies proposed for addition to the ECL may have legitimate civilian uses, they can also enable military systems, including artificial intelligence–enabled command and control, surveillance systems, advanced aerospace platforms, and precision-guided weapons. If they were permitted to be exported without safeguards, there is a risk that they could be diverted, trafficked, or otherwise used to undermine international security or threaten Canada’s security interests. Adding these items to the ECL would help to ensure that these items are not exported for use in programs that are contrary to Canada’s national and international security interests.
When Canada controls goods and technologies outside of multilateral export control and non-proliferation regimes, an order must be made to amend the ECL to have these items directly listed. The proposed Order would add new controls to Group 5 (Miscellaneous Goods and Technologies), which includes a range of items from softwood lumber to strategic goods and technology.
As Canada has determined that the identified goods and technologies need to be controlled for export because they could be used in military and/or illicit weapons programs, the ECL was determined to be the only option for implementing such controls. No other options were considered.
Regulatory analysis
Benefits and costs
The semiconductor and advanced manufacturing sectors are important economic engines for Canada. Statistics Canada estimates that in 2020, the semiconductor industry generated a total of $28.8 billion in total output and is a growth market, with one private sector forecaster suggesting a compound annual growth rate of 8% to 11% from 2023 to 2030. One private sector research firm suggests that Canada’s additive manufacturing sector could grow from US $1.7 billion in 2023 to US $6.7 billion by 2030, a compound annual growth rate of roughly 22%.
These sectors both rely significantly on imports, so that growth in these sectors depends on the willingness of international partners to trade with Canada on sensitive technologies or to allow them to transit through Canada. For example, in 2020, Canada’s semiconductor industry relied on $7.3 billion worth of imports.
The proposed controls are similar to those applied by international partners and have been scoped to provide confidence to international partners while minimizing the burden on Canadian industry.
Benefits
The proposed Order would help protect Canada and its allies from adverse consequences for international security by limiting the export of these advanced goods and technologies and ensuring careful review and oversight of proposed export transactions. This would help to ensure that Canada would not be used as a transit point for exporters in other jurisdictions seeking to circumvent their national legislation. It would also help avoid a situation where other governments decline to export semiconductors or advanced manufacturing goods or technologies to Canada because of inadequate export controls.
Costs
Exporters of newly controlled items would need to obtain a permit prior to exporting to all destinations other than the United States.
The majority of costs of applying for permits would apply to businesses in the semiconductor and advanced manufacturing sectors. It is expected that only a small number of universities and researchers would apply for permits to export technical information related to the development of newly controlled items, as the controls do not apply to technology in the public domain, basic scientific research or to the minimum necessary information for patent applications.
Although the semiconductor and advanced manufacturing sectors are growing in Canada, this proposal is not expected to have significant impacts on Canadian businesses because most of the items (advanced semiconductor manufacturing equipment, advanced microprocessors and computers, and the powder of high entropy alloys and refractory metals) are not currently produced, manufactured, or used in Canada. As stakeholders have noted, Canada’s ability to expand manufacturing or trade in these technologies depends on controls that are aligned with key allies and partners.
With this in mind, it is projected that Global Affairs Canada would receive 15 new applications from industry in Year 1, increasing to a total of 22 additional applications in Year 10.
Costs to government
Global Affairs Canada would incur costs to process up to 22 additional permit applications per year. This is a minimal incremental administrative cost for the Department, which processed an average of 5 693 applications for strategic and military goods and technology applications per year between 2014 and 2024. Likewise, given the low number of anticipated exports, there would also be a minimal incremental cost to the Canada Border Services Agency for enforcing export controls (e.g. validating permits at border crossings, detaining non-compliant exports). It is also anticipated that some of these exports would not take place at the border but rather via transfer by intangible means, such as via email or the cloud.
Accordingly, the proposed Order is not expected to require new resources, specialized infrastructure, or significant changes to existing practices.
Costs to industry
Exporters would bear costs to apply for an export permit to export (to non-U.S. destinations) any of the items added to the ECL under the proposed Order. The incremental administrative cost for exporters is expected to be $18.91 per application, assuming the average time spent per application is 30 minutes and the average wage per hour (including overhead) for applicants is $37.82. These figures are presented in 2024 dollars.
Additional costs may also be carried and would vary on a case-by-case basis. For example, applicants would need to wait for the application to be processed. In most cases, a 10-business-day service standard would apply. As these items are not yet manufactured for sale, costs would likely be minimal. Any non-residents seeking to export these items would require that a custom broker or a resident apply on their behalf. This typically impacts less than 2.5% of applications. As well, applicants may also bear a cost for lost business if an export permit is denied and another buyer cannot be found. This cost would vary depending on the value of the proposed export. This being said, denial rates are typically below 1%.
Small business lens
Analysis under the small business lens concluded that the proposed Order would impact small businesses that work with the goods and technologies proposed to be added to the list.
It was determined that there are no practical opportunities to reduce regulatory burden on small business (e.g. by exempting permit requirements or shortening service standards for small businesses) because new controls are driven by security considerations. Instead, Global Affairs Canada supports small businesses by providing assistance support during the application process via a dedicated telephone helpline, a dedicated mailbox, as well as online assistance in the electronic permitting system, and by ongoing engagement with the permit officer assigned to individual applications.
One-for-one rule
The one-for-one rule applies because there would be an incremental increase in administrative burden on business. The proposal is, therefore, considered burden IN under the rule. The proposed Order would not add or remove regulatory titles under the one-for-one rule.
It is estimated that the proposed Order would result in an annualized total administrative cost of $128 for affected businesses, based on the assumption that up to 14 companies would cumulatively submit up to 22 permit applications per year by Year 10. Exporters are expected to spend an average of 30 minutes per application, which is longer than other applications, because these new controls would need to be precisely described in an application. It is assumed that the average wage of export permit applicants (including overhead) is $35.75/hour.
As per the Red Tape Reduction Regulations, the assessment of administrative impacts was conducted for a period of 10 years. Values in this section are presented in 2012 dollars, discounted to 2012 at a rate of 7%.
Regulatory cooperation and alignment
The controls in the proposed Order have been specifically negotiated and scoped to ensure alignment with Canada’s allies and partners. These partners are at various stages of implementing national controls consistent with those described in the proposed Order. For example, in September 2025, the European Commission published draft controls aligned with the proposed Order that would apply in its 27 Member States. It is expected that consistent controls will be adopted in as many as 40 countries, strengthening the overall effectiveness of the controls in preventing diversion and unauthorized use.
International obligations
The proposed Order would not affect Canada’s formal international obligations. Canada, its allies, and its partners continue to affirm the importance of cooperation on export controls related to critical and emerging goods and technologies to promote international security, and are committed to working together on implementing the necessary national controls. For example, recent G7 Statements (June 2023, [ARCHIVED] December 2023, [ARCHIVED] June 2024) highlight the need to strengthen efforts on export controls to address risks and to ensure gaps in export controls for dual-use goods and technologies cannot be exploited.
Effects on the environment
In accordance with the Cabinet Directive on the Environmental Assessment of Policy, Plan and Program Proposals, a preliminary scan concluded that a strategic environmental assessment is not required.
Gender-based analysis plus
A gender-based analysis plus (GBA+) was conducted. The proposed Order is not expected to result in differential impacts based on gender and/or other identity factors. Under the EIPA, export permit applications for controlled military items must be assessed against the risk that the export could be used to commit or facilitate serious acts of gender-based violence and violence against women and children. The Minister of Foreign Affairs cannot issue a permit if there is a substantial risk that the export would be used to commit or facilitate these acts. This requirement applies to all other controlled items under the Department’s policy.
Implementation, compliance and enforcement, and service standards
Implementation
As per long-standing practice with strategic exports, the proposed Order would come into force 30 days after the day it is published in the Canada Gazette, Part II, to provide time for implicated parties to become aware of the new controls and to apply for an export permit in advance of the coming-into-force date. No permit would be required for exports to the United States. The proposed Order would also be published on the Department’s website, and a notice would also be communicated to stakeholders through the Department’s web application, entitled Export Controls On-Line (NEXCOL).
Compliance and enforcement
All exports or transfers by any means of items, including technical data, technical assistance and information necessary for the development, production, or use of an item controlled under the ECL must be authorized by an export permit. The Canada Border Services Agency and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police are responsible for the enforcement of export controls. In addition, through the Safeguarding Science Initiative, Global Affairs Canada, in collaboration with Public Safety Canada, performs regular outreach to academia and relevant stakeholders to raise awareness of Canada’s export control regime. This proactive outreach helps ensure that the relevant stakeholders remain up to date with the regulatory requirements and improves compliance.
Service standards
Service standards for evaluating and issuing export permits are set out in Global Affairs Canada’s Export and brokering controls handbook. From the date a complete permit application is received, it is expected that 90% of the time, a decision on an application will be provided within 10 business days, where consultations outside the Export Controls Operations Division are not required, and within 40 business days where consultations are required. These standards are comparable to international regulators that apply similar controls.
Adherence to the service standard depends on the complexity of the proposed export, including the details of the proposed transaction and the broader context. If any part of an application triggers consultation outside of the Export Controls Operations Division, applicants are generally made aware early in the process.
Contact
Charles Thompson
Acting Senior Policy Analyst
Export Controls Policy Division – ITR
Global Affairs Canada
125 Sussex Drive
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0G2
Email: expctrlpol@international.gc.ca
PROPOSED REGULATORY TEXT
Notice is given that the Governor in Council proposes to make the annexed Order Amending the Export Control List under paragraph 3(1)(a) and section 6footnote a of the Export and Import Permits Act footnote b.
Interested persons may make representations concerning the proposed Regulations within 30 days after the date of publication of this notice. They are strongly encouraged to use the online commenting feature that is available on the Canada Gazette website but if they use email, the representations should cite the Canada Gazette, Part I, and the date of publication of this notice, and be sent to the following email address: expctrlpol@international.gc.ca.
Ottawa, April 16, 2026
Janna Rinaldi
Acting Assistant Clerk of the Privy Council
Order Amending the Export Control List
Amendments
1 (1) Subitem 5506(1) of the schedule to the Export Control List footnote 2 is replaced by the following:
5506 (1) In this item, composite, development, digital computer, electronic assembly, Gate-All-Around Field-Effect Transistor (GAAFET), laser, matrix, production, software, substrate, substrate blanks, technology and use have the same meaning as in the Guide under the heading “Definitions of Terms Used in Groups 1 and 2”.
(2) Subparagraphs 5506(2)(a)(i) and (ii) of the schedule to the List are replaced by the following:
- (i) software specially designed or modified for the development or production of items specified in clause (c)(ii)(B) or (C), any of subparagraphs (c)(iii) or (vi), or paragraph (d),
- (ii) software specially designed for the use of items specified in any of clauses (d)(iv)(C), (D) or (G) to (P), and
(3) Paragraph 5506(2)(a) of the schedule to the List is amended by striking out “and” at the end of subparagraph (iii) and by repealing subparagraph (iv).
(4) Subparagraph 5506(2)(b)(i) of the schedule to the List is replaced by the following:
- (i) technology specially designed or modified for the development or production of items specified in subparagraph (c)(i), clause (ii)(B) or (C), any of subparagraphs (c)(iii) to (vii), or paragraphs (d) or (e),
(5) Paragraph 5506(2)(b) of the schedule to the List is amended by striking out “and” at the end of subparagraph (iii) and by replacing subparagraph (iv) with the following:
- (iv) technology specially designed or modified for the use of computers, electronic assemblies or components specified in subparagraph (c)(vi), and
- (v) technology for the development of software specially designed or modified for the production of additive manufacturing machines specified in subparagraph (d)(ii);
(6) Paragraph 5506(2)(c) of the schedule to the List is amended by adding the following after subparagraph (iv):
- (v) integrated circuits having one or more digital processing units having a Total Processing Performance (TPP) of 6,000 or more,
- NOTE
- 1 For digital computers and electronic assemblies containing integrated circuits specified in subparagraph (v), see subparagraph (vi).
- 2 Total Processing Performance (TPP) is calculated according to the following fomula: 2 × MacTOPS × bit length of the operation aggregated over all processing units on the integrated circuit.
- 2a MacTOPS means the theoretical peak number of Tera (1012) operations per second for the multiply-accumulate computation (D = A × B + C).
- 2b The 2 in the TPP formula is based on the industry convention of counting one multiply-accumulate computation, (D = A × B + C), as 2 operations for purposes of datasheets. Therefore, 2 × MacTOPS may correspond to the reported TOPS or Floating-Point Operations per Second (FLOPS) on a datasheet.
- 2c Bit length of the operation means the largest bit-length of the inputs to the multiply operation for a multiply-accumulate computation.
- 2d The TPPs for each processing unit on the integrated circuit are aggregated to arrive at a total: TPP = TPP1 + TPP2 + .... + TPPn (where n is the number of processing units on the integrated circuit).
- 3 The rate of MacTOPS is to be calculated at its maximum value theoretically possible, assumed to be the highest value the manufacturer claims in a manual or brochure for the integrated circuit. For example, the TPP threshold of 6,000 can be met with 750 tera integer operations (or 2 × 375 MacTOPS) at 8 bits. If the integrated circuit is designed for a multiply-accumulate computation with multiple bit lengths that achieve different TPP values, the highest TPP value should be evaluated against the parameters in subparagraph (v).
- 4 For integrated circuits that provide processing of both sparse and dense matrices, the TPP values are the values for processing of dense matrices (without sparsity).
- NOTE
- (vi) computers, electronic assemblies and components, containing one or more integrated circuits, specified in subparagraph (v), and
- NOTE
- For the purposes of subparagraph (vi), computers include, in particular, digital computers and hybrid computers.
- NOTE
- (vii) electronic assemblies, modules or equipment, containing one or more user configurable Field Programmable Logic Devices (FPLD) and having an aggregate lookup table input count of greater than or equal to 1,800,000;
- NOTE
- 1 For electronic assemblies, modules or equipment having FPLDs that are combined with an analog-to-digital converter, that are rated for extended operating temperatures or are radiation hardened, or have cryptographic functionality, see paragraphs 1-3.A.2.h., 1-4.A.1.a, and 1-5.A.2.a, respectively, of the Guide.
- 2 For the purposes of subparagraph (vii), user configurable means that a user can configure or modify the logic cells or interconnects between logic cells within the FPLD logic fabric to prescribe the specific function that the electronic assembly, module or equipment performs.
- 3 For the purposes of subparagraph (vii), aggregate lookup table input count means the sum of the number of independent inputs available to each physical programmable lookup table (LUT), contained within a FPLD or other programmable item. For example, a circuit board containing 2 Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), each having 150,000 programmable LUTs with 6 inputs would have an aggregate lookup table input count of 2 × 150,000 × 6 = 1,800,000.
- NOTE
(7) Subparagraphs 5506(2)(d)(i) to (viii) of the schedule to the List are replaced by the following:
- (i) scanning electron microscope (SEM) equipment designed for imaging semiconductor devices or integrated circuits, and having all of the following:
- (A) a stage placement accuracy less (better) than 30 nm,
- (B) a stage positioning measurement performed using laser interferometry,
- (C) a position calibration within a Field-of-View (FOV) based on laser interferometer length-scale measurement,
- (D) a capacity to collect and store images with more than 2 × 108 pixels,
- (E) an FOV overlap of less than 5% in vertical and horizontal directions,
- (F) an FOV stitching overlap of less than 50 nm, and
- (G) an accelerating voltage of more than 21 kV,
- NOTE
- 1 Subparagraph (i) includes SEM equipment designed for chip design recovery.
- 2 Subparagraph (i) does not apply to SEM equipment designed to accept a Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International (SEMI) standard wafer carrier, for example, a 200 mm or larger Front Opening Unified Pod (FOUP).
- NOTE
- (ii) additive manufacturing machines designed to produce metal or metal alloy components and having the following characteristics, and specially designed components for those machines:
- (A) the consolidation source is one or more of the following:
- (I) a laser,
- (II) an electron beam, or
- (III) an electric arc,
- (B) during manufacturing, the controlled process atmosphere consists of:
- (I) an inert gas, or
- (II) a vacuum (pressure equal to or less than 100 Pa),
- (C) the in-process monitoring equipment in a coaxial or paraxial configuration has any of the following:
- (I) an imaging camera with a peak response at a wavelength that is greater than 380 nm and less than or equal to 14,000 nm,
- (II) a pyrometer designed to measure temperatures greater than 1,273.15K (1,000°C), or
- (III) a radiometer or spectrometer with a peak response at a wavelength that is greater than 380 nm and less than or equal to 3,000 nm, and
- (D) the closed-loop control systems are designed to modify the consolidation source parameters, build paths, or equipment settings during the build cycle in response to feedback from in-process monitoring equipment specified in clause (C),
- NOTE
- 1 In clauses (C) and (D), in-process monitoring, also known as in-situ process monitoring, means the observation and measurement of the additive manufacturing process including the measurement of electromagnetic or thermal emissions from the melt pool.
- 2 In clause (C), coaxial configuration, also known as on-axis or inline configuration, means a configuration in which one or more sensors are mounted in an optical path shared by the laser consolidation source.
- 3 In clause (C), paraxial configuration means a configuration in which one or more sensors are mounted onto or integrated into the laser, electron beam, or electric arc consolidation source component.
- 4 In clause (C), for both coaxial configuration and paraxial configuration, the field of view of the sensors is fixed to the moving reference frame of the consolidation source and moves in the same scan trajectory throughout the build process.
- NOTE
- (A) the consolidation source is one or more of the following:
- (iii) cryogenic wafer probing equipment designed to test devices at a temperature less than or equal to 4.5 K (−268.65°C), and to accommodate wafer diameters greater than or equal to 100 mm, and
- (iv) equipment for the manufacturing of semiconductor devices or materials as follows, and specially designed components and accessories therefor:
- (A) masks and reticles designed for integrated circuits specified in subparagraphs (c)(i) and (v),
- (B) imprint lithography templates designed for integrated circuits specified in subparagraphs (c)(i) and (v),
- (C) equipment designed or modified for isotropic dry etching, having a largest silicon-germanium to silicon (SiGe:Si) etch selectivity greater than or equal to 100:1,
- NOTE
- For the purposes of clause (C), silicon-germanium to silicon (SiGe:Si) etch selectivity is measured for a germanium (Ge) concentration of greater than or equal to 30% (Si0.70Ge0.30).
- NOTE
- (D) equipment designed or modified for anisotropic dry etching, and having all of the following:
- (I) one or more Radio Frequency (RF) power sources with at least one pulsed Radio Frequency (RF) output,
- (II) one or more fast gas switching valves with a switching time of less than 300 ms, and
- (III) an electrostatic chuck with 20 or more individually controllable variable temperature elements,
- NOTE
- 1 Clauses (C) and (D) include etching by radicals — atoms, molecules, or ions that have an unpaired electron in an open electron shell configuration — or by ions, sequential reactions, or non-sequential reactions.
- 2 Clause (D) includes etching using RF pulse excited plasma, pulsed duty cycle excited plasma, pulsed voltage on electrodes modified plasma, or cyclic injection and purging of gases combined with a plasma, plasma atomic layer etching, or plasma quasi-atomic layer etching.
- NOTE
- (E) extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography masks and EUV lithography reticles, designed for integrated circuits, and having mask substrate blanks specified in paragraph 1-3.B.1.j of the Guide,
- NOTE
- Clause (E) also applies to masks and reticles with a mounted pellicle.
- NOTE
- (F) pellicles specially designed for EUV lithography,
- NOTE
- 1 In clauses (E) and (F), pellicle means a membrane that is integrated with a frame and that is designed to protect a mask or reticle from particle contamination.
- 2 In clauses (E) and (F), extreme Ultraviolet means electromagnetic spectrum wavelengths greater than 5 nm and less than 124 nm.
- NOTE
- (G) align and expose step and repeat (direct step on wafer) or step and scan (scanner) lithography equipment for wafer processing using photo-optical or X-ray methods and having all of the following:
- (I) a light source wavelength equal to or longer than 193 nm,
- (II) the capacity to produce a pattern with a Minimum Resolvable Feature size (MRF) of 45 nm or less, and
- (III) a maximum dedicated chuck overlay value of less than or equal to 1.50 nm,
- NOTE
- 1 For the purposes of subclause (II), the MRF is calculated using the following formula: MRF = (an exposure light source wavelength in nm) × (K factor) ÷ maximum numerical aperture, where K factor = 0.25. MRF is also known as resolution.
- 2 For the purposes of subclause (III), dedicated chuck overlay is the alignment accuracy of a new pattern to an existing pattern printed on a wafer by the same lithographic system. Dedicated chuck overlay is also known as single machine overlay.
- NOTE
- (H) equipment designed for epitaxial growth of silicon (Si) or silicon germanium (SiGe), and having all of the following:
- (I) at least one preclean chamber designed to provide a surface preparation means to clean the surface of the wafer, and
- (II) an epitaxial deposition chamber designed to operate at a temperature below 958 K (685°C),
- NOTE
- Clause (H) includes atomic layer epitaxy (ALE) equipment.
- NOTE
- (I) semiconductor manufacturing deposition equipment designed for Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD), as follows:
- (I) equipment designed for the deposition of tungsten to fill an entire interconnect or in a channel less than 40 nm wide,
- (II) equipment designed for area selective deposition of a metal or metal nitride sidewall barrier using an organometallic compound precursor, and
- NOTE
- For the purposes of subclause (II), area selective deposition means the deposition of material on the sidewall but not the bottom of a feature.
- NOTE
- (III) equipment designed for the deposition of a work function metal — composed of titanium aluminium carbide (TiAlC) and having a work function greater than 4.0 eV — and having all of the following:
- 1 more than one metal source of which one is functioning as an aluminium precursor source, and
- 2 a precursor vessel designed to operate at a temperature greater than or equal to 303.15 K (30oC),
- NOTE
- For the purposes of subclause (III), work function metal means a material that controls the threshold voltage of a transistor.
- NOTE
- (J) semiconductor manufacturing deposition equipment designed for cobalt electroplating or cobalt electroless-plating deposition processes,
- (K) semiconductor manufacturing deposition equipment designed for chemical vapour deposition (CVD) of cobalt fill metal,
- (L) semiconductor manufacturing deposition equipment designed for selective bottom-up CVD of tungsten fill metal,
- NOTE
- selective bottom-up CVD means the preferential deposition of material on the bottom relative to the sidewall.
- NOTE
- (M) semiconductor manufacturing deposition equipment designed for void-free plasma enhanced deposition of a layer with a dielectric constant less than 3.3, in gaps having an aspect ratio equal to or greater than 1:1 and a width less than 25 nm,
- NOTE
- 1 gap means the space between metal lines.
- 2 aspect ratio (depth : width) means the ratio of the depth to the width of the gap between the metal lines.
- NOTE
- (N) semiconductor manufacturing deposition equipment designed for the deposition of a ruthenium layer, using an organometallic compound precursor, while maintaining the wafer substrate at a temperature greater than 293.15 K (20°C) and less than 773.15 K (500°C),
- (O) semiconductor manufacturing deposition equipment designed for multistep processing in multiple chambers and maintaining a high vacuum or inert environment during transfer between process steps, as follows:
- (I) equipment designed to fabricate a metal contact by performing all of the following processes:
- 1 a surface treatment plasma process using hydrogen, hydrogen and nitrogen, or ammonia (NH3), while maintaining the wafer substrate at a temperature greater than 373.15 K (100°C) and less than 773.15 K (500°C),
- 2 a surface treatment plasma process using oxygen or ozone, while maintaining the wafer substrate at a temperature greater than 313.15 K (40°C) and less than 773.15 K (500°C), and
- 3 the deposition of a tungsten layer while maintaining the wafer substrate at a temperature greater than 373.15 K (100°C) and less than 773.15 K (500°C),
- (II) equipment designed to fabricate a metal contact by performing all of the following processes:
- 1 a surface treatment plasma process using a remote plasma generator and an ion filter, and
- 2 the deposition of a cobalt layer selectively onto copper using an organometallic compound precursor,
- (III) equipment designed to fabricate a metal contact by performing all of the following processes:
- 1 the deposition of a titanium nitride (TiN) or tungsten carbide (WC) layer, using an organometallic compound precursor, while maintaining the wafer substrate at a temperature greater than 293.15 K (20°C) and less than 773.15 K (500°C),
- 2 the deposition of a cobalt layer using a physical sputter deposition technique and having a process pressure greater than 1.33 × 10-1 Pa (1 mTorr) and less than 1.33 × 101 Pa (100 mTorr), while maintaining the wafer substrate at temperature less than 773.15 K (500°C), and
- 3 the deposition of a cobalt layer using an organometallic compound precursor and having a process pressure greater than 1.33 × 102 Pa (1 Torr) and less than 1.33 × 104 Pa (100 Torr), while maintaining the wafer substrate at temperature greater than 293.15 K (20°C) and less than 773.15 K (500°C),
- (IV) semiconductor manufacturing deposition equipment designed to fabricate copper interconnects by performing all of the following processes:
- 1 deposition of a cobalt or ruthenium layer using an organometallic compound precursor and having a process pressure greater than 1.33 × 102 Pa (1 Torr) and less than 1.33 × 104 Pa (100 Torr), while maintaining the wafer substrate at a temperature greater than 293.15 K (20°C) and less than 773.15 K (500°C), and
- 2 deposition of a copper layer using a physical vapor deposition technique having a process pressure greater than 1.33 × 10-1 Pa (1 mTorr) and less than 1.33 × 101 Pa (100 mTorr), while maintaining the wafer substrate at a temperature less than 773.15 K (500°C), and
- (I) equipment designed to fabricate a metal contact by performing all of the following processes:
- (P) equipment for semiconductor manufacturing, designed to fabricate a metal contact by multistep processing within a single chamber by performing all of the following:
- (I) deposition of a tungsten layer, using an organometallic compound precursor, while maintaining the wafer substrate temperature greater than 373.15 K (100°C) and less than 773.15 K (500°C), and
- (II) surface treatment plasma process using hydrogen, hydrogen and nitrogen, or ammonia (NH3); and
(8) Paragraph 5506(2)(e) of the schedule to the List is amended by striking out “and” at the end of subparagraph (ii), by adding “and” at the end of subparagraph (iii) and by adding the following after subparagraph (iii):
- (iv) high-entropy alloy or refractory metal and alloy powders, having a surface modified with inoculants.
- NOTE
- 1 For the purposes of subparagraph (iv), high-entropy alloys are alloys having at least 5 principal metallic elements, each having a concentration of 5 to 35 atomic percent, from the following list: Al, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zr, Nb, Mo, Hf, Ta or W.
- 2 For the purposes of subparagraph (iv), inoculants are additives that promote grain nucleation and increase the total area of grain boundaries to inhibit solidification defects.
- 3 For the purposes of subparagraph (iv), refractory metals and alloys are metals and alloys of niobium, molybdenum, tungsten and tantalum.
- NOTE
Coming into Force
2 This Order comes into force on the 30th day after the day on which it is published in the Canada Gazette, Part II.
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