Apr 26, 2026
"BIOEXPORT NAVIGATOR: A Decision-Support Tool for U.S.-China AI-Biosecurity Trade Compliance"
Ammara Durrani
Biosecurity practitioners currently face a fragmented policy signal challenge: while AI-enabled biological design risks accelerate, the legal frameworks governing cross-border transfers—particularly between the U.S. and China—remain opaque and difficult to interpret. This complexity creates a "chilling effect" on legitimate research while leaving critical gaps for accidental misuse in an era of intense strategic competition. The BioExport Navigator is a prototype decision-support tool designed to bridge this gap. By mapping RAND 2025 technical uplift to U.S. BIS regulatory triggers, it provides a structured decision layer for cross-border compliance. The tool uniquely flags EAR § 744.6 "U.S. Person" liability and identifies "small-but-deadly" models that fall below standard compute thresholds but trigger presumption of denial for China-bound transfers. It moves biosecurity from reactive monitoring to proactive, informed decision-making in an era of intense strategic competition. It ensures that high-risk AI-Bio convergence is managed through standardized, cost-effective, real-world policy frameworks.
Great problem choice!
The validation is the thing to address. LLM consensus isn't rigorous enough for a tool that touches criminal liability. Even one conversation with an actual export compliance lawyer would be more credible than multi-model cross-checking.
The artifact right now is a CSV and a logic description. A minimal working decision tree that a researcher can click through would make this feel more like a tool rather than a proposal!
Cite this work
@misc {
title={
(HckPrj) "BIOEXPORT NAVIGATOR: A Decision-Support Tool for U.S.-China AI-Biosecurity Trade Compliance"
},
author={
Ammara Durrani
},
date={
4/26/26
},
organization={Apart Research},
note={Research submission to the research sprint hosted by Apart.},
howpublished={https://apartresearch.com}
}


