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Australia Group
Multilateral export control regime established in 1985
Multilateral export control regime established in 1985

The Australia Group (AG) is a multilateral export control regime (MECR) and an informal group of countries (now joined by the European Commission) established in 1985 (after the use of chemical weapons by Iraq in 1984) to help member countries to identify those exports which need to be controlled so as not to contribute to the spread of chemical and biological weapons.
The group, initially consisting of 15 members, held its first meeting in Brussels, Belgium, in June 1985. With the incorporation of India on 19 January 2018, it now has 43 members, including Australia, New Zealand, the European Commission, all 27 member states of the European Union, United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, India, Ukraine, and Argentina. The name comes from Australia's initiative to create the group. Australia manages the secretariat.
The initial members of the group had different assessments of which chemical precursors should be subject to export control. Later adherents initially had no such controls. Today, members of the group maintain export controls on a uniform list of 90{{cite web|url=https://costanziresearch.com/cw-nonproliferation/cw-control-lists/ag-chemicals/|title=Australia Group Chemical Weapons Precursors List
In 2002, the group took two important steps to strengthen export control. The first was the "no-undercut" requirement, which stated that any member of the group considering making an export to another state that had already been denied an export by any other member of the group must first consult with that member state before approving the export. The second was the "catch-all" provision, which requires member states to halt all exports that could be used by importers in chemical or biological weapons programs, regardless of whether the export is on the group's control lists. Delegations representing the members meet every year in Paris, France.
Members
Participants
- Argentina (1993)
- Australia (1985)
- Austria (1989)
- Belgium (1985)
- Bulgaria (2001)
- Canada (1985)
- Croatia (2007)
- Cyprus (2000)
- Czech Republic (2004)
- Denmark (1985)
- Estonia (2004)
- European Union (1985)
- Finland (1991)
- France (1985)
- Germany (1985)
- Greece (1985)
- Hungary (1993)
- Iceland (1993)
- India (2018)
- Ireland (1985)
- Italy (1985)
- Japan (1985)
- South Korea (1996)
- Latvia (2004)
- Lithuania (2004)
- Luxembourg (1985)
- Malta (2004)
- Mexico (2013)
- Netherlands (1985)
- New Zealand (1985)
- Norway (1986)
- Poland (1994)
- Portugal (1985)
- Romania (1995)
- Slovakia (1994)
- Slovenia (2004)
- Spain (1985)
- Sweden (1991)
- Switzerland (1987)
- Turkey (2000)
- Ukraine (2005)
- United Kingdom (1985)
- United States (1985)
Adherents
Becoming an adherent of the Australia Group is a unilateral decision made by the adherent and does not require acceptance by established members of the group. To become an adherent member, the adherent must notify the Chair of the Australia Group of their political commitment to adhere to the Australia Group Guidelines and Common Control Lists, and to notify the Chair of any subsequent changes to this commitment.
As of November 2025, the following countries are adherents:
- Albania (2025)
- Montenegro (2025)
- Kazakhstan (2015)
References
References
- "The Australia Group – Origins".
- "The Australia Group – Origins".
- "The Australia Group – Membership".
- "The Australia Group – Activities".
- Arms Control Association, "The Australia Group at a Glance", September 2003, available at www.armscontrol.org/factssheets/australiagroup.asp
- Croddy, Eric. (2002). "Chemical and Biological Weapons: A Comprehensive Study for the Concerned Citizen". Copernicus Books.
- https://www.dfat.gov.au/publications/minisite/theaustraliagroupnet/site/en/participants.html
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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