Pakistan updates export control lists to align with global non-proliferation rules

This picture taken on March 8, 2023, shows a cargo ship set to sail from a sea port in Karachi, Pakistan. (Radio Pakistan/File)
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Updated 30 January 2026
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Pakistan updates export control lists to align with global non-proliferation rules

  • Revised controls require licenses for dual-use items linked to nuclear and biological technologies
  • Update aligns Pakistan’s export rules with global regimes and follows periodic revisions since 2005

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign office announced on Friday the country has updated its national export control lists governing sensitive and dual-use technologies, requiring exporters to seek government licenses for items linked to nuclear, biological and missile-related applications.

The revised lists, notified under the Export Control Act, 2004, specify goods, materials, equipment and technologies that cannot be exported without prior approval from the Strategic Export Control Division (SECDIV), a specialized unit operating under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

“This revision was part of SECDIV’s regular review process, conducted in consultation with relevant ministries and departments, to ensure that Pakistan’s national controls remain up to date, effective and aligned with international standards,” the foreign office said in a notification.

Export control lists are used by governments worldwide to regulate trade in dual-use items — products and technologies that have legitimate civilian applications but could also be used for military or weapons-related purposes.

Such controls are designed to prevent proliferation while allowing lawful trade under licensing systems.
Pakistan’s updated lists were published in the official Gazette through a statutory regulatory order dated October 13, 2025, and take immediate effect, the notification said.

“This notification underscores Pakistan’s resolve to further strengthen its export control regime and reaffirms its role as a responsible technology-holder state, firmly committed to the objectives of non-proliferation and the fulfilment of its international obligations,” the foreign office added.

The control lists were first issued in 2005 and have since been revised in 2011, 2015, 2016, 2018 and 2022, reflecting changes in technology, international rules and compliance requirements.

The latest revision brings Pakistan’s export rules into closer alignment with international non-proliferation regimes, including the Nuclear Suppliers Group, the Missile Technology Control Regime, and the Australia Group, all of which coordinate export controls among participating countries to limit the spread of weapons-related technologies.
 


US-based firm sells 75 percent stake in Pakistan’s leading starch producer to Nishat Group

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US-based firm sells 75 percent stake in Pakistan’s leading starch producer to Nishat Group

  • Rafhan Maize, prominent Pakistani starch and food ingredients producer, has a market capitalization of $355 million, says brokerage firm 
  • Brokerage firm Arif Habib Ltd. says transaction ranks among largest mergers and acquisitions deals in Pakistan in nearly two decades

Karachi: US-based firm Ingredion Incorporated has formally agreed to sell up to 75% of its stake in Rafhan Maize Products, a leading Pakistani starch and food ingredients manufacturer, to Pakistan’s Nishat Group, Ingredion’s financial adviser said on Sunday. 

Rafhan Maize is a subsidiary of Ingredion Incorporated, a prominent global corn refiner which began its operations in Pakistan as a pioneer of the corn refining industry in 1953. Over the last six decades, Rafhan Maize says it has expanded operations to become one of the country’s premier agro-based industries. 

Nishat Group, meanwhile, is a Pakistani private sector business conglomerate. Brokerage firm Arif Habib Limited acted as the exclusive financial adviser to Ingredion Incorporated for the transaction. 

“This landmark transaction ranks among the largest M&A deals in Pakistan in nearly two decades, giving the Nishat Group a controlling stake in Rafhan Maize,” Shahid Ali Habib, chief executive officer of Arif Habib Ltd., said in a statement.

He added that Rafhan Maize has a market capitalization of approximately Rs100 billion [$355 million].

Habib described Rafhan Maize as a “market leader” in Pakistan’s starch industry, operating three production facilities nationwide with a production capacity more than five times its nearest competitor.

“Ingredion shall retain a strategic stake in the company and continue to support the Nishat Group,” he added.