Germany’s Bosch to pay U.S. $36 million for shipments to China’s Huawei

(Reuters) – German technology company Robert Bosch agreed to pay $36 million to U.S. authorities for shipping over $70 ​million worth of sensor products and software for ‌cell phones to China’s Huawei, the U.S. Commerce Department said on Wednesday.

Huawei is on a U.S. trade blacklist that requires a ​license for certain foreign-produced items that are the ​product of U.S.-origin technology.

Two non-U.S. Bosch subsidiaries exported the ⁠goods and software between 2020 and 2024 on ​over 100 occasions without a license, according to a settlement ​agreement between the Commerce Department and Bosch.

The violations were “unintentional,” Bosch said in a statement.

The U.S. Justice Department agreed to close its related ​investigation and said it was declining to prosecute the ​company, which self-disclosed the misconduct.

“This declination reflects the clear benefits for ‌companies ⁠that promptly disclose potential violations and fully assist in our investigations,” Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg said in a statement.

Bosch agreed to disgorge profits ​from the transactions ​at issue ⁠to the Justice Department. The company will receive credit in the $36 million Commerce Department ​settlement for the Justice Department payment, which ​also was ⁠partially suspended, authorities said.

Bosch, headquartered in Stuttgart, is an international technology and services company with nearly 500 subsidiaries and ⁠approximately $90 ​billion in annual revenue in 2024.

In ​its statement, Bosch said it had enhanced its trade compliance program to ​prevent future violations.

Reporting by Karen Freifeld; Editing by Daniel Wallis