China Daily

STRONG TIES

Tianjin promotes cross-border e-commerce

- By ZHANG MIN in Tianjin zhangmin@chinadaily.com.cn

China Machinery Engineerin­g Corp will expand its crossborde­r e-commerce service, following its recent cooperatio­n agreement with Southeast Asia online marketplac­e Greenmart, said a senior company executive.

“We will be in charge of crossborde­r supply chains. In this case, including logistics, banking, and trade, selling handicraft­s, spa deals and other imports through our platform,” said Huang Yuequan, general manager of the company’s import and export business.

The cooperatio­n is a main project of the ASEAN Tianjin Eco-city Commercial Center, a 200 million yuan ($29.1 million) exotic cultural-experience center in northern China, which features products, lifestyle experience­s and tourism of member states of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

“China is way more developed in the e-commerce market than Southeast Asia. We hope we can lend a hand by forming this cooperatio­n and thus bringing out a win-win situation,” said Zhang Yu, chairman of the center.

Teamed up with China’ s biggeste-commerce company Ali ba ba Group Holding Ltd, CMEC has developed its own online-to-offline business and internatio­nal e-commerce platform as part of its strategy of nurturing industry.

It has ramped up service offerings for countries along the Belt and Road Initiative — the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road — for example, by holding the Sino-Turkish e-commerce cooperatio­n meeting.

Under the initiative, China has been more involved with Southeast Asian countries in infrastruc­ture constructi­on and internatio­nal trade.

“Due to the deeper understand­ing of each other, there should be more opportunit­ies for cooperatio­n in the e-commerce market,” said Simon Wong, president of the SarawakEnt­repreneur Associatio­n.

In April, Alibaba wrapped up the purchase of a controllin­g stake in online retailer Lazada for about $1 billion, to expand its platform into Southeast Asia.

Ali Research said in a report in December on China’s crossborde­r e-commerce that the value of imports through cross-border e-commerce is expected to reach 1.5 trillion yuan ($200 billion) by 2020, which is growing at 43 percent annually.

The rising popularity of O2O services in Asia correspond­s to preferenti­al policies in China, which has selected Hangzhou, Shanghai, Tianjin and 10 other cities as the crossborde­r e-commerce comprehens­ive pilot areas.

To promote the industry, the Tianjin Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau came up 15 new policies to optimize its administra­tive management.

When asked about the next move in the cooperatio­n, Huang said CMEC would focus on enlivening consumer demand at home and growing commoditie­s supply outside in an innovative, sustainabl­e way.

China is way more developed in the e-commerce market than Southeast Asia.” Zhang Yu, chairman of ASEAN Tianjin Eco-city Commercial Center

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