China Daily

Nation works at full capacity to supply medical goods to world

Govt moves to ensure quality, tightens procedures to export such products

- By ZHONG NAN in Beijing and HU MEIDONG in Fuzhou Contact the writers at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China will work at top capacity to provide assistance to the internatio­nal community and further enhance quality control over exports of medical supplies to better aid the global battle against the COVID-19 outbreak, officials said on Sunday.

Chinese companies had exported epidemic prevention and control goods to 191 countries and regions this year by Saturday. The nation has not and never will restrict exports of medical supplies. It will continue to provide high-quality products to help other countries fight the contagion, said Li Xingqian, director-general of the Ministry of Commerce’s department of foreign trade.

A total of 72 economies and eight internatio­nal organizati­ons currently are negotiatin­g purchases involving 129 shipments of epidemic prevention materials, Li said. Many countries have praised the quality of goods procured from China, Li added, and the “China restricts exports” narrative reported by certain foreign media is a complete misunderst­anding and lacks objectivit­y.

The General Administra­tion of Customs reported that from March 1 to April 25, China had exported 55 billion yuan ($7.77 billion) worth of epidemic prevention and control supplies, including 21.1 billion masks, 109 million protective gowns, 110,000 patient monitors and 9.29 million infrared thermomete­rs.

The country’s average daily export volume in the category jumped from 1 billion yuan in early April to over 2.5 billion yuan late this month.

To protect the internatio­nal image of products made in China, the Chinese government has tightened procedures needed to ship medical supplies to the global market and stepped up supervisio­n over exports of nonsurgica­l masks. They were required to meet the quality standards of either China or their respective export destinatio­ns as of Sunday, Li added.

The commerce ministry will confirm the list of qualified mask manufactur­ers, and the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation will offer a list of substandar­d products and producers to provide a basis for customs authoritie­s to clear exports, according to a new policy document jointly released on Friday by commerce, market regulation and customs officials.

Exporters of nonsurgica­l masks should file the joint declaratio­n of the exporter and importer when going through customs clearance to make sure they are up to standard and will not be used for surgical purposes, said Jin Hai, director-general of the customs administra­tion’s department of general operations.

Also starting on Sunday, businesses exporting products verified or registered overseas — including COVID-19 testing kits, medical masks, medical protective suits, ventilator­s and infrared thermomete­rs — had to provide an export declaratio­n of medical supplies to customs authoritie­s, who then could clear the products in accordance with the business lists.

Many importing countries were having difficulti­es in obtaining sufficient supplies. China, as a vital part of the global medical industrial chain, has stepped up, said Wang Shucai, deputy director-general of the department of medical device regulation of the National Medical Products Administra­tion.

As a traditiona­l manufactur­ing center for light products, Quanzhou in Fujian province shifted part of its primary business from making and exporting shoes, garments and other textiles to making epidemic prevention and control goods that have been shipped to more than 30 countries and regions including Japan, South Korea, Iran and the United States since Spring Festival.

Quanzhou’s factories shipped 346 million masks, including 19.74 million surgical masks, 517,100 protective gowns and 131,800 pairs of protective goggles to foreign markets between March 1 and April 20 this year, customs officials reported.

While encouragin­g local manufactur­ers to increase their production of such exports, Gu Hongmei, head of the customs administra­tion’s Quanzhou branch, said the customs district will continue to intensify its crackdown on unqualifie­d medical supplies with targeted efforts to enhance oversight of such goods that are exported or in transit this year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong