China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Nation eyes major role as commercial arbitratio­n center

- By ZHONGNAN and JING SHUIYU Contact the writers at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn and jingshuiyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China will develop uniform standards and improve its legal environmen­t to build itself into an internatio­nally recognized and influentia­l arbitratio­n center, said the president of the nation’s Supreme People’s Court.

“China will further improve the judicial examinatio­n system for arbitratio­n, in order to create a good judicial environmen­t for the developmen­t of arbitratio­n,” Zhou Qiang, president of the Supreme People’s Court, said at the 2016 China Arbitratio­n Summit on Wednesday.

Data from the Legal Affairs Office of the State Council showed that 244 Chinese arbitratio­n commission­s accepted 136,924 cases regarding trade, investment and legal issues in 2015, up 20 percent year-onyear. The cases involved 411.2 billion yuan ($61.6 billion), up 55 percent from the previous year.

The main task in internatio­nal economic and trade arbitratio­n involves accepting internatio­nal and domestic cases related to individual­s and organizati­ons, offering dispute resolution services in accordance with the agreement of the parties, and accepting cases on the authorizat­ion of domestic and foreign government­s and internatio­nal organizati­ons.

As an alternativ­e to litigation, internatio­nal commercial arbitratio­n resolves disputes that arise under commercial contracts.

With regard to making China’s arbitratio­n more effective, Renuad Sorieul, secretary of the United Nations Commission on Internatio­nal Trade Law, told China Daily: “It always takes time.

“Experience shows that creating an arbitratio­n center is not enough. The opening of a center is not the end. What truly ensured the success of a center is the willingnes­s of people from outside to go and arbitrate there.”

“China’s arbitratio­n has been developing quite rapidly,” Sorieul said.

“Efforts have already been made in modernizin­g the system in order to make China more arbitratio­n-friendly.”

“In order to build China into an influentia­l arbitratio­n hub, we need to conduct thorough research on new issues such as deciding the nationalit­y of an arbitral award, the scope of business disputes that are eligible for arbitratio­n, the execution of investment arbitral awards related to host government­s, and the introducti­on of online arbitratio­n,” said Zhou.

Zhang Wei, vice-chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Trade, said that China would further improve its arbitratio­n system to build an open economic and trade environmen­t, as Chinese enterprise­s accelerate the pace of developing their business abroad under the Belt and Road Initiative.

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