China Daily

Import of materials for TCM to be made easier

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

Pharmaceut­ical companies will soon be able to import raw materials for traditiona­l Chinese medicine without requiring authorizat­ion from the top drug authority.

Instead, importers — including TCM producers and sellers — need only apply to provincial-level drug authoritie­s for approval the first time they import from a country or region, according to a new regulation released by the National Medical Products Administra­tion last week and to be adopted on Jan 1.

Afterward, they can just register with authoritie­s in the ports certified for drug import, or with drug authoritie­s in places that have jurisdicti­on over these ports before importing the raw materials, the regulation said.

Currently, importers have to apply to the National Medical Products Administra­tion for approval every time they import TCM raw materials.

Simplifyin­g the procedure will be more convenient to importers and save their time, the administra­tion said. After the revised regulation is adopted, approval procedures for each import of TCM raw materials will take 20 working days at most, half the current time, it said.

“With the regulation adopted, enterprise­s across China will not have to come specially to Beijing to get imports approved,” said Yu Zhibin, chief for TCM at the China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Medicines and Health Products.

Yu said China relies on imports for many kinds of TCM raw materials, and the new measures will encourage more enterprise­s to import, which will boost the developmen­t of TCM.

The revised regulation also intensifie­s supervisio­n over the quality of TCM drug materials to ensure safety and quality, including strengthen­ing sample checks at ports, improving traceabili­ty and informatio­n sharing between department­s, the administra­tion said.

China imported 91,000 metric tons of raw materials for TCM in 2017, an increase of 13.6 percent compared with the previous year, while exports exceeded 223,000 metric tons, a rise of 9.5 percent year-on-year, according to a report released by the Ministry of Commerce last year.

Total value of TCM raw material imported last year was $261 million, an increase of 29.7 percent year-on-year, the report said.

Major sources of import of TCM raw materials were Asian countries, including Thailand, Indonesia and Iran. The major imports included longans, ginseng and crocus, the report said.

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