China's export is being frustrated by more and more technical trade
barriers such as stricter quarantine standards, a trade official
said in Guangzhou Thursday.
Guo Li, assistant minister of commerce, said at a meeting held in
the capital of Guangdong Province, south China, technical trade
barriers are apt to intensify in the international market and
greatly hold back China's export trade, especially when farm
produce and foods are concerned.
The quarantine standards of some countries can become very picky
for exporters, she added.
A
report of the Ministry of Commerce shows that 71 percent of Chinese
exporters and 39 percent of exporting products encountered
technical barriers last year, causing a loss of US$17 billion,
equal to 5.2 percent of the year's total exports.
Included were 90 percent of the country's exported farm produce and
foods, and a loss of 9 billion US dollars, according to the
report.
Guo said the export of Chinese goods to Japan dropped by 0.2
percent in the first half of this year on a year-on-year basis due
to changes in food quarantine standards of Japan issued earlier
this year.
The policy changes already affected 40 percent of China's farm
produce export business to Japan valued at US$2.3 billion, she
added.
The European Union's rejection of Chinese animal products has not
been fully lifted while other countries like Hungary, Russia, Japan
and Mexico have increased quarantine standards on animal and honey
products.
As
a result of the stricter quarantine standards, China's export of
fowl products dropped by 32.9 percent last year while livestock
exports fell by 4.1 percent and honey products by 16.7 percent.
Guo called on export enterprises of the country and government
departments concerned to work hard to deal with the issue by taking
technical trade measures, which she did not elaborate.
(Xinhua News Agency August 15, 2003)
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