China imposes further checks on mask exports for ensuring quality control amid Coronavirus outbreak

The coronavirus outbreak has affected more than 80,000 people in China and claimed the lives of over 3,000

The East Asian country China has tightened the restrictions on the export of masks and also the other personal protective equipment on Friday, calling for the shipments of the items to go under mandatory customs inspections.

The new rule of China is the latest bid by the nation to balance the global demand of the PPE for treating the rising number of coronavirus or COVID-19 cases as well as ensuring that the manufacturers and also the sellers do not fill the market with uncertified products.

The regulations follow highly publicised complaints from some governments and hospitals that they received PPE from China that they considered faulty. In late March, Dutch officials recalled tens of thousands of masks delivered to the Netherlands from China, stating they did not meet quality standards.

China imposes new rule for quality PPE

Coronavirus
Workers make face masks in the workshop of a textile company in Jimo District of Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province, Feb. 12, 2020. Qingdao Municipal Bureau of Industry and Information Technology has mobilized two large textile companies to produce face masks to help the fight against the novel coronavirus epidemic. With the help and coordination of local authorities, the companies have retrofitted their production equipment and modified the assembly lines to produce face masks. It's expected that an average of 60,000 face masks could be produced per day in the first phase of production. (Photo by Liang Xiaopeng/Xinhua/IANS) Xinhua/IANS

The regulations published on Friday, from China's customs agency, require companies manufacturing PPE for export to submit extra documentation and go through a government-led inspection process. This month, authorities established rules requiring mask exporters to provide documentation ensuring their products are registered to be sold in China, and also meet the relevant regulatory standards in the destination country.

Industry experts say the new inspections could lengthen the approval process for shipments of the equipment by days or weeks. As the coronavirus has subsided in China and spread around the world, a global shortage of masks and other PPE has emerged.

Companies such as LVMH and IKEA launched production lines

Companies such as LVMH and IKEA launched production lines to help meet the demand, along with scores of large and small manufacturers across China. Many of the new manufacturers have little experience producing medical-grade products and come from sectors unrelated to health.

Maggie Chen, who runs a Shenzhen-based consultancy that helps companies comply with import and export regulations, says that in the short term, the new regulations will further shrink the number of masks on the market and cause prices to increase. But she said they mark a necessary step in ensuring that the PPE made in China meets international standards.

"It's good for the market that there are new manufacturers who are emerging to relieve the shortage of masks," she said. "But masks are medical products, and it's also good for the market to regulate them."

(With agency inputs)

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