No toy products without compulsory certification will be allowed
to leave factories, be sold or be imported into China by June 1,
2007, according to a China Daily report on Saturday.
Liu Weijun, chief engineer of Certification and Accreditation
Administration (CNCA), said in Beijing on Friday
that as from March 1, toy producers in China have been able to
apply to three certification agencies nominated by the CNCA to
certify their products.
The administration has nominated 15 institutions to examine toys
for certification, he said.
Rag dolls and electronic toys produced by two manufacturers in
South China's Guangdong Province were reported to have received the
China Compulsory Certification (CCC) last week.
Such measures are expected to mitigate the increasing
international pressure on environmental protection and worries that
inferior and bogus toy products may threat health and safety of
babies and children.
China's toy products account for 75 percent of the world's toy
output, according to statistics from the China Chamber of Commerce
for Import and Export of Light Industrial Products and Arts-Crafts
(CCCLA).
They are being exported to Europe, the United States, Japan and
other regions and countries, it said.
From 2005, the CNCA began accepting compulsory certifications
for toys in six categories including electric, plastic and metal
products as well as baby carriers, CNCA officials said.
The Chinese mainland has since issued compulsory certifications
to 162 types of products in 23 categories, according to CNCA
statistics.
Insiders said they believe China's domestic toy market value
could exceed 3.75 billion U.S. dollars annually.
CCCLA figures show the mainland now has more than 8,000 toy
manufacturers with an annual output value exceeding 50 billion yuan
(US$6.25 billion).
(China Daily April 1, 2006)