China considers draft law revision to standardization law

BEIJING -- Chinese lawmakers Monday started to review a draft amendment to the Standardization Law, as the country strives to achieve quality-based development.
The draft revision, the first since the law came into force in 1989, was given a first reading at a four-day bimonthly session of the National People's Congress Standing Committee, which opened Monday.
"As the country's economy and social conditions have evolved, some of the law's existing clauses are out of date," Tian Shihong, head of the Standardization Administration of China, told lawmakers.
The draft expands the scope of standards to cover various sectors, including agriculture, industry, service and social programs, as they currently only cover industrial products, construction and environmental protection areas.
It will also integrate mandatory standard systems, focusing on the technical requirements of health and safety, national and ecological security, as well as on the basic needs on the management of society and the economy.
- Sanya to host sixth Asian Beach Games in April
- Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macao to jointly hold entrepreneurship competition
- China approves rice-derived recombinant human albumin injection
- Hundreds attend 5th TCM Culture Festival in Tianjin
- China warns of strict action to prevent theft and smuggling of mineral resources
- Third rare earth mineral found in Bayan Obo deposit