The reforms and innovations of Shenzhen Customs are pushing the convenience of trade to new heights and boosting the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region's ties to the Chinese mainland after the city's return to China in 1997.
Shenzhen, a coastal city in South China's Guangdong province, is the key trade hub between the mainland and the SAR.
Looking to the two areas' glorious past, statistics indicate that from 1997 to 2016, the total trade volume between Shenzhen and Hong Kong surged from 70.14 billion yuan ($10.26 billion) to 696.15 billion yuan, with an annual growth rate of up to 12.8 percent.
The rapid rise in trade volume provides ever escalating demands for customs services.
Shenzhen Customs, which offers land and sea port services, has remained committed to reforms and innovation in a bid to enhance its efficiency.
Currently, it is the only Customs office to open land port cargo transportation and 24-hour traveler check services in China.
It has taken the lead in the country to provide automatic examination services in its road port. The rapid clearance services between Shenzhen and Hong Kong have driven the region's customs services to a new level.
To date, its experiences have benefited not only the whole of Guangdong province, but also four provinces in the Pan-Pearl River Delta region, as well as the whole country.
Shenzhen Customs is not merely a witness of the great trade between Hong Kong and Shenzhen, but also a crucial participant.
The enhanced ties have also boosted Shenzhen Customs' business growth and reform, which has in turn accelerated local clearance businesses' efficiency and convenience.
Efficient clearance
Hong Kong's economy has been affected by the Asian financial crisis and global financial crunch over the past 20 years.
Despite these difficulties, Shenzhen's trade with Hong Kong has continued to account for a high proportion of Shenzhen's trade volume.
It rose from 18.8 percent in 1997 to a historical high of 34.2 percent in 2013.
According to Liu Ying, a statistics official at Shenzhen Customs, the city's current trade with Hong Kong has entered an adjustment period, yet still ranks No 1 in terms of overall volume. It stood at 20 percent in 2016.
Fresh vegetables, live ducks and chickens, fruits from around the world and novelty electronics flow smoothly between the two cities across the sea.
In the past 20 years, the trade structure has made tremendous changes from labor-intensive products to high-end electronic machinery and from processing trade to higher-level trade products.
Benefiting from mainland's rising levels in the manufacturing industry, enterprises' independent management and consumers' spending habits, Shenzhen's trade with Hong Kong has been kicked into high gear.
In 2003, the Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement was singed between Hong Kong and the mainland.
In January of 2003, Huanggang port in Shenzhen began to offer 24-hour traveler checks and took the lead in China in offering cargo and passenger transport services day and night.
All of these have significantly benefited cargo to be shipped overseas via Shenzhen, including mobile phones, computers and other electronics.
Liu said: "Hong Kong's return to China has helped to optimize commodities' structure in trade and as a result, the sale of electronic goods is on the rise."
Shenzhen's labor-intensive products sold to Hong Kong have seen a major drop from an annual 28.5 percent in 1997 to just 5.4 percent in 2016.
The city's shipment of machinery electronics rose 84.9 percent in 2016 from 35.8 percent in 1997, playing a key role among all varieties of products in trade.
In a bid to meet the growing demand of the new trade structure, Shenzhen Customs has beefed up its efforts to enhance its clearance efficiency.
A so-called Shenzhen speed has taken shape. In 2002, the Customs office began to offer automatic examination services in major road ports along the Guangdong-Hong Kong Road, reducing the average time for each bus from 5 seconds to 2 seconds.
In 2007, a cross-regional rapid clearance service was launched, offering seamless service along roads from Shenzhen to Hong Kong. The Hong Kong Customs office has begun its own multi-model cargo transportation plan and the mainland's Customs has begun to offer its cross-regional rapid clearance plan, which reduced the average clearance time by about 26 minutes.
The experience has been introduced throughout China since 2014.
The Shenzhen Customs office has accumulated mature experience in cargo declaration, which has also been implemented throughout the whole province, the Pan-Pearl River Delta region as well as the whole country.
Food safety
Head of the Hong Kong-based Chao's Food Co Ltd, surnamed Peng, who has been engaged in the pig and duck business between Shenzhen and Hong Kong for more than 30 years, said his company has cultivated fields in Huizhou, Haifeng in Guangdong and Bobai in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region to provide livestock to Hong Kong every day.
"Since 1997, I could provide a list of goods and declare all varieties of goods ahead of time with the Customs office in Wenjindu port, which sped up our company's service to Hong Kong residents," he said.
Wenjindu has a long history of shipping livestock to Hong Kong, and almost 85 percent of vegetables and livestock come to the island via the port.
Statistics indicate that in 2016, the Customs office examined a total of 2.21 million tons of such products, up 3.2 percent year-on-year.
The total value hit $5.4 billion, up 9.5 percent year-on-year.
The service effectively fulfills Hong Kong residents' demand.
According to Shenzhen Customs, more than 1 million tons of fruit were imported from overseas through the city's ports to the Chinese mainland in 2016, up 10.1 percent year-on-year.
The value hit 15.19 billion yuan, more than any other port city in the country.
Wenjindu port is the country's No 1 port to import fruit from overseas in terms of its total volume and value.
The port has reduced red carpets in declaration, clearance and examination services and has been devoted itself to "zero retention" of fresh fruit and livestock.
"Five seconds for such trucks could be achieved through our automatic examination system," said Luo Chuanyong, a head of the logistics office in Wenjindu.
"The country's policies to support free trade guarantees our services. As part of recent 'green channel' measures, electronic and online systems deepen Shenzhen-Hong Kong trade ties," said Chen Shenghua, vice-director at the office of country of origin administration at Shenzhen Customs.
"In the past, overseas fruit needed two days to be transported from Hong Kong to the mainland, but now the electronic administrative online network has removed the barrier," he said.
Airport logistics
Shenzhen airport is now fostering a "four-hour airline circle" for the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road and a "12-hour airline circle" among many major global cities.
Prior to 1997, Shenzhen Bao'an International Airport seldom offered global air routs, with just a few linking the city to Southeast Asian destinations. Nowadays it has become a huge international transport hub.
In August 2005, an airline logistics fast lane between Hong Kong and Shenzhen's airports was inaugurated.
Cargos from Hong Kong to Shenzhen airports now enjoy non-barrier clearance, significantly lowering pressure on transport, logistics and surveillance systems.
An international express mail examination center and airline logistics parks have been opened to serve both airports.
yangcheng@chinadaily.com.cn
Staff members of a foreign shipping company are satisfied with services provided by Yantian port, a key port under administration of Shenzhen Customs.Provided To China Daily
(China Daily 06/28/2017 page12)