China to suspend checks on U.S. scrap metal shipments, halting imports

Reuters  |  BEIJING/MELBOURNE 

BEIJING/(Reuters) - The North American unit of a Chinese inspection firm said it would suspend checks on cargoes of metal from the for a month from Friday, effectively halting all imports of U.S.

The suspension comes amid a broad crackdown on pollution in and stricter regulation around waste imports. It poses a serious headache for China's buyers: the is a major source of for and top supplier of scrap copper.

In a notice to customers dated May 3, reviewed by Reuters, Certification and (CCIC) said it would stop processing applications and issuing certificates for scrap material shipments from May 4 to June 4.

The company could not immediately be reached for comment outside normal working hours in the

The inspection firm said in the notice it would empty every container of U.S.-origin scrap from May 4 to check for plastic and other hazardous waste products, which it would send for further testing.

During the month-long period, CCIC "will temporarily stop processing applications and issuing the certificate for pre-shipment inspection on scrap materials to China," it said.

Last year, China imported a total of 5.74 million tonnes of scrap metal, mainly scrap copper and aluminium, according to official data. But imports have fallen sharply year on year so far in 2018 as quotas have been progressively tightened.

China imported 50,000 tonnes of copper scrap from the U.S. in March and more than 500,000 tonnes last year, equivalent to 15 percent of the country's secondary supply.

(Reporting by in and Melanie Burton in Editing by and Kenneth Maxwell)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, May 04 2018. 12:35 IST