Categoría: CHINA news

Cooperazione digitale UE–Cina

Forefront of EU–China digital cooperation

Cooperazione digitale UE–Cina

CPO & Partners is delighted to share its active participation in the prestigious European Union Chamber of Commerce in China Site Tour at China Mobile Shanghai Industrial Research Institute and Shanghai Mobile New-Quality Productivity Exhibition Hall.

🚀 This event showcased cutting-edge innovations in 5G, AI, big data, IoT, and new-quality productivity, with demonstrations of Baidou Satellite guidance, drone navigation, and smart transportation.

🎤 Keynotes on cross-border compliance, cloud-network integration, and data pathways by China Mobile experts provided invaluable insights for Sino-European digital collaboration.

🤝 Our presence underscores our commitment to bridging Italy-China business, leveraging nearly 20 years in Shanghai to explore compliant digital infrastructure opportunities for our clients.

2026-02-03-Focus--Decreto-Legislativo-30-dicembre-2025,-n.-211

D.Lgs. 211/2025 – New Criminal Liability and Decree 231

2026-02-03-Focus--Decreto-Legislativo-30-dicembre-2025,-n.-211

Published 9 January 2026, Legislative Decree 30 December 2025, no. 211 enters into force 24 January 2026. Implementing Directive (EU) 2024/1226, the decree transforms administrative violations of EU restrictive measures into criminal offences with direct entity liability under Legislative Decree 231/2001.

  • New Criminal Code offences (Articles 275-bis et seq.) target asset freezes, making funds available to designated entities, authorisation breaches, and gross negligence in dual-use classification. Extraterritorial reach covers Italian nationals abroad.
  • Entity liability (Article 25-octies.2): 1-5% global turnover sanctions (min. €3-40M), 1-6 year disqualifications. Exemption requires updated 231 Models with CONSIS screening and dual-use protocols.
  • Italian groups with China WFOEs, joint ventures and minority stakes: Chinese supply chains circumvent Russia sanctions (19 EU packages). Parent companies risk liability for subsidiary/participated entity violations if exercising direction or deriving benefit.

Actions: CONSIS screening, 231 Model update, training for China operations.

Catalogo-delle-Industrie-Favorite-agli-Investimenti-Esteri-2025

China releases the 2025 Encouraged Catalogue for Foreign Investment

Catalogo-delle-Industrie-Favorite-agli-Investimenti-Esteri-2025

On December 24, 2025, China released the Catalogue of Encouraged Industries for Foreign Investment 2025, effective February 1, 2026, updating the list of sectors and activities eligible for preferential treatment, streamlined procedures, and operational advantages.

Compared to the previous version, the new Catalogue shows a broader scope – with 200+ new items and 300+ revisions – and a more targeted focus on:

  • Advanced manufacturing, with items from terminal products and components to raw materials;
  • Green technologies and modern services, such as lifestyle, consumer-facing, and digitalized service industries;
  • Additional incentives for central, western, northeastern regions (underdeveloped areas), and Hainan.

Four preferential policies:

  1. Customs duty exemptions for imported self-use equipment;
  2. Preferential industrial land access – reductions down to 70% and more flexibility;
  3. Reduced CIT (15%) for eligible projects located in western China and Hainan;
  4. Tax credits for profits reinvestment into National Catalogue’s projects.

This update confirms China’s intention to attract foreign investment, especially when aligned with its high-quality growth, innovation, and regional development goals, offering a key instrument for recalibrating China and Far East investment strategies.

 

Pdf Source (Chinese language)

https://www.ndrc.gov.cn/xxgk/zcfb/fzggwl/202512/P020251224301773999332.pdf

Projects-Networking-of-Zhejiang-Shanghai-Connect

Zhejiang Shanghai Connect | Jiaxing Special Event

Projects-Networking-of-Zhejiang-Shanghai-Connect

On December 9, 2025, Francesco Marano took part in the “Zhejiang–Shanghai Connect | Jiaxing Special Event” held in Shanghai, delivering a speech focused on foreign investment projects in China.

His contribution addressed key aspects related to market entry strategies, investment pathways, and the role of tax and legal advisory in supporting cross-border operations within an evolving regulatory and economic framework.

The event provided a valuable platform for dialogue between institutions and international stakeholders, highlighting the importance of cooperation between European and Chinese business ecosystems.

China-New-Government-Procurement-Standards-2026

China: New Government Procurement Standards – Effective January 1, 2026

China-New-Government-Procurement-Standards-2026

A new policy notice on government procurement introduces a 20% price evaluation advantage for qualifying “Made in China” products – a move designated to strengthen domestic manufacturing while ensuring foreign-invested enterprises (FIEs) can still participate on equal footing.

Key points:

  • Domestic products meeting specific transformation and cost criteria can enjoy a 20% bid advantage.
  • Mixed procurement packages qualify as “Made in China” if 80% or more of the products are domestically produced.
  • Stricter requirements apply to high-tech and security-sensitive components.
  • A five-year rollout period followed by a 3-5-year transition ensures smooth implementation.

This policy underscores China’s push for high-quality industrial development, local innovation, and balanced global participation in its procurement ecosystem.

Barcelona-Changzhou

Changzhou City – Zhonglou District – Barcelona 2025

Barcelona-Changzhou

The event has successfully concluded

Changzhou City – Zhonglou District, China 2030:

Opportunities and Challenges of China’s 15th Five-Year Plan, hosted in Barcelona

 

CPO & Partners participated alongside FELIU as an internationalization partner, contributing to the discussion on the strategic directions shaping China’s market in the coming years.

During his presentation, Fabio Enrico Pessina provided an in-depth overview of China’s economic and regulatory outlook toward 2030, highlighting implications for European companies across technology, green transition, and advanced manufacturing sectors.

We extend our thanks to FELIU for the excellent organization and to all participants for the valuable exchange.

An important opportunity to strengthen business connections between Europe and China in an increasingly complex global landscape.

Customs-Duties-The-EU-Closes-Low-Value-Parcels-Loophole

Customs Duties: The EU Closes Low-Value Parcels Loophole

Customs-Duties-The-EU-Closes-Low-Value-Parcels-Loophole

On November 13th, 2025, the European Commission agreed to eliminate the €150 customs duty relief threshold and potentially introduce “handling fees” on e-commerce packages as of 2026.

Given the evolution of the e-commerce model, this exemption is no longer justified and creates unfair competition. This initiative directly addresses the sharp rise in low-value B2C parcels shipped from non-EU platforms to EU consumers.

This measure aligns with the VAT framework already in force since 2021, which abolished the €22 VAT relief threshold, applying VAT on all commercial goods imported into the EU from third countries and requiring an import declaration.

The removal of the customs duty exemption threshold means that all goods, regardless of their value, will no longer be exempt from customs duties – ensuring fairer conditions between wholesale and retail importers.

Until mid-2028, a temporary system will be in place to facilitate duty calculation on low-value parcels; afterwards. the EU Customs Data Hub will centralize the entire customs processing.

This agreement marks a pivotal step in the modernization of EU customs procedures, paving the way for a more streamlined, transparent, and equitable system.

 

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https://www.cpopartners.com/cpo-newsletter-customs-duties/

 

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newsletter_2025-11-19-CBAM-Fase-Definitiva-2026

CBAM – Final Phase 2026

newsletter_2025-11-19-CBAM-Fase-Definitiva-2026

CBAM – Final Phase: Sustainability as Market-Access Requirement

Starting January 1st, 2026, the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) will enter into full force, introducing a carbon cost on imports with high embedded emissions – including aluminum, cement, electricity, fertilizers, iron and steel – to support more sustainable global trade.

The New Regulation (EU) 2025/2083 launches the definitive phase of CBAM, fully integrating climate policy into international trade.

Importers and their indirect customs representatives will be required to obtain the status of authorized CBAM declarant and operate through the EU’s digital CBAM Registry.

The annual CBAM declaration must be submitted by September 30th of the year following the imports (first deadline: 2027), while the purchase of CBAM certificates to offset emissions will begin in 2027 for emissions related to 2026.

Updates:

  • A de minimis threshold – 50 tons per year for CBAM goods, easing the burden on smaller firms.
  • Reduction of the mandatory certificate holding requirement from 80% to 50% of quarterly emissions.
  • Possibility for authorized declarants to delegate the CBAM declaration to a third party.

What to do?

  • Check whether exempt due to the de minimis
  • Apply for CBAM authorization before the end of 2025 (temporary waiver until March 31st, 2026).
  • Set up robust systems for collecting data on embedded emissions in imported goods.

 

To receive the PDF with details and insights on the topic “CBAM – Definitive Phase 2026,” please subscribe to our newsletter by clicking on the following link:

https://www.cpopartners.com/cpo-newsletter-cbam/

 

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2025-11-13-China-postpones-the-new-export-controls-on-REEs-announced-on-October-9-2025

China postpones the new export controls on Rare Earths

2025-11-13-China-postpones-the-new-export-controls-on-REEs-announced-on-October-9-2025

China postpones the new export controls on Rare Earths announced on October 9th, 2025

After introducing the first export controls on 7 Rare Earths (REEs) and their derivatives on April 4th, 2025, China announced a second round of restrictions on October 9th.

The new measures included export controls on an additional 5 REEs as well as a new extraterritorial provision, which – starting from December 1, 2025 – would have required a dual-use item export license issued by MOFCOM even for products manufactured outside China and destined for a third country, if containing raw materials or technologies of Chinese origin. The impact? Potential shipments disruptions, further delays, and significant administrative bottlenecks.

Following preliminary trade talks between Presidents Xi and Trump during the ASEAN Summit on October 30th, China agreed to suspend the new restrictions for one year. Moreover, during a closed-door meeting between Chinese and EU representatives in Brussels, it was declared – though not yet officially – that the suspension would also apply to the EU.

On November 7th, 2025, China formally confirmed the suspension of the new REEs export control measures until November 10th, 2026. However, the controls introduced on April 4th, 2025, remain in full force.

2025-11-14-Pinghu-Torino-Majestic

Opportunities and Challenges of the Chinese Market toward 2030

2025-11-14-Pinghu-Torino-Majestic

Opportunities and Challenges of the Chinese Market toward 2030

 

The event “Opportunities and Challenges of the Chinese Market toward 2030”, held yesterday at Starhotels Majestic in Turin, concluded successfully, confirming the strong interest of the Piedmont industrial ecosystem in China’s upcoming developments.

The Pinghu Economic & Technological Development Zone delegation presented the evolution of the industrial district and the opportunities available to Italian companies in automotive, green economy and digital innovation, ahead of China’s 2026–2030 Five-Year Plan.

Professionals from CPO & Partners, together with Dr. Sara Berloto (ICCF), outlined key strategic trends, regulatory perspectives and operational frameworks supporting companies looking to strengthen their presence in China.

The discussions, Q&A session and networking cocktail highlighted the growing interest in building structured cooperation between Piedmont and China within an evolving industrial landscape.

Our sincere thanks to the Pinghu delegation, the speakers and all participants for their valuable contributions.

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