
HANGZHOU, Oct. 26 -- A national quality monitoring center for cross-border e-commerce was launched on Wednesday in Hangzhou, China's e-commerce capital.
The online system, approved by the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine in June 2015, went into operation after more than a year's preparation.
The platform will form a big data center to monitor cross-border e-commerce and will have several functions, such as risk monitoring, evaluation and treatment, quality source tracing, and credit rating.
Wang Yichen, an official with the Hangzhou entry-exit inspection and quarantine bureau, said the center will lower risks concerning commodity quality, protect consumer rights and help create a safer and more trustworthy e-commerce environment.
The center has agreed to cooperate with Alibaba's cross-border retail platform Tmall International on policy innovation, data sharing, quality supervision and information exchange.
China currently has over 5,000 cross-border e-commerce platforms. The Ministry of Commerce predicts the volume of cross-border e-commerce will reach 6.5 trillion yuan in 2016 and that it will soon account for 20 percent of China's foreign trade.
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