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Global Data Standards
Facilitating Trade in Asia-Pacific
By use of industry data at the border to move cargo
through customs (and OGAs) faster and easier
Patrik Jonasson, GS1 Director Public Policy Asia-Pacific
4 December 2016
Todays presentation will focus on:
• how Governments can leverage private sector supply
chain data at the border…
• and how access to this data will enable the move of cargo
through customs (and OGAs) faster and easier
© GS1 2016
2
What do these products all have in
common?
© GS1 2016
What do all these products have in
common?
• Sold by Aeon, Lotte, ebay, Tesco
Lotus, Giant, Alibaba, Google
shopping and Amazon
• Bought by consumers globally
• Traded across borders
• Need to comply with regulatory
requirements for health/product
safety standards, product
registration etc. prior to importation
© GS1 2016
What do all these products have in
common?
• Carry the product barcode
• Product data available in
industry databases / cloud
• Using a standardized system
for product identification and
seamless sharing of product
data between trading partners
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There are a number of ways to leverage this
standardized data sharing at the border
By using an international system with globally unambiguous
product/commodity identification; border agencies can get access
to:
• Data in industry databases giving granular and
unambiguous product information
• Supply chain visibility data allowing full chain traceability - by
pulling trade and transport data directly from traders
systems when required
• Automating clearance process with scanning and data
capture allows all supply chain participants including customs
to reliably identify goods moving to and across the border
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Public & Private supply chain Data Working
Together (import scenario) at the border
ITDS clearance
payback up to
$8:$1
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Conclusion
Smarter use of already available data will make trade processes more
transparent and more efficient
• The use of industry generated data is a major potential benefit
to both traders and government that can be easily implemented
• Governments could be interfacing risk targeting and
intelligence tools with industry databases to leverage information
in real time
• Traders using the system would benefit from faster clearance,
better predictability in the clearance process and more efficient
cross-border trade
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Patrik Jonasson
Director Public Policy Asia-Pacific
GS1 Global Office
[email protected]
© GS1 2016
More information and sources
www.gs1.org
http://ocp.gs1.org/sites/faq/Pages/topic.aspx?t=GS1%20EDI
http://www.apec.org/Meeting-Papers/MinisterialStatements/Annual/2014/2014_amm/annexa.aspx
http://www.itds.gov
http://www.cbsa-asfc.gc.ca/agency-agence/consult/bccc-ccacf/201305-16-eng.html#c8c
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Data Carriers
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