Chongqing approved as port of entry for imported drugs
CHONGQING -- China's Chongqing municipality has been approved as a port of entry for imported drugs, making it the only such entry port in west China and the fourth in the Chinese mainland following Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou.
The permission for entry was granted by China's National Medical Products Administration, a city official told a press conference.
Previously, imported drugs had to pass through China's eastern ports to arrive in western regions, and it could take up to 40 days or more for the consignments to arrive in Chongqing, said Luo Li, deputy director of the municipal drug administration.
However, after the approval, the time is expected to shorten to around 15 days through the China-Europe freight train service, Luo added.
The approval will bring more imports of novel drugs through Chongqing and strengthen the competitiveness of the city's pharmaceutical industry, said Yuan Quan, president of Chongqing Pharmaceutical (Group) Co., Ltd.
It will also prompt foreign pharmaceutical magnates to set up projects involving pharmaceutical research and development and clinical trial of drugs in Chongqing to fast-track the development of pharmaceutical industry clusters, Luo said.
- Chinese leaders attend deliberations at annual legislative session
- China names flag bearers for Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympics
- NPC deputies from military, armed police review government work report
- Xi urges major provincial economies to gain experience in solving new problems
- Professional managers key to rural vitalization, expert says
- Chinese clinical trial shows breakthrough in liver cancer survival
































