If you need a trade representative in Ukraine or in Russia it would be comfortable for you to use our list of services. We will easily help you to obtain your representative in Ukraine, we will make the translation of your web site to Russian and make a site promotion in the Russian internet, It will be the best business solution in Russia for you.


 


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SOLUTION FOR BUSINESS

Do you need to have a WEB site in Russian?

Do you want to promote your business to CIS countries?

Do you need to get more buyers from Russia, Ukraine, Byelorussia, Kazakhstan, etc? 

 

Are you interested in representative office in Ukraine?

 

trade agent ukraine russia


Useful information

The Commission intends to create a paperless environment for customs and trade in the European Community (EC). The proposed decision will give the go-ahead for the simultaneous development of interoperable customs systems.
The customs duties on imports and exports, as well as charges having equivalent effect between Member States, are forbidden.
TAIL SHAFT - The extreme section at the aft end of a ship's propeller shaft.
Under the terms of the Convention, the European Community is committed to facilitating the movement of goods over its external borders.
The Commission defines a new strategy to be adopted for customs activities in the European Union in order to adapt to the present and future changes and to propose concrete actions to be taken.
DANGEROUS CARGO - see HAZARDOUS CARGO DAVITS - Two radial cranes on a ship which hold the lifeboats, which are used to lower and lift lifeboats.



  

Combined Nomenclature, Common Customs Tariff and Integrated Tariff of...

The Common Customs Tariff is the external tariff applied to products imported into the European Union (EU). The Integrated Tariff of the European Communities is referred to as Taric. Taric incorporates all EU and trade measures applied to goods imported into and exported out of the EU. It is managed by the Commission, which publishes a daily updated version on the official Taric website.

ACT

Council Regulation (EEC) No 2658/87 of 23 July 1987 on the tariff and statistical nomenclature and on the Common Customs Tariff [See amending act(s)].

SUMMARY

The purpose of this regulation is to establish a Combined Nomenclature that meets Customs Union tariff and statistical requirements and to create an Integrated Tariff of the European Communities, referred to as Taric. The Combined Nomenclature provides the best means of collecting, exchanging and publishing data on EU external trade statistics. It is also used for the collection and publication of external trade statistics in intra-EU trade.

Integrated Tariff of the European Communities (Taric)

Taric is the Integrated Tariff of the European Communities. It comprises all customs duty rates and certain EU rules applicable to the EU’s external trade. The Taric has this regulation as its legal basis.

Taric supports goods clearance by the EU countries. It also provides means of collecting, exchanging and publishing data on EU external trade statistics. This data is not, however, available to the general public.

Combined Nomenclature and Taric

The regulation establishes a goods nomenclature referred to as the Combined Nomenclature (CN) to satisfy Common Customs Tariff and EU external trade requirements. It is based on the harmonised system nomenclature and supplements it with its own subdivisions referred to as "CN subheadings".

The Combined Nomenclature is the result of the merger between the Common Customs Tariff nomenclature and Nimexe (EU Statistical Nomenclature).

Annex I to the regulation fixes the conventional rates of duty, some autonomous Common Customs Tariff rates when they are less than the conventional ones, and the statistical supplementary units.

The Commission establishes the Integrated Tariff of the European Communities (Taric) based on the Combined Nomenclature. It comprises additional EU subdivisions, referred to as "Taric subheadings" used to describe goods and their code number, customs duty rates depending on the origin of the goods, and many trade policy measures.

Each CN subheading has an eight digit code number. The first six digits refer to the harmonised system headings and subheadings. The seventh and eighth digits represent the CN subheadings. The ninth and tenth digits represent Taric subheadings.

The Commission's role

Every year the Commission adopts a regulation reproducing a complete version of the Combined Nomenclature and Common Customs Tariff duty rates, taking Council and Commission amendments into account. The regulation is published in the Official Journal no later than 31 October. It applies from 1 January of the following year.

The Commission is responsible for the publishing and computerised management of the Taric. It attributes Taric code numbers, updates the Taric, and informs the EU countries electronically on a daily basis of any amendments.

Committee procedures

The Commission is assisted in carrying out this work by the Customs Code Committee, constituted by Article 247 of Regulation (EEC) No 2913/92 and article 10 of Regulation 2658/87, comprising representatives of the EU countries and chaired by a Commission representative. It is responsible for examining all questions on the Combined Nomenclature, Taric nomenclature and any other nomenclature based on the Combined Nomenclature.