Customs and Excise (Specified RCEP Parties—Malaysia) Amendment Order 2022
Customs and Excise (Specified RCEP Parties—Malaysia) Amendment Order 2022
Customs and Excise (Specified RCEP Parties—Malaysia) Amendment Order 2022
2022/13

Customs and Excise (Specified RCEP Parties—Malaysia) Amendment Order 2022
Cindy Kiro, Governor-General
Order in Council
At Wellington this 8th day of February 2022
Present:
The Right Hon Jacinda Ardern presiding in Council
This order is made under section 435(8)(b) of the Customs and Excise Act 2018 on the advice and with the consent of the Executive Council.
Order
1 Title
This order is the Customs and Excise (Specified RCEP Parties—Malaysia) Amendment Order 2022.
2 Commencement
This order comes into force on 18 March 2022.
3 Principal order
This order amends the Customs and Excise (Specified RCEP Parties) Order 2021.
4 Schedule amended
In the Schedule, after the item relating to Lao PDR, insert:
Malaysia (18 March 2022)
Michael Webster,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Explanatory note
This note is not part of the order, but is intended to indicate its general effect.
This order, which comes into force on 18 March 2022, amends the Customs and Excise (Specified RCEP Parties) Order 2021 (the principal order). It declares Malaysia to be a specified party to the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (the RCEP) for the purposes of the Customs and Excise Act 2018. The RCEP is a free trade agreement done at Hanoi, Vietnam, on 15 November 2020.
This order inserts Malaysia into the list of specified RCEP parties in the Schedule of the principal order with the date of 18 March 2022 next to it. That means that, on and from that date,—
Malaysia will be a specified RCEP party (see clause 3(3) of the principal order); and
authorised certification bodies will be able to issue New Zealand certificates of origin in respect of goods for export to Malaysia.
Malaysia will also be a specified party for the purposes of the Tariff Act 1988, under the Tariff (Specified RCEP Parties) Order 2021 on and from 18 March 2022.
Regulatory impact statement
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade produced an extended national interest analysis (that took the place of a regulatory impact assessment) on 22 October 2020 to help inform the decisions taken by the Government relating to the RCEP.
A copy of the national interest analysis can be found at—
Issued under the authority of the Legislation Act 2019.
Date of notification in Gazette: 10 February 2022.
This order is administered by the New Zealand Customs Service.