Importers, local manufacturers must be registered before selling certain commodities – GNBS

THE Guyana National Bureau of Standards (GNBS) wants importers and local manufacturers to conform to its registration requirements for the selling of commodity items monitored by the agency.Importers and local manufacturers are required to register with the GNBS on a yearly basis in order to be in complete compliance with the agency’s standards.

The commodities monitored by GNBS are domestic electric appliances, weighing and measuring devices, textiles, garments, footwear, safety matches, tyres, gas stoves, fertilisers, cigarettes, PVC pipes, furniture, toys, soap powder, Christmas trees and decorative lighting outfits, safety helmets, cellular phones, water and electricity meters, and seat belts.
Registration of both imported and locally-manufactured products would facilitate inspection of the products’ labels in order to verify that the product is in conformity with national standards.

Head of the Conformity Department and Officer in Charge of the GNBS, Candelle Walcott-Bostwick, said: “For the categories of products monitored by the GNBS for the importers, once they’re going to bring in any of those items that are on our list of products, they are expected to register with the bureau annually. For the locally-manufactured products, they also have to register with the bureau.”

If an importer brings in any of these items without being registered by the agency, the items are placed on a ‘hold’ system, which allows the importer or the dealer to be registered.

Application forms for registration are available on the bureau’s website, and can be submitted to the office, located at the National Exhibition Centre at Sophia.

“They would complete the form, and after that is completed, they are normally issued a certificate (which) should be displayed at the location (stating) that they are a registered importer of a particular product,” Walcott-Bostwick explained.

The fee for registration for the importation of these items is generally $30,000, but the dealer (importers of cellular phones, tyres etc.) is required to pay a registration fee of $15,000.

The bureau intends to create public awareness to familiarise the business community with the necessary information, for easier flow of conducting business and to encourage compliance with the agency’s standards.

(Government Information Agency)

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