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Laying Down the Community Customs Code (Modernised Customs Code) Regulation
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Article 1: Subject matter and scope
Without prejudice to international law and conventions and Community legislation in other fields, the Code shall apply uniformly throughout the customs territory of the Community.
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down the provisions referred to in the first subparagraph and simplified formalities for their implementation, shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4). Those measures shall also take account of particular circumstances pertaining to the trade in goods involving only one Member State.
Article 2: Mission of customs authorities
Article 3: Customs territory
Article 4: Definitions
Article 5: Exchange and storage of data
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down exceptions to the first subparagraph, shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
Those measures shall define the cases in which and the conditions under which paper or other transactions may be used in place of electronic exchanges of data, taking the following, in particular, into account:
Article 6: Data protection
Such information may, however, be disclosed without permission where the customs authorities are obliged or authorised to do so pursuant to the provisions in force, particularly in respect of data protection, or in connection with legal proceedings.
Article 7: Exchange of additional information between customs authorities and economic operators
Article 8: Provision of information by the customs authorities
Article 9: Provision of information to the customs authorities
Where the declaration or notification is lodged, the application is submitted or information is provided by a customs representative of the person concerned, the customs representative shall also be bound by the obligations set out in the first subparagraph.
Article 10: Electronic systems
Article 11: Customs representative
Such representation may be either direct, in which case the customs representative shall act in the name of and on behalf of another person, or indirect, in which case the customs representative shall act in his own name but on behalf of another person.
A customs representative shall be established within the customs territory of the Community.
Article 12: Empowerment
A person who fails to state that he is acting as a customs representative or who states that he is acting as a customs representative without being empowered to do so shall be deemed to be acting in his own name and on his own behalf.
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down derogations from the first subparagraph, shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
Article 13: Application and authorisation
The customs authorities shall, if necessary following consultation with other competent authorities, grant that status, which shall be subject to monitoring.
The first type of authorisation shall enable economic operators to benefit from certain simplifications in accordance with the customs legislation. Under the second type of authorisation the holder thereof shall be entitled to facilitations relating to security and safety.
Both types of authorisations may be held at the same time.
Article 14: Granting of status
Article 15: Implementing measures
Article 16: General provisions
A decision may also be requested by, and taken with regard to, several persons, in accordance with the conditions laid down in the customs legislation.
However, where the customs authorities are unable to comply with those time limits, they shall inform the applicant of that fact before the expiry of those time limits, stating the reasons and indicating the further period of time which they consider necessary in order to give a decision on the request.
Following the expiry of that period, the person concerned shall be notified, in the appropriate form, of the decision, which shall set out the grounds on which it is based. The decision shall refer to the right of appeal provided for in Article 23.
Article 17: Community-wide validity of decisions
Article 18: Annulment of favourable decisions
Article 19: Revocation and amendment of favourable decisions
However, in exceptional cases where the legitimate interests of the person to whom the decision was addressed so require, the customs authorities may defer the date on which revocation or amendment takes effect.
Article 20: Decisions relating to binding information
Such a request shall be refused in any of the following circumstances:
Those decisions shall be binding on the customs authorities, as against the holder of the decision, only in respect of goods for which customs formalities are completed after the date on which the decision takes effect.
The decisions shall be binding on the holder of the decision, as against the customs authorities, only with effect from the date on which he receives, or is deemed to have received, notification of the decision.
They may not be amended.
Article 21: Application of penalties
Article 22: Decisions taken by a judicial authority
Article 23: Right of appeal
Any person who has applied to the customs authorities for a decision and has not obtained a decision on that request within the time limits referred to in Article 16(2) shall also be entitled to exercise the right of appeal.
Article 24: Suspension of implementation
The Commission may, in accordance with the regulatory procedure referred to in Article 184(2), adopt measures for the implementation of the first subparagraph of this paragraph.
Article 25: Customs controls
Customs controls may in particular consist of examining goods, taking samples, verifying declaration data and the existence and authenticity of documents, examining the accounts of economic operators and other records, inspecting means of transport, inspecting luggage and other goods carried by or on persons and carrying out official enquiries and other similar acts.
Member States, in cooperation with the Commission, shall develop, maintain and employ a common risk management framework, based upon the exchange of risk information and analysis between customs administrations and establishing, inter alia, common risk evaluation criteria, control measures and priority control areas.
Controls based upon such information and criteria shall be carried out without prejudice to other controls carried out in accordance with paragraphs 1 and 2 or with other provisions in force.
Article 26: Cooperation between authorities
Article 27: Post-release control
Such inspections may be carried out at the premises of the holder of the goods or his representative, of any other person directly or indirectly involved in those operations in a business capacity or of any other person in possession of those documents and data for business purposes.
Article 28: Intra-Community flights and sea crossings
Article 29: Keeping of documents and other information
In the case of goods released for free circulation in circumstances other than those referred to in the third subparagraph, or goods declared for export, that period shall run from the end of the year in which the customs declarations for release for free circulation or export are accepted.
In the case of goods released for free circulation duty-free or at a reduced rate of import duty on account of their end-use, that period shall run from the end of the year in which they cease to be subject to customs supervision.
In the case of goods placed under another customs procedure, that period shall run from the end of the year in which the customs procedure concerned has ended.
Where an appeal has been lodged or where court proceedings have begun, the documents and information must be kept for the period provided for in paragraph 1 of this Article or until the appeals procedure or court proceedings are terminated, whichever is the later.
Article 30: Charges and costs
However, the customs authorities may impose charges or recover costs where specific services are rendered, in particular the following:
Article 31: Currency conversion
Article 32: Time limits
Article 33: Common Customs Tariff
Other measures prescribed by Community provisions governing specific fields relating to trade in goods shall, where appropriate, be applied in accordance with the tariff classification of those goods.
In the case of tariff ceilings such application shall cease by virtue of a legal act of the Community.
Article 34: Tariff classification of goods
Article 35: Scope
Article 36: Acquisition of origin
Article 37: Proof of origin
Article 38: Implementing measures
Article 39: Preferential origin of goods
Article 40: Scope
Article 41: Method of customs valuation based on the transaction value
Article 42: Secondary methods of customs valuation
The order of application of points (c) and (d) shall be reversed if the declarant so requests.
Article 43: Implementing measures
Article 44: Release for free circulation and temporary admission
Where a customs declaration in respect of one of the procedures referred to in paragraph 1 is drawn up on the basis of information which leads to all or part of the import duties not being collected, the person who provided the information required to draw up the declaration and who knew, or who ought reasonably to have known, that such information was false shall also be a debtor.
Article 45: Special provisions relating to non-originating goods
Article 46: Customs debt incurred through non-compliance
Where a customs declaration in respect of one of the procedures referred to in paragraph 1 is drawn up, or any information required under the customs legislation relating to the conditions governing the placing of the goods under a customs procedure is given to the customs authorities, which leads to all or part of the import duties not being collected, the person who provided the information required to draw up the declaration and who knew, or who ought reasonably to have known, that such information was false shall also be a debtor.
Article 47: Deduction of an amount of import duty already paid
The first subparagraph shall apply mutatis mutandis where a customs debt is incurred in respect of scrap and waste resulting from the destruction of such goods. mutatis mutandis
Article 48: Export and outward processing
Where a customs declaration is drawn up on the basis of information which leads to all or part of the export duties not being collected, the person who provided the information required for the declaration and who knew, or who should reasonably have known, that such information was false shall also be a debtor.
Article 49: Customs debt incurred through non-compliance
Article 50: Prohibitions and restrictions
Article 51: Several debtors
Article 52: General rules for calculation of the amount of import or export duty
However, where the information available to the customs authorities enables them to establish that the customs debt had been incurred prior to the time at which they reached that conclusion, the customs debt shall be deemed to have been incurred at the earliest time that such a situation can be established.
Article 53: Special rules for calculation of the amount of import duty
However, the customs value, quantity, nature and origin of non-Community goods used in the operations shall be taken into account for the calculation of the amount of import duty.
Article 54: Implementing measures
Article 55: Place where the customs debt is incurred
In all other cases, the place where a customs debt is incurred shall be the place where the events from which it arises occur.
If it is not possible to determine that place, the customs debt shall be incurred at the place where the customs authorities conclude that the goods are in a situation in which a customs debt is incurred.
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down the period of time referred to in the first subparagraph of this paragraph shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
Article 56: General provisions
The guarantee provided for a specific declaration shall apply to the amount of import or export duty corresponding to the customs debt and other charges in respect of all goods covered by or released against that declaration, whether or not that declaration is correct.
If the guarantee has not been released, it may also be used, within the limits of the secured amount, for the recovery of amounts of import or export duty and other charges payable following post-release control of those goods.
Article 57: Compulsory guarantee
Where it is not possible to establish the precise amount, the guarantee shall be fixed at the maximum amount, as estimated by the customs authorities, of import or export duty corresponding to the customs debt and of other charges which have been or may be incurred.
Article 58: Optional guarantee
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down when a guarantee is optional shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
Article 59: Provision of a guarantee
Article 60: Choice of guarantee
However, the customs authorities may refuse to accept the form of guarantee chosen where it is incompatible with the proper functioning of the customs procedure concerned.
The customs authorities may require that the form of guarantee chosen be maintained for a specific period.
Article 61: Guarantor
Article 62: Comprehensive guarantee
Article 63: Additional provisions relating to the use of guarantees
Article 64: Additional or replacement guarantee
Article 65: Release of the guarantee
Article 66: Determination of the amount of import or export duty
Article 67: Notification of the customs debt
The notification referred to in the first subparagraph shall not be made in the following situations:
Article 68: Limitation of the customs debt
Article 69: Entry in the accounts
The first subparagraph shall not apply in cases referred to in the second subparagraph of Article 67(1).
The customs authorities need not enter in the accounts amounts of import or export duty which, pursuant to Article 68, correspond to a customs debt which could no longer be notified to the debtor.
Article 70: Time of entry in the accounts
However, provided that payment has been guaranteed, the total amount of import or export duty relating to all the goods released to one and the same person during a period fixed by the customs authorities, which may not exceed 31 days, may be covered by a single entry in the accounts at the end of that period. Such entry in the accounts shall take place within 14 days of the expiry of the period concerned.
However, where the customs debt relates to a provisional commercial policy measure taking the form of a duty, the amount of import or export duty payable shall be entered in the accounts within two months of the date of publication in the Official Journal of the European Union of the Regulation establishing the definitive commercial policy measure. Official Journal of the European Union
Article 71: Implementing measures
Article 72: General time limits for payment and suspension of the time limit for payment
Without prejudice to Article 24(2), that period shall not exceed 10 days following notification to the debtor of the customs debt. In the case of aggregation of entries in the accounts under the conditions laid down in the second subparagraph of Article 70(1), it shall be so fixed as not to enable the debtor to obtain a longer period for payment than if he had been granted deferred payment in accordance with Article 74.
Extension of that period may be granted by the customs authorities at the request of the debtor where the amount of import or export duty payable has been determined in the course of post-release control as referred to in Article 27. Without prejudice to Article 77(1), such extensions shall not exceed the time necessary for the debtor to take the appropriate steps to discharge his obligation.
Those measures shall lay down, in particular, the period of the suspension, taking into account the time which is reasonable for the conclusion of any formalities or for the recovery of the amount of import or export duty corresponding to the customs debt.
Article 73: Payment
Article 74: Deferment of payment
Article 75: Time limits for deferred payment
If those periods are calendar months, Member States may provide that the amount of import or export duty in respect of which payment has been deferred is to be paid by the 16th day of the month following the calendar month in question.
Article 76: Implementing measures
Article 77: Other payment facilities
Where facilities are granted pursuant to the first subparagraph, credit interest shall be charged on the amount of import or export duty. The rate of credit interest shall be the interest rate applied by the European Central Bank to its most recent main refinancing operation carried out before the first calendar day of the half-year in question (the reference rate), plus one percentage point.
For a Member State which is not participating in the third stage of economic and monetary union, the reference rate referred to above shall be the equivalent rate set by its national central bank. In that case, the reference rate in force on the first calendar day of the half-year in question shall apply for the following six months.
Article 78: Enforcement of payment and arrears
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down measures in respect of securing payment from guarantors within the framework of a special procedure, shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
The rate of interest on arrears shall be the interest rate applied by the European Central Bank to its most recent main refinancing operation carried out before the first calendar day of the half-year in question (the reference rate), plus two percentage points.
For a Member State which is not participating in the third stage of economic and monetary union, the reference rate referred to above shall be the equivalent rate set by its national central bank. In that case, the reference rate in force on the first calendar day of the half-year in question shall apply for the following six months.
The rate of interest on arrears shall be set in accordance with paragraph 2.
Article 79: Repayment and remission
However, interest shall be paid where a decision granting repayment is not implemented within three months of the date on which that decision was taken, unless the failure to meet the deadline was outside the control of the customs authorities.
In such cases, the interest shall be paid from the date of expiry of the three-month period until the date of repayment. The rate of interest shall be established in accordance with Article 77.
In such cases, any interest paid under the second subparagraph of paragraph 4 must be reimbursed.
Article 80: Repayment and remission of overcharged amounts of import or export duty
Article 81: Defective goods or goods not complying with the terms of the contract
Defective goods shall be deemed to include goods damaged before their release.
Article 82: Repayment or remission on account of error by the competent authorities
The issue of an incorrect certificate shall not, however, constitute an error where the certificate is based on an incorrect account of the facts provided by the exporter, except where it is evident that the issuing authorities were aware or should have been aware that the goods did not satisfy the conditions laid down for entitlement to the preferential treatment.
The debtor shall be considered to be in good faith if he can demonstrate that, during the period of the trading operations concerned, he has taken due care to ensure that all the conditions for the preferential treatment have been fulfilled.
The debtor may not rely on a plea of good faith if the Commission has published a notice in the Official Journal of the European Union stating that there are grounds for doubt concerning the proper application of the preferential arrangements by the beneficiary country or territory. Official Journal of the European Union
Article 83: Repayment and remission in equity
Article 84: Procedure for repayment and remission
Article 85: Implementing measures
Article 86: Extinguishment
Article 87: Obligation to lodge an entry summary declaration
Customs authorities may accept, instead of the lodging of the entry summary declaration, the lodging of a notification and access to the entry summary declaration data in the economic operator’s computer system.
In adopting those measures, account shall be taken of the following:
Article 88: Lodgement and responsible person
Customs authorities may, in exceptional circumstances, accept paper-based entry summary declarations, provided that they apply the same level of risk management as that applied to entry summary declarations made using an electronic data-processing technique and that the requirements for the exchange of such data with other customs offices can be met.
The Commission shall, in accordance with the regulatory procedure referred to in Article 184(2), adopt measures stipulating the information which must appear on the notification of arrival.
Paragraph 1 shall apply, mutatis mutandis , to the notification of arrival mentioned in the first subparagraph of this paragraph. mutatis mutandis
Article 89: Amendment of entry summary declaration
However, no such amendment shall be possible after any of the following events:
Article 90: Customs declaration replacing entry summary declaration
Article 91: Customs supervision
They shall remain under such supervision for as long as is necessary to determine their customs status and shall not be removed therefrom without the permission of the customs authorities.
Without prejudice to Article 166, Community goods shall not be subject to customs supervision once their customs status is established.
Non-Community goods shall remain under customs supervision until their customs status is changed, or they are re-exported or destroyed.
Article 92: Conveyance to the appropriate place
Goods brought into a free zone shall be brought into that free zone directly, either by sea or air or, if by land, without passing through another part of the customs territory of the Community, where the free zone adjoins the land frontier between a Member State and a third country.
The goods shall be presented to the customs authorities in accordance with Article 95.
Article 93: Intra-Community air and sea services
Article 94: Conveyance under special circumstances
Article 95: Presentation of goods to customs
Article 96: Unloading and examination of goods
However, such permission shall not be required in the event of an imminent danger necessitating the immediate unloading of all or part of the goods. In that case, the customs authorities shall immediately be informed accordingly.
Article 97: Obligation to place non-Community goods under a customs procedure
Article 98: Goods deemed to be placed in temporary storage
Article 99: Waiver for goods arriving under transit
Article 100: Provisions applicable to non-Community goods after a transit procedure has ended
Article 101: Presumption of customs status of Community goods
Article 102: Loss of customs status of Community goods
Article 103: Community goods leaving the customs territory temporarily
Article 104: Customs declaration of goods and customs supervision of Community goods
Article 105: Competent customs offices
Member States shall ensure that official opening hours are fixed for those offices that are reasonable and appropriate, taking into account the nature of the traffic and of the goods and the customs procedures under which they are to be placed, so that the flow of international traffic is neither hindered nor distorted.
Article 106: Centralised clearance
Those measures shall take account of the following:
Article 107: Types of customs declaration
Article 108: Content of a declaration and supporting documents
The Commission shall, in accordance with the regulatory procedure referred to in Article 184(2), adopt measures laying down the specifications to which customs declarations must correspond.
However, upon request by the declarant, the customs authorities may allow those documents to be made available after release of the goods.
Article 109: Simplified declaration
Article 110: Supplementary declaration
The supplementary declaration may be of a general, periodic or recapitulative nature.
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down exceptions to the first subparagraph of this paragraph, shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
Where the simplified declaration takes the form of an entry in the declarant’s records and access to those data by the customs authorities, the declaration shall take effect from the date on which the goods are entered in the records.
Article 111: Person lodging a declaration
However, where acceptance of a customs declaration imposes particular obligations on a specific person, the declaration must be made by that person or by his representative.
Article 112: Acceptance of a declaration
Where the declaration takes the form of an entry in the declarant’s records and access to those data by the customs authorities, the declaration shall be deemed to have been accepted at the moment at which the goods are entered in the records. The customs authorities may, without prejudice to the legal obligations of the declarant or to the application of security and safety controls, waive the obligation for the goods to be presented or to be made available for customs control.
Article 113: Amendment of a declaration
Article 114: Invalidation of a declaration
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down exceptions to the first subparagraph of this paragraph, shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
Article 115: Facilitation of the drawing-up of customs declarations for goods falling under different tariff subheadings
The Commission may, in accordance with the regulatory procedure referred to in Article 184(2), adopt measures for the implementation of this Article.
Article 116: Simplification of customs formalities and controls
Those measures shall take account of the following:
Article 117: Verification of a customs declaration
Article 118: Examination and sampling of goods
Article 119: Partial examination and sampling of goods
However, the declarant may request a further examination or sampling of the goods if he considers that the results of the partial examination, or of the analysis or examination of the samples taken, are not valid as regards the remainder of the goods declared. The request shall be granted, provided that the goods have not been released or that, if they have been released, the declarant proves that they have not been altered in any way.
Article 120: Results of the verification
Article 121: Identification measures
Those identification measures shall have the same legal effect throughout the customs territory of the Community.
Article 122: Implementing measures
Article 123: Release of the goods
The first subparagraph shall also apply where verification as referred to in Article 117 cannot be completed within a reasonable period of time and the goods are no longer required to be present for verification purposes.
For the purposes of the first subparagraph, where a customs declaration covers two or more items, the particulars relating to each item shall be deemed to constitute a separate customs declaration.
Article 124: Release dependent upon payment of the amount of import or export duty corresponding to the customs debt or provision of a guarantee
However, without prejudice to the third subparagraph, the first subparagraph shall not apply to temporary admission with partial relief from import duties.
Where, pursuant to the provisions governing the customs procedure for which the goods are declared, the customs authorities require the provision of a guarantee, those goods shall not be released for the customs procedure in question until such guarantee is provided.
Article 125: Destruction of goods
Article 126: Measures to be taken by the customs authorities
Article 127: Abandonment
Article 128: Implementing measures
Article 129: Scope and effect
Article 130: Scope and effect
Where the end-use for which the goods in question are to be released for free circulation is no longer the same, the amount of import duty shall be reduced by any amount collected on the goods when they were first released for free circulation. Should the latter amount exceed that levied on the release for free circulation of the returned goods, no repayment shall be granted.
Article 131: Cases in which no relief from import duties is granted
Article 132: Goods previously placed under the inward-processing procedure
Article 133: Products of sea-fishing and other products taken from the sea
Article 134: Implementing measures
Article 135: Scope
Article 136: Authorisation
Those measures shall take account of the following:
Where evidence exists that the essential interests of Community producers are likely to be adversely affected, an examination of the economic conditions shall take place in accordance with Article 185.
The Commission shall, in accordance with the regulatory procedure referred to in Article 184(2), adopt measures governing the following:
Article 137: Records
The records must enable the customs authorities to supervise the procedure concerned, in particular with regard to identification of the goods placed under that procedure, their customs status and their movements.
Article 138: Discharge of a procedure
Article 139: Transfer of rights and obligations
Article 140: Movement of goods
Article 141: Usual forms of handling
Article 142: Equivalent goods
Under the outward-processing procedure, equivalent goods shall consist in non-Community goods which are processed instead of Community goods placed under the outward-processing procedure.
Equivalent goods shall have the same eight-digit Combined Nomenclature code, the same commercial quality and the same technical characteristics as the goods which they are replacing.
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, providing for derogations from the third subparagraph of this paragraph, shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
Article 143: Implementing measures
Article 144: External transit
Article 145: Internal transit
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down the conditions under which and the means by which that customs status may be established, shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
Article 146: Obligations of the holder of the Community transit procedure and of the carrier and recipient of goods moving under the Community transit procedure
Article 147: Goods passing through the territory of a country outside the customs territory of the Community under the external Community transit procedure
Article 148: Scope
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down cases in which, and the conditions under which, Community goods may be placed under the customs warehousing or free-zone procedures, shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
Article 149: Responsibilities of the holder of the authorisation or procedure
Article 150: Duration of a storage procedure
Article 151: Placing of goods in temporary storage
Article 152: Goods in temporary storage
Article 153: Storage in customs warehouses
Article 154: Community goods, end-use and processing activities
Article 155: Designation of free zones
For each free zone the Member State shall determine the area covered and define the entry and exit points.
The perimeter and the entry and exit points of the area of free zones shall be subject to customs supervision.
Article 156: Buildings and activities in free zones
Article 157: Presentation of goods and their placement under the procedure
Article 158: Community goods in free zones
Article 159: Non-Community goods in free zones
In such cases the goods shall not be regarded as being under the free-zone procedure.
In the case of such use or consumption, no customs declaration for the release for free circulation or temporary admission procedure shall be required.
Such declaration shall, however, be required if such goods are subject to a tariff quota or ceiling.
Article 160: Bringing goods out of a free zone
Articles 91 to 98 shall apply mutatis mutandis to goods brought into other parts of the customs territory of the Community. mutatis mutandis
Article 161: Customs status
However, for the purposes of applying export duties and export licences or export control measures laid down under the common agricultural or commercial policies, such goods shall be regarded as Community goods, unless it is established that they do not have the customs status of Community goods.
Article 162: Scope
Article 163: Period during which goods may remain under the temporary admission procedure
Article 164: Situations covered by temporary admission
In adopting those measures, account shall be taken of international agreements and of the nature and the use of the goods.
Article 165: Amount of import duty in case of temporary admission with partial relief from import duties
That amount shall be payable for every month or fraction of a month during which the goods have been placed under temporary admission with partial relief from import duty.
Article 166: End-use procedure
Article 167: Rate of yield
The rate of yield or average rate of yield shall be determined on the basis of the actual circumstances in which processing operations are, or are to be, carried out. That rate may be adjusted, where appropriate, in accordance with Articles 18 and 19.
Article 168: Scope
In the case referred to in Article 142, the procedure may be used where compliance with the conditions laid down in respect of equivalent goods can be verified.
Article 169: Period for discharge
That period shall run from the date on which the non-Community goods are placed under the procedure and shall take account of the time required to carry out the processing operations and to discharge the procedure.
The authorisation may specify that a period which commences in the course of a calendar month, quarter or semester shall end on the last day of a subsequent calendar month, quarter or semester respectively.
Article 170: Temporary re-export for further processing
Article 171: Scope
The measures designed to amend non-essential elements of this Regulation, by supplementing it, laying down the rules for such calculation and the rules where specific duties are involved, shall be adopted in accordance with the regulatory procedure with scrutiny referred to in Article 184(4).
Article 172: Goods repaired free of charge
Article 173: Standard exchange system
The customs authorities shall, however, waive the requirement set out in the first subparagraph if the replacement product has been supplied free of charge, either because of a contractual or statutory obligation arising from a guarantee or because of a material or manufacturing defect.
Article 174: Prior importation of replacement products
In the event of such prior importation of a replacement product, a guarantee shall be provided covering the amount of the import duty that would be payable should the defective goods not be exported in accordance with paragraph 2.
Article 175: Obligation to lodge a pre-departure declaration
However, the first subparagraph shall not apply to goods carried on means of transport which only pass through the territorial waters or the airspace of the customs territory of the Community without a stop therein.
Article 176: Measures establishing certain details
Article 177: Customs supervision and exit formalities
Article 178: Community goods
Article 179: Non-Community goods
Article 180: Exit summary declaration
Customs authorities may accept, instead of the lodging of the exit summary declaration, the lodging of a notification and access to the summary declaration data in the economic operator’s computer system.
Article 181: Amendment of the exit summary declaration
However, no amendment shall be possible after any of the following events:
Article 182: Temporary export
Article 183: Further implementing measures
Article 184: Committee
The period laid down in Article 5(6) of Decision 1999/468/EC shall be set at three months.
The period laid down in Article 4(3) of Decision 1999/468/EC shall be set at three months.
Article 185: Further matters
Article 186: Repeal
References to the repealed Regulations shall be construed as references to this Regulation and shall be read in accordance with the correlation tables set out in the Annex.
Article 187: Entry into force
Article 188: Application
Notwithstanding the entry into force of the implementing provisions, the provisions of this Regulation referred to in this paragraph shall be applicable on 24 June 2013 at the latest.
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CORRELATION TABLES
Footnote p0: This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.
Done at Strasbourg, 23 April 2008.