
China air travellers caught off guard after regulator grounds mobile power banks
Advertisement
The
Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) began enforcing the strict ban on lithium-based power banks over safety risks on Saturday, two days after issuing the notice. The ban applies to devices without proper safety and quality certifications or those that have been associated with product recalls.
The products are not allowed in either carry-on or checked luggage for domestic flights. International flights are not affected for the time being.
A CAAC spokesperson told People's Daily on Wednesday that the decisions followed reports of
several incidents globally this year involving lithium battery products overheating on planes. Lithium batteries without China Compulsory Certification (3C) safety certifications would be barred from domestic flights, the spokesperson said. The certification applies to products that could impact health, safety and environmental protection.
Travellers have reported seeing restricted portable power banks piling up at airport security checks in China. Photo: Handout
According to the notice, several leading portable battery manufacturers recently recalled batches of products due to safety risks such as overheating and fire hazards. China's market regulators have also revoked or suspended 3C certification for several battery manufacturers.
Advertisement
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
26 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
China, No 2 in global computing power, accelerates build-out as AI race heats up
China has vowed an even stronger push to entrench digital infrastructure's role as an economic growth engine, after a rapid 5G roll-out in recent years that has helped lift its computing power to the world's No 2 ranking, trailing only the US. In the five years to June this year, the number of 5G base stations in China had grown fivefold to 4.55 million and the number of gigabit broadband users had risen 34-fold to 226 million, substantially lifting the country's computing power, Liu Liehong, the director of the National Data Bureau, told a news conference in Beijing on Thursday that focused on China's achievements in digital infrastructure development. But the country's data infrastructure development is still in its early stages and it will continue to deploy large-scale facilities and foster a market-driven ecosystem to support the digital economy and scientific and technological innovation, bureau deputy director Xia Bing said at the same news conference. 'We'll continuously build convenient, efficient, autonomous, secure and world-leading national data infrastructure,' he said. China's data industry has become a new growth driver for the digital economy, with more than 400,000 companies generating 5.86 trillion yuan (US$816.4 billion) in output last year – a jump of 117 per cent from the end of the 13th Five-Year Plan in 2020 – according to the National Data Development Research Institute, and it is expected to maintain a high level of growth in the next few years. In eastern China's Yangtze River Delta, which includes some of the country's most developed cities such as Shanghai, Suzhou and Hangzhou, a multi-tier, full-chain data industry ecosystem has taken shape, Liu said.


South China Morning Post
26 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Xiaomi regains top spot in Southeast Asia's smartphone market for first time in 4 years
Chinese tech giant Xiaomi became the largest smartphone vendor in Southeast Asia for the first time in four years on the back of strong second quarter sales of its budget and premium handsets, bucking a downturn precipitated by US-China trade tensions, according to Canalys. Xiaomi's smartphone shipments in the region jumped 8 per cent year on year to 4.7 million units in the second quarter, propelling it to the top spot for the first time since the same period in 2021, the research firm said in a report on Wednesday. The Chinese handset maker captured 19 per cent of the smartphone market in Southeast Asia, overtaking Chinese rival Transsion and South Korean electronics giant Samsung Electronics, which respectively accounted for 18 per cent and 17 per cent of the market in the April to June quarter. Xiaomi's growth was driven by its efforts to expand its sales channel, which allowed it to scale its sub-brands, Calalys said. The shipments of the budget brand Poco more than doubled, while sales of its premium 15 series grew 54 per cent year on year, which was 'a milestone for a brand long perceived as a budget flagship', research manager Le Xuan Chiew said. Lei Jun, co-founder and CEO of Xiaomi, speaks during the launch of Xiaomi's Xring O1 chipset in Beijing on May 22, AFP The company also took advantage of the rapid expansion of TikTok Shop, the short video app's e-commerce platform, according to Canalys, which is part of the research firm Omdia.


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
Alibaba's new AI agent to ‘revolutionise' how merchants source goods online
Alibaba Group Holding's international commerce arm on Thursday released an artificial intelligence agent to help merchants source products and supplies, a development that could change the way online business is conducted. The Accio Agent unveiled by Alibaba International Digital Commerce Group (AIDC) was designed to 'revolutionise international commerce' by automating 70 per cent of the traditional time-consuming work, including product ideation, prototyping, compliance checks and supplier sourcing, the company said in a statement. The AI agent marks a step forward in the process of 'agentic purchase', which is the use of AI agents to handle everything from product discovery to fulfilment. It could fundamentally change existing models of online search, advertising and e-commerce as tech giants such as roll out their own agents. Alibaba said the agent could reduce weeks of market research and product sourcing work to just a few minutes. This would cut costs and speed up tasks for merchants, some of whom are small and medium-sized businesses run by solo entrepreneurs, enabling them to streamline their operations. Accio Agent was trained on a huge quantity of data. Photo: Handout '[Accio Agent] is designed to help you do business,' Zhang Kuo, vice-president at AIDC, said, adding that it could handle multiple tasks simultaneously and operate like a team of professionals such as sourcing specialists, developers and engineers, and market researchers.