Eurasian Customs Union


The Eurasian Customs Union is a customs union which consists of all the Member states of the Eurasian Economic Union.
The customs union is a principal task of the Eurasian Economic Community, established in 2000, and now succeeded by the Eurasian Economic Union. No customs are levied on goods travelling within the customs union and – unlike a free-trade area – members of the customs union impose a common external tariff on all goods entering the union. One of the consequences of the customs union is that the Eurasian Union negotiates as a single entity in international trade deals such as the World Trade Organisation, instead of individual member states negotiating for themselves.
It came into existence on 1 January 2010. Its founding states were Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia. On 2 January 2015 it was enlarged to include Armenia. Kyrgyzstan acceded to the EEU on 6 August 2015. The original treaty establishing the Customs Union was terminated by the agreement establishing the Eurasian Economic Union, signed in 2014, which incorporated the Customs Union into the EEU's legal framework.
The member states continued with economic integration and removed all customs borders between each other after July 2011. On 19 November 2011, the member states put together a joint commission on fostering closer economic ties, planning to create a Eurasian Economic Union by 2015. On 1 January 2012, the three states formed a single economic space to promote further economic integration. The Eurasian Economic Commission is the regulatory agency for the Customs Union and the Eurasian Economic Community.
The creation of the Eurasian Customs Union was guaranteed by 3 different treaties signed in 1995, 1999 and 2007. The first treaty in 1995 guaranteeing its creation, the second in 1999 guaranteeing its formation, and the third in 2007 announced the establishment of a common customs territory and the formation of the customs union.

Overview

Export
Imports
87.95% of customs import duties come from Russia's budget, 4.7% from Belarus and the remainder from Kazakhstan.

Market access to Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) – CU EAC approval

Access of products to the single territory of the is granted after products have proved to be compliant with the requirements of Customs Union technical regulations which are applicable to the product. As of September 2016, 36 CU TRs have been developed covering different types of products. Some TRs are still being developed.
There are two types of conformity assessment procedures – certification of conformity and declaration of conformity. List of products which are subject to certification and declaration is provided in the relevant CU TRs. The customer can always choose to order a CU Certificate instead of a CU Declaration.
For DoC, the applicant must be a local entity registered in the territory of an EAEU member country. The range of applicants for Certification is defined in the relevant CU TRs.
All conformity assessment works can only be done by local certification bodies/testing laboratories accredited in the EAEU member countries by their national accrediting authorities. However where the EAEU countries are members of international organizations, competent national certification bodies in EAEU accredited in the same international organizations have the legal right to recognize the results of .
For products which successfully passed the CU EAC conformity assessment procedure – a CU EAC certificate is issued . All certificates/declarations are officially registered maintained by each member country. The term of validity is defined in the certificate. For series manufacturing certificates, there's mandatory annual surveillance procedure.
Products complying with all applicable CU TRs are marked with the .
The EAEU member countries managed to agree on unification of requirements for most of categories of products/services. However:
a) There are areas where national requirements are valid in each member country. E.g. for RF appliances/modules. It is not currently planned to develop unified requirements in the EAEU for this type of products, although this may change in the future. As of today, it is not expected that unified requirements in EAEU for radio-telecom appliances/modules would appear earlier than in 2020.
b) Due to uneasy process of development of CU TR system in EAEU, the national member countries are starting to implement national requirements in the areas strategically important for these countries in the absence of proper quality unified EAEU TRs.
Before TRs came into force, the following approvals were the basis for access to the Eurasian Economic Union member countries:
The Customs Union has meant that a transit visa is needed when travelling to or from Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan or Kyrgyzstan, and changing plane in Russia.