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Two landmark reforms now govern how contracts of carriage in China are drafted, disputed and enforced. The revised Arbitration Law, effective 1 March 2026, reshapes seat analysis, clause validity requirements and the procedural framework for commercial arbitration across every sector. Barely two months later, on 1 May 2026, the revised Maritime Code and accompanying supply-chain regulations introduced unwaivable minimum standards for sea carriage touching Chinese ports, fundamentally altering the risk calculus for carriers, shippers and commodity traders. Together, these changes mean that any party with cargo loading at or discharging in a Chinese port, or with supply-chain contracts performed partly in China, must reassess choice-of-law clauses, arbitration seats, interim-relief options and enforcement strategies immediately.
Before examining the detail, practitioners need a clear timeline. The table below maps each reform to its effective date and the most significant practical consequence for China contract disputes.
| Date | Instrument | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 1 March 2026 | Arbitration Law (revised) | New validity rules for arbitration clauses; strengthened institutional-preference signals; clearer framework for court-ordered interim measures in support of arbitration; revised provisions on seat and arbitrator appointment. |
| 1 May 2026 | Maritime Code (revised) and supply-chain regulations | Mandatory, unwaivable minimum standards for contracts of carriage where loading or discharge occurs at a Chinese port; expanded scope to multimodal transport with a sea leg; new carrier liability floors that override contrary contractual terms. |
The combined effect is that parties can no longer rely on a foreign governing-law clause alone to insulate their contractual arrangements from Chinese mandatory rules. Industry observers expect this dual reform to accelerate the shift towards China-seated arbitration for high-value maritime and supply-chain disputes.
The revised Maritime Code applies its mandatory provisions to any contract of carriage by sea where the port of loading or the port of discharge is located in China. This is not limited to Chinese-flagged vessels or Chinese counterparties. A bill of lading issued in London for cargo loaded at Tianjin, or a charter-party for grain discharged at Qingdao, will both fall within scope.
The trigger is strictly geographic: if cargo physically crosses a Chinese port terminal, the code’s minimum standards attach. Industry analysis confirms that this represents a significant expansion from the pre-2026 position, where parties could more readily contract out of Chinese liability rules by choosing a foreign governing law. Practical examples of shipments now caught include:
The most consequential change for china maritime contracts is the introduction of minimum liability standards that parties cannot contract out of. P&I insurer commentary confirms that the revised code establishes mandatory floors for carrier liability on loss, damage and delay, and that any contractual clause purporting to reduce liability below these floors is void as a matter of Chinese law. This applies regardless of the governing law chosen in the bill of lading or charter-party.
The key mandatory provisions include:
The likely practical effect will be that bills of lading incorporating Hague-Visby or Hamburg Rules terms will need to be reviewed to confirm that their liability architecture does not fall below the new Chinese floors. Where it does, the Chinese mandatory standard displaces the contractual term.
The revised code extends its reach beyond pure sea carriage. Where a multimodal transport contract includes a sea leg that touches a Chinese port, the maritime-code minimums apply to the sea segment. This has cascading effects for supply chain contracts in China: logistics providers, freight forwarders and 3PL operators who issue through bills of lading or multimodal transport documents must ensure that their contractual terms, and their insurance, comply with the new minimums for the Chinese sea leg.
For industrial supply contracts, particularly those linked to Belt and Road projects, oil and gas infrastructure, or large-scale commodity procurement, flow-down clauses that allocate carriage risk to sub-contractors must be revised. A flow-down clause that passes liability through to a carrier at a level below the Chinese minimum will create a gap: the head-contract holder remains exposed to a claim that the carrier can lawfully refuse to indemnify.
In light of the maritime code 2026 China reforms, four immediate drafting actions are necessary:
The revised Arbitration Law, effective 1 March 2026, addresses several long-standing concerns raised by foreign parties engaged in disputes connected to China. Academic and institutional analysis identifies the following headline changes:
The seat question is critical for contracts of carriage enforcement. Under the revised law, where the arbitration agreement designates a Chinese city as the place of arbitration and names a Chinese institution, China will be treated as the seat. The practical consequence is that Chinese procedural law governs the arbitration, Chinese courts exercise supervisory jurisdiction, and any challenge to the award is heard by a Chinese court.
Industry observers expect that the expanded interim-measures framework will make a China seat more attractive for parties who need rapid preservation of ship-related assets or cargo within Chinese territory. Conversely, parties who prefer a neutral seat should be aware that choosing a foreign seat does not eliminate the need for Chinese court assistance where enforcement targets are located in China.
To ensure enforceability, arbitration clauses in contracts touching Chinese ports should:
The interplay between mandatory maritime rules and choice of law in China requires a structured decision process. The following framework helps in-house counsel determine the optimal combination of governing law and arbitration seat.
| Question | If Yes | If No |
|---|---|---|
| Is loading or discharge at a Chinese port? | Maritime Code minimums apply, proceed to next question. | Standard choice-of-law analysis applies; Chinese minimums do not attach. |
| Does the contract need to comply with Chinese minimum standards? | Ensure contractual terms meet or exceed floors; add savings clause. | Review whether any multimodal or supply-chain extension triggers the code. |
| Will enforcement targets (vessels, cargo, receivables) be in China? | A China seat or China-specific interim-relief clause is strongly recommended. | A neutral seat (Singapore, London, Hong Kong) may be preferable. |
| Do parties need rapid interim relief (arrest, preservation) in China? | China seat or hybrid clause with express court-assistance carve-out. | Foreign seat with enforcement planning for any China-located assets. |
Contracts of carriage enforcement often depends on speed. The revised Maritime Code preserves and expands China’s ship-arrest mechanism, allowing a claimant to apply for the arrest of a vessel in a Chinese port before or during arbitral or court proceedings. The practical steps for claims handlers are:
To enforce a foreign arbitral award in China, the applicant relies on the New York Convention (to which China is a party, subject to the reciprocity and commercial reservations). The process requires filing with the intermediate people’s court at the place of the respondent’s domicile or where the respondent’s assets are located. Key requirements include:
Early indications suggest that the revised Arbitration Law’s clarified clause-validity rules will reduce, but not eliminate, disputes over whether an arbitration agreement is enforceable in China.
Enforcement of foreign court judgments in China remains more difficult than enforcement of arbitral awards. China does not have a comprehensive treaty network for reciprocal judgment enforcement. In practice, parties with enforcement targets in China should consider arbitration as the primary dispute-resolution mechanism, given the New York Convention framework. Where a foreign judgment is the only option, strategic alternatives include re-litigation of the claim in a Chinese court using the foreign judgment as evidence, or negotiated set-off arrangements.
Based on regional enforcement practice in ports such as Tianjin and Tangshan, the following timelines are typical:
The following model clauses address the most frequent gaps identified in contracts of carriage and supply chain contracts in China after the 2026 reforms. Each clause includes a usage note and risk warning.
The following anonymised examples illustrate how the interplay between contract drafting and Chinese enforcement rules has played out in recent maritime and industrial disputes.
Example 1, Oil pipeline equipment supply. A European equipment supplier contracted with a Chinese EPC contractor for supply and delivery of pipeline components to a northern Chinese port. The contract was governed by Swiss law, with ICC arbitration seated in Zurich. When a payment dispute arose, the supplier obtained an ICC award but discovered that the contractor’s only attachable assets were in Tianjin. Enforcement took over 14 months because the arbitration clause did not name a specific institution recognised under Chinese law guidelines, and the respondent argued the clause was defective. The lesson: even with a foreign seat, the clause must be drafted to withstand Chinese validity scrutiny at the enforcement stage.
Example 2, Marine seismic survey charter. A charter-party for a seismic survey vessel operating out of a Chinese port included a broadly drafted force-majeure exclusion that would now conflict with the revised Maritime Code’s restricted carrier defences. When weather-related delays occurred, the charterer invoked the clause to withhold hire. Under the post-1 May 2026 regime, this type of exclusion is likely to be unenforceable in Chinese proceedings. The lesson: review legacy charter-party terms against the new mandatory standards before the next fixture.
Example 3, Commodity trading enforcement. A Singapore-based commodity trader arrested a vessel at a Chinese port to secure a cargo-damage claim. The arrest was executed within 36 hours, but the trader had not posted adequate counter-security, and the court released the vessel after the shipowner challenged the security level. The trader had to re-apply, losing critical time. The lesson: pre-arrange P&I club letters of undertaking to the appropriate value before filing arrest applications.
The following actions should be completed within 90 days of the 1 May 2026 effective date of the revised Maritime Code:
To find a China contract disputes lawyer who can assist with this review, use the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jingzhan Wong at Tianjin Bozhuan Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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