Customs opens 'orange' lane for medium to high risk cargoes
The Bureau of Customs has activated a new lane that scans medium to high-risk cargoes entering the country.
The “orange” lane was recently launched by the bureau as a new selectivity color under its risk management system where “green,” “yellow,” and “red” lanes are currently in place.

According to the bureau, the new color lane is assigned to medium to high risk cargoes. Goods declarations tagged as orange shall pass through the X-ray scanning and once the image is found to be suspicious, it shall be subjected to physical examination.
The bureau’s Risk Management Office emphasized that the activation of another color lane is purposely to delineate scanning and physical inspection.
It added that activating “a new color lane is gearing to maximize non-intrusive inspection for an enhanced trade facilitation while ensuring strengthened border protection and revenue collection.”
The activation of orange lane is also part of the bureau’s improvement of the Universal Risk Management System (URMS), which is aimed to enhance the risk management capabilities of the bureau.
All cargoes coming into the country are selected to pass through a certain color lane.
Cargoes tagged as red, covering high risk cargoes, shall be subjected to both X-ray scanning and physical examination. The yellow lane is intended for cargoes with low to medium risk subject to document-check, while the green lane is for cargoes with low to no risk.
Selection process under the URMS is analytics-based through the memory-based reasoning (MBR) feature of the system that enables risk and compliance prediction as an artificial intelligence tool promoting automation and lesser human intervention to assist traders, the bureau said.