(1) Having its own name, domicile and articles of association;
(2) Having necessary property;
(3) Having committee members;
(4) Having appointed arbitrators.
The articles of association of the Arbitration Commission shall be formulated in accordance with this Law.
The scope of accepting cases by the Arbitration Commission
China's laws clearly stipulate the scope of disputes that can be submitted for arbitration. According to Article 2 of the Arbitration Law of People's Republic of China (PRC), "contract disputes and other property rights disputes between citizens, legal persons and other organizations with equal subjects may be arbitrated." The scope specifically includes: 1, various contract disputes. Including the sale, gift, loan, lease, entrustment, punishment, processing contract, technology, construction, real estate, product quality, transportation, warehousing, finance, securities, insurance, futures, investment, copyright, patents, trademarks, foreign-related economic and trade, maritime and other contract disputes. 2. Other property rights disputes. Non-contractual real right disputes mainly refer to infringement disputes, including consumer rights infringement disputes, maritime infringement disputes and other real right infringement disputes. In addition, China's laws clearly stipulate the contents of disputes that cannot be submitted for arbitration according to the Arbitration Law of People's Republic of China (PRC): ① Civil disputes over citizens' personal relations, specifically disputes over marriage, adoption, guardianship, upbringing and inheritance; Administrative disputes that should be handled by administrative organs according to law; (3) For economic disputes in special fields, the state has arranged a special dispute resolution mechanism, specifically labor disputes and agricultural contract disputes within agricultural collective economic organizations.
Legal basis: Article 3 of the Arbitration Law The chairman, vice-chairmen and members of the Arbitration Commission shall be experts in law, economy and trade and people with practical work experience. Experts in law, economy and trade shall not be less than two thirds of the members of the Arbitration Commission.