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Published byGladys Parsons Modified over 9 years ago
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UNIDO Vienna, 6 May 2014 Hein Bollens, Acting Head of Unit European Commission, DGENTR
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What if?
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Standardisation - self regulation voluntarily interoperability
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industry 93-95% Member States (3-5%) European Commission/EFTA (2%) Who is paying for standardisation?
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Legislative and normative processes Legislation Requests for standards Standards Publication of standards references in The EU-Official Journal Annual Union Work Programme for Standardisation Policy
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Directive 2003/20/EC: Since May 2006, it is compulsory to use safety belts and child restraint systems in all vehicles in Europe. All car seats must display an ECE R44/04 certification label to indicate they comply with standard safety requirement.
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European Standardisation is a success story European standards are voluntary Standards support European policy and legislation CONCLUSION
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The New Approach Facilitate free movement of goods in the Internal Market whilst ensuring a high level of protection for consumers Elimination of barriers to trade through technical harmonisation
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References to Standards in «New Approach» legislation Objective: remove barriers to trade in the EU Single Market How? By task sharing: Legislation: mandatory, stable, predictable and safeguarding public interest (via listing the essential requirements) Standards: voluntary, constantly updated to the state-of-the-art, predictable, harmonising the technical specifications Areas: Protection of health, safety, environment and consumers
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Example Train brakes – pressure cylinder Dir. 2009/105/EG (New Approach) EU – legislation: essential requirements "safe" pressure equipment : resistence to 1.3 x operating pressure European Standards: technical specifications realisation of safety level: design-manufacture-test
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