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Rio-de-Janeiro, December 2006

Good regulatory and CA practices at UNECE projects. Rio-de-Janeiro, December 2006. Plan of the presentation. About UNECE Good Regulatory Governance – current tendencies (good regulatory practices) WP.6 and GRP WP.6 and GCAP Market surveillance Conclusions. CA. IS. US. FI. NO. SE.

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Rio-de-Janeiro, December 2006

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  1. Good regulatory and CA practices at UNECE projects Rio-de-Janeiro, December 2006 United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  2. Plan of the presentation About UNECE Good Regulatory Governance – current tendencies (good regulatory practices) WP.6 and GRP WP.6 and GCAP Market surveillance Conclusions United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  3. CA IS US FI NO SE EE RU LV DK LT NL BY IE GB PL DE BE CZ L UA KZ SK AT FR HU CH M D SL RO HR BA YU IT BG GE KG MK AL UZ AM ES AZ TM GR TR PT TJ MT CY IL 50 - 80 % of World Trade is between UNECE Member States(55 member States, Europe, North America, CIS) United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  4. The UNECE’s Support to Governments and Business(since 1947) • Legal Instruments (conventions, standards, regulations …) • Trade & Transport Facilitation • Harmonization & Standardization United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  5. TRADE AND TRANSPORT FACILITATION Reducing trade transaction costs through: • Harmonisation and Simplification of Procedures • Standardisation of Documentation and Information Flows United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  6. Trade Facilitation: Achievements • UN layout key for trade documents • UN/EDIFACT • Codes for trade locations • UN/CEFACT supply chain reference model • E-commerce standards • “Single Window” United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  7. Jaimurzina: TIR stand for “Transport internationaux routiers” Transport • Regulations: Regulations on vehicles’ construction Transport of dangerous goods • Agreements: International transport of goods (transit under TIR convention) United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  8. HARMONIZATION &STANDARDIZATION • Good Regulatory Practices in Trade • Agricultural Quality Standards • Harmonization of Statistical Data Definitions and Collection United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  9. Quality Standards for: • Fresh and Dried Fruits and Vegetables • Meat • Potatoes • Egg & Egg products • Cut flowers United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  10. Good Regulatory Practices • Working Party on Regulatory Cooperation and Standardization Policies (Working Party 6) • International Model for Technical Harmonization (UNECE Recommendation “L”) • Promoting good practices in standardization, regulatory techniques and market surveillance United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  11. Good Regulatory Governance & Practices • Why Good Regulatory Practices (GRP)? GRP: • Good regulatory quality • Good governance • Gains for society • Regulatory impact assessment • Cost efficiency for society United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  12. Regulatory differences:possibilities to improve • National (Brazil): • Starting a business takes: • 19 days in Minas Gerais • 152 days in São Paulo • In international context, based on an OECD study of 155 States, at a world level: • Minas Gerais is ranked 30 • São Paolo is ranked 149 • (Source "Doing Business in Brazil", IFC/World Bank publication, 2006) • International GRP context: • Work at OECD, APEC, US, EC and EU countries, etc. • GRP training (on RIA-College of Europe) United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  13. From « culture of control » to « culture of shared responsibilities » • “Traditional” regulatory approach: • Control  inspect  punish “Smart” regulatory approach: • Focus on outcome (not on tools/means) • Cost/benefit assessment through consultation, balance of interests United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  14. Regulatory approaches « culture » United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  15. « Smart » regulation provides: • Problem definition/risks profile/scenarios • Objective of regulation/incentives • Solution justification (alternatives) • Effectivness to reach the outcome • Benefits/costs calculation • Proportionality of chosen measures • Consistent/simple (versus legislation) • Overall social net effect • cost-efficienct outcome for society United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  16. Consulation with civil society -WHY ? • Transparency = understanding = compliance • Reduce regulatory failures ( problem or its "shadow" ?) • Best solution = technological or structural ? •    Result: « Smart" regulation, partnerships, good governance United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  17. GRP & WP.6 • Technical regulations – where to start? • Should you regulate? • If yes, what is the potential impact? • Based on impact assessment, how you shall regulate? United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  18. International UNECE Forum on Common Regulatory Language for Global Trade,Geneva, 20-21 June 2006 • “UNECE region plus…” event • Good regulatory practices (WTO, OECD, ISO, UNECE) • Regional experiences (EU, North America, ASEAN, MERCOSUR, CIS) • To regulate or not to regulate… United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  19. Regulatory Method - « self-regulation » (examples) • Information awareness (by/for industry and consumers/users). standards, voluntary certification, quality/environment management schemes, industry codes (company; sectoral; multi (uni) lateral; "recognized", etc.), customer charters, official codes/guidelines… • Need for regional/international convergence? United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  20. Regulatory Method - Binding Regulation(examples) • Performance regulations; mandatory information/labelling; economic incentives (taxes, subsidies, "user pay" charges, loans/loan guarantees, insurance, public expenditure, public ownership, etc.); certification; … • Need for regional/international convergence ? United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  21. Promoting Good Practices • The Team of Specialists on Standardization and Regulatory Techniques(“START”) • The Advisory Group on Market Surveillance(“MARS” Group) • Promoting Good Governance including dialogue and cooperation with the private sector and NGOs United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  22. International Model for Technical Harmonization (REC. L) PRINCIPLES • National technical regulations on the basis of international (regional) standards • "Common regulatory objectives" on the basis of mutually agreed safety and other legitimate requirements • Regulators should not harmonize existing regulations, but rather should try to agree on what safety (etc.) levels they would like to achieve United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  23. International Model for Technical Harmonization • Regional application: CIS agreement on technical harmonization • Balkan project: training of officials on good regulatory practices • Sectoral application: • The TELECOM initiative • Earth-Moving Machinery • Safety of Pipelines Initiative (2005) • Equipment for explosive environment. (June 2006) United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  24. UNECE/SIDA Southeast Europe Regulatory Project • Identify regulatory-related obstacles to regional trade • Agree on national and regional regulatory priorities • Propose solutions for regulatory convergence • Promote good regulatory practices United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  25. Good Practices for Conformity Assessment (GPCA) • WTO principles transformed in GPCA: • SDoC (pre-requisite: liability laws for manufacturers and efficient market surveillance) • Acceptance of CA results («one test-one certificate-accepted worldwide») • Less certification (voluntary compliance means?) United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  26. Conformity Assessment at WP.6 • National and regional developments (laws, procedures, changes in infrastructure) • Accreditation developments • Quality and environmental schemes (quality national policies, awards, integrated schemes, public governance, etc.) • Definitions (support to ISO work ) • Market surveillance United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  27. Market Surveillance (MS) at WP.6 • UN General Assembly decision 54/449 of 22 December 1999 (United Nations Guidelines for Consumer Protection) • International MS Forums (2002 & 2005) • Etablishing «MARS» Group in 2003 United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  28. Control of Safety(at which stage and how?) Design Production Placing on market • Certification Market surveilance • From certification to MS (& maybe to SDoC) United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  29. Market Surveillance (MS) • Common feature- no (few) common features • Differencies in institutional structure (number of bodies, to whom repport), • Scope of work (safety or plus quality, IPR), legal basis, … • Less certification  more market surveilance? United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  30. EU (EC) requirements for national MS organization • organize communication and national coordination between relevant authorities (incl. labour inspectorates and customs) • establish necesary procedures (for non-compliant products) in order to: • Record of complaints/reports and follow-up • Monitor accidents and damage to health, public interest • Establish/implement MS programmes for specific categories of products or risks United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  31. EU (EC) requirements for MS measures (authorities shall:) • Perform checks on safety (and other issues) on adequate scale through appropriate controls (documentary, or physical, laboratory checks) • Apply best practices and sound resources • Take necessary representative samples of products for controls • Require that necessary documentation/information is available by economic operators (manufacturer, importer, distributor) …/… United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  32. Take appropriate necessary national measures to alert/inform users of the risks from dangerous products placed on the market      • Cooperate with economic operators on actions to avoid or reduce risks caused by their product • Carry out other duties with due independence and observe confidentiality and professional secrecy • Take appropriate measures when a dangerous product is detected (or sufficient reason to believe it) on the basis of a risk analysis (taking into account the precautionary principle) • Contribute to and use EU integrated information system on MS United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  33. EC Proposals for EU MS Electonic Information System • Archiving of data • Information exchange on MS activities in general • Particular MS information (MS statistics, information by sector, by product, ...) • Risk analysis methodlogies and results • Anaylsis of accidents with comparative data to exchange/adopt best practices • Information on counterfeits that could have impact on health, or other issues of public interest • Accessible to public (with safegurad of confidentiality and professional secrecy) United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  34. MS problems and solutions(examples from “MARS” Group) • Legal representation on the market • Intellectual property rights (IPRs) and MS • Sampling, misleading labelling , success criteria, etc. • Who needs MS (state, companies)? Coordination … United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  35. “Disappearing” companies • Who “represents” the product on the market? • Slovakia: Control by authorities (of legal papers and of premises) which grant permissions to sell on markets • Israel: Regime for imported goods based on risks of products and their use United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  36. Israel – four imported products’ groups • High danger (207 products; toys, electrical home appliances …): certification of each shipment • Medium (120 ; carpets, bottles ...): type approval • Low  (39; ceramic tiles ...) : importer’s declaration. • For industrial use (11): SDoC United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  37. IPR & UNECERecommendation “M” • Counterfeits = 5-7 % of international trade (in Russia: up to 1/3 in some sectors) • Counterfeit conformity assessment marks • Use of market surveillance against counterfeit goods (under preparation - adoption in 2007?) • Need for coordination on national level  (IPR & other matters with customs, consumer protection, etc.) United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  38. Sampling in MS:Who pays? • Brazil: - manufacturer replaces product to retailer • Russia, Belarus: retailer pays (restrictions on inspections to avoid abuse) • Czech Republic: MS body takes a product for inspection (charged when product meets requirements) • EU, Indonesia, Turkey, etc.: MS body buys the product from its budget United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  39. New problems - new experiences • Misleading labelling (fresh orange juice, cholesterol free, only 1% salt, etc.) • Choice of laboratories to inspect products (through tender?) • Criteria of MS success (0% or 100% of inspected products are safe?) United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  40. Conclusions & Way forward • GRPs and GPCA: no «one size-fit all » recipe • “Think globally - act locally”: “tailor” your own solutions on the basis of national and international experiences • UNECE welcomes you to join its work United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

  41. For more information, please contact:Mr. (Dr.) Serguei Kouzmine Secretary to UNECE Working Party on Regulatory Cooperation and Standardization Policies (WP.6)Tel. (+41 22) 917 2771; Fax (41 22) 917 0479/0037e-mail : Serguei.Kouzmine@unece.org Thank you ! OBRIGADO ! United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

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