370 likes | 552 Views
The New Legislative Framework Helsinki, 10 September 2008. European Commission Directorate General for Enterprise and Industry Unit C1: Regulatory approach for the free circulation of goods Doris Gradenegger. Timeframe / Process. Proposals were adopted by the Commission on 14 February 2007
E N D
The New Legislative Framework Helsinki, 10 September 2008 European Commission Directorate General for Enterprise and Industry Unit C1: Regulatory approach for the free circulation of goods Doris Gradenegger
Timeframe / Process • Proposals were adopted by the Commission on 14 February 2007 • COREPER adoption 13 February 2008 • EP Plenary 21 February 2008 • Adoption by the Council 23 June 2008 • OJ L 218, p. 30 (Regulation 765/2008), p. 82 (Decision 768/2008) • Entry into force 1 January 2010
Why did we propose the New Framework? New Approach directives are not all functioning in the same way in all Member States • Incoherent definitions/lack of definitions • Unclear obligations for economic operators • Abuse of CE marking • Ad-hoc variants of modules • Differing criteria for notified bodies • Uneven level of market surveillance
Why did we propose the New Framework? • More than a NA review • Legal framework for the marketing of goods
Complementary legislative tools REGULATION • Accreditation • Market surveillance - internal - imported products • CE marking Applicable as from 01/01/2010 DECISION sui generis • Definitions • Obligations for economic operators • Notified Bodies • Conformity assessment procedures • Safeguard mechanisms • CE marking TOOLBOX
The technique • Split into two instruments for legal reasons: Two different addressees: MS and legislator • Regulation applies as it stands • Alignment of sectoral Directives (currently toys Directive) to Decision Art 2: “Legislation shall have recourse to the general principles and … reference provisions”
Regulation - Scope Accreditation • Accreditation relating to conformity assessment Market surveillance • Products = Substances, preparations and goods produced through a manufacturing process, except food, feed, human blood and tissues, living plants and animals Border controls • ALL products covered by Community harmonisation legislation
Regulation - Scope For the first time: Community rules on accreditation and market surveillance Coherence throughout the EU
Market surveillance - Exemptions • Exemptions via product definition • Food and feed, human blood and tissues, living plants and animals • Exemptions via lex specialis (“Regulation applies insofar as there are no specific provisions …”) • Pharmaceuticals • Drug precursors • Civil aviation • Motor vehicles • Medical devices • Authorities may take more specific measures as provided for in GPSD (Consumer products)
Regulation - Exemptions BORDER CONTROLS • Specific provisions relating to the organisation of border controls of specific products prevail
Market surveillance - Main elements I Common minimum requirements in all Member States • Organisational/operational requirements • Infrastructures, resources and powers • Adequate checks – internally and at borders
Market surveillance - Main elements II - Ensure recall/withdrawal of products posing a serious risk, use RAPEX (Art 12 GPSD) • Hear operator (10 days, except urgency) • Measures: • Proportionate • well founded • appeal possible • Destruction of products • Ensure follow up of complaints and accidents
Market surveillance - Main elements III • Co-operation mechanism - National level - Community level • Improvement of safeguard clause mechanism & information procedure in Decision
Border controls - Main elements • Customs obliged to carry out checks at borders on an adequate scale • Suspension of release for free circulation if product • is not properly marked or • presents a serious risk • Inform market surveillance authorities • Destruction of products
Accreditation Accreditation = a third-party attestation attesting the competence of a conformity assessment body to carry out specific conformity assessment tasks
Why introduce Accreditation? • Currently operates in all Member States, however due to lack of common rules: • Different approaches to accreditation • Differing systems with uneven rigour • Need to introduce a framework for accreditation and to lay down principles for its operation and organisation at Community level to ensure uniform application
Accreditation - Requirements Accreditation bodies should: • Be completely independent from commercial motivations; • Be independent and impartial; • NOT be involved in conformity assessment activities for which they accredit other bodies; • Demonstrate a high level of competence via participation in the EA (European co-operation for accreditation) peer evaluation system.
Accreditation – Main principles = Last level of control • No competition between accreditors and between accreditors and accredited CABs • ONE national accreditation body per Member State • Public authority activity • Peer evaluation • Cooperation between national accreditation bodies and EA
Decision – toolbox for future legislation • General principles – NA approach technique, conformity assessment … • Definitions • Obligations of economic operators • Notified bodies, notification • Safeguard procedure • CE marking
Why harmonise definitions and obligations? • Different Directives use terms differently • Some Directives have no definitions at all • Obligations of economic operators are not consistent throughout sectoral legislation ->Lack of clarity/legal security
Definitions • Economic operators • Making available on the market • Placing on the market • ...
Obligations I • Economic operators are responsible for the compliance of the product in relation to their role in the supply and distribution chain • Only manufacturer has detailed knowledge of design and production process -> Distinguish between manufacturer and operators further down the chain: conformity assessment is responsibility of manufacturer alone
Obligations importer • Need to ensure compliance of third country products -> IMPORTER to ensure that • manufacturer has carried out conformity assessment • manufacturer has drawn up the technical documentation • product bears conformity mark -> Indication of importer’s name and address
Obligations distributor • DISTRIBUTOR to act with due care • Ensure presence of conformity marking and required documents
Traceability • Each operator shall be able to identify to market surveillance authorities • Any operator who has supplied them with a product • Any operator to whom they have supplied a product
Why strengthen requirements for Notified Bodies? Notification is a Member State responsibility • Currently different requirements for notification in different Member States • NBs do not apply conformity assessment in an equal manner => Need to create a level playing field for both notified bodies and manufacturers
Notification • Ensure full technical competence • Requirements for notifying authorities • Requirements / obligations for NBs • Subsidiaries and sub-contracting • Accredited in-house bodies • Procedure – electronic notification • Challenge of competence – de-notification
Safeguard procedures • Two phases: • MS informs MS and COM about specific measure taken • If all MS agree: all MS to take measure; measure is deemed to be justified • If objections are raised: COM to decide whether measure is justified after consulting MS and operator, depending on the decision: • Measure to be withdrawn or • other MS have to ensure that product is withdrawn
CE marking in the New Legal Framework Strengthening the marking In Decision (rules on affixing) and Regulation (general principles incl. pictogram) • Clarify role and significance • Manufacturer’s responsibility • The ONLY conformity mark • Rules and conditions for its affixing • Community collective trade mark • MS to ensure correct implementation
What’s next? Alignment of sectoral Directives • By issue? • Separate Directives? • Groups of Directives? • Omnibus? to be decided within the next months
European Consumer Safety Mark Regulation on accreditation and market surveillance • Co-decision procedure – discussed by EP in 2007 • Summer 2007: Mattel recall case – “unsafe” toys bearing CE marking • criticism of CE marking • “CE is misleading the consumer as CE does not in all cases require 3rd party certification but only manufacturer’s declaration which is not reliable.” • “CE marking does not mean safety.”
Safety of products • Safety requirements in legislation • Quality of the manufacturer • Quality of controls and testing • Quality of surveillance by public authorities If there is a weak link in the chain, the chain breaks down.
European Parliament Regulation on accreditation and market surveillance • Recital introduced by EP: COM to provide an in-depth analysis on the feasibility of a consumer safety mark, if necessary followed by a legislative proposal
Timeframe • Web-Questionnaire • Consumers • Enterprises • Market surveillance authorities • Consultation closed 6 June • Trends … • Feedback to EP end of September
Issues to be clarified … additional mark, possibly involving third party certification • BENEFIT for consumers? - safer products - need to understand the meaning • ACCEPTANCE by consumers? • awareness/recognition • (higher) price • BENEFIT or BURDEN for enterprises? - competitive advantage/disadvantage - procedures • SMEs?
Issues to be clarified • Scope • ALL consumer products? • selected products? --> selection criteria? • Relation to existing marks • Voluntary or obligatory • Enforcement, ownership