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Document 52013SC0034
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document PRODUCT SAFETY AND MARKET SURVEILLANCE PACKAGE A proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and the Council on consumer product safety and a proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on market surveillance for products
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document PRODUCT SAFETY AND MARKET SURVEILLANCE PACKAGE A proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and the Council on consumer product safety and a proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on market surveillance for products
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document PRODUCT SAFETY AND MARKET SURVEILLANCE PACKAGE A proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and the Council on consumer product safety and a proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on market surveillance for products
/* SWD/2013/034 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document PRODUCT SAFETY AND MARKET SURVEILLANCE PACKAGE A proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and the Council on consumer product safety and a proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on market surveillance for products /* SWD/2013/034 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document PRODUCT SAFETY AND MARKET
SURVEILLANCE PACKAGE A proposal for a Regulation of the
European Parliament and the Council on consumer product safety and a proposal
for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on market
surveillance for products 1. Summary of the problem
description, subsidiarity and objectives 1.1. Policy context The free movement of safe and compliant
products is one of the cornerstones of the European Union. This principle
constitutes an important pillar of the single market and allows consumers and
enterprises to purchase or sell products in another Member State. The impact assessment concerns manufactured non-food
products which are either subject to EU harmonisation rules for specific
categories of products, or to Directive 2001/95/EC on general product safety (the
"General Product Safety Directive"), applicable to consumer products.
This set of EU rules has put in place product safety requirements for a large
number of products, while the free movement provisions of the Treaty and the
mutual recognition principle govern the remaining product categories. Effective market surveillance should enable
unsafe, or otherwise harmful, products to be identified and kept or taken off
the market and allow for the penalisation of unscrupulous or even criminal
operators. It should also act as a powerful deterrent. In a single market in
which products circulate freely, market surveillance needs to be highly
coordinated and capable of reacting rapidly over a huge area. However, market surveillance has not kept pace
with developments in the Union's regulatory framework. Advances have been made
over the last decade with the implementation of the General Product Safety
Directive, which had to be transposed by 15 January 2004, and with the coming
into application of Regulation (EC) No 765/2008 setting out the requirements
for accreditation and market surveillance relating to the marketing of products
on 1 January 2010. These legal instruments, together with market surveillance
rules for certain sector-specific Union harmonisation legislation, provide
today an EU legal basis for the market surveillance of all consumer products (both
harmonised and non-harmonised) and for all harmonised products (for consumers
and professional users). However, the market surveillance rules are fragmented
and spread over different pieces of Union legislation (Regulation 765/2008, the
General Product Safety Directive and sector-specific Union harmonisation legislation)
which creates confusion on the part of both operators and national authorities.
Overall
architecture of Union product safety and compliance rules Products || Consumer || Professional Harmonised || Sector specific Directives and Regulations and the General Product Safety Directive || Sector specific Directives and Regulations Non-harmonised || General Product Safety Directive || National product safety rules under the 'Mutual Recognition Regulation' Article 34-36 TFEU This initiative is one of the important actions
of the European Consumer Agenda[1]
and the Single Market Act II[2],
both adopted by the Commission in 2012. 1.2. Problem
definition - Unsafe and non-compliant products in the single market The internal market for products is enormous. In
2010, intra-EU trade of harmonised and non-harmonised consumer products amounted
to almost EUR 1 trillion. The value of harmonised
sectors (including both consumer and professional
goods) in the EU-27 is estimated to be no less than EUR 2,100 billion. An internal EU market should be a place where
safe products circulate freely. Effective application of the free movement
principle in the product safety area requires that the assessment of whether a
product is safe or not - and thus, whether it should stay on the market or not
- be performed in the same way in all Member States. Free circulation of safe
products should be promoted and unsafe products effectively tracked down and
removed from the single EU market. 1.2.1. Problem 1: Difficulties in
compliance with EU product safety requirements Compliance with the EU product safety
requirements is often difficult for economic operators since, in general,
requirements in the area of so-called non-harmonised products are not consistent
with those in the harmonised area. Furthermore, in the non-harmonised area, the
EU product safety requirements are often ambiguous and lack detailed benchmarks
for safety evaluation, while, in the harmonised area, different and overlapping
layers of product safety undermine legal certainty. Unsafe and non-compliant products not only pose
risks to consumers and other users, they also have important economic
consequences: they lead to unfair competition. Operators not adhering to the
rules can make significant savings on compliance costs. They can consequently
offer their products at lower prices than their competitors who respect the
law. In sectors where there is tough competition from imported, low-price
products, European industry is at a disadvantage. The situation therefore “punishes”
the law-abiding manufacturer, as compliance becomes a “competitive
disadvantage”. With the intensification of trade globalisation,
the problem of unsafe and non-compliant products concerns increasingly (but not
exclusively) those goods imported from third countries. 1.2.2. Problem 2: Market surveillance
for products within the single market is fragmented
Despite the widespread harmonisation of safety
standards and other requirements for products (e.g. environmental) across the
Union, and the fact that many products are regularly marketed in more than one Member State, the Single Market is regulated through 27 separate systems of enforcement. A major reason for the considerable number of
non-compliant products on the market is that market surveillance does not
operate effectively within the European Union. The principal causes of
ineffective and inefficient market surveillance on the single EU market are: weak
coordination of the market surveillance authorities of different Member States,
poor functioning of EU procedures for the exchange of information on product
risks and inconsistent enforcement of EU-wide product safety action. Where action is needed beyond the border,
authorities must rely on their colleagues in other Member States. However, in
contrast to other areas, for example the Consumer Protection Cooperation
Regulation or the Services Directive, in the area of product safety, market
surveillance authorities do not benefit from procedures for effective
cross-border enforcement. Thus, significant resources are wasted and important
synergies are lost. 1.3. EU right to act The single market for products is a key
achievement of the European Union. Yet the elimination of national barriers for
consumer and other products offers plenty of opportunities to less scrupulous
traders who do not apply the consumer safety rules or refuse to implement the
EU legislation on products. The EU therefore has the right to act on the basis
of Article 114 TFEU in order to ensure the proper functioning of the single
market for consumer products and to increase the efficiency of cross-border
market surveillance. Article 168(1) and Article 169(1) TFEU complement this
right to act. The first stipulates that a high level of human health protection
shall be ensured in the definition and implementation of all Union policies and
activities; the latter provides that in order to promote the interests of
consumers and to ensure a high level of consumer protection, the Union shall,
amongst others, contribute to protecting the health, safety and economic
interests of consumers. Despite the existence of the single EU market,
the enforcement of product safety requirements is the responsibility of the Member
States. According to the principle of subsidiarity actions against products
posing risks are carried out by Member States. However, the way in which market
surveillance is performed and organised significantly varies from one Member State to another. Differences in the organisation of market
surveillance at national level cause problems when viewed in a framework where
controls at national borders have practically disappeared. To ensure that only safe
and compliant products circulate on the market, every Member State depends on the market surveillance of its neighbours. Consequently, weaknesses in the
organisation of market surveillance in one Member State can seriously undermine
the efforts taken by other Member States. This justifies EU action to address
this issue. 1.4. Objectives 1.4.1. General policy objectives The general objective of this initiative is to
improve the functioning of the internal market and to achieve a high level of
protection of consumers and other product users through the reduction of the
number of unsafe or non-compliant products on the market. 1.4.2. Specific policy objectives ·
Consolidation and reinforcement of EU product
safety requirements; ·
Better coordination and increased effectiveness of
market surveillance activities on the single EU market for goods; ·
Simplification of the EU legislative framework. 1.4.3. Operational policy
objectives ·
Ensuring consistency of EU product safety
requirements; ·
Reducing ambiguity of product safety
requirements for non-harmonised consumer products; ·
Reinforcing EU cooperation mechanisms; ·
Making EU product safety procedures more
coherent; ·
More effective EU-wide product safety action. 2. Policy
options The presented policy options were established
by the Commission in close cooperation with all groups of stakeholders. Certain
policy options were, however, discarded at an early stage, including regulating
the safety of services, adopting product safety requirements for non-harmonised
professional products[3],
adopting specific rules concerning products marketed via the internet and abolishing
the general requirement that all consumer products must be safe. 2.1. Specific
policy objective 1: Consolidation and reinforcement of EU product safety rules 2.1.1. Operational policy
objective: Ensuring consistency of EU product safety requirements Option 1.A –
Baseline scenario: Keeping differences between
consumer product safety requirements and harmonised product safety requirements Option 1.B –
Aligning consumer product safety requirements with harmonised product safety
requirements Option 1.C – Consumer product safety requirements to be defined less strictly
then harmonised product safety requirements Option 1.D – Consumer product safety requirements to be defined more
strictly than harmonised product safety requirements 2.1.2. Operational
policy objective: Reducing ambiguity of product safety requirements for
non-harmonised consumer products Option 2.A – Baseline scenario: Existence of pre-standardisation
procedures for non-harmonised consumer products that are not aligned with the
new European standardisation regime Option 2.B – Direct applicability of ad-hoc
safety requirements Option 2.C – Abolition of formal adoption of
the non-binding ad-hoc safety requirements (alignment with the new European
standardisation regime) Option 2.D – Fast-track procedure for adopting
already existing European standards without mandates 2.2. Specific policy objective 2: Better coordination and increased
effectiveness of market surveillance activities on the single EU market for
goods 2.2.1. Operational policy
objective: Reinforcing EU cooperation mechanisms Option 3.A –
Baseline scenario: keep status quo based mostly on voluntary market
surveillance coordination Option 3.B – Coordination
of cross-border enforcement of measures resulting from "on the-field"
market surveillance Option 3.C – Overall
rationalisation of coordination of market surveillance activities Option 3.D – Centralisation of EU market surveillance in the area of
non-food products (EU Market surveillance agency) 2.2.2. Operational policy
objective: Making EU product safety procedures more coherent Option 4.A – Baseline scenario: Keeping the
parallel notifications under RAPEX procedure and safeguard procedure Option 4.B – Simplification of the RAPEX
procedure Option 4.C – Simplification of the RAPEX
procedure and streamlining of that procedure with the safeguard procedure 2.2.3. Operational policy
objective: More effective EU-wide product safety action Option 5.A – Baseline scenario: Keeping EU-wide
product safety measures indirectly applicable for a period of one year only Option 5.B – Extension of the scope of EU-wide
product safety measures to harmonised non-consumer products Option 5.C - Making EU-wide product safety
measures directly applicable Option 5.D – Removal of the limited validity of
EU-wide product safety measures Option 5.E – Combination of options 5.B, 5.C
and 5.D 2.3. Specific policy objective
3: Simplification of the EU legislative framework The two other specific policy objectives are
complemented by the objective to simplify the legislative framework regarding
product safety and market surveillance. The simplification consists in (1) merging
the market surveillance rules of different pieces of legislation into a single
horizontal market surveillance regulation, (2) the transformation of the
revised General Product Safety Directive into a regulation and (3) the repeal of
Directive 87/357/EEC and the transfer of its concept, that food-imitating
products must not endanger the health and safety of consumers, into the new Consumer
Product Safety Regulation replacing the General Product Safety Directive. 3. Analysis
of impacts and comparison of envisaged policy options Due to the absence of reliable statistics or
even estimates regarding the number of unsafe and non-harmonised consumer
products, and the number of non-compliant harmonised products, the assessment
of the options is mainly qualitative. 3.1. Specific policy objective
1: Consolidation and reinforcement of EU product safety rules 3.1.1. Operational policy
objective: Ensuring consistency of EU product safety requirements In order to provide consumers and other users
with an equally high level of protection against unsafe products throughout the
EU, as well as to prevent barriers on the EU internal market, the EU product
safety rules must be clear and compatible across different product sectors. Comparison of the
options against the baseline scenario Options Issues || Option 1.B || Option 1.C || Option 1.D Safety of consumers || ++ || - || ++ Legal clarity and certainty || ++ || + || - Market surveillance effectiveness and efficiency || ++ || -- || + Comparison of the
change in costs for economic operators compared to the baseline scenario Options Cost types || Option 1.B || Option 1.C || Option 1.D Information research costs/legal costs || Decrease || Slight decrease || 0 Production costs || 0* || 0 || Increase * slight increase except for a very small group of producers Preferred option: Option 1.B - Alignment of consumer product safety requirements with
harmonised product safety requirements 3.1.2. Operational policy
objective: Reducing ambiguity of product safety requirements for non-harmonised
consumer products Policy options aimed at reducing the ambiguity
of product safety requirements for non-harmonised consumer products are assessed
according to the ease in which they can lead to the development of European
standards under the general product safety rules, the coherence of procedures
with the general regime under the new Standardisation Regulation (EU) No
1025/2012 and the costs for public administration. In terms of timeliness and reduced administrative
burden, Options 2.C and 2.D. can both be considered to be superior to Option
2.B. Between Options 2.C and 2.D the criterion of coherence of procedures for
requesting standards favours Option 2.C to Option 2.D. Comparison of
options against the pre-defined criteria Options Criteria || Option 2.B || Option 2.C || Option 2.D Rapidity || - || + || ++ Coherence || - || + || - Costs for authorities (including national authorities and EU) || Unchanged || Decrease || Decrease Preferred option: Option 2.C – Abolition of formal adoption of the non-binding
ad-hoc safety requirements (alignment with the new European standardisation
regime) 3.2. Specific policy objective
2: Better coordination and the increased effectiveness of market surveillance
activities on the single EU market for goods 3.2.1. Operational policy
objective: Reinforcing EU cooperation mechanisms The impact of the different policy options is
assessed and compared according to the criteria of effectiveness and efficiency
of market surveillance in accordance with the resources available and the aim of
ensuring seamless market surveillance for the single EU market. In contrast to Options 3.B and 3.C, which aim to
do more with the same amount of resources, Option 3.D would likely lead to
higher benefits for the single EU market and for consumer safety but it would
require substantial investment to build a centralised EU framework for market
surveillance in the area of non-food product safety. However, even under option
3.D, only certain activities (such as system inspections, peer reviews of the
quality of the functioning of market surveillance authorities in Member States,
monitoring of the coordination between enforcement authorities and national
RAPEX contact points), could be moved to the central EU level. By contrast,
core market surveillance actions, such as on-site inspection of manufacturers,
importers and distributors, testing of products, risk assessment and risk
management would have to stay at national level. Thus Option 3.C seems to be the most
appropriate for fulfilling the objective of achieving a coherent and seamless
framework for decentralised market surveillance for the single EU market. In terms
of benefits, it is superior to Option 3.B, although potentially inferior to
Option 3.D; in terms of costs it is equal to Option 3.B, but superior to Option
3.D. Comparison of the
options against the baseline scenario Options Issues || Option 3.B || Option 3.C || Option 3.D Safety of consumers/users || + || ++ || ++ Competitiveness of compliant economic operators || + || ++ || ++ Effectiveness of market surveillance || + || ++ || +++ Efficiency of market surveillance || + || ++ || + Potential of harmonisation of enforcement approaches on the internal market || + || ++ || +++ Comparison of the
change in costs for public authorities compared to the baseline scenario Options Cost types || Option 3.B || Option 3.C || Option 3.D Costs for national market surveillance authorities || Slight increase || Slight increase || Increase Costs for the EU || Slight increase || Slight increase || High increase Preferred option: Option 3.C – Rationalisation of the overall coordination of
decentralised market surveillance on the single EU market. 3.2.2. Operational policy
objective: Making EU product safety procedures more coherent The options are assessed and compared according
to the criteria of effectiveness in tracking dangerous products and the efficiency
of managing the EU notification procedures for Member States and the
Commission. Option 4.A would not eliminate or mitigate any
shortcomings of the existing EU notification procedures and is therefore not
appropriate to achieve the pursued objective. Options 4.B and 4.C would both
offer effective means to track unsafe products on the internal EU market since with
both options the RAPEX notification conditions would be simplified and the objective
of a better functioning of the alert procedures for dangerous non-food products
would be achieved. Option 4.C appears to be superior to Option 4.B because it
would have the additional advantage of streamlining various procedures, thus
making their application more user-friendly. Comparison of the
change compared to the baseline scenario in relation to public authorities Options Criteria || Option 4.B || Option 4.C Effectiveness in tracking down unsafe products || Increase || Increase Costs for national market surveillance authorities || Slight decrease || Decrease Costs for the EU || 0 || Decrease Preferred
option: Option 4.C – Simplification of the
RAPEX procedure and streamlining of that procedure with the safeguard procedure 3.2.3. Operational policy
objective: More effective EU-wide product safety action To fulfil the objective of making action at
EU-level against products presenting a risk more effective, especially in
situations where individual action by Member States fails to provide a coherent
response, EU measures concerning product safety need to be timely, predictable
and effectively implemented by national market surveillance authorities. Making EU product safety measures directly
applicable - combined with the possibility of adopting these measures either for
a period specified on a case-by-case basis or without limitation of their
validity - is the best way to achieve a timely response to safety issues that
is both effective and predictable. EU product safety measures could be made directly
applicable so that market surveillance authorities could take enforcement
measures without any additional delays or uncertainties related to the transposition
into national legislation by each individual Member State. Comparison of
options 5.B, 5.C and 5.D against pre-defined criteria Options Criteria || Option 5.B || Option 5.C || Option 5.D || Option 5.E Rapidity || 0 || + || + || ++ Predictability || 0 || 0 || + || ++ Effective application || + || ++ || 0 || +++ Preferred option: Option 5.E – Combination of options 5.B, 5.C and 5.D 4. Form of the legislative instruments It is suggested that the selected options are reflected
in two different legal instruments: Problem 1 would be solved through the adoption of
the Consumer Product Safety Regulation replacing the General Product Safety
Directive, which would maintain the general requirement that all consumer
products must be safe and, in respect of the obligations of economic operators,
would be aligned with the respective provisions of Annex 1 of Decision (No)
768/2008/EC[4].
Problem 2 would be addressed by a new Regulation on market surveillance of
products that would constitute the main instrument for market surveillance in
the area of non-food goods. Provisions on market surveillance in the EU
internal market legislation, which are currently scattered over several pieces
of sector-specific EU legislation, Regulation (EC) No 765/2008 and the General
Product Safety Directive, would be replaced by the provisions of this new Regulation.
A Regulation, being directly applicable in all Member
States, would achieve a very high degree of harmonisation of the rules on consumer
product safety and market surveillance. The Consumer Product Safety Regulation would
impose obligations on economic operators that would be directly enforceable
(thus creating a level playing field) and would empower market surveillance
authorities to act immediately in case of unsafe consumer products or
non-compliance, without the need for transposition of these rules into
different national laws. 5. Monitoring and evaluation In addition to the
evaluation of the legislative instruments five years after their entry into
force, the monitoring of the application of EU product safety rules will be
performed through the collection of relevant information from (i) the
Eurobarometer surveys relating to consumer safety, (ii) the GRAS-RAPEX
information system, (iii) the general information support system (ICSMS) and (iv)
the Enforcement Indicators monitoring activity which surveys certain parameters
of market surveillance in Member States. Eurobarometer
surveys can measure how consumers and economic operators perceive the safety of
products on the market. This perception is relevant to assess whether the
initiative has contributed to an increased level of safety of consumer products
as well as increased consumer confidence in the market and the regulatory
framework. The contribution of
the future legislation to the reduction of compliance costs of economic
operators and benefit gains due to fairer competition and the elimination of non-complaint
market players could be assessed through ad-hoc studies performed, in
particular, by the industry. Finally, better
coordination and effectiveness of market surveillance activities in the single market
could be demonstrated by means of the Enforcement Indicators monitoring
activity and the data notified and exchanged through the IT systems that will
be further developed under the new legislation. [1] COM(2012)225 final. [2] COM(2012)573 final. [3] Professional products mean those products which are
only used by professionals and not by consumers, such as industrial machines,
raw materials or semi-finished products. [4] Articles R1 – R7.