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This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website

Market surveillance and compliance of products

Market surveillance and compliance of products

SUMMARY OF:

Regulation (EU) 2019/1020 — market surveillance and compliance of products

WHAT IS THE AIM OF THE REGULATION?

  • It aims to improve how the free movement of goods principle works by strengthening market surveillance1 of products covered by EU hamonisation legislation. This must ensure a high level of protection of health and safety, in general and in the workplace, and protect consumers, the environment, public security and other public interest.
  • It lays down rules and procedures for economic operators2 and establishes a system for their cooperation with supervisory authorities.
  • It establishes controls on products imported into the EU.
  • It deletes and replaces Articles 15 to 29 of Regulation (EC) No 765/2008 (see summary on Accreditation and market surveillance) and amends Directive 2004/42/EC and Regulation (EU) No 305/2011 (see summary on Construction products).

KEY POINTS

The regulation applies to products:

  • covered by EU harmonisation legislation (and set out in Annex I);
  • imported into the EU which are not subject to specific legislation.

Certain products may not be offered for sale to EU consumers without an economic operator established in the EU:

  • who keeps EU conformity and performance declarations and makes these and the technical documentation available to authorities when asked;
  • who informs the authorities when they consider a product poses a risk;
  • who cooperates with the authorities, when asked, by taking immediate corrective action — from remedying the fault to recall or destroying the item — if a product is considered non-compliant, and helps to eliminate or mitigate risks;
  • whose name and contact details are on the product, packaging or accompanying document.

Market surveillance authorities:

  • carry out effective surveillance of products sold online and offline;
  • perform appropriate documentary, physical and laboratory checks on products, taking into account possible hazards;
  • act when a product, properly installed, maintained and used for its intended purpose:
    • could damage users’ health and safety,
    • does not conform to EU legislation;
  • ensure economic operators take corrective action when instructed and act when they fail to do so;
  • establish procedures to follow up complaints and reports and to verify economic operators have taken corrective action;
  • apply a high level of transparency and make available to the public any information they consider relevant to protect end users’ interests;
  • provide economic operators with grounds for their decisions to give them an opportunity to respond;
  • notify the European Commission and the other EU countries immediately of any measures they take if these could have an impact in other EU countries;
  • may ask colleagues elsewhere in the EU to help with investigations and enforcement and participate in peer reviews to improve the system’s overall efficiency;
  • have powers to:
    • start investigations on their own initiative,
    • require economic operators to provide relevant documents, data and information on supply chains, distribution networks, product models and ownership of websites,
    • carry out unannounced onsite inspections and physical checks,
    • enter any premises, land or means of transport an economic operator uses,
    • acquire product samples without revealing their identity,
    • instruct economic operators to take measures to end non-compliance or eliminate risk,
    • prohibit or restrict availability of a product and order it be withdrawn or recalled,
    • insist in case of serious risk that product content is removed from a website or require it be accompanied by a warning,
    • adopt measures, including penalties, against economic operators that fail to act.

EU countries:

  • designate one or more authorities with the powers of market surveillance, investigation and enforcement;
  • appoint a single liaison office to represent the surveillance authorities and communicate the country’s national strategy;
  • ensure the authorities and office have sufficient budgetary and other resources;
  • may authorise surveillance authorities to reclaim from an economic operator all the costs they incur when pursuing non-compliance cases;
  • draw up an overarching national market surveillance strategy every 4 years from to promote a consistent, comprehensive and integrated approach to market surveillance — this must include:
    • data on non-compliant products,
    • priority areas for enforcing the EU legislation,
    • enforcement activities to reduce non-compliance,
    • assessment of cooperation between authorities in other EU countries;
  • provide economic operators, at their request and free of charge, information on national implementation of EU product harmonisation legislation;
  • introduce effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties and notify these to the Commission by .

The Commission:

  • ensures the Your Europe portal provides users with easy online access to information about the EU’s product requirements, rights, obligations and rules;
  • adopts implementing acts;
  • assists the EU Product Compliance Network (see below) in all its activities;
  • maintains a computer system to store and process all the data collected;
  • reports to the European Parliament, the Council and the European Economic and Social Committee by , and every 5 years thereafter, on the regulation’s implementation.

Specific rules apply to imported products:

  • EU countries designate authorities with the necessary powers to check imports;
  • market surveillance authorities provide them with information on products and economic operators where a high risk of non-compliance has been identified;
  • authorities may impound a product if the necessary documentation is absent or there are concerns it presents a serious health, safety, environmental or public interest risk, and only release it when certain conditions are met.

The regulation:

  • establishes an EU Product Compliance Network — it:
    • develops cooperation between the surveillance authorities and the Commission;
    • contains national and Commission representatives and experts;
    • organises a range of activities to improve market surveillance across the EU.

FROM WHEN DOES THE REGULATION APPLY?

It applies from . However, Articles 29, 30, 31, 32, 33 (on the EU Product Compliance Network) and 36 (on financing activities) apply from .

BACKGROUND

For more information, see:

KEY TERMS

  1. Market surveillance: measures to ensure products comply with EU legislation and protect the public interest.
  2. Economic operator: manufacturer, authorised representative, importer, distributor or fulfilment service provider.

MAIN DOCUMENT

Regulation (EU) 2019/1020 of the European Parliament and of the Council of on market surveillance and compliance of products and amending Directive 2004/42/EC and Regulations (EC) No 765/2008 and (EU) No 305/2011 (OJ L 169, , pp. 1-44)

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