prEN 18199
(Main)Leather - Essential requirements for leather traceability
Leather - Essential requirements for leather traceability
This document sets the minimum essential elements of traceability and evidence of verification to be present in a leather traceability system, kept by organizations along the animal-to-leather supply chain. It is applicable to all types of leather.
This document defines the requirements and related evidence for establishing the traceability of leather back to the originating farms or hunting area.
This document can be applied to any organization operating within the leather value chain.
Leder - Grundlegende Anforderungen für die Rückverfolgbarkeit von Leder
Dieses Dokument legt die grundlegenden Mindestelemente der Rückverfolgbarkeit und des Nachweises der Überprüfung fest, die in einem System zur Rückverfolgbarkeit von Leder vorhanden sein müssen, das von Organisationen entlang der Lieferkette vom Tier zum Leder geführt wird. Das System ist für alle Lederarten anwendbar.
Dieses Dokument legt die Anforderungen sowie die zugehörigen Nachweise für die Rückverfolgbarkeit von Leder bis zum ursprünglichen Landwirtschaftsbetrieb oder zum ursprünglichen Jagdgebiet fest.
Dieses Dokument kann von jeder Organisation angewendet werden, die innerhalb der Lederwertschöpfungskette arbeitet.
Cuir - Exigences essentielles relatives à la traçabilité des cuirs
Le présent document définit les éléments essentiels minimaux de traçabilité et les preuves de vérification à apporter dans un système de traçabilité du cuir, tenu par les organismes tout au long de la chaîne d’approvisionnement de l’animal au cuir. Il s’applique à tous les types de cuir.
Le présent document définit les exigences et les preuves connexes permettant d’établir la traçabilité du cuir jusqu’à l’exploitation agricole ou la zone de chasse d’origine.
Ce document peut s’appliquer à tout organisme qui intervient dans la chaîne de valeur du cuir.
Usnje - Bistvene zahteve za sledljivost usnja
General Information
Standards Content (Sample)
SLOVENSKI STANDARD
01-september-2025
Usnje - Bistvene zahteve za sledljivost usnja
Leather - Essential requirements for leather traceability
Leder - Grundlegende Anforderungen für die Rückverfolgbarkeit von Leder
Cuir - Exigences essentielles relatives à la traçabilité des cuirs
Ta slovenski standard je istoveten z: prEN 18199
ICS:
59.140.30 Usnje in krzno Leather and furs
2003-01.Slovenski inštitut za standardizacijo. Razmnoževanje celote ali delov tega standarda ni dovoljeno.
DRAFT
EUROPEAN STANDARD
NORME EUROPÉENNE
EUROPÄISCHE NORM
May 2025
ICS 59.140.30
English Version
Leather - Essential requirements for leather traceability
Cuir - Exigences essentielles relative à la traçabilité des Leder - Grundlegende Anforderungen für die
cuirs Rückverfolgbarkeit von Leder
This draft European Standard is submitted to CEN members for enquiry. It has been drawn up by the Technical Committee
CEN/TC 289.
If this draft becomes a European Standard, CEN members are bound to comply with the CEN/CENELEC Internal Regulations
which stipulate the conditions for giving this European Standard the status of a national standard without any alteration.
This draft European Standard was established by CEN in three official versions (English, French, German). A version in any other
language made by translation under the responsibility of a CEN member into its own language and notified to the CEN-CENELEC
Management Centre has the same status as the official versions.
CEN members are the national standards bodies of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia,
Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway,
Poland, Portugal, Republic of North Macedonia, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Türkiye and
United Kingdom.
Recipients of this draft are invited to submit, with their comments, notification of any relevant patent rights of which they are
aware and to provide supporting documentation.
Warning : This document is not a European Standard. It is distributed for review and comments. It is subject to change without
notice and shall not be referred to as a European Standard.
EUROPEAN COMMITTEE FOR STANDARDIZATION
COMITÉ EUROPÉEN DE NORMALISATION
EUROPÄISCHES KOMITEE FÜR NORMUNG
CEN-CENELEC Management Centre: Rue de la Science 23, B-1040 Brussels
© 2025 CEN All rights of exploitation in any form and by any means reserved Ref. No. prEN 18199:2025 E
worldwide for CEN national Members.
Contents Page
European foreword . 3
Introduction . 4
1 Scope . 5
2 Normative references . 5
3 Terms and definitions . 5
4 Requirements . 9
4.1 Chain of custody model . 9
4.2 Information requirements . 9
4.2.1 General. 9
4.2.2 Level 1: Minimum traceability applicable for all types of animals, hides, skins, and
leathers . 10
4.2.3 Level 2: Minimum traceability applicable for bovine original material to be placed
in, or exported from, the EU . 11
4.2.4 Level 3: Minimum traceability applicable for enhanced sustainability claims . 12
4.3 System requirements . 12
4.4 Coordination of the leather supply chain . 13
5 Verification . 13
Bibliography . 14
European foreword
This document (prEN 18199:2025) has been prepared by Technical Committee CEN/TC 289 “Leather”,
the secretariat of which is held by UNI.
This document is currently submitted to the CEN Enquiry.
Introduction
Public and/or private stakeholders require supply chains to provide information to consumers on how,
by whom, and where products are made. Accordingly, traceability of leather back to the place of birth
and slaughter of animals whose hide/skin constitute the input material of the tanning process, and
transparency in the supply chain have become essential in the leather market. Animal welfare,
deforestation, child or forced labour, toxic-free supplies, etc. are some of the ethical considerations that
lay behind this growing trend.
Traceability constitutes a particular challenge for the leather industry, as hides and skins obtain their
identity separately from the animal at the slaughterhouse, and information on the previous lifecycle is
lost in the vast majority of cases. A proliferation of different and diverse approaches on leather
traceability risks obliging operators along the animal-to-leather supply chain to implement several
systems developed by private certification scheme owners for ascertaining the chain of custody and
resulting with audit overlaps and an increase in unproductive costs.
The present document provides the requirements agreed by the sector’s certification bodies and
scheme owners setting the minimum essential elements for leather traceability and minimum data or
information to be kept as evidence.
The document should be used by operators along the leather value chain for implementing their
traceability systems, to be verified by a robust assurance process.
1 Scope
This document sets the minimum essential elements of traceability and evidence of verification to be
present in a leather traceability system, kept by organizations along the animal-to-leather supply chain.
It is applicable to all types of leather.
This document defines the requirements and related evidence for establishing the traceability of leather
back to the originating farms or hunting area.
This document can be applied to any organization operating within the leather value chain.
2 Normative references
The following documents are referred to in the text in such a way that some or all of their content
constitutes requirements of this document. For dated references, only the edition cited applies. For
undated references, the latest edition of the referenced document (including any amendments) applies.
EN 15987, Leather - Terminology - Key definitions for the leather trade
ISO 22095, Chain of custody — General terminology and models
3 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the terms and definitions given in EN 15987, in ISO 22095 and the
following apply.
ISO and IEC maintain terminology databases for use in standardization at the following addresses:
— ISO Online browsing platform: available at https://www.iso.org/obp/
— IEC Electropedia: available at https://www.electropedia.org/
3.1
abattoir / slaughterhouse
facility where animals are sent for slaughter at end of life
3.2
animal origin
place where an animal was born
3.3
batch
quantity or consignment of animals farmed, or material processed at the same time
3.4
batch system
method whereby a group (batch) of animals/material is farmed/produced simultaneously (rather than
one at a time)
Note 1 to entry: It is up to the farmer/manufacturer to decide how big the batch will be, and how often these
batches will be processed.
Note 2 to entry: Each batch goes through the separate stages of the farming/manufacturing process together.
3.5
book and claim
chain of custody model in which the administrative record flow is not necessarily connected to the
physical flow of material or product throughout the supply chain
Note 1 to entry: This chain of custody model is also referred to as “certificate trading model” or “credit trading”.
Note 2 to entry: This is often used where the certified/specified material is not, or only with difficulty, be kept
separate from the non-certified/specified material, such as green credits in an electricity supply.
[SOURCE: ISO 22095]
3.6
chain of custody
process by which inputs and outputs and associated information are transferred, monitored and
controlled as they move through each step in the relevant supply chain
[SOURCE: ISO 22095]
3.7
direct supplier
person, party or company that supplies goods/services directly to a person, party or company
Note 1 to entry: A company may be an organization, manufacturing facility or farm.
3.8
indirect supplier
person, party or company that supplies goods/services to another supplier as an intermediary
Note 1 to entry: A company may be an organization, manufacturing facility or farm.
3.9
farm
all places where the birth, raising and/or finishing or full life cycle of an animal takes place
3.10
birthing farm
facility where animals are born and stay with their mothers until they are weaned
3.11
finishing farm
feedlot
facility where animals spend the last period of life, prior to slaughter, to ensure optimum weight and
health for meat production
Note 1 to entry: For cattle it is approx. 4 months.
3.12
industrialized farm system
system that combines the characteristics of a birthing farm, rearing farm (raising farm) and finishing
farm (feedlot), and is commonly used for large volume meat production
3.13
rearing farm
raising farm
facility where young animals are sent to continue to grow to a pre-determined age/weight
3.14
finished product manufacturer
person, party or company that transforms finished leather into final products
3.15
geolocation
geographical location of a plot of land described by means of latitude and longitude coordinates,
corresponding to at least one latitude and one longitude point and using at least six decimal digits
Note 1 to entry: For plots of land of more than four hectares used for the production of the relevant commodities
other than cattle, this shall be provided using polygons with sufficient latitude and longitude points to describe the
perimeter of each plot of land.
[SOURCE: Regulation (EU) 2023/1115 Regulation on Deforestation-free Products (EUDR), modified]
3.16
hide and skin origin
place where the hide or skin is separated from the carcass
3.17
hunting area
geographic area where people are allowed to hunt wild animals, such as a forest or woodland
3.18
identity preservation
process that maintains the unique characteristics of a product throughout its supply chain
[SOURCE: ISO 22095]
3.19
mass balance
chain of custody model in which materials or products with a set of specified characteristics are mixed
according to defined criteria with materials or products without that set of characteristics
Note 1 to entry: The proportion of the input with specified characteristics only match the initial proportions on
average and typically vary across different outputs.
[SOURCE: ISO 22095]
3.20
organization
group of people or a person with their own functions, responsibilities, relationships, and authorities to
achieve their objectives
Note 1 to entry: This definition includes sole-traders, companies, corporations, firms, enterprises, authorities,
partnerships, associations, charities, and institutions
[SOURCE: ISO 9001, modified]
3.21
plot of land
land within a single real-estate property which enjoys sufficiently homogeneous conditions to allow an
evaluation of the aggregate level of risk of deforestation and forest degradation associated with relevant
commodities produced on that land
[SOURCE: EUDR, modified]
3.22
segregation
chain of custody model in which specified characteristics of a material or product are maintained from
the initial input to the final output
Note 1 to entry: Addition of material with different characteristics and/or grade to the input is not allowed.
Note 2 to entry: Commonly, material from more than one source contributes to a chain of custody under the
segregated model.
[SOURCE: ISO 22095]
3.23
service provider
person, party or company who provides a service in the supply chain, such as waste disposal, testing,
certification, packaging
3.24
subcontractor
person, party or company that signs a contract to perform part or all of the obligations of another’s
contract
Note 1 to entry: For example, in the leather sector a subcontractor provides a transformation process on behalf of
a tannery without owning the material.
[SOURCE: UNECE UN-CEFACT - Leather Value Chain R
...
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