CEN/Guides - Group for CEN Guides
Group for CEN Guides
General Information
This document presents rules for the drafting and presentation of European Standards dealing with machinery safety and their revisions, primarily to achieve consistency and acceptable quality of the various standards to be prepared.
It also gives requirements on the criteria for the selection of new work items and for procedures to prepare, produce or revise standards in an efficient and effective way.
This document gives requirements that are additional to the CEN/CENELEC Internal Regulations, Part 3, when this is necessary owing to the special requirements of machinery safety standards.
This document is primarily intended for the drafting of type-C standards. It is also applicable to the drafting of type-B standards; however, the foreseeable variation in the format of these standards prevents general application. When its requirements are specific to type-B standards, this is indicated.
- Guide49 pagesEnglish languagesale 10% offe-Library read for1 day
This document provides guidance on addressing chemicals in the development of standards for consumer-relevant articles. The aim is to minimize the impacts of chemicals of concern on human health and the environment by complying with, complementing or going beyond legal obligations for environmental dimension is considered, where feasible and where appropriate, for instance by addressing environmental exposure or persistent or bio-accumulative chemicals.
The Guide is intended to assist in the development of normative provisions for chemicals, particularly in those areas where specific regulatory provisions (e.g. limit values) for chemicals are absent and are not envisaged to be implemented in the foreseeable future such as articles covered by the General Product Safety Directive (2001/95/EC). In so doing, the Guide aims to facilitate the placing on the market of safe products. In addition, these guidelines can assist those with a general professional interest in consumer safety.
The Guide including the associated background information document presents a comprehensive overview of approaches taken on chemicals in various legislative and voluntary tools. It is not intended to override legal obligations. Both documents reflect the status as of April 2017.
Electrical and electronic equipment, and ICT products, are excluded from the scope as these products fall under the lead of CENELEC and ETSI, respectively. Food contact materials, materials used in the supply of drinking water, medical devices, and construction products are also excluded. This is because comprehensive, detailed and specific regulation on chemicals in these products is either already available or subject to consideration and debate; because specific approaches are required; or because performance requirements are supposed to be addressed at national level; or a combination of all these. Nonetheless, some of the guidance may be useful in areas excluded from the scope of the Guide.
It is envisaged that sector specific guides or standards dealing with chemical hazards in standards for consumer-relevant articles, where available, should be used in conjunction with the present Guide.
NOTE The Bibliography includes relevant CEN sector guidance documents.
- Guide95 pagesEnglish languagesale 10% offe-Library read for1 day
This document provides guidance on the validation tasks in the standardisation process of environmental test methods.
It deals with the two main steps of such validation tasks, the robustness testing and the interlaboratory testing (determining the repeatability and reproducibility), both interacting with the elaboration of the draft standards as shown in the flow chart given in clause 2.1. It applies to the different inter-related phases of the environmental test methods, typically sampling and production of a laboratory sample, storage and transportation of the laboratory sample, extraction, analysis or quantification of a test portion and finally reporting. Consequently this document focuses on the ‘why’ and ‘what’ of validation tasks in direct relation to the different steps of the standardisation process. This document is focussed on the validation tasks in the standardisation process of reference methods either for the whole measurement process or for part thereof.
Given the guidance aim of this document, it does not contain detailed procedures for performing the validation tasks (such as number of laboratories, number of samples, etc.).
- Guide21 pagesEnglish languagesale 10% offe-Library read for1 day