CE marking India

CE Marking in Ahmadabad call 09718380800, 9213283599, ce certificate providers in Ahmadabad, ce certification companies in ahmadabad, ce marking consultants in ahmadabad, ce marking in gujarat

Tuesday, 26 February 2013

Seven Steps of CE Marking


What is CE Marking
1.CE Marking on a product is a manufacturer's declaration that the product complies with the essential requirements of the relevant European health, safety and environmental protection legislation, in practice by many of the so-called Product Directives.1.CE Marking on a product ensures the free movement of the product within the EFTA & European Union (EU) single market (total 28 countries), and CE Marking on a product permits the withdrawal of the non-conforming products by customs and enforcement/vigilance authorities.

General principles of the CE marking

The CE marking shall be affixed only by the manufacturer or his authorized representative. The CE marking shall be affixed only to products to which its affixing is provided for by specific Community harmonization legislation, and shall not be affixed to any other product.By affixing or having affixed the CE marking, the manufacturer indicates that he takes responsibility for the conformity of the product with all applicable requirements set out in the relevant Community harmonization legislation providing for its affixing.The CE marking shall be the only marking which attests the conformity of the product with the applicable requirements of the relevant Community harmonization legislation providing for its affixing.The affixing to a product of markings, signs or inscriptions which are likely to mislead third parties regarding the meaning or form of the CE marking shall be prohibited. Any other marking may be affixed to the product provided that the visibility, legibility and meaning of the CE marking is not thereby impaired.Member States shall ensure the correct implementation of the regime governing the CE marking and take appropriate action in the event of improper use of the marking. Member States shall also provide for penalties for infringements, which may include criminal sanctions for serious infringements. Those penalties shall be proportionate to the seriousness of the offence and constitute an effective deterrent against improper use.

If you manufacture or import a product which falls within the scope of one or more of the New Approach Directives and wish to place your product on the market in any of the members states of the European Economic Area (EEA), then you must apply CE Marking to your product against the essential requirements of all these applicable directives.

The New Approach Directives will provide a range of compliance routes for your product and show you, usually in a modular format, the available routes to compliance.

You must then decide which is the best fit for your company set up and follow the routes detailed in the Directive. In many cases the compliance route will require you to use a Notified Body to assist with your certification. The essential requirements of the New Approach Directives differ from directive to directive and product to product.

We offer CE marking services for all the New Approach directives under the scope of CE marking as follows:

Medical Devices (MDD) - 93/42/EEC, Pressure Equipment (PED) - 97/23/EC,
Transportable Pressure Equipment Directive - 99/36/EC, Simple Pressure Vessels - 87/404/EEC, Construction Products (CPD) - 89/106/EEC, Low Voltage Equipment (LVD) - 2006/95/EC, Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) - 89/336/EEC, Machinery - 98/37/EC, Lifts - 95/16/EC, Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) - 89/686/EEC, Toys - 88/378/EEC


Benefits of CE Marking


The CE Marking is a kind of trade passport for the European marketplace: it allows the manufacturer to freely circulate their product throughout the 18 countries of the European Economic Area (EEA).

There is only one set of requirements and procedures to comply with in designing and manufacturing a product for the entire EEA. Various conflicting national regulations are eliminated. As a result, the product no longer needs to be adapted to the specific requirements of the different member states of the EEA.

In addition, it may be considered a benefit that by implementing the requirements, the product will be safer for the user and this may also reduce damage and liability claims.

The CE Marking is required only for the following types of products:

Toys, Machinery, Electrical, equipment, Personal protective, equipment, Pressure equipment, Medical devices, Active implantable, medical devices, In vitro diagnostics, Radio and Telecommunications terminal equipment, Simple pressure vessels, Gas appliances, Lifts, Recreational craft, Equipment and protective systems for use in explosive atmospheres, Non-automatic weighing instruments.

The CE Marking is NOT required for the following types of products:

Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals, Cosmetics, Foodstuffs


Requirements for Affixing of the CE Marking

The CE Marking must be affixed to the product, to its data plate or, where this is not possible or not warranted due to the nature of the product, to its packaging, if any, and to the accompanying documents by the manufacturer, the authorized representative in the European Community or, in exceptional cases, by those responsible for placing the product on the market.

Seven Steps of CE-Marking

Step1: 
The first steps towards CE-marking your product is determining your product's application and establishing which directives apply to it.

Step2: Applying standards
The process is getting your product to meet the essential requirements laid down in the directives.

Step3: Make sure your product is safe and be able to prove it. So carry out a risk assessment or analysis and show how you meet the requirements laid down in the directives.

Step4: Technical document
Drawing up technical documentation or a technical file, intended to provide information on the design, manufacture and operation of your product.

Step5: User Manual
The fifth step is to apply the product with instructions for the end user, including legal obligations, instructions for use and clear documentations, stating the purpose of the product and the risks related to its use under normal circumstances.

Step6: Declaration of conformity
The sixth step is the declaration on conformity, one of the final steps in the CE marking procedure. The declaration of conformity must contain all relevant product information, including which EU directive(s) the product now complies with.

Step7: Affixing the CE mark

The seventh step is to affixing the CE-mark, which means you declare to all parties Involved that your product conforms to all applicable provisions.

Contact us for CE Marking – 09718380800, 09213283599

Sunday, 24 February 2013

CE Marking Certification Ahmadabad


Only safe, flawless, and quality goods should be available on the European market – at least, that’s the objective of the CE mark. The seal proves that the product in question conforms to EU health and safety standards, whether it's toys or construction machines. Our experts conduct an audit on your products based on the appropriate EU regulations, such as the low-voltage or electromagnetic compatibility directive. A CE declaration of conformity means your product now has right of way onto the European market.

Benefits at a Glance

CE mark helps you:
·         Stick to current EU guidelines
·         Reduce liability for your company with documented safety standards
·         Improve the quality and safety of your products
·         Take advantage of short audit times and our extensive experience

Four Steps to Your Product’s CE Mark

Step 1: 
Our employees determine which directive are applicable to your product. 

Step 2: 
We carry out the conformity evaluation procedure and all required audits on your behalf. With a declaration of conformity, you demonstrate that your product complies with all valid regulations, such as health and safety product regulation or medical product regulations. 

Step 3: 
Some products or machines rated as dangerous need to have been initialized by an authorized body

Step 4: 
You can now label your product as CE mark approved.

CE Directive and the CE Mark

The 'CE' abbreviation stands for 'Communauté Européenne,' French for 'European Union.' It also stands for EU-wide standards, which simplify the traffic of European goods.
The CE marking as it has been legally called since 1993 (per directive 93/68/EEC)(Decision 93/465/EEC), or formerly EC mark is a mandatory conformity marking for products placed on the market in the European Economic Area (EEA). With the CE marking on a product, the manufacturer declares that the product conforms to the essential requirements of the applicable EC directives.
The actual meaning of "CE" has been disputed. It is often taken to be an abbreviation of French: Conformité Européenne, meaning "European Conformity". However, "CE" originally stood for "Communauté Européenne", "Comunidad Europea", "Comunidade Europeia" and "Comunità Europea", meaning "European Community". In former German legislation, the CE marking was called "EG-Zeichen" meaning "European Community mark". According to the European Commission, the CE logo has become a symbol for free marketability of industrial goods within the EEA without any literal meaning, which appears contradictory to what they say today

Countries requiring the CE marking

The CE marking is mandatory for certain product groups in the European Economic Area (EEA), consisting of the 27 Member States of the EU and EFTA countries Iceland, Norway and Liechtenstein. It is also obligatory for all such products made in third countries (non-member states) sold in the EEA. In that case, the importer has to make sure that the manufacturer outside the EU has taken the necessary steps that allow him to affix the CE marking.
It is still not required within the member countries of the Central European Free Trade Agreement (CEFTA), but some of them (Republic of Macedonia, Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro) are official candidates for membership to the European Union, and are already adopting many of its standards within their legislation (like most of the former Central European countries that were members of CEFTA before joining the EU).

Rules underlying CE marking

Responsibility for CE marking lies with whoever puts the product on the market in the EU, i.e. an EU-based manufacturer, the importer or distributor of a product made outside the EU, or an EU-based office of a non-EU manufacturer.
The manufacturer of a product affixes the CE marking to it but has to take certain obligatory steps before the product can bear CE marking. The manufacturer must carry out a conformity assessment, set up a technical file and sign an EC declaration of conformity. The documentation has to be made available to authorities on request.
Importers of products have to verify that the manufacturer outside the EU has undertaken the necessary steps and that the documentation is available upon request. Importers should also make sure that contact with the manufacturer can always be established.
Distributors must be able to demonstrate to national authorities that they have acted with due care and they must have affirmation from the manufacturer or importer that the necessary measures have been taken.
If importers or distributors market the products under their own name, they take over the manufacturer's responsibilities. In this case they must have sufficient information on the design and production of the product, as they will be assuming the legal responsibility when they affix the CE marking.
There are certain rules underlying the procedure to affix the marking:
·         Products subject to certain EC directives providing for CE marking have to be affixed with the CE marking before they can be placed on the market.
·         Manufacturers have to check, on their sole responsibility, which EU directives they need to apply for their products.
·         The product may be placed on the market only if it complies with the provisions of all applicable directives and if the conformity assessment procedure has been carried out accordingly.
·         The manufacturer draws up an EC declaration of conformity and affixes the CE marking on the product.
·         If stipulated in the directive(s), an authorized third party (Notified Body) must be involved in the conformity assessment procedure.
·         If the CE marking is affixed on a product, it can bear additional markings only if they are of different significance, do not overlap with the CE marking and are not confusing and do not impair the legibility and visibility of the CE marking.

 

Self-certification

Depending on the level of risk of the product, the CE marking is affixed to a product by the manufacturer or authorized representative who decides whether the product meets all the CE marking requirements. If a product has minimal risk, it can be self-certified where manufacturers a Declaration of Conformity and affixes the CE marking to their own product. Manufacturer then must do several things:
1. Decide whether the product needs to have a CE marking and if the product applies to more than one directive it needs to comply with all of them.
2. Choose the conformity assessment procedure from the modules called out by the directive for the product. There are several modules available for the Conformity Assessment Procedures as listed below:
·         Module A – Internal production control.
·         Module B – EC type-examination.
·         Module C – Conformity to type.
·         Module D – Production quality assurance.
·         Module E – Product quality assurance.
·         Module F – Product verification.
·         Module G – Unit verification.
·         Module H – Full quality assurance.
In reality the self certification process consists of the following stages:
Stage 1: Identify the applicable Directive(s)
The first step is to identify whether the product needs to bear CE marking or not. Not all products are required to bear CE marking, only the products that fall within the scope of at least one of the sectoral directives requiring CE marking. There are more than 20 sectoral product directives requiring CE marking covering, but not limited to, products such as electrical equipment, machines, medical devices, toys, pressure equipment, PPE, wireless devices and construction products.
Identifying which directive(s) may be applicable, as there may be more than one, involves a simple exercise of reading the scope of each directive to establish which apply to the product (An example of the scope of the Low Voltage Directive below). If the product does not fall within the scope of any of the sectoral directives, then the product does not need to bear CE marking (and, indeed, must not bear CE marking).
Low Voltage Directive (2006/95/EC)
Article 1 states the Directive covers "any equipment designed for use with a voltage rating of between 50 and 1000 V for A.C. and between 75 and 1500 V for D.C, other than the equipment and phenomena listed in Annex II."
Stage 2: Identify the applicable requirements of the Directive(s)
Each Directive has slightly different methods of demonstrating conformity depending on the classification of the product and its intended use. Every Directive has a number of ‘essential requirements’ that the product has to meet before being placed on the market.
The best way to demonstrate that these essential requirements have been met is by meeting the requirements of an applicable ‘harmonised standard,’ which offer a presumption of conformity to the essential requirements, although the use of standards usually remains voluntary. Harmonised standards can be identified by searching the ‘Official Journal’ on the European Commission’s website, or by visiting the New Approach website established by the European Commission and EFTA with the European Standardisation Organisations.
Stage 3: Identify an appropriate route to conformity
Although the process is always a self-declaration process,there are various ‘attestation routes’ to conformity depending on the Directive and classification of the product. Some products (such as invasive medical devices, or fire alarm and extinguisher systems) may, to some extent, have a mandatory requirement for the involvement of an authorised third party or "notified body".
There are various attestation routes which include:
·     An assessment of the product by the manufacturer.
·     An assessment of the product by the manufacturer, with additional requirement for mandatory factory production control audits to be carried out by a third party.
·     An assessment by a third party (e.g. EC type test), with the requirement for mandatory factory production control audits to be carried out by a third party.
Stage 4: Assessment of the product's conformity
When all of the requirements have been established, the conformity of the product to the essential requirements of the Directive(s)needs to be assessed. This usually involves assessment and/or testing, and may include an evaluation of the conformity of the product to the harmonised standard(s) identified in step 2.
Stage 5: Compile the technical documentation
Technical documentation, usually referred to as the technical file, relating to the product or range of products needs to be compiled. This information should cover every aspect relating to conformity and is likely to include details of the design, development and manufacture of the product.
Technical documentation will usually include:
·         Technical description
·         Drawings, circuit diagrams and photos
·         Bill of materials
·         Specification and, where applicable, Declarations of Conformity for the critical components and materials used
·         Details of any design calculations
·         Test reports and/or assessments
·         Instructions
·         EC Declaration of Conformity
·         Technical documentation can be made available in any format (i.e. paper or electronic) and must be held for a period of up to 10 years after the manufacture of the last unit, and in most cases reside in the European Economic Area (EEA).
Stage 6: Make a Declaration and affix the CE marking
When the manufacturer, importer or authorised representative is satisfied that their product conforms to the applicable Directives, an EC Declaration of Conformity must be completed or, for partly completed machinery under the Machinery Directive, an EC Declaration of Incorporation.
The requirements for the Declaration vary slightly, but will at least include:
·         Name and address of the manufacturer
·         Details of the product (model, description and the serial number where applicable)
·         List of applicable sectoral Directives and standards that have been applied
·         A statement declaring that the product complies with all of the relevant requirements
·         Signature, name and position of the responsible person
·         The date that the Declaration was signed
·         Details of the authorised representative within the EEA (where applicable)
·         Additional Directive/standard specific requirements
·         In all cases, except for the PPE Directive, all of the Directives can be declared on one Declaration.
·         Once a Declaration of Conformity has been completed, the final step is to affix the CE marking to the product. When this has been done, the CE marking requirements have been met for the product to be placed legally on the EEA market.

Characteristics of CE marking

·         The CE marking has to be affixed by the manufacturer or its authorized representative in the European Union according to its legal format visibly, legibly and indelibly to the product
·         The size of the CE marking must be at least 5 mm, if enlarged its proportions have to be kept
·         If the appearance and workmanship of a product do not allow for the CE marking to be affixed on the product itself, the marking has to be affixed to its packaging or accompanying documents
·         If a directive requires the involvement of a Notified Body in the conformity assessment procedure, its identification number has to be put behind the CE marking. This is done under the responsibility of the Notified Body

Dimensions

The CE logo must be at least 5 mm high (except on small-scale equipment/machinery such as spectacles). Where it cannot be placed on the product itself (e.g. contact lens solution), it must be placed on the packaging.
The letters "CE" are not enough. The logo must not be modified.
CE Marking is the symbol  as shown on the top of this page. The letters "CE" are the abbreviation of French phrase "Conformité Européene" which literally means "European Conformity". The term initially used was "EC Mark" and it was officially replaced by "CE Marking" in the Directive 93/68/EEC in 1993. "CE Marking" is now used in all EU official documents.

"CE Mark" is also in use, but it is NOT the official term. For instance, in the Directive 2007/47/ec, of 5 September 2007, amending the directives 90/385/eec, 93/42/eec & 98/8/ec, the term CE Marking appears 9 times whereas CE Mark appears nowhere in the entire 35-page document.
  1. CE Marking on a product is a manufacturer's declaration that the product complies with the essential requirements of the relevant European health, safety and environmental protection legislation, in practice by many of the so-called Product Directives.*
*Product Directives contains the "essential requirements" and/or "performance levels" and "Harmonized Standards" to which the products must conform. Harmonized Standards are the technical specifications (European Standards or Harmonization Documents) which are established by several European standards agencies (CEN, CENELEC, etc).
CEN stands for European Committee for Standardization.
CENELEC stands for European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization.
  1. CE Marking on a product indicates to governmental officials that the product may be legally placed on the market in their country.
  2. CE Marking on a product ensures the free movement of the product within the EFTA & European Union (EU) single market (total 28 countries), and
  3. CE Marking on a product permits the withdrawal of the non-conforming products by customs and enforcement/vigilance authorities.

General principles of the CE marking

  1. The CE marking shall be affixed only by the manufacturer or his authorised representative.
  2. The CE marking shall be affixed only to products to which its affixing is provided for by specific Community harmonisation legislation, and shall not be affixed to any other product.
  3. By affixing or having affixed the CE marking, the manufacturer indicates that he takes responsibility for the conformity of the product with all applicable requirements set out in the relevant Community harmonisation legislation providing for its affixing.
  4. The CE marking shall be the only marking which attests the conformity of the product with the applicable requirements of the relevant Community harmonisation legislation providing for its affixing.
  5. The affixing to a product of markings, signs or inscriptions which are likely to mislead third parties regarding the meaning or form of the CE marking shall be prohibited. Any other marking may be affixed to the product provided that the visibility, legibility and meaning of the CE marking is not thereby impaired.
  6. Member States shall ensure the correct implementation of the regime governing the CE marking and take appropriate action in the event of improper use of the marking. Member States shall also provide for penalties for infringements, which may include criminal sanctions for serious infringements. Those penalties shall be proportionate to the seriousness of the offence and constitute an effective deterrent against improper use.
CE marking is a key indicator of a product’s compliance with EU legislation and enables the free movement of products within the European market. By affixing the CE marking on a product, a manufacturer is declaring, on his sole responsibility, conformity with all of the legal requirements to achieve CE marking and therefore ensuring validity for that product to be sold throughout the European Economic Area (EEA, the 27 Member States of the EU and EFTA countries Iceland, Norway, Liechtenstein), as well as Turkey. This also applies to products made in third countries which are sold in the EEA and Turkey. However, not all products must bear the CE marking. Only those product categories subject to specific directives that provide for the CE marking are required to be CE marked.
There are more than 20 directives setting out the product categories requiring CE marking. The essential requirements that products have to fulfil (e.g. safety) are harmonised at EU level and are set out in general terms in these directives. Harmonised European standards are issued with reference to the applied directives and express in detailed technical terms the essential requirements. It is up to you to ensure that your product complies with the essential requirements of the relevant EU legislation. Full compliance of a product to the harmonised standards gives a product the “presumption of conformity” with the relevant essential requirements. The use of harmonised standards remains voluntary. You may decide to choose other ways to fulfil these essential requirements. Testing the product and checking its conformity to the EU legislation (Conformity Assessment Procedure) is the responsibility of the manufacturer. One part of the procedure is, as a general rule, a risk assessment. By applying the relevant harmonised European standards, you will be able to fulfill the essential legislative requirements of the directives. The manufacturer has to establish the technical documentation required by the directive(s) for the assessment of the product’s conformity to the relevant requirements, and for the  risk assessment. Together with the EC declaration of conformity, the technical documentation must be presented on request to the relevant national authorities. Each directive covering your product specifies whether an authorised third party (Notified Body) must be involved in the conformity assessment procedure necessary for CE marking. This is not obligatory for all products, so it is important to check whether the involvement of a Notified Body is indeed required. These Bodies are authorised by national authorities and officially “notified” to the Commission and listed in the NANDO (New Approach Notified and Designated Organisations) database.