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Croatian Government’s Priorities in the Regulatory Area

Croatian Government’s Priorities in the Regulatory Area. UNECE Round Table on Regulatory Cooperation in South East Europe Geneva, 22 November 2004. WTO. Year 2000

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Croatian Government’s Priorities in the Regulatory Area

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  1. Croatian Government’s Priorities in the Regulatory Area UNECE Round Table on Regulatory Cooperation in South East Europe Geneva, 22 November 2004

  2. WTO • Year 2000 • WTO membership/TBT Agreement, Croatia accepted to base its system of technical legislation, standardisation, metrology and conformity assessment on international rules

  3. Stabilisation and Association Agreement with the EU (SAA) • in force since January 2002 • “make necessary measures in order to gradually achieve conformity with Community technical regulations and European standardisation, metrology, accreditation and conformity assessment procedures” (Article 73) • within a period of six years • Candidate country July 2004

  4. National Strategy for Technical Harmonisation with the EU • January 2003 • Separation of the relevant functions of the State Office for Standardisation and Metrology • responsibilities for the transposition and implementation of “New Approach” and “Old Approach” directives

  5. Horizontal IssuesLegislative framework • September/October 2003 • Law on Technical Requirements for Products and on Conformity Assessment • Law on Standardisation • Law on Accreditation • Law on General Product Safety • Law on Metrology

  6. Quality infrastructure • CROATIAN STANDARDS INSTITUTE • CROATIAN ACCREDITATION • CROATIAN METROLOGY INSTITUTE established as public institutions as from 1 January 2005

  7. CROATIAN STANDARDS INSTITUTE Support to technical legislation • Priorities: • to adopt all harmonised European standards • to withdraw all the standards which are not harmonised with European or international standards • Support to the implementation of technical legislation

  8. CROATIAN ACCREDITATATION Activities: • accreditation of testing and calibration laboratories • accreditation of certification bodies, inspection bodies • evaluation and confirmation of the competence of conformity assessment bodies in accordance with technical regulations

  9. Technical requirements and conformity assessment Law on Technical Requirements for Products and Conformity Assessment • Defines methods to determine technical requirements for products • Conformity assessment procedures in line with corresponding New Approach Directives • Adoption of technical regulations

  10. Technical requirements and conformity assessment • Rules for affixing and use of the CE conformity marking (93/465/EEC) • A form of the conformity marking to be affixed to products will be defined in a separate regulation • Market surveillance with regard to the fulfilment of the requirements for products

  11. Technical regulations • Based on Law on Technical Requirements for Products and on Conformity Assessment, the Croatian Government adopted a Programme which assigned different ministries with the task of transposition and implementation of the New Approach Directives as regulations • Drafting - complete by the end of 2004

  12. Ministry of Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship • low-voltage electrical equipment (73/23/EEC) • simple pressure vessels (87/404/EEC) • machinery (98/37/EC) • lifts (95/16/EC) • personal protective equipment (89/686/EEC)

  13. Ministry of Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship • appliances burning gaseous fuels (90/396/EEC) • pressure equipment (97/23/EC) • efficiency requirements for new hot-water boilers fired with liquid or gaseous fuels (92/42/EEC) • energy efficiency requirements for household electric refrigerators and freezers (96/57/EC)

  14. Ministry of Health and Social Welfare • safety of toys (88/378/EEC) • medical devices, general (93/42/EEC) • active implantable medical devices (90/385/EEC) • in vitro diagnostic medical devices (98/79/EC)

  15. Ministry of the Sea, Tourism, Transport and Development • interoperability of the trans-European high-speed rail system (96/48/EC) • marine equipment (96/98/EC) • recreational craft (94/25/EC) • radio and telecommunications terminal equipment (99/5/EC) • electromagnetic compatibility (89/336/EEC)

  16. Ministry of Environmental Protection, Physical Planning and Construction • construction products (89/106/EEC) • packaging and packaging waste (94/62/EC)

  17. EU support CARDS projects • CARDS 2001 “EU Industrial standards” • CARDS 2003 “Development of accreditation systems and support to national testing and calibration laboratories” • CARDS 2004 “Development of national metrology, standardisation, conformity assessment and accreditation systems”

  18. Transposition Working Groups • Established at ministerial level for the transposition of a particular directive and compilation of technical regulations • Include representatives from ministries, institutions, business and civil society • Technical assistance under the CARDS 2001 project “EU Industrial Standards” is provided to 9 transposition groups

  19. Co-ordination • A Steering Group at high governmental level • Members are all responsible ministers headed by the Deputy Prime Minister responsible for the economy • Enables gathering of all respective date related to the issue of cross-sectorial implementation of directives

  20. Weaknesses • Lack of coordination • No sufficient and adequately trained personnel • Insufficient capacities, in particular of the Ministry of Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship as a coordinating body • No conformity assessment bodies acting in line with technical regulations

  21. How to address these weaknesses? • Steering group at the Government level • Specialised training of the existing staff through CARDS and PHARE programmes and recruitment of new experts • International cooperation • Reorganisation of the Ministry of Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship is a priority – Internal Market Directorate

  22. How to address these weaknesses? • Establishment of conformity assessment and accreditation system according to regulations • Upgrading the competence of accreditation and conformity assessment • Ensure financial resources to enable the existing testing laboratories to purchase new equipment

  23. Results • EU directives adopted and implemented • Trained and competent personnel • Market operators familiar with regulations and standards in their export markets and able to compete • Limitation of obstacles to international trade and facilitated market access

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