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10 th Anniversary of CYS-CYSAB 24 th October 2012, Nicosia, Cyprus

10 th Anniversary of CYS-CYSAB 24 th October 2012, Nicosia, Cyprus. The European Accreditation system and its impact to economy and society in the EU member states and beyond Thomas Facklam, EA MLA Council chair. Contents. What is EA?. EA organizational structure. MLA Signatories.

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10 th Anniversary of CYS-CYSAB 24 th October 2012, Nicosia, Cyprus

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  1. 10th Anniversary of CYS-CYSAB 24th October 2012, Nicosia, Cyprus The European Accreditation system and its impact to economy and society in the EU member states and beyond Thomas Facklam, EA MLA Council chair

  2. Contents What is EA? EA organizational structure MLA Signatories Standards for Accreditation The Development of European Accreditation EA in the global network

  3. Contents The role and importance of accreditation in today´s society and especially the operation of the Single Market New Approach Directives, NLF, the Health Sector The role of small countries and small ABs in European and international accreditation The importance of regional cooperation The cooperation of EA with sector scheme owners Examples of new legislation (GHG, EU/ETS, wastes etc.)

  4. Contents What is EA? EA organizational structure MLA Signatories Standards for Accreditation The Development of European Accreditation EA in the global network

  5. Origins of EA • EA was created in 1997 but its origins extend back further WEMC 1973-1982 WECC 1976-1994 WELAC 1987-1994 EAL 1994-1997 EAC 1991-1997 EA created as a legal entity on 26/06/2000

  6. The European co-operation for Accreditation (1) A not-for-profit association registered in the Netherlands in June 2000. 35 Full Members representing 35 European economies 13 Associate Members Out of these members, 4 have turned into a bilateral agreement with EA.

  7. The European co-operation for Accreditation (2) A permanent secretariat of 5 persons: Martine Blum, Bénédicte Ziemann, Frédérique Laudinet, Julia Ledwon, EA Secretariat Marga Zaffe, Secretary of the MLA Council EA is an active Member of ILAC (International laboratory Accreditation Cooperation) and IAF (International Accreditation Forum) as a recognised regional cooperation.

  8. Purpose of EA (1) • The European co-operation for Accreditation (EA) is the Association of the national accreditation bodies that provide accreditation for the following conformity assessment activities: • Calibration • Testing • Inspection • Certification of quality, environmental management systems • Certification of products • Certification of persons • Verification bodies & verifiers (EMAS, EU/ETS, ETV)

  9. Purpose of EA (2) • Provide Europe with an effective, reliable accreditation infrastructure • Develop accreditation criteria and guidelines supporting harmonisation of practices • Operate a sound, robust, reliable peer evaluation process • Ensure equivalence of accreditation and equal reliability of accredited results • Cooperate with the European Commission and other European, international stakeholders

  10. The European Accreditation model • A service of general interest • Public authority • Last level of control of CA services • Voluntary, mandatory fields • Mandate of the Government • Full compliance with applicable rules • Accountability to stakeholders • No predominance of any single interest group • Non-profit distributing • Non competition

  11. Contents What is EA? EA organizational structure MLA Signatories Standards for Accreditation The Development of European Accreditation EA in the global network

  12. EA Organizational structure General Assembly EA Advisory Board Executive Committee Secretariat Multilateral Agreement council (MAC) Horizontal Harmonisation Committee Laboratory Committee Inspection Committee Certification Committee Communications & Publications Committee

  13. Contents What is EA? EA organizational structure MLA Signatories Standards for Accreditation The Development of European Accreditation EA in the global network

  14. EA MLA Signatories • Multilateral Agreements (MLAs) create confidence in, and acceptance of, accredited certifications, inspections and test reports, eliminating the need for suppliers to be certified in each country where they sell their products or services. EA’s role in supporting the effective operation of the Single Market is recognized by Regulation 765/2008, the Guidelines for cooperation and Framework Partnership agreement signed with the European Commission and EFTA. • EA MLA Signatories and the accreditations they grant are internationally recognized through the ILAC and IAF Multilateral agreements. • Each signatory is subject to routine rigorous evaluations by peer evaluation teams in order to verify continuing compliance with the Regulation 765/2008 and international standard for accreditation bodies (ISO/IEC 17011).

  15. EA MLA Signatories: rights & obligations • Operate according to the criteria specified in the relevant European Standards, published in the EN 45000 and ISO/IEC 17000 series of standards, or other internationally recognised normative documents, supplemented by EA application documents, if necessary • Accept the other schemes operated by the other signatories as equivalent to their own • Recognise on an equal basis with their own the certificates and/or reports from the organisations accredited by the signatories under their scheme(s) • Recommend & promote the acceptance of certificates and/or reports from the organisations accredited by the signatories under their scheme(s) by all users in countries of the signatories • Investigate all complaints initiated by a signatory resulting from certificates and/or reports issued by an accredited organisation of their own scheme(s) • Notify all other signatories as soon as possible of any significant change that has occured or will occur in their status or in the operational practices of their scheme(s)

  16. Poland Austria Spain Greece France Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Germany Slovakia Sweden Ireland Italy Norway Czech Rep. Latvia Estonia Romania United Kingdom Lithuania Finland Netherlands Denmark EA MLA Signatories • 33 Full Member accreditation bodies have signed the EA MLA, out of which 26 have signed for all accreditation activities covered by the EA MLA. Serbia Luxembourg Malta FJRO Mazedonia Slovenia Hungary Cyprus Switzerland Portugal Turkey Full details of the scope for MLA Signatories can be found on the EA website

  17. EA MLA Signatories • 4 Associate Member accreditation bodies have signed the EA MLA Israel Tunisia South Africa Ukraine Full details of the scope for MLA Signatories can be found on the EA website

  18. Contents What is EA? EA organizational structure MLA Signatories Standards for Accreditation The Development of European Accreditation EA in the global network

  19. EMAS Verifiers Council Regulation 1221/2009 ISO Guide 65 (EN45011) ISO/IEC 17021 ISO/IEC 17024 Eco-Management and Audit Scheme Products Management Systems Persons Standards for accreditation (1) Accreditation Bodies ISO/IEC 17011 Certification Bodies

  20. Standards for accreditation (2) Accreditation Bodies ISO/IEC 17011 Laboratories Inspection Bodies Verification Bodies ISO/IEC 17025 ISO/IEC 15189 ISO/IEC 17020 ISO 14065 Testing and Calibration Inspection Verification

  21. Contents What is EA? EA organizational structure MLA Signatories Standards for Accreditation The Development of European Accreditation EA in the global network

  22. The Development of European Accreditation (1) • The European legislation on accreditation and market surveillance • Legal basis for accreditation and EA • Strengthening use of accreditation and the EA MLA as a basis for notification • Recognising EA as the European Accreditation Infrastructure

  23. The Development of European Accreditation (2) The EA Development Strategy 2010-2015 • Prepare for the new role • Reconsider, improve organisation and structure • Increase resources • Reinforce relations with all stakeholders • Reinforce cooperation with AB’s of the European Neighbouring Policy (ENP) • Reinforce influence in ILAC and IAF

  24. Contents What is EA? EA organizational structure MLA Signatories Standards for Accreditation The Development of European Accreditation EA in the global network

  25. ILAC 72 AB Full Members In ILAC, Full Members are MLA signatories. 21 AB Associate Members 18 AB Affiliate Members 1 Regional Cooperation Body (SADCA, South Africa) 3 Regional Cooperations (including EA) 26 Stakeholder Members IAF 64 AB Members and 53 MLA signatories 18Associate Members 4 Regions (including EA) 4 Observers EA, a major member of ILAC and IAF

  26. EA Executive Committee (2012-2014) Graham Talbot, Chairman Daniel Pierre, Vice-Chairman Thomas Facklam, Chair of the MAC Vagn Andersen, Chair of the CPC Merih Malmqvist Nilsson, Chair of the HHC Rolf Straub, Chair of the IC Leopoldo Cortez, Chair of the CC Paolo Bianco, Chair of the LC RÓsza Ring, Treasurer Biserka Bajzek Brezak, Quality Manager Ignacio Pina, Jan van der Poel, Members of the Executive

  27. Contents The role and importance of accreditation in today´s society and especially the operation of the Single Market New Approach Directives, NLF, the Health Sector The cooperation of EA with sector scheme owners Examples of new legislation (GHG, EU/ETS, wastes etc.) The role of small countries and small ABs in European and international accreditation The importance of regional cooperation

  28. Co-operation of national bodies What if accreditation bodies were competitive bodies? To maintain the necessary confidence in the accreditations granted, an extra layer would be necessary for supervision. This would create extra costs. With no end...

  29. EA and its members are neutral from commercial pressure. EA develops and maintains a high level of service for the benefit of the European economy: the European Commission and EFTA, the European industries, governments and citizens. All interested parties and stakeholders are involved in the EA activities. They can and do contribute to the EA work through membership in the EA Advisory Board, committees and working groups

  30. New responsibilities for EA members Communication is a pivotal function for the consistent implementation of the new regulation. The latter formalizes EA members’ obligations to satisfy the expectations of national authorities and stakeholders, which entrust greater responsibility from their NAB. A Best Practice Guide on Communications with the Regulators has been published to assist EA and its members to develop and strengthen cooperation with both national and European regulators.

  31. New responsibilities for EA Similarly EA itself shall enhance its communications with the EC: EA shall attend every SOGS meeting dealing with accreditation, as well as meetings of the EC Inter-Service Steering Group for Accreditation in order to discuss the benefits of accreditation with the various EC services; specific projects are underway with DGs Environment, Transport, Health & Consumer and Agriculture.

  32. Furthermore, EA is given a prime role to define, harmonise and build consistency in accreditation as a service to trade with third countries, with the aim to reduce barriers to trade and to contribute to protecting health and safety. Following the European Union’s will to have close links with these countries, EA considers that relationships between EA and ABs in countries being part of the EU’s Neighbourhood Policy (1) and potential candidates for EU membership (2) should be strengthened in order to support the work of the EU, to embrace and support the effective development of ABs in these countries, to enable good cooperation with EA, and to facilitate a good understanding of EA’s practices.

  33. Contents The role and importance of accreditation in today´s society and especially the operation of the Single Market New Approach Directives, NLF, the Health Sector The role of small countries and small ABs in European and international accreditation The importance of regional cooperation The cooperation of EA with sector scheme owners Examples of new legislation (GHG, EU/ETS, wastes etc.)

  34. Enterprise and Industry NEW LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK OVERVIEWAIMS AND EXSPECTATIONS

  35. The New Legislative Framework • Regulation (EC) 765/2008of European Parliament & Council of 9 July 2008 – for accreditation & market surveillance (OJ L218/30 of 13/08/2008) • Decision (EC) 768/2008of European Parliament & Council of 9 July 2008 on common framework for the marketing of products (OJ L218/82 of 13/08/2008)

  36. The New Legislative Framework REGULATION Accreditation Market surveillance - internal - imported products general principles Financing elements Applicable from 1 Jan 2010 Lex Specialis sectorals/GPSD DECISION • Definitions / obligations • Notification (criteria / process / accreditation) • Conformity assessment procedures • Safeguard mechanisms (& market surveillance) • marking Basis for future legislation

  37. The Regulation & the Decision REGULATION • Covers elements not already included in sectoral legislation • Complementary to sectoral legislation • Applicable in all Member States from 1 January 2010 • Creates direct rights and obligations for Member States and individuals DECISION • Covers elements already included in legislation • Sui Generis Decision -applies to European legislator (Council, EP and COMM) • No immediate effects for Member States or individuals • Better Regulation tool: model Articles - “toolbox”

  38. Accreditation • Create and promote mutual confidence in the quality of CABs and their certificates • Common and transparent rules for the assessment of the competence and monitoring of conformity assessment bodies • Stabilise the European accreditation system

  39. Scope for Accreditation • All product sectors • No exclusions • Includes services • Rules are applicable in the mandatory and voluntary sector

  40. Accreditation Public authority activity 1 national accreditation body (NAB) per Member State Prevention of competition for NABs Set of requirements for NABs European Accreditation infrastructure: EA (European co-operation for accreditation) Cross border accreditation (EA role) Peer evaluation (EA role)

  41. Implementation: Commission The Commission must follow national adaptations of systems. Commission must follow EA. Guidelines signed between Commission, EA, EFTA & National Authorities 1 April 2009 Framework contract EA/COM Overview rules for peer evaluation

  42. Implementation: National Authorities oversee NAB ensure proper means at disposal carry out regular monitoring take corrective actions

  43. Implementation: EA Ensure openness, transparency, equivalence and competence in its procedures Operate a rigorous peer evaluation system Identify and raise awareness of tools for the implementation of EU legislation Assist in the development of sectoral schemes where requested

  44. Accreditation in support of notification Accreditation is the preferred means Facilitated notification procedure based on accreditation Standard-based Transparent Peer evaluation

  45. Notification without accreditation « Alternative » procedure (Reg. 765/2008 Art. 5(2)) Member States must provide documentary evidence of competence

  46. Contents The role and importance of accreditation in today´s society and especially the operation of the Single Market New Approach Directives, NLF, the Health Sector The role of small countries and small ABs in European and international accreditation The importance of regional cooperation The cooperation of EA with sector scheme owners Examples of new legislation (GHG, EU/ETS, wastes etc.)

  47. Sector Schemes It is an important goal for EA to provide the market in general and individual conformity assessment scheme owners in particular, with a harmonized view on accreditation and the implementation of the underlying standards. Conformity assessment scheme owners need to have a unified response from EA because one of the ultimate goals of their cooperation with EA is to be able to achieve recognition under the EA Multilateral Agreement of Mutual Recognition (EA MLA) for individual conformity assessment bodies working within their schemes thus facilitating the free movement of goods and services.

  48. Scheme owner: • A scheme owner is an identifiable organization which has established a conformity assessment scheme and which can take responsibility for the conformity assessment scheme design. The following are examples of scheme owners: • Standardization bodies; • Conformity Assessment Bodies; • Government authorities; • Organizations that use services provided by CABs; • Organizations that buy or sell products subject to conformity assessment activities; • Manufacturers and their associations that have established their own conformity assessment schemes.

  49. Contents The role and importance of accreditation in today´s society and especially the operation of the Single Market New Approach Directives, NLF, the Health Sector The role of small countries and small ABs in European and international accreditation The importance of regional cooperation The cooperation of EA with sector scheme owners Examples of new legislation (GHG, EU/ETS, wastes etc.)

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