The Commission has presented a proposal for a new Cyber Resilience Act to protect consumers and businesses from products with inadequate security features. A first ever EU-wide legislation of its kind, it introduces mandatory cybersecurity requirements for products with digital elements, throughout their whole lifecycle.
The Act, announced by President Ursula von der Leyen in September 2021 during her State of the European Union address, and building on the 2020 EU Cybersecurity Strategy and the 2020 EU Security Union Strategy,
will ensure that digital products, such as wireless and wired products
and software, are more secure for consumers across the EU: in addition
to increasing the responsibility of manufacturers by obliging them to
provide security support and software updates to address identified
vulnerabilities, it will enable consumers to have sufficient information
about the cybersecurity of the products they buy and use.
Margrethe Vestager, Executive Vice-President for a Europe Fit for the Digital Age, said: “We
deserve to feel safe with the products we buy in the single market.
Just as we can trust a toy or a fridge with a CE marking, the Cyber
Resilience Act will ensure the connected objects and software we buy
comply with strong cybersecurity safeguards. It will put the
responsibility where it belongs, with those that place the products on
the market.”
Margaritis Schinas, Vice-President for Promoting our European Way of Life, said: “The
Cyber Resilience Act is our answer to modern security threats that are
now omnipresent through our digital society. The EU has pioneered in
creating a cybersecurity ecosystem through rules on critical
infrastructure, cybersecurity preparedness and response, and the
certification of cybersecurity products. Today, we are completing this
ecosystem through an Act that brings security in everyone's home, in all
our businesses and in every product that is interconnected.
Cybersecurity is a matter for society, no longer an industry affair.”
Thierry Breton, Commissioner for the Internal Market, said: "When
it comes to cybersecurity, Europe is only as strong as its weakest
link: be it a vulnerable Member State, or an unsafe product along the
supply chain. Computers, phones, household appliances, virtual
assistance devices, cars, toys… each and every one of these hundreds of
million connected products is a potential entry point for a cyberattack.
And yet, today most of the hardware and software products are not
subject to any cyber security obligations. By introducing cybersecurity
by design, the Cyber Resilience Act will help protect Europe's economy
and our collective security.”
With ransomware attacks hitting an organisation every 11 seconds
around the globe and the estimated global annual cost of cybercrime
reaching €5.5 trillion in 2021 (Cybersecurity Ventures as quoted in
Joint Research Centre report (2020): “Cybersecurity – Our Digital Anchor, a European perspective”),
ensuring a high level of cybersecurity and reducing vulnerabilities in
digital products – one of the main avenues for successful attacks – is
more important than ever. With the growth in smart and connected
products, a cybersecurity incident in one product can have an impact on
the entire supply chain, possibly leading to severe disruption of
economic and social activities across the internal market, undermining
security or even becoming life-threatening.
The measures proposed today are based on the New Legislative Framework for EU product legislation and will lay down:
(a) rules for the placing on the market of products with digital elements to ensure their cybersecurity;
(b) essential requirements for the design, development and production
of products with digital elements, and obligations for economic
operators in relation to these products;
(c) essential requirements for the vulnerability handling processes
put in place by manufacturers to ensure the cybersecurity of products
with digital elements during the whole life cycle, and obligations for
economic operators in relation to these processes. Manufacturers will
also have to report actively exploited vulnerabilities and incidents;
(d) rules on market surveillance and enforcement.
The new rules will rebalance responsibility towards manufacturers,
who must ensure conformity with security requirements of products with
digital elements that are made available on the EU market. As a result,
they will benefit consumers and citizens, as well as businesses using
digital products, by enhancing the transparency of the security
properties and promoting trust in products with digital elements, as
well as by ensuring better protection of their fundamental rights, such
as privacy and data protection.
While other jurisdictions around the world look into addressing these
issues, the Cyber Resilience Act is likely to become an international
point of reference, beyond the EU's internal market. EU standards based
on the Cyber Resilience Act will facilitate its implementation and will
be an asset for the EU cybersecurity industry in global markets.
The proposed regulation will apply to all products that are connected
either directly or indirectly to another device or network. There are
some exceptions for products, for which cybersecurity requirements are
already set out in existing EU rules, for example on medical devices,
aviation or cars.
Next Steps
It is now for the European Parliament and the Council to examine the
draft Cyber Resilience Act. Once adopted, economic operators and Member
States will have two years to adapt to the new requirements. An
exception to this rule is the reporting obligation on manufacturers for
actively exploited vulnerabilities and incidents, which would apply
already one year from the date of entry into force, since they require
fewer organisational adjustments than the other new obligations. The
Commission will regularly review the Cyber Resilience Act and report on
its functioning.
Background
Cybersecurity is one of the Commission's top priorities and a
cornerstone of the digital and connected Europe. An increase of
cyber-attacks during the coronavirus crisis has shown how important it
is to protect hospitals, research centres and other infrastructure.
Strong action in the area is needed to future-proof the EU's economy and
society. It is estimated that the annual costs of data breaches are at
least €10 billion and the annual costs of malicious attempts to disrupt
traffic on the internet are estimated to be at least €65 billion (impact assessment report accompanying the Commission Delegated Regulation supplementing Radio Equipment Directive Delegated Regulation).
The Cybersecurity Strategy, presented in December 2020, has proposed
to integrate cybersecurity into every element of the supply chain and
bring further together EU's activities and resources across the four
communities of cybersecurity – internal market, law enforcement,
diplomacy and defence. It builds on the EU' Shaping Europe's Digital Future and the EU Security Union Strategy,
and leans on a number of legislative acts, actions and initiatives the
EU has implemented to strengthen cybersecurity capacities and ensure a
more cyber-resilient Europe.
The new Cyber Resilience Act will complement the EU cybersecurity
framework: the Directive on the security of Network and Information
Systems (NIS Directive), the Directive on measures for a high common level of cybersecurity across the Union (NIS 2 Directive), which was recently agreed by the European Parliament and the Council, and the EU Cybersecurity Act.
For More Information
Questions and Answers: EU Cyber Resilience Act
Factsheet on the EU Cyber Resilience Act
Proposal for a Cyber Resilience Act
Factsheet on the new EU Cybersecurity Strategy
Factsheet on the Proposal for a Directive on measures for high common level of cybersecurity across the Union (NIS2 Directive)
Factsheet on Cybersecurity: EU External Action
Questions and Answers: New EU Cybersecurity Strategy and new rules to make physical and digital critical entities more resilient
Proposal for a Directive on measures for high common level of cybersecurity across the Union (NIS2 Directive)
Proposal for a Directive on the resilience of critical entities
Commission
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