Standards are the silent foundation of the EU Single Market and global competitiveness. They help manufacturers ensure the interoperability of products and services, reduce costs, improve safety and foster innovation.
Today, the Commission is presenting a new Standardisation Strategy outlining our approach to standards within the Single Market as well as globally. The Strategy is accompanied by a proposal for an amendment to the Regulation on standardisation, a report on its implementation, and the 2022 annual Union work programme for European standardisation.
This new Strategy aims to strengthen the EU's global competitiveness,
to enable a resilient, green and digital economy and to enshrine
democratic values in technology applications.
Standards are the silent foundation of the EU Single Market and
global competitiveness. They help manufacturers ensure the
interoperability of products and services, reduce costs, improve safety
and foster innovation. Standards are an invisible but fundamental part
of our daily life: from Wi-Fi frequencies, to connected toys or ski
bindings, just to mention a few. Standards give confidence that a
product or a service is fit for purpose, is safe and will not harm
people or the environment. Compliance with harmonised standards
guarantees that products are in line with EU law.
The fast pace of innovation, our green and digital ambitions and the
implications of technological standards for our EU democratic values
require an increasingly strategic approach to standardisation. The EU's
ambitions towards a climate neutral, resilient and circular economy
cannot be delivered without European standards. Having a strong global
footprint in standardisation activities and leading the work in key
international fora and institutions will be essential for the EU to
remain a global standard-setter. By setting global standards, the EU
exports its values while providing EU companies with an important
first-mover advantage.
Executive Vice-President for a Europe Fit for the Digital Age, Margrethe Vestager, said: “Ensuring
that data is protected in artificial intelligence or ensuring that
mobile devices are secure from hacking, rely on standards and must be in
line with EU democratic values. In the same way, we need standards for
the roll-out of important investment projects, like hydrogen or
batteries, and to valorise innovation investment by providing EU
companies with an important first-mover advantage.”
Commissioner for the Internal Market, Thierry Breton, said: “Technical
standards are of strategic importance. Europe's technological
sovereignty, ability to reduce dependencies and protection of EU values
will rely on our ability to be a global standard-setter. With today's
Strategy, we are crystal-clear on our standardisation priorities and
create the conditions for European standards to become global
benchmarks. We take action to preserve the integrity of the European
standardisation process, putting European SMEs and the European interest
at the centre”.
The Strategy presented today proposes five key sets of actions:
- Anticipate, prioritise and address standardisation needs in strategic areas:
we need standards faster and in tune with the European innovation and
policy agenda. The Commission has identified standardisation urgencies
as regards COVID-19 vaccine and medicine production, critical raw
materials recycling, the clean hydrogen value chain, low-carbon cement,
chips certification and data standards. As of this year, standardisation
priorities will be clearly identified in the 2022 annual Union work
programme for European standardisation. A High-level Forum will be set
up to inform future standardisation priorities. The Commission will
establish the function of a Chief Standardisation Officer to ensure
high-level guidance across the Commission on standardisation activities,
which will be supported by an EU excellence hub on standards composed
of Commission services.
- Improve the governance and integrity of the European standardisation system:
European standards, which support EU policy and legislation, must be
decided by European players. The Commission is proposing an amendment to
the Regulation on standardisation
to improve the governance in the European standardisation system. While
the European system will remain open, transparent, inclusive and
impartial, the proposal prescribes that mandates at the request of the
Commission to the European standardisation organisations must be handled
by national delegates – the national standardisation bodies – from the
EU and EEA Member States. This will avoid any undue influence of actors
from outside the EU and EEA in the decision-making processes during the
development of standards for key areas, like cybersecurity or hydrogen
standards. The Commission will further pay close attention to the
inclusiveness of the system, the role of SMEs and civil society. It
calls on the European standardisation organisations to modernise their
governance structures and will launch a peer review process among Member
States and national standardisation bodies to achieve better
inclusiveness for civil society, users and SMEs-friendly conditions for
standardisation. At the same time, the Commission will launch the
evaluation of the Regulation on standardisation.
- Enhance European leadership in global standards:
the Commission will work through the High-Level Forum to set up a new
mechanism with EU Member States and national standardisation bodies to
share information, coordinate and strengthen the European approach to
international standardisation. The Commission will also pursue more
coordination between EU Member States and like-minded partners. The EU
will fund standardisation projects in African and the Neighbourhood
countries.
- Support innovation: the
Commission is proposing to better tap into the potential of EU-funded
research to valorise innovation projects through standardisation
activities and anticipate early standardisation needs. A
‘standardisation booster' to support researchers under Horizon 2020 and
Horizon Europe to test the relevance of their results for
standardisation, will be launched. The development of a Code of Practice
for researchers on standardisation will be initiated to strengthen the
link between standardisation and research/innovation through the
European Research Area (ERA), by mid-2022.
- Enable the next generation of standardisation experts:
standards rely on the best experts and Europe is facing a generation
shift. The Commission will promote more academic awareness on standards,
for instance through the future organisation of EU University Days and
training of researchers.
Background
Today, standards have become a matter of global importance. Other
regions are reinforcing their global footprint by being more strategic
and assertive. The European standardisation system needs to evolve to
respond to these challenges. The Commission's plans for a new
Standardisation Strategy and legislative adjustment to the
standardisation Regulation were announced in the Commission's ‘Updating the 2020 New Industrial Strategy: Building a stronger Single Market for Europe's recovery'.
A harmonised standard is a European standard developed by a
recognised European Standards Organisation (CEN, CENELEC or ETSI)
following a request from the European Commission. Once accepted, these
standards become part of EU law and provide manufacturers using them
across the Single Market with a presumption of conformity with the
requirements of EU legislation, helping to reduce costs for small
businesses. The process is based on a public-private-partnership between
the Commission and the standardisation community, where the division of
roles and responsibilities is guided by the 2012 standardisation
Regulation.
Commission
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