European directive 2007/23/EC on the placing on the market of pyrotechnical articles : are you concerned?

Similar documents
European Directive 2007/23/EC on the Placing on the Market of Pyrotechnical Articles: Are you concerned?

How to deal with the essential safety requirements of the EU directive in the placing on the market of pyrotechnic articles

Road transportation of dangerous goods quantitative risk assessment and route comparison

Pressure Equipment Directive PED 2014/68/EU Commission's Working Group "Pressure"

Implementation of Directive 1999/92/EC : some concerns for the definition of ATEX zones

Safety Assessments Revised Toy Safety Directive 2009/48/EC

Changes rules and evolution of results in judo, an analysis: of the 2012 and 2016 Olympic Games and 2015 and 2017 World Championships.

Information sheet swimming pools Page 1 of 8. Introduction INFORMATION SHEET LVD ADCO PUMPS AND OTHER ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES FOR MOBILE SWIMMING POOLS

Guidance on the Legal Obligations for Importers, Retailers and Distributors of Category 1 Fireworks

Pressure Equipment Directive (PED) Directive 97/23/EC. Pressure Equipment (PED) --- Baltic Pressure Equipment Workshop Riga, November 2003

Compliance for a cross four-bar knee joint

COUNCIL DIRECTIVE 79/409/EC. of 2 April on the conservation of the wild birds

EU Directive on Placing on Market of Pyrotechnic Articles (2007/23/EC) Guidance on Legal Obligations for

Farm Animals Breeding Act 1

(Acts whose publication is not obligatory) COUNCIL COUNCIL DIRECTIVE. of 18 June 1991 on control of the acquisition and possession of weapons

Explosives Act 1. Passed Chapter 1 General Provisions

General Guidance on Fireworks

This document is meant purely as a documentation tool and the institutions do not assume any liability for its contents

Study of potential leakage on several stressed fittings for hydrogen pressures up to 700 bar

Pressure Equipment Directive (PED) 97/23/EC Page 033 of 124

Pressure Equipment Directive PED 2014/68/EU Commission's Working Group "Pressure"

Hazard Communication Plan (HCP) 29 CFR

Modelling Pressure: Leakage Response in Water Distribution Systems Considering Leak Area Variation

Lockout/Tagout CE Marking Requirements WHITE PAPER

Behaviour of a highly pressurised tank of GH2 submitted to a thermal or mechanical impact

Comparing Mirrored Mutations and Active Covariance Matrix Adaptation in the IPOP-CMA-ES on the Noiseless BBOB Testbed

Proposal for a COUNCIL REGULATION

Analysis of reflected blast wave pressure profiles in a confined room

GENERAL SAFETY INSTRUCTION GSI-M-2 STANDARD PRESSURE EQUIPMENT

Anabolics: the approach taken in the USA

BUSINESS PLAN CEN/TC 402 DOMESTIC POOLS AND SPAS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Official Journal of the European Union

A GUIDE TO BUYING FALL ARREST EQUIPMENT. uk.rs-online.com (UK customers) (International customers)

GENERAL SAFETY INSTRUCTION GSI-M-1 LIFTING EQUIPMENT AND ACCESSORIES

Identification of Equidae in the European Union

Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Hydrogen Fluoride Hydrofluoric Acid Solutions

Farm Animals Breeding Act 1

Pressure Equipment Directive PED 2014/68/EU Commission's Working Group "Pressure"

13062/11 LL/tl 1 DG I

GUIDELINES. Systems. Pressure. Guidelines Acceptance of equipment, establishment of safe operating limits and fitness for service

All TSOs of the Nordic Capacity Calculation Region Proposal for fallback procedures in accordance with Article 44 of Commission Regulation (EU)

Economic and Social Council

INF.27. Economic Commission for Europe Inland Transport Committee. Pressure receptacles for paintball guns. Introduction

CONTRACTOR WHS HAZARD STANDARD HAZARDOUS CHEMICALS EXTERNAL USE ONLY

Transport of gas tanks for motor vehicles

Personal Protective Equipment

Safe management of industrial steam and hot water boilers A guide for owners, managers and supervisors of boilers, boiler houses and boiler plant

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES. Proposal for a COUNCIL REGULATION. establishing measures for the recovery of the stock of European Eel.

SAFETY DATA SHEET (REGULATION (EC) n 1907/ REACH) Version 1.1 (18/06/2015) - Page 1/5 PEBEO S A Pâte à modèle / Modelling paste

ST/SG/AC.10/C.3/2016/8. Secretariat. United Nations. Transport of gas tanks for motor vehicles. Introduction

COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING DECISION. of

Section J. How to develop safety elements for project safety management system. How to develop safety elements for project SMS

Risk analysis for equipment and protective systems intended for use in potentially explosive atmospheres

WORKSHOP SAFE ENGINEERING

Avis juridique important 31988L0642

Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection WORKING DOCUMENT. on the control of the acquisition and possession of weapons

SAFE USE INSTRUCTIONS SHEET

Written evidence submitted by the British Shooting Sports Council (PCB 30)

Health & Safety Policy & Plan. Rightway Roofing.

TOXIC GAS DETECTORS IN THE WORKPLACE UK REGULATIONS AND STANDARDS

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES. Proposal for a COUNCIL REGULATION

(2) Such trade should accordingly be conducted in compliance with Community veterinary rules.

Screening report Serbia

This document is meant purely as a documentation tool and the institutions do not assume any liability for its contents

Newtown Neighbourhood Centre

Official Journal of the European Union L 92/3

This document is a preview generated by EVS

Personal Protective Equipment

SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL STANDARD

Original language: English CoP17 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

A8-0251/113. Text proposed by the Commission. Justification

Port State Control. A three-tiered approach. R.Baumler - WMU 1. Dr. Raphaël Baumler World Maritime University Malmö - Sweden

FLOWMETER MODELS: 1MFA, 4MFA, 6MFA and 8MFA Series SAVE THESE INSTRUCTIONS

Marine Education Society of Australasia HAZARD MANAGEMENT POLICY

SAFETY DATA SHEET (REACH regulation (EC) n 1907/ n 453/2010)

COMMISSION DELEGATED REGULATION (EU) No /.. of

To comply with the OHS Act, the responsible manager must carry out and document the following:

Official Journal of the European Union L 187/57

SAFETY DATA SHEET. (REACH regulation (EC) n 1907/ n 2015/830)

Firearms Act (1/1998; amendments up to 804/2003 included) Chapter 1 Scope of application. Section 1 Scope of application

SAFETY DATA SHEET (REACH regulation (EC) n 1907/ n 2015/830)

Appendix 9 European Standards and Markings for Fall Arrest. Issue 7: August 2008

Understanding safety life cycles

OREGON DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE POLICY Human Resources Division

INTRODUCTION UNIFIED COMMAND

EUROPASS SUPPLEMENT TO THE DIPLOMA OF

Country report. Czech bathing water quality in Czech Republic. May Photo: Peter Kristensen

Changes to the Gas. (Safety and Measurement) Regulations. effective 1 July 2013

2018 COM Doc. No. COC-303_Appendix 1 / oct.-18 (11:37 )

Frequently asked questions on the use of rubber crumb in 3G artificial grass pitches

Conformity with Relevant Standards and CE Marking

PRESIDENCY WORKING DOCUMENT

Fisheries Control Regulations

PIQCS HACCP Minimum Certification Standards

Transport of gas tanks for motor vehicles

Metal Expansion Joints. System solutions for reliable connections in plant engineering and construction.

EXPLOSIVE ATMOSPHERES - CLASSIFICATION OF HAZARDOUS AREAS (ZONING) AND SELECTION OF EQUIPMENT

SAFETY DATA SHEET. (REACH regulation (EC) n 1907/ n 453/2010)

Council of the European Union Brussels, 6 December 2018 (OR. en)

Work Health and Safety Risk Management Procedures

Transcription:

European directive 2007/23/EC on the placing on the market of pyrotechnical articles : are you concerned? Lionel Aufauvre To cite this version: Lionel Aufauvre. European directive 2007/23/EC on the placing on the market of pyrotechnical articles : are you concerned?. 35. International Pyrotechnics Seminar (IPS 2008), Jul 2008, Fort Collins, United States. IPSUSA Seminars Inc., pp.57-61, 2008. <ineris-00973309> HAL Id: ineris-00973309 https://hal-ineris.ccsd.cnrs.fr/ineris-00973309 Submitted on 4 Apr 2014 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access archive for the deposit and dissemination of scientific research documents, whether they are published or not. The documents may come from teaching and research institutions in France or abroad, or from public or private research centers. L archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, émanant des établissements d enseignement et de recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires publics ou privés.

European Directive 2007/23/EC on the Placing on the Market of Pyrotechnical Articles: Are you concerned? Lionel Aufauvre Lionel.Aufauvre@ineris.fr INERIS Certification Division Parc Technologique Alata BP 2 F-60550 Verneuil-en-Halate, France ABSTRACT On May 23, 2007 the European Parliament and the Council adopted the Directive 2007/23/EC [1] on the placing on the market of pyrotechnic articles. This newly published text is another piece of the European regulation concerning explosives and pyrotechnic articles. It completes the Directive 93/15/EEC of 5 April 1993 [2] on the harmonisation of the provision relating to the placing on the market and supervision of explosives for civil uses. These two Directives following the "new approach" aim at ensuring the free movement of products within the European Union (EU), improving safety of both consumers and professionals and implementing harmonised safety requirements for such products in all Members States. Thus, the Directive 2007/23/EC applies specifically to pyrotechnic articles and their placing on the EU market, but what are they and how do you know if you are concerned? As Notified Body and Official Laboratory in France INERIS has gained a lot of experience in testing, certifying and approving explosives and pyrotechnic articles. In this paper we give an insight of the different parts of the Directive 2007/23/EC, we answer the title question and we present the possible frame of the CE marking and certification procedure for pyrotechnic articles. Introduction In the European Union (EU) pyrotechnic articles are now subjected to comply with the EU Directive 2007/23/EC [1] as far as it concerns their placing on the market. By introducing harmonized Essential Safety Requirements (ESR) this new Directive offers the possibilities to replace the National approval procedures concerned by a single legal framework throughout the European Union (EU). Although this EU directive will reduce the administrative burden for everybody by introducing the CE marking and certification procedure, its substitution and application in replacement of the current National regulatory frameworks may create difficulties at the beginning. In this paper we present the different aspects of the Directive. Scope of the Directive 2007/23/EC Since 1993, pyrotechnic articles and ammunitions are explicitly excluded from the scope of the Directive 93/15/EEC that deals with explosives for civil uses. But one had to wait until 2004 and the adoption by the European Commission (EC) of the Directive 2004/57/EC of 23 April 2004 [3] (on the identification of pyrotechnic articles and certain ammunition) to specify what the term pyrotechnic articles actually covers in the context of the former Directive. Thus, the Directive 2007/23/EC applies specifically to pyrotechnic articles defined as article containing explosive substances or an explosive mixture of substances designed to produce heat, light, sound, gas or smoke or a combination of such effects through selfsustained exothermic chemical reactions. This broad definition includes namely fireworks, theatrical pyrotechnic articles and pyrotechnic

articles for vehicles but also a large variety of other articles designed for more specific applications. However, some articles are excluded from the scope of the Directive, they are: - pyrotechnic articles intended for noncommercial use by the armed forces, the police or fire departments; - pyrotechnic marine equipment falling within the scope of Directive 96/98/EC [4]; - pyrotechnic articles intended for use in the aerospace industry; - percussion caps intended specifically for toys falling within the scope of Directive 88/378/EEC [5]; - and ammunition as projectiles or propelling charges or blank ammunition used in portable firearms, other guns and artillery. Benefits of this new Directive The implementation of the Directive 2007/23/EC by replacing some 27 parallel national approval procedures will guarantee the free movement of pyrotechnic articles while ensuring public security, safety of consumers and environmental protection at the EU level. This is achieved by setting up essential safety requirements that pyrotechnic articles have to conform with. For the manufacturers, importers or distributors concerned that will result in a reduction of costs to obtain technical approvals for their products as the principle tested once, accepted everywhere will be followed as long as the essential safety requirements are fulfilled without lowering the level of safety for the end users. But the benefit of that is still larger, for example in Europe, obviously, firework and automotive pyrotechnic markets are significantly different. Whereas on the one hand, the EU is a net importer of fireworks, on the other hand, it is a net exporter of automotive components containing pyrotechnic articles. The vast majority of fireworks on the EU market are imported from Asia (China, India ). As a result of that, most of the stakeholders in this field are involved in purchasing, storing, distributing and professional displaying of fireworks. These articles are often directly sold to a large public and subject to various regional traditions and habits pertaining to each country. Easy access to consumer fireworks increases every year, and correlatively the number of accidents involving fireworks also increases, leading to a stringent reinforcement of the regulation in some countries. Then, the implementation of the new Directive is a real opportunity to achieve a higher safety level with fireworks articles through harmonized testing and quality assessment procedures. By contrast, the EU appears as a major automotive pyrotechnics exporter, not only for manufactured components but also for parts of assembled vehicles. In this field, a large number of stakeholders are employed in designing, manufacturing and assembling. There is no direct consumer market for these products and only automotive factory workers or professional in repair shops buy, handle and use them. It seems that there are no records of accidents involving these products, most probably because of the lack of statistics in currently existing accidents/incidents database. Therefore, on this basis the application of an EU Directive can be seen less necessary. However, as the existing approval processes, regulations and laws were different from one Member State to another leading to the multiplication of delays and costs for approval, harmonization was also chosen through an EU Directive for the placing on the market of automotive pyrotechnic articles. This solution was also preferred by the automotive supplier industry to other types of solutions as the "new approach" legislation only lays down essential safety requirements and offers more flexibility to the manufacturer (together with more responsibility) to comply with regulation. Application of the Directive 2007/23/EC The Directive entered into force on July 4, 2007 and Member States shall adopt and publish, by January 4, 2010, the appropriate laws, regulations and administrative provisions necessary to comply with this Directive. They shall apply those provisions by July 4, 2013 for other pyrotechnic articles for vehicles. However, by way of derogation, National authorizations for pyrotechnic articles for vehicles granted before that date should continue to be valid until their expiry.

Categorization For the purpose of the Directive pyrotechnic articles shall be categorized by the manufacturer according to their type of use, or their purpose and level of hazard, including their noise level (see tables 1 to 3). The categorization has three consequences, firstly it matches age limits for the consumer (see table 4) below which pyrotechnic articles shall not be made available to them, secondly it limits the accessibility of fireworks category 4, theatrical pyrotechnic articles of category T2 and other pyrotechnic articles of category P2 to persons with specialist knowledge and thirdly it requires minimum specific labeling according to the category. Table 1: Categorization for fireworks Category 1 Fireworks which present a very low hazard and negligible noise level and which are intended for use in confined areas, including fireworks which are intended for use inside domestic buildings Category 2 Fireworks which present a low hazard and low noise level and which are intended for outdoor use in confined areas Category 3 Fireworks which present a medium hazard, which are intended for outdoor use in large open areas and whose noise level is not harmful to human health Category 4 Fireworks which present a high hazard, which are intended for use only by persons with specialist knowledge (commonly known as fireworks for professional use) and whose noise level is not harmful to human health Table 2: Categorization for theatrical pyrotechnic articles Category T1 Pyrotechnic articles for stage use which present a low hazard Category T2 Pyrotechnic articles for stage use which are intended for use only by persons with specialist knowledge Table 3: Categorization for other pyrotechnic articles Category P1 Pyrotechnic articles other than fireworks and theatrical pyrotechnic articles which present a low hazard Category P2 Pyrotechnic articles other than fireworks and theatrical pyrotechnic articles which are intended for handling or use only by persons with specialist knowledge Table 4: Age limits Fireworks Category 1 12 years Fireworks Category 2 16 years Fireworks Category 3 18 years Category T1 and P1 18 years Fireworks Category 4 Only for persons with Category T2 and P2 specialist knowledge Conformity assessment procedures For the assessment of conformity of pyrotechnic articles the manufacturer shall follow one of the following procedures: 1. the EC type-examination procedure (Module B), and, at its choice, either: - the conformity to type procedure (Module C), or - the production quality assurance procedure (Module D), or - the product quality assurance procedure (Module E); 2. the unit verification procedure (Module G); 3. the full product quality assurance procedure (Module H), insofar as it concerns fireworks of category 4. A description of each module is given in different sections of the annex II of the Directive. Without going in too much details in the content of each module, it is worth to point out that a third body is requested for their application. Such a third body is called a Notified Body and stands as an organism appointed by Member States to carry out different tasks described in the modules. INERIS has officially applied to be notified for the Directive 2007/23/CE. It is likely that other organisms have or will also apply for this notification (lists of all Bodies notified for each

Directive can be found on the Internet [6]). The notifications will be registered shortly after the transposition of the Directive by the different Member States. According to our experience as Notified Body for the Directive 93/15/EC, most of the manufacturers will probably choose the application of Module B + Module D for the certification of their products. Whereas the Module B consists in describing the type of article according to a technical documentation and test results and in assessing the conformity of representative samples with the Essential Safety Requirements given in the Annex I of the Directive, the Module D (or similarly Modules C or E) consists rather in assessing the capability of the manufacturer to ensure the later conformity of pyrotechnic articles actually produced with the type initially defined and thereby mainly by assessment of the quality system applied by the manufacturer. It also requires the marking of each article, the issuing of a written declaration of conformity and the archiving of specific documents by the manufacturer. The main steps to get the CE mark approval To briefly described the different things that an applicant shall do in order to receive the CE certification for its products: - Contact the Notified Body (notified for the Directive 2007/23/EC) of your choice and lodge your application by submitting the necessary technical documentation to assess the Essential Safety Requirements. - The Notified Body will carry out the relevant testing procedures on representative samples you will provide in the frame of the EC typeexamination procedure (module B). - The Notified Body issues an EC typeexamination certificate to the applicant if the provisions of the Directive are satisfied. - The Notified Body will either perform examination at random intervals on commercial articles (module C) or assess the quality system of the manufacturer (modules D or E). That is to confirm the later conformity of articles manufactured according to the type certified. - The manufacturer can affix the CE conformity marking (see Figure 1) on its certified products and issues the corresponding declaration of conformity to the Directive. Figure 1: CE mark [7] Essential Safety Requirements (ESR) The Essential Safety Requirements given in the annex I of the Directive are the minimum requirements to be satisfied by the pyrotechnic articles in order to ensure a high level of protection of human health and safety and the protection of consumers and professional end users. Although the ESR do not really intend to guarantee any performance reliabilities in the final use of the articles, an adequate and complete operation of the articles according to what it is expected is in some way a basic condition for safety. Depending of the articles and their intended uses some of the requirements may not be relevant and the articles do not need to comply with. Harmonized standards In order to facilitate the process of demonstrating compliance with the essential safety requirements, harmonized standards for the design, manufacture and testing of pyrotechnic articles are being developed by the Technical Committee CEN/TC212 [8] of the European Committee for Standardization. In line with the New Approach to technical harmonization and standardization, pyrotechnic articles manufactured in compliance with harmonized standards should benefit from a presumption of conformity with the essential safety requirements provided for in the Directive. However, these harmonized standards will not be available before a few years and the demonstration of the compliance with the ESR will have meantime to be made by the mean of

other relevant standards or existing testing procedures used in the frame of the national approvals of pyrotechnic articles. For example, as far as it concerns pyrotechnic articles for vehicles the relevant international ISO standards (for example the ISO 12097 Road vehicles Airbag components) should be taken into account during the transition period. Conclusion In the recently implemented new process of the certification of pyrotechnic articles, to prove the compliance with essential safety requirements is one thing and to prove the ability to produce articles in conformity with the type certified is another thing. The manufacturer of pyrotechnic articles has to do both in the frame of the Directive 2007/23/EC. The application of the Directive requires the intervention of a Notified Body to carry out different tasks. In one hand, it proceeds to a type examination (product certification) in accordance with Essential Safety Requirements based on the manufacturer technical documentation and on test results. And on the other hand, it brings a complementary contribution in the control procedures in terms of periodic audits of the manufacturing and inspection conditions. [4] EU Official Journal L 46, 17.2.1997, p. 25. Council Directive 96/98/EC of 20 December 1996 on marine equipment. [5] EU Official Journal L 187, 16.7.1988, p. 1. Council Directive 88/378/EEC of 3 May 1988 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States concerning the safety of toys. [6] <http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/newapproach/ nando/index.cfm?fuseaction=directive.main> [7] <http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/faq/ce-mark.h tm> [8] <http://www.cen.eu/cenorm/sectors/tech nicalcommitteesworkshops/centechnicalc ommittees/centechnicalcommittees.asp?pa ram=6193&title=cen%2ftc+212> References [1] EU Official Journal L 154, 14.6.2007, p.1. Directive 2007/23/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 May 2007 on the placing on the market of pyrotechnic articles. [2] EU Official Journal L 121, 15.5.1993, p.20. Council Directive 93/15/EEC of 5 April 1993 on the harmonization of the provisions relating to the placing on the market and supervision of explosives for civil uses. [3] EU Official Journal L 127, 29.4.2004, p. 73. Commission Directive 2004/57/EC of 23 April 2004 on the identification of pyrotechnic articles and certain ammunition for the purposes of Council Directive 93/15/EEC on the harmonisation of the provisions relating to the placing on the market and supervision of explosives for civil uses.