Members of the Euralarm Fire Section are disappointed that the European Commission’s CPR proposal fails to address the market needs and does not address the main challenge facing standardization.
Nevertheless, Euralarm will continue to contribute to provide feedback to the current public consultation expecting a more practical proposal.
Robust standards
Since 1970, Euralarm has worked hard to represent the interests of the electronic fire safety industry in the areas of standardization development and legislation.
This resulted in robust standards to ensure that buildings are reliably monitored for fire threats, and occupants can be protected through automated notification, evacuation, and suppression systems.
These standards address the performance of the individual products, as well as their mutual compatibility when combined to form systems. It is a combination of these standards with application standards which leads to functional and purpose-built solutions.
Robust installation codes
The safety-critical products provided by Euralarm members are the foundation for reliable systems which are deployed according to robust installation codes in member states.
These codes establish the best practice for the provision of such systems while allowing for sensible (and transparent) variations and deviations where appropriate.
The threat
Members are disappointed that the proposal fails to address the urgent need to resolve the ongoing stagnation
The threat to the continuing success of this well-established order is that much-needed revisions and extensions of the product standards underpinning the system are being hampered by the legalities of the CPR and the procrastinations by the European Commission.
Although Euralarm welcomes the publication of the proposal for a new CPR and the recent Q&A session which provided an opportunity to clarify the understanding, members are disappointed that the proposal fails to address the urgent need to resolve the ongoing stagnation of the standardization process.
European standardization process
Standards for individual fire safety products such as smoke detectors fall under the CPR. The performance characteristics of these products are, to a large extent, identical across all of Europe, thereby encouraging free trade of them across the region.
A system compatibility standard outlines which products belong to which system, while the design, installation, commissioning, and maintenance of a fire safety system are achieved through national standards.
These standards focus on the overall function in alignment with national and/or regional regulations. This arrangement has been developed over many years and has met the needs of stakeholders across the continent. The application standards would be meaningless without robust product standards.
Challenge of legal boundaries
Re-writing all product standards would not be an effective use of resources and would certainly be met with significant resistance
The drafted CPR shows that it is not possible to solve the current issues easily as the legal boundaries haven't changed. Harmonized standards remain legally controlled documents according to the Commission’s interpretation of the European Court of Justice ruling and the new CPR does not provide any means to solve this.
It would mean that the fire safety industry has to re-write all product standards to align with what the European Commission is requesting. Consequently, the system standard and all the national application standards would have to be re-written.
Time span for such an undertaking can be estimated to be at best 10 years. This would not be an effective use of resources and would certainly be met with significant resistance because of the unnecessary confusion and inconsistencies of such a transition.
Assertions that the changes proposed amount to a simplification and should reduce costs and timescales for publishing standards are therefore unsubstantiated. Euralarm members anticipate increased costs, complexity, and timescales.
Frustrating experience
Numerous delegates of the Euralarm Fire Section have worked closely with the responsible standardization committee CEN/TC 72 and engaged with representatives from EU Commission DG GROW and CEN management.
The members have invested many years of participation in consultations, impact assessments, technical workshops, and the Joint Initiative on Standardization (JIS).
Despite those efforts, Euralarm members have had little influence on the Commission who, contrary to expectation, have opted for a significant revision of the CPR. It has been frustrating for all those Euralarm members that success has been out of the reach.
Euralarm continues to provide feedback
Nevertheless, Euralarm will provide feedback to the current public consultation expecting a more practical proposal. Such a proposal should take away the significant negative consequences for the fire safety industry – and for the markets it serves – under the European Commission’s present interpretation of both the CPR and the European standardization processes.
The industry is at great risk if this is not corrected. Euralarm readiness to find commonly acceptable solutions is once again clearly expressed.