AGREEMENT ON TECHNICAL
BARRIERS TO TRADE
Members,
Having regard to the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations;
Desiring to further the objectives of GATT 1994;
Recognizing the important contribution that international standards and conformity assessment
systems can make in this regard by
improving efficiency of production and facilitating the conduct
of international trade;
Desiring therefore to encourage the development of such international standards and
conformity
assessment systems;
Desiring however to ensure that technical regulations and standards, including
packaging, marking
and labelling requirements, and
procedures for assessment of conformity with technical regulations
and standards do not create unnecessary
obstacles to international trade;
Recognizing that no country should be prevented from taking measures necessary to
ensure
the quality of its exports, or for the
protection of human, animal or plant life or health, of the
environment, or for the prevention of
deceptive practices, at the levels it considers appropriate, subject
to the requirement that they are not
applied in a manner which would constitute a means of arbitrary
or unjustifiable discrimination between
countries where the same conditions prevail or a disguised
restriction on international trade, and
are otherwise in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement;
Recognizing that no country should be prevented from taking measures necessary for the
protection of its essential security
interest;
Recognizing the contribution which international standardization can make to the
transfer of
technology from developed to developing
countries;
Recognizing that developing countries may encounter special difficulties in the
formulation
and application of technical
regulations and standards and procedures for assessment of conformity
with technical regulations and
standards, and desiring to assist them in their endeavours in this regard;
Hereby agree as follows:
Article 1
General Provisions
1.1 General terms for standardization
and procedures for assessment of conformity shall normally
have the meaning given to them by
definitions adopted within the United Nations system and by
international standardizing bodies
taking into account their context and in the light of the object and
purpose of this Agreement.
1.2 However, for the purposes of this
Agreement the meaning of the terms given in Annex 1 applies.
1.3 All products, including industrial
and agricultural products, shall be subject to the provisions
of this Agreement.
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1.4 Purchasing specifications prepared
by governmental bodies for production or consumption
requirements of governmental bodies are
not subject to the provisions of this Agreement but are addressed
in the Agreement on Government
Procurement, according to its coverage.
1.5 The provisions of this Agreement do
not apply to sanitary and phytosanitary measures as defined
in Annex A of the Agreement on the
Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures.
1.6 All references in this Agreement to
technical regulations, standards and conformity assessment
procedures shall be construed to
include any amendments thereto and any additions to the rules or the
product coverage thereof, except
amendments and additions of an insignificant nature.
TECHNICAL REGULATIONS AND STANDARDS
Article 2
Preparation, Adoption and
Application of Technical Regulations
by Central Government
Bodies
With respect to their central
government bodies:
2.1 Members shall ensure that in
respect of technical regulations, products imported from the territory
of any Member shall be accorded
treatment no less favourable than that accorded to like products of
national origin and to like products
originating in any other country.
2.2 Members shall ensure that technical
regulations are not prepared, adopted or applied with a
view to or with the effect of creating
unnecessary obstacles to international trade. For this purpose,
technical regulations shall not be more
trade-restrictive than necessary to fulfil a legitimate objective,
taking account of the risks non-fulfilment
would create. Such legitimate objectives are, inter alia:
national security requirements; the
prevention of deceptive practices; protection of human health or
safety, animal or plant life or health,
or the environment. In assessing such risks, relevant elements
of consideration are, inter alia: available
scientific and technical information, related processing
technology or intended end-uses of
products.
2.3 Technical regulations shall not be
maintained if the circumstances or objectives giving rise
to their adoption no longer exist or if
the changed circumstances or objectives can be addressed in a
less trade-restrictive manner.
2.4 Where technical regulations are
required and relevant international standards exist or their
completion is imminent, Members shall
use them, or the relevant parts of them, as a basis for their
technical regulations except when such
international standards or relevant parts would be an ineffective
or inappropriate means for the
fulfilment of the legitimate objectives pursued, for instance because of
fundamental climatic or geographical
factors or fundamental technological problems.
2.5 A Member preparing, adopting or
applying a technical regulation which may have a significant
effect on trade of other Members shall,
upon the request of another Member, explain the justification
for that technical regulation in terms
of the provisions of paragraphs 2 to 4. Whenever a technical
regulation is prepared, adopted or
applied for one of the legitimate objectives explicitly mentioned in
paragraph 2, and is in accordance with
relevant international standards, it shall be rebuttably presumed
not to create an unnecessary obstacle
to international trade.
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2.6 With a view to harmonizing
technical regulations on as wide a basis as possible, Members shall
play a full part, within the limits of
their resources, in the preparation by appropriate international
standardizing bodies of international
standards for products for which they either have adopted, or expect
to adopt, technical regulations.
2.7 Members shall give positive
consideration to accepting as equivalent technical regulations of
other Members, even if these
regulations differ from their own, provided they are satisfied that these
regulations adequately fulfil the
objectives of their own regulations.
2.8 Wherever appropriate, Members shall
specify technical regulations based on product requirements
in terms of performance rather than
design or descriptive characteristics.
2.9 Whenever a relevant international
standard does not exist or the technical content of a proposed
technical regulation is not in
accordance with the technical content of relevant international standards,
and if the technical regulation may
have a significant effect on trade of other Members, Members shall:
2.9.1 publish a notice in a publication
at an early appropriate stage, in such a manner as to
enable interested parties in other
Members to become acquainted with it, that they
propose to introduce a particular
technical regulation;
2.9.2 notify other Members through the
Secretariat of the products to be covered by the
proposed technical regulation, together
with a brief indication of its objective and
rationale. Such notifications shall
take place at an early appropriate stage, when
amendments can still be introduced and
comments taken into account;
2.9.3 upon request, provide to other
Members particulars or copies of the proposed technical
regulation and, whenever possible,
identify the parts which in substance deviate from
relevant international standards;
2.9.4 without discrimination, allow
reasonable time for other Members to make comments
in writing, discuss these comments upon
request, and take these written comments and
the results of these discussions into
account.
2.10 Subject to the provisions in the
lead-in to paragraph 9, where urgent problems of safety, health,
environmental protection or national
security arise or threaten to arise for a Member, that Member may
omit such of the steps enumerated in
paragraph 9 as it finds necessary, provided that the Member, upon
adoption of a technical regulation,
shall:
2.10.1 notify immediately other Members
through the Secretariat of the particular technical
regulation and the products covered,
with a brief indication of the objective and the
rationale of the technical regulation,
including the nature of the urgent problems;
2.10.2 upon request, provide other
Members with copies of the technical regulation;
2.10.3 without discrimination, allow
other Members to present their comments in writing,
discuss these comments upon request,
and take these written comments and the results
of these discussions into account.
2.11 Members shall ensure that all
technical regulations which have been adopted are published
promptly or otherwise made available in
such a manner as to enable interested parties in other Members
to become acquainted with them.
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2.12 Except in those urgent
circumstances referred to in paragraph 10, Members shall allow a
reasonable interval between the
publication of technical regulations and their entry into force in order
to allow time for producers in
exporting Members, and particularly in developing country Members,
to adapt their products or methods of
production to the requirements of the importing Member.
Article 3
Preparation, Adoption and
Application of Technical Regulations
by Local Government Bodies
and Non-Governmental Bodies
With respect to their local government
and non-governmental bodies within their territories:
3.1 Members shall take such reasonable
measures as may be available to them to ensure compliance
by such bodies with the provisions of
Article 2, with the exception of the obligation to notify as referred
to in paragraphs 9.2 and 10.1 of
Article 2.
3.2 Members shall ensure that the
technical regulations of local governments on the level directly
below that of the central government in
Members are notified in accordance with the provisions of
paragraphs 9.2 and 10.1 of Article 2,
noting that notification shall not be required for technical regulations
the technical content of which is
substantially the same as that of previously notified technical regulations
of central government bodies of the
Member concerned.
3.3 Members may require contact with
other Members, including the notifications, provision of
information, comments and discussions
referred to in paragraphs 9 and 10 of Article 2, to take place
through the central government.
3.4 Members shall not take measures
which require or encourage local government bodies or nongovernmental
bodies within their territories to act
in a manner inconsistent with the provisions of
Article 2.
3.5 Members are fully responsible under
this Agreement for the observance of all provisions of
Article 2. Members shall formulate and
implement positive measures and mechanisms in support of
the observance of the provisions of
Article 2 by other than central government bodies.
Article 4
Preparation, Adoption and
Application
of Standards
4.1 Members shall ensure that their
central government standardizing bodies accept and comply
with the Code of Good Practice for the
Preparation, Adoption and Application of Standards in Annex 3
to this Agreement (referred to in this
Agreement as the "Code of Good Practice"). They shall take
such reasonable measures as may be
available to them to ensure that local government and nongovernmental
standardizing bodies within their
territories, as well as regional standardizing bodies of
which they or one or more bodies within
their territories are members, accept and comply with this
Code of Good Practice. In addition,
Members shall not take measures which have the effect of, directly
or indirectly, requiring or encouraging
such standardizing bodies to act in a manner inconsistent with
the Code of Good Practice. The
obligations of Members with respect to compliance of standardizing
bodies with the provisions of the Code
of Good Practice shall apply irrespective of whether or not a
standardizing body has accepted the
Code of Good Practice.
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4.2 Standardizing bodies that have
accepted and are complying with the Code of Good Practice
shall be acknowledged by the Members as
complying with the principles of this Agreement.
CONFORMITY WITH TECHNICAL REGULATIONS
AND STANDARDS
Article 5
Procedures for Assessment
of Conformity by Central Government Bodies
5.1 Members shall ensure that, in cases
where a positive assurance of conformity with technical
regulations or standards is required,
their central government bodies apply the following provisions
to products originating in the
territories of other Members:
5.1.1 conformity assessment procedures
are prepared, adopted and applied so as to grant access
for suppliers of like products
originating in the territories of other Members under
conditions no less favourable than
those accorded to suppliers of like products of national
origin or originating in any other
country, in a comparable situation; access entails
suppliers' right to an assessment of
conformity under the rules of the procedure,
including, when foreseen by this
procedure, the possibility to have conformity assessment
activities undertaken at the site of
facilities and to receive the mark of the system;
5.1.2 conformity assessment procedures
are not prepared, adopted or applied with a view
to or with the effect of creating
unnecessary obstacles to international trade. This means,
inter alia, that conformity assessment procedures shall not be more strict or be
applied
more strictly than is necessary to give
the importing Member adequate confidence that
products conform with the applicable
technical regulations or standards, taking account
of the risks non-conformity would
create.
5.2 When implementing the provisions of
paragraph 1, Members shall ensure that:
5.2.1 conformity assessment procedures
are undertaken and completed as expeditiously as
possible and in a no less favourable
order for products originating in the territories of
other Members than for like domestic
products;
5.2.2 the standard processing period of
each conformity assessment procedure is published
or that the anticipated processing
period is communicated to the applicant upon request;
when receiving an application, the
competent body promptly examines the completeness
of the documentation and informs the
applicant in a precise and complete manner of
all deficiencies; the competent body
transmits as soon as possible the results of the
assessment in a precise and complete
manner to the applicant so that corrective action
may be taken if necessary; even when
the application has deficiencies, the competent
body proceeds as far as practicable
with the conformity assessment if the applicant
so requests; and that, upon request,
the applicant is informed of the stage of the
procedure, with any delay being
explained;
5.2.3 information requirements are
limited to what is necessary to assess conformity and
determine fees;
5.2.4 the confidentiality of
information about products originating in the territories of other
Members arising from or supplied in
connection with such conformity assessment
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procedures is respected in the same way
as for domestic products and in such a manner
that legitimate commercial interests
are protected;
5.2.5 any fees imposed for assessing
the conformity of products originating in the territories
of other Members are equitable in
relation to any fees chargeable for assessing the
conformity of like products of national
origin or originating in any other country, taking
into account communication,
transportation and other costs arising from differences
between location of facilities of the
applicant and the conformity assessment body;
5.2.6 the siting of facilities used in
conformity assessment procedures and the selection of
samples are not such as to cause
unnecessary inconvenience to applicants or their agents;
5.2.7 whenever specifications of a
product are changed subsequent to the determination of
its conformity to the applicable
technical regulations or standards, the conformity
assessment procedure for the modified
product is limited to what is necessary to
determine whether adequate confidence
exists that the product still meets the technical
regulations or standards concerned;
5.2.8 a procedure exists to review
complaints concerning the operation of a conformity
assessment procedure and to take
corrective action when a complaint is justified.
5.3 Nothing in paragraphs 1 and 2 shall
prevent Members from carrying out reasonable spot checks
within their territories.
5.4 In cases where a positive assurance
is required that products conform with technical regulations
or standards, and relevant guides or
recommendations issued by international standardizing bodies exist
or their completion is imminent,
Members shall ensure that central government bodies use them, or
the relevant parts of them, as a basis
for their conformity assessment procedures, except where, as duly
explained upon request, such guides or
recommendations or relevant parts are inappropriate for the
Members concerned, for, inter alia,
such reasons as: national security requirements; the prevention
of deceptive practices; protection of
human health or safety, animal or plant life or health, or the
environment; fundamental climatic or
other geographical factors; fundamental technological or
infrastructural problems.
5.5 With a view to harmonizing
conformity assessment procedures on as wide a basis as possible,
Members shall play a full part, within
the limits of their resources, in the preparation by appropriate
international standardizing bodies of
guides and recommendations for conformity assessment procedures.
5.6 Whenever a relevant guide or
recommendation issued by an international standardizing body
does not exist or the technical content
of a proposed conformity assessment procedure is not in accordance
with relevant guides and
recommendations issued by international standardizing bodies, and if the
conformity assessment procedure may
have a significant effect on trade of other Members, Members
shall:
5.6.1 publish a notice in a publication
at an early appropriate stage, in such a manner as to
enable interested parties in other
Members to become acquainted with it, that they
propose to introduce a particular
conformity assessment procedure;
5.6.2 notify other Members through the
Secretariat of the products to be covered by the
proposed conformity assessment
procedure, together with a brief indication of its
objective and rationale. Such
notifications shall take place at an early appropriate stage,
when amendments can still be introduced
and comments taken into account;
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5.6.3 upon request, provide to other
Members particulars or copies of the proposed procedure
and, whenever possible, identify the
parts which in substance deviate from relevant
guides or recommendations issued by
international standardizing bodies;
5.6.4 without discrimination, allow
reasonable time for other Members to make comments
in writing, discuss these comments upon
request, and take these written comments and
the results of these discussions into
account.
5.7 Subject to the provisions in the
lead-in to paragraph 6, where urgent problems of safety, health,
environmental protection or national security
arise or threaten to arise for a Member, that Member may
omit such of the steps enumerated in
paragraph 6 as it finds necessary, provided that the Member, upon
adoption of the procedure, shall:
5.7.1 notify immediately other Members
through the Secretariat of the particular procedure
and the products covered, with a brief
indication of the objective and the rationale of
the procedure, including the nature of
the urgent problems;
5.7.2 upon request, provide other
Members with copies of the rules of the procedure;
5.7.3 without discrimination, allow
other Members to present their comments in writing,
discuss these comments upon request,
and take these written comments and the results
of these discussions into account.
5.8 Members shall ensure that all conformity
assessment procedures which have been adopted are
published promptly or otherwise made
available in such a manner as to enable interested parties in
other Members to become acquainted with
them.
5.9 Except in those urgent
circumstances referred to in paragraph 7, Members shall allow a reasonable
interval between the publication of
requirements concerning conformity assessment procedures and
their entry into force in order to
allow time for producers in exporting Members, and particularly in
developing country Members, to adapt
their products or methods of production to the requirements
of the importing Member.
Article 6
Recognition of Conformity
Assessment by Central Government Bodies
With respect to their central
government bodies:
6.1 Without prejudice to the provisions
of paragraphs 3 and 4, Members shall ensure, whenever
possible, that results of conformity
assessment procedures in other Members are accepted, even when
those procedures differ from their own,
provided they are satisfied that those procedures offer an assurance
of conformity with applicable technical
regulations or standards equivalent to their own procedures.
It is recognized that prior
consultations may be necessary in order to arrive at a mutually satisfactory
understanding regarding, in particular:
6.1.1 adequate and enduring technical
competence of the relevant conformity assessment
bodies in the exporting Member, so that
confidence in the continued reliability of their
conformity assessment results can
exist; in this regard, verified compliance, for instance
through accreditation, with relevant
guides or recommendations issued by international
standardizing bodies shall be taken
into account as an indication of adequate technical
competence;
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6.1.2 limitation of the acceptance of
conformity assessment results to those produced by
designated bodies in the exporting
Member.
6.2 Members shall ensure that their
conformity assessment procedures permit, as far as practicable,
the implementation of the provisions in
paragraph 1.
6.3 Members are encouraged, at the
request of other Members, to be willing to enter into negotiations
for the conclusion of agreements for
the mutual recognition of results of each other's conformity
assessment procedures. Members may
require that such agreements fulfil the criteria of paragraph 1
and give mutual satisfaction regarding
their potential for facilitating trade in the products concerned.
6.4 Members are encouraged to permit
participation of conformity assessment bodies located in
the territories of other Members in
their conformity assessment procedures under conditions no less
favourable than those accorded to
bodies located within their territory or the territory of any other country.
Article 7
Procedures for Assessment
of Conformity by Local Government Bodies
With respect to their local government
bodies within their territories:
7.1 Members shall take such reasonable
measures as may be available to them to ensure compliance
by such bodies with the provisions of
Articles 5 and 6, with the exception of the obligation to notify
as referred to in paragraphs 6.2 and
7.1 of Article 5.
7.2 Members shall ensure that the
conformity assessment procedures of local governments on the
level directly below that of the
central government in Members are notified in accordance with the
provisions of paragraphs 6.2 and 7.1 of
Article 5, noting that notifications shall not be required for
conformity assessment procedures the
technical content of which is substantially the same as that of
previously notified conformity
assessment procedures of central government bodies of the Members
concerned.
7.3 Members may require contact with
other Members, including the notifications, provision of
information, comments and discussions
referred to in paragraphs 6 and 7 of Article 5, to take place
through the central government.
7.4 Members shall not take measures
which require or encourage local government bodies within
their territories to act in a manner
inconsistent with the provisions of Articles 5 and 6.
7.5 Members are fully responsible under
this Agreement for the observance of all provisions of
Articles 5 and 6. Members shall
formulate and implement positive measures and mechanisms in support
of the observance of the provisions of
Articles 5 and 6 by other than central government bodies.
Article 8
Procedures for Assessment
of Conformity by Non-Governmental Bodies
8.1 Members shall take such reasonable
measures as may be available to them to ensure that nongovernmental
bodies within their territories which
operate conformity assessment procedures comply
with the provisions of Articles 5 and
6, with the exception of the obligation to notify proposed conformity
assessment procedures. In addition,
Members shall not take measures which have the effect of, directly
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or indirectly, requiring or encouraging
such bodies to act in a manner inconsistent with the provisions
of Articles 5 and 6.
8.2 Members shall ensure that their
central government bodies rely on conformity assessment
procedures operated by non-governmental
bodies only if these latter bodies comply with the provisions
of Articles 5 and 6, with the exception
of the obligation to notify proposed conformity assessment
procedures.
Article 9
International and Regional
Systems
9.1 Where a positive assurance of conformity
with a technical regulation or standard is required,
Members shall, wherever practicable,
formulate and adopt international systems for conformity assessment
and become members thereof or
participate therein.
9.2 Members shall take such reasonable
measures as may be available to them to ensure that
international and regional systems for
conformity assessment in which relevant bodies within their
territories are members or participants
comply with the provisions of Articles 5 and 6. In addition,
Members shall not take any measures
which have the effect of, directly or indirectly, requiring or
encouraging such systems to act in a
manner inconsistent with any of the provisions of Articles 5 and 6.
9.3 Members shall ensure that their
central government bodies rely on international or regional
conformity assessment systems only to
the extent that these systems comply with the provisions of
Articles 5 and 6, as applicable.
INFORMATION AND ASSISTANCE
Article 10
Information About Technical
Regulations, Standards and
Conformity Assessment
Procedures
10.1 Each Member shall ensure that an
enquiry point exists which is able to answer all reasonable
enquiries from other Members and
interested parties in other Members as well as to provide the relevant
documents regarding:
10.1.1 any technical regulations
adopted or proposed within its territory by central or local
government bodies, by non-governmental
bodies which have legal power to enforce
a technical regulation, or by regional
standardizing bodies of which such bodies are
members or participants;
10.1.2 any standards adopted or
proposed within its territory by central or local government
bodies, or by regional standardizing
bodies of which such bodies are members or
participants;
10.1.3 any conformity assessment procedures,
or proposed conformity assessment procedures,
which are operated within its territory
by central or local government bodies, or by
non-governmental bodies which have
legal power to enforce a technical regulation,
or by regional bodies of which such
bodies are members or participants;
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10.1.4 the membership and participation
of the Member, or of relevant central or local
government bodies within its territory,
in international and regional standardizing bodies
and conformity assessment systems, as
well as in bilateral and multilateral arrangements
within the scope of this Agreement; it
shall also be able to provide reasonable
information on the provisions of such
systems and arrangements;
10.1.5 the location of notices
published pursuant to this Agreement, or the provision of
information as to where such
information can be obtained; and
10.1.6 the location of the enquiry
points mentioned in paragraph 3.
10.2 If, however, for legal or
administrative reasons more than one enquiry point is established by
a Member, that Member shall provide to
the other Members complete and unambiguous information
on the scope of responsibility of each
of these enquiry points. In addition, that Member shall ensure
that any enquiries addressed to an
incorrect enquiry point shall promptly be conveyed to the correct
enquiry point.
10.3 Each Member shall take such
reasonable measures as may be available to it to ensure that one
or more enquiry points exist which are
able to answer all reasonable enquiries from other Members
and interested parties in other Members
as well as to provide the relevant documents or information
as to where they can be obtained
regarding:
10.3.1 any standards adopted or
proposed within its territory by non-governmental standardizing
bodies, or by regional standardizing
bodies of which such bodies are members or
participants; and
10.3.2 any conformity assessment
procedures, or proposed conformity assessment procedures,
which are operated within its territory
by non-governmental bodies, or by regional bodies
of which such bodies are members or
participants;
10.3.3 the membership and participation
of relevant non-governmental bodies within its territory
in international and regional
standardizing bodies and conformity assessment systems,
as well as in bilateral and
multilateral arrangements within the scope of this Agreement;
they shall also be able to provide
reasonable information on the provisions of such
systems and arrangements.
10.4 Members shall take such reasonable
measures as may be available to them to ensure that where
copies of documents are requested by
other Members or by interested parties in other Members, in
accordance with the provisions of this
Agreement, they are supplied at an equitable price (if any) which
shall, apart from the real cost of
delivery, be the same for the nationals1 of the Member concerned or
of any other Member.
10.5 Developed country Members shall,
if requested by other Members, provide, in English, French
or Spanish, translations of the
documents covered by a specific notification or, in case of voluminous
documents, of summaries of such
documents.
10.6 The Secretariat shall, when it
receives notifications in accordance with the provisions of this
Agreement, circulate copies of the
notifications to all Members and interested international standardizing
1"Nationals"
here shall be deemed, in the case of a separate customs territory Member of the
WTO, to mean persons,
natural or legal, who are domiciled or
who have a real and effective industrial or commercial establishment in that
customs
territory.
Page 127
and conformity assessment bodies, and
draw the attention of developing country Members to any
notifications relating to products of
particular interest to them.
10.7 Whenever a Member has reached an
agreement with any other country or countries on issues
related to technical regulations,
standards or conformity assessment procedures which may have a
significant effect on trade, at least
one Member party to the agreement shall notify other Members through
the Secretariat of the products to be
covered by the agreement and include a brief description of the
agreement. Members concerned are
encouraged to enter, upon request, into consultations with other
Members for the purposes of concluding
similar agreements or of arranging for their participation in
such agreements.
10.8 Nothing in this Agreement shall be
construed as requiring:
10.8.1 the publication of texts other
than in the language of the Member;
10.8.2 the provision of particulars or
copies of drafts other than in the language of the Member
except as stated in paragraph 5; or
10.8.3 Members to furnish any
information, the disclosure of which they consider contrary
to their essential security interests.
10.9 Notifications to the Secretariat
shall be in English, French or Spanish.
10.10 Members shall designate a single
central government authority that is responsible for the
implementation on the national level of
the provisions concerning notification procedures under this
Agreement except those included in Annex
3.
10.11 If, however, for legal or
administrative reasons the responsibility for notification procedures
is divided among two or more central
government authorities, the Member concerned shall provide
to the other Members complete and
unambiguous information on the scope of responsibility of each
of these authorities.
Article 11
Technical Assistance to
Other Members
11.1 Members shall, if requested,
advise other Members, especially the developing country Members,
on the preparation of technical
regulations.
11.2 Members shall, if requested,
advise other Members, especially the developing country Members,
and shall grant them technical
assistance on mutually agreed terms and conditions regarding the
establishment of national standardizing
bodies, and participation in the international standardizing bodies,
and shall encourage their national
standardizing bodies to do likewise.
11.3 Members shall, if requested, take
such reasonable measures as may be available to them to
arrange for the regulatory bodies within
their territories to advise other Members, especially the
developing country Members, and shall
grant them technical assistance on mutually agreed terms and
conditions regarding:
11.3.1 the establishment of regulatory
bodies, or bodies for the assessment of conformity with
technical regulations; and
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11.3.2 the methods by which their
technical regulations can best be met.
11.4 Members shall, if requested, take
such reasonable measures as may be available to them to
arrange for advice to be given to other
Members, especially the developing country Members, and shall
grant them technical assistance on
mutually agreed terms and conditions regarding the establishment
of bodies for the assessment of
conformity with standards adopted within the territory of the requesting
Member.
11.5 Members shall, if requested,
advise other Members, especially the developing country Members,
and shall grant them technical
assistance on mutually agreed terms and conditions regarding the steps
that should be taken by their producers
if they wish to have access to systems for conformity assessment
operated by governmental or
non-governmental bodies within the territory of the Member receiving
the request.
11.6 Members which are members or
participants of international or regional systems for conformity
assessment shall, if requested, advise
other Members, especially the developing country Members, and
shall grant them technical assistance
on mutually agreed terms and conditions regarding the establishment
of the institutions and legal framework
which would enable them to fulfil the obligations of membership
or participation in such systems.
11.7 Members shall, if so requested,
encourage bodies within their territories which are members
or participants of international or regional
systems for conformity assessment to advise other Members,
especially the developing country
Members, and should consider requests for technical assistance from
them regarding the establishment of the
institutions which would enable the relevant bodies within their
territories to fulfil the obligations
of membership or participation.
11.8 In providing advice and technical
assistance to other Members in terms of paragraphs 1 to 7,
Members shall give priority to the
needs of the least-developed country Members.
Article 12
Special and Differential
Treatment of Developing Country Members
12.1 Members shall provide differential
and more favourable treatment to developing country Members
to this Agreement, through the
following provisions as well as through the relevant provisions of other
Articles of this Agreement.
12.2 Members shall give particular
attention to the provisions of this Agreement concerning developing
country Members' rights and obligations
and shall take into account the special development, financial
and trade needs of developing country
Members in the implementation of this Agreement, both nationally
and in the operation of this
Agreement's institutional arrangements.
12.3 Members shall, in the preparation
and application of technical regulations, standards and
conformity assessment procedures, take
account of the special development, financial and trade needs
of developing country Members, with a
view to ensuring that such technical regulations, standards and
conformity assessment procedures do not
create unnecessary obstacles to exports from developing country
Members.
12.4 Members recognize that, although
international standards, guides or recommendations may exist,
in their particular technological and
socio-economic conditions, developing country Members adopt
certain technical regulations,
standards or conformity assessment procedures aimed at preserving
indigenous technology and production
methods and processes compatible with their development needs.
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Members therefore recognize that
developing country Members should not be expected to use international
standards as a basis for their
technical regulations or standards, including test methods, which are not
appropriate to their development,
financial and trade needs.
12.5 Members shall take such reasonable
measures as may be available to them to ensure that
international standardizing bodies and
international systems for conformity assessment are organized
and operated in a way which facilitates
active and representative participation of relevant bodies in
all Members, taking into account the
special problems of developing country Members.
12.6 Members shall take such reasonable
measures as may be available to them to ensure that
international standardizing bodies,
upon request of developing country Members, examine the possibility
of, and, if practicable, prepare
international standards concerning products of special interest to developing
country Members.
12.7 Members shall, in accordance with
the provisions of Article 11, provide technical assistance
to developing country Members to ensure
that the preparation and application of technical regulations,
standards and conformity assessment
procedures do not create unnecessary obstacles to the expansion
and diversification of exports from
developing country Members. In determining the terms and conditions
of the technical assistance, account
shall be taken of the stage of development of the requesting Members
and in particular of the
least-developed country Members.
12.8 It is recognized that developing
country Members may face special problems, including
institutional and infrastructural
problems, in the field of preparation and application of technical
regulations, standards and conformity
assessment procedures. It is further recognized that the special
development and trade needs of
developing country Members, as well as their stage of technological
development, may hinder their ability
to discharge fully their obligations under this Agreement. Members,
therefore, shall take this fact fully
into account. Accordingly, with a view to ensuring that developing
country Members are able to comply with
this Agreement, the Committee on Technical Barriers to
Trade provided for in Article 13
(referred to in this Agreement as the "Committee") is enabled to
grant,
upon request, specified, time-limited
exceptions in whole or in part from obligations under this Agreement.
When considering such requests the
Committee shall take into account the special problems, in the
field of preparation and application of
technical regulations, standards and conformity assessment
procedures, and the special development
and trade needs of the developing country Member, as well
as its stage of technological
development, which may hinder its ability to discharge fully its obligations
under this Agreement. The Committee
shall, in particular, take into account the special problems of
the least-developed country Members.
12.9 During consultations, developed
country Members shall bear in mind the special difficulties
experienced by developing country
Members in formulating and implementing standards and technical
regulations and conformity assessment
procedures, and in their desire to assist developing country
Members with their efforts in this
direction, developed country Members shall take account of the special
needs of the former in regard to
financing, trade and development.
12.10 The Committee shall examine
periodically the special and differential treatment, as laid down
in this Agreement, granted to
developing country Members on national and international levels.
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INSTITUTIONS, CONSULTATION AND DISPUTE
SETTLEMENT
Article 13
The Committee on Technical
Barriers to Trade
13.1 A Committee on Technical Barriers
to Trade is hereby established, and shall be composed of
representatives from each of the
Members. The Committee shall elect its own Chairman and shall meet
as necessary, but no less than once a
year, for the purpose of affording Members the opportunity of
consulting on any matters relating to
the operation of this Agreement or the furtherance of its objectives,
and shall carry out such
responsibilities as assigned to it under this Agreement or by the Members.
13.2 The Committee shall establish
working parties or other bodies as may be appropriate, which
shall carry out such responsibilities
as may be assigned to them by the Committee in accordance with
the relevant provisions of this
Agreement.
13.3 It is understood that unnecessary
duplication should be avoided between the work under this
Agreement and that of governments in
other technical bodies. The Committee shall examine this problem
with a view to minimizing such
duplication.
Article 14
Consultation and Dispute
Settlement
14.1 Consultations and the settlement
of disputes with respect to any matter affecting the operation
of this Agreement shall take place
under the auspices of the Dispute Settlement Body and shall follow,
mutatis mutandis, the provisions of Articles XXII and XXIII of GATT 1994, as elaborated
and applied
by the Dispute Settlement Understanding.
14.2 At the request of a party to a
dispute, or at its own initiative, a panel may establish a technical
expert group to assist in questions of
a technical nature, requiring detailed consideration by experts.
14.3 Technical expert groups shall be
governed by the procedures of Annex 2.
14.4 The dispute settlement provisions
set out above can be invoked in cases where a Member
considers that another Member has not
achieved satisfactory results under Articles 3, 4, 7, 8 and 9 and
its trade interests are significantly
affected. In this respect, such results shall be equivalent to those
as if the body in question were a
Member.
FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 15
Final Provisions
Reservations
15.1 Reservations may not be entered in
respect of any of the provisions of this Agreement without
the consent of the other Members.
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Review
15.2 Each Member shall, promptly after
the date on which the WTO Agreement enters into force
for it, inform the Committee of
measures in existence or taken to ensure the implementation and
administration of this Agreement. Any
changes of such measures thereafter shall also be notified to
the Committee.
15.3 The Committee shall review
annually the implementation and operation of this Agreement taking
into account the objectives thereof.
15.4 Not later than the end of the
third year from the date of entry into force of the WTO Agreement
and at the end of each three-year
period thereafter, the Committee shall review the operation and
implementation of this Agreement,
including the provisions relating to transparency, with a view to
recommending an adjustment of the
rights and obligations of this Agreement where necessary to ensure
mutual economic advantage and balance
of rights and obligations, without prejudice to the provisions
of Article 12. Having regard, inter
alia, to the experience gained in the implementation of the Agreement,
the Committee shall, where appropriate,
submit proposals for amendments to the text of this Agreement
to the Council for Trade in Goods.
Annexes
15.5 The annexes to this Agreement
constitute an integral part thereof.
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ANNEX 1
TERMS AND THEIR DEFINITIONS FOR THE
PURPOSE OF THIS AGREEMENT
The terms presented in the sixth
edition of the ISO/IEC Guide 2: 1991, General Terms and
Their Definitions Concerning
Standardization and Related Activities, shall, when used in this Agreement,
have the same meaning as given in the
definitions in the said Guide taking into account that services
are excluded from the coverage of this
Agreement.
For the purpose of this Agreement,
however, the following definitions shall apply:
1. Technical regulation
Document which lays down product
characteristics or their related processes and production
methods, including the applicable
administrative provisions, with which compliance is mandatory. It
may also include or deal exclusively
with terminology, symbols, packaging, marking or labelling
requirements as they apply to a
product, process or production method.
Explanatory note
The definition in ISO/IEC Guide 2 is
not self-contained, but based on the so-called "building
block" system.
2. Standard
Document approved by a recognized body,
that provides, for common and repeated use, rules,
guidelines or characteristics for
products or related processes and production methods, with which
compliance is not mandatory. It may
also include or deal exclusively with terminology, symbols,
packaging, marking or labelling
requirements as they apply to a product, process or production method.
Explanatory note
The terms as defined in ISO/IEC Guide 2
cover products, processes and services. This
Agreement deals only with technical
regulations, standards and conformity assessment procedures
related to products or processes and
production methods. Standards as defined by ISO/IEC
Guide 2 may be mandatory or voluntary.
For the purpose of this Agreement standards are
defined as voluntary and technical
regulations as mandatory documents. Standards prepared
by the international standardization
community are based on consensus. This Agreement covers
also documents that are not based on
consensus.
3. Conformity assessment procedures
Any procedure used, directly or
indirectly, to determine that relevant requirements in technical
regulations or standards are fulfilled.
Explanatory note
Conformity assessment procedures
include, inter alia, procedures for sampling, testing and
inspection; evaluation, verification
and assurance of conformity; registration, accreditation
and approval as well as their
combinations.
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4. International body or system
Body or system whose membership is open
to the relevant bodies of at least all Members.
5. Regional body or system
Body or system whose membership is open
to the relevant bodies of only some of the Members.
6. Central government body
Central government, its ministries and
departments or any body subject to the control of the
central government in respect of the
activity in question.
Explanatory note:
In the case of the European Communities
the provisions governing central government bodies
apply. However, regional bodies or conformity
assessment systems may be established within
the European Communities, and in such
cases would be subject to the provisions of this
Agreement on regional bodies or
conformity assessment systems.
7. Local government body
Government other than a central
government (e.g. states, provinces, Länder, cantons,
municipalities, etc.), its ministries
or departments or any body subject to the control of such a government
in respect of the activity in question.
8. Non-governmental body
Body other than a central government
body or a local government body, including a nongovernmental
body which has legal power to enforce a
technical regulation.
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ANNEX 2
TECHNICAL EXPERT GROUPS
The following procedures shall apply to
technical expert groups established in accordance with
the provisions of Article 14.
1. Technical expert groups are under
the panel's authority. Their terms of reference and detailed
working procedures shall be decided by
the panel, and they shall report to the panel.
2. Participation in technical expert
groups shall be restricted to persons of professional standing
and experience in the field in
question.
3. Citizens of parties to the dispute
shall not serve on a technical expert group without the joint
agreement of the parties to the dispute,
except in exceptional circumstances when the panel considers
that the need for specialized
scientific expertise cannot be fulfilled otherwise. Government officials
of parties to the dispute shall not
serve on a technical expert group. Members of technical expert groups
shall serve in their individual
capacities and not as government representatives, nor as representatives
of any organization. Governments or
organizations shall therefore not give them instructions with regard
to matters before a technical expert
group.
4. Technical expert groups may consult
and seek information and technical advice from any source
they deem appropriate. Before a
technical expert group seeks such information or advice from a source
within the jurisdiction of a Member, it
shall inform the government of that Member. Any Member
shall respond promptly and fully to any
request by a technical expert group for such information as
the technical expert group considers
necessary and appropriate.
5. The parties to a dispute shall have
access to all relevant information provided to a technical
expert group, unless it is of a
confidential nature. Confidential information provided to the technical
expert group shall not be released
without formal authorization from the government, organization or
person providing the information. Where
such information is requested from the technical expert group
but release of such information by the
technical expert group is not authorized, a non-confidential
summary of the information will be
provided by the government, organization or person supplying the
information.
6. The technical expert group shall
submit a draft report to the Members concerned with a view
to obtaining their comments, and taking
them into account, as appropriate, in the final report, which
shall also be circulated to the Members
concerned when it is submitted to the panel.
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ANNEX 3
CODE OF GOOD PRACTICE FOR THE
PREPARATION, ADOPTION AND
APPLICATION OF STANDARDS
General Provisions
A. For the purposes of this Code the
definitions in Annex 1 of this Agreement shall apply.
B. This Code is open to acceptance by
any standardizing body within the territory of a Member
of the WTO, whether a central
government body, a local government body, or a non-governmental
body; to any governmental regional
standardizing body one or more members of which are Members
of the WTO; and to any non-governmental
regional standardizing body one or more members of which
are situated within the territory of a
Member of the WTO (referred to in this Code collectively as
"standardizing bodies" and
individually as "the standardizing body").
C. Standardizing bodies that have
accepted or withdrawn from this Code shall notify this fact to
the ISO/IEC Information Centre in
Geneva. The notification shall include the name and address of
the body concerned and the scope of its
current and expected standardization activities. The notification
may be sent either directly to the
ISO/IEC Information Centre, or through the national member body
of ISO/IEC or, preferably, through the
relevant national member or international affiliate of ISONET,
as appropriate.
SUBSTANTIVE PROVISIONS
D. In respect of standards, the
standardizing body shall accord treatment to products originating
in the territory of any other Member of
the WTO no less favourable than that accorded to like products
of national origin and to like products
originating in any other country.
E. The standardizing body shall ensure
that standards are not prepared, adopted or applied with
a view to, or with the effect of,
creating unnecessary obstacles to international trade.
F. Where international standards exist
or their completion is imminent, the standardizing body
shall use them, or the relevant parts
of them, as a basis for the standards it develops, except where
such international standards or
relevant parts would be ineffective or inappropriate, for instance, because
of an insufficient level of protection
or fundamental climatic or geographical factors or fundamental
technological problems.
G. With a view to harmonizing standards
on as wide a basis as possible, the standardizing body
shall, in an appropriate way, play a
full part, within the limits of its resources, in the preparation by
relevant international standardizing
bodies of international standards regarding subject matter for which
it either has adopted, or expects to
adopt, standards. For standardizing bodies within the territory of
a Member, participation in a particular
international standardization activity shall, whenever possible,
take place through one delegation
representing all standardizing bodies in the territory that have adopted,
or expect to adopt, standards for the
subject matter to which the international standardization activity
relates.
H. The standardizing body within the
territory of a Member shall make every effort to avoid
duplication of, or overlap with, the
work of other standardizing bodies in the national territory or with
the work of relevant international or
regional standardizing bodies. They shall also make every effort
to achieve a national consensus on the
standards they develop. Likewise the regional standardizing
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body shall make every effort to avoid
duplication of, or overlap with, the work of relevant international
standardizing bodies.
I. Wherever appropriate, the standardizing
body shall specify standards based on product
requirements in terms of performance
rather than design or descriptive characteristics.
J. At least once every six months, the
standardizing body shall publish a work programme containing
its name and address, the standards it
is currently preparing and the standards which it has adopted
in the preceding period. A standard is
under preparation from the moment a decision has been taken
to develop a standard until that
standard has been adopted. The titles of specific draft standards shall,
upon request, be provided in English,
French or Spanish. A notice of the existence of the work
programme shall be published in a
national or, as the case may be, regional publication of standardization
activities.
The work programme shall for each
standard indicate, in accordance with any ISONET rules,
the classification relevant to the
subject matter, the stage attained in the standard's development, and
the references of any international
standards taken as a basis. No later than at the time of publication
of its work programme, the
standardizing body shall notify the existence thereof to the ISO/IEC
Information Centre in Geneva.
The notification shall contain the name
and address of the standardizing body, the name and
issue of the publication in which the
work programme is published, the period to which the work
programme applies, its price (if any),
and how and where it can be obtained. The notification may
be sent directly to the ISO/IEC
Information Centre, or, preferably, through the relevant national member
or international affiliate of ISONET,
as appropriate.
K. The national member of ISO/IEC shall
make every effort to become a member of ISONET
or to appoint another body to become a
member as well as to acquire the most advanced membership
type possible for the ISONET member.
Other standardizing bodies shall make every effort to associate
themselves with the ISONET member.
L. Before adopting a standard, the
standardizing body shall allow a period of at least 60 days for
the submission of comments on the draft
standard by interested parties within the territory of a Member
of the WTO. This period may, however,
be shortened in cases where urgent problems of safety, health
or environment arise or threaten to
arise. No later than at the start of the comment period, the
standardizing body shall publish a
notice announcing the period for commenting in the publication referred
to in paragraph J. Such notification
shall include, as far as practicable, whether the draft standard deviates
from relevant international standards.
M. On the request of any interested
party within the territory of a Member of the WTO, the
standardizing body shall promptly
provide, or arrange to provide, a copy of a draft standard which it
has submitted for comments. Any fees
charged for this service shall, apart from the real cost of delivery,
be the same for foreign and domestic
parties.
N. The standardizing body shall take
into account, in the further processing of the standard, the
comments received during the period for
commenting. Comments received through standardizing bodies
that have accepted this Code of Good
Practice shall, if so requested, be replied to as promptly as possible.
The reply shall include an explanation
why a deviation from relevant international standards is necessary.
O. Once the standard has been adopted,
it shall be promptly published.
P. On the request of any interested
party within the territory of a Member of the WTO, the
standardizing body shall promptly
provide, or arrange to provide, a copy of its most recent work
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programme or of a standard which it
produced. Any fees charged for this service shall, apart from
the real cost of delivery, be the same
for foreign and domestic parties.
Q. The standardizing body shall afford
sympathetic consideration to, and adequate opportunity
for, consultation regarding
representations with respect to the operation of this Code presented by
standardizing bodies that have accepted
this Code of Good Practice. It shall make an objective effort
to solve any complaints.