Google on the quoted phrase "placing on the market refers to each" 

And you see support for your argument in 

The guidance for the machinery directive 
UK's RoHS guidance 
UK's guidance from Defra on EuP topics 
Guidance from Walaw (apparently a law firm) related to leisure craft. 
Advice posted by Ireland's EPA organization on RoHS 
A Commission guidance document on the Waste directive 
even a EU (commission?) guidance document on cold storage buildings (ETAG 021) 

and may other governmental and professional re-iterations of the same concept. 


Regards, 
Lauren Crane 
Product Regulatory Analyst
Corporate Product EHS Manager
Applied Materials Inc.
Austin, TX 512 272-6540 [#922 26540]

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Charlie Blackham <[email protected]> 
Sent by: [email protected] 

09/29/2009 05:16 AM 
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Subject
EU Directives: Placing on the market - legally binding definition

        

                                      



Section 2.3.1 of the “Blue Book” 
(http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/newapproach/legislation/guide/document/1999_1282_en.pdf
 
<http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/newapproach/legislation/guide/document/1999_1282_en.pdf>
  ) defines Placing on the market as: 

  

A product is placed on the Community market when it is made available for the 
first time. This is considered to take place when a product is transferred from 
the stage of manufacture with the intention of distribution or use on the 
Community market (30). Moreover, the concept of placing on the market refers to 
each individual product, not to a type of product, and whether it was 
manufactured as an individual unit or in series. 

  

I’m looking for the most “legally binding” pronouncement that  “the concept of 
placing on the market refers to each individual product, not to a type of 
product”. 

  

In effect I’m looking for a citation to dispel the argument that “our product 
was placed on the market in the year dot, and hasn’t changed, so we do not have 
to apply/meet new harmonised standards following DOCOPOCOSS of standards 
against which product was initially assessed.” 

  

Is there one better than the “guidance” in the Blue book? 

  

Regards 

Charlie 


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