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November 12, 2015

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Message for PPE procurers

Specsavers Corporate Eyecare has highlighted some of the changes that businesses should be aware of with the revision of the Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Directive 89/686/EEC. The changes aim to reflect new technologies that are now employed in bringing PPE to market, they say.

The draft version of the Regulation has already been approved by the European Commission and Parliament, say the company, adding that the European Council is currently reaching final agreement on the wording of the Regulation, which is due to be printed in the OJ (Official Journal of European Union) at the end of January 2016. The company highlight that the Regulation is due to come into force in quarter one of 2016, with a transition period taking place in 2016 and 2017, with full enforcement of the PPE Regulation by the end of 2018.

Jim Lythgow, head of strategic alliances at Specsavers Corporate Eyecare, says:  “Existing certifications for PPE, held by the manufacturers, will expire when the Regulation comes into force at the end of 2018. It is important, therefore, for employers and safety managers who procure PPE, to ensure that their providers will be able to meet with the new certification, otherwise employees will not be covered.”

Specsavers Corporate Eyecare explains that, while the previous PPE Directive put the emphasis on the manufacturers, the new Regulation will be effective over the entire supply chain so anyone involved in the supply and distribution chain will have to take appropriate measures to ensure the PPE meets with the standard requirements, they say.

The company concludes that, previously a ‘Directive’ – this is a legislative act setting out objectives for EU countries to achieve in their own way, by a certain date; the requirements will be reclassified as a PPE ‘Regulation’ – this is a binding legislative act, which must be applied precisely across the EU.

For more on PPE, read our PPE Regulation and Buyer’s Guide

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Chris Butcher
Chris Butcher
8 years ago

“Existing certifications for PPE, held by the manufacturers, will expire when the Regulation comes into force at the end of 2018.”

No they won’t. Existing EC Certificates will remain valid, for a maximum of 5 years after 2018, or until their expiry date, whichever is sooner.

(Article 47 of the draft text)