- General Product Safety Regulations 2005
Infobox UK Statutory Instrument
Title=General Product Safety Regulations 2005
parliament=United Kingdom Parliament
Citation=2005 No. 1803
introduced_by=Gerry Sutcliffe Department of Trade and Industry
territorial_extent=United Kingdom
Primary_legislation=European Communities Act 1972 , s.2(2)
date_made=30 June 2005
date_laid_before_Parliament=6 July 2005
commencement=1 October 2005
revoked_date=—
amendments=—
related_legislation=—
revoking_legislation=—
status=Current
original_text=http://www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si2005/20051803.htm
activeTextDocId=2211259
|The General Product Safety Regulations 2005 is a 2005 Statutory Instrument of the
Parliament of the United Kingdom that demands that "No producer shall [supply or] place a [consumer] product on the market unless the product is a safe product" (reg.5(1)) and provides broad enforcement powers. The regulations implementedEuropean Union directive 2001/95/EC and revoked the General Product Safety Regulations 1994 [ [http://www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si1994/Uksi_19942328_en_1.htm SI 1994/2328] ] (reg.1(2)). The regulations alsorepeal ed section 10 of theConsumer Protection Act 1987 which had previously imposed a more limited general safety requirement (reg.46(2)).It is a
crime to breach the general safety requirement. Onsummary conviction in theMagistrates' Court , an offender can be sentenced to up to three months'imprisonment and the statutory maximumfine . On conviction onindictment in theCrown Court , an offender can be sentenced to 12 months' imprisonment and a £20,000 fine (s.20(1)). An enforcement authority can recover the full costs of enforcement from an offender (s.27).It is a defence that all
due diligence was exercised in the supply of the product (reg.29(1)). Were a person wishes to rely on the defence that supply of a dangerous product was due to the default of someone else or reliance on information from someone else, he must serve notice on the court seven days before the hearing (s.29(2)-(3)).The general safety requirement
The regulations require that no producer shall (reg.5):
*Place a product on the market;
*Offer or agree to place a product on the market or expose or possess a product for placing on the market;
*Offer or agree to supply a product or expose or possess a product for supply;
*Supply a product;— unless the product is a safe product.A producer must provide appropriate information to consumers (art.7). Either a producer or distributor must inform an enforcement authority if they become aware that they have supplied a dangerous product (reg.9). The authority must inform the Secretary of State,
as of 2008 theSecretary of State for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform , who must inform the European Commission (regs.33-34)A distributor must exercise
due care in helping to ensure safety through (reg.8):
*Not selling dangerous products;
*Providing information to purchasers;
*Maintainingtraceability ;
*Co-operating with enforcement authorities.Producer
A producer is (s.2):
*The manufacturer of a product who is established in the EU;
*A person established in the EU, holding himself out as the manufacturer, for example by for example by sellingprivate label products under his ownbrand ("own-branders");
*A person established in the EU who reconditions the product;
*A person established in the EU who represents a manufacturer from outside the EU;
*Where there is no EU representative of the manufacturer, theimport er into the EU;
*Otherprofessional s in thesupply chain who affect the safety of the product.A supply chain professional whose activity does not affect product safety is a distributor (reg.2).
Product
The regulations apply to products supplied commercially, whether or not for consideration, that are (reg.2):
*Consumer product s; or
*Likely, under reasonably foreseeable conditions, to be used by consumers;— including products that are:
*New, used or reconditioned;
*Made available for consumer for their own use during providing a service, for examplehire ofbowling shoes .The regulations do not apply to products used by service providers themselves, especially means of
transport (reg.2), nor do they apply tosecond hand goods supplied with the clear intention that they will be repaired or reconditioned before use (reg.4). They do not apply to products where there are specific provisions as to the product's safety in thelaw of the European Union (reg.3).afe product
A safe product is a product which, under normal or reasonably foreseeable conditions of use including (reg.2):
*Duration of use;
*Putting into service;
*Installation ; and
*Maintenance requirements;— does not present anyrisk or only the minimum risks compatible with the product's use, considered to be acceptable and consistent with a high level of protection for the safety and health of persons.Relevant factors are (reg.2):
*Characteristics of the product, including:
**Composition;
**Packaging ; and
**Instructions forassembly , installation and maintenance;
*Effect on other products, where it is reasonably foreseeable that it will be used with other products;
*Presentation, labelling, warnings, instructions for use and disposal and any other indication or information regarding the product; and
*Categories of consumers at risk when using the product, in particularchildren and the elderly;— and conformance to or compliance with (reg.6(3)):
*A voluntary UK standard giving effect to aEuropean standard , but not a European standard published in theOfficial Journal of the European Union ;
*Other UK standards;
*Recommendations of theEuropean Commission setting guidelines on product safety assessment;
*Product safety codes of good practice in the sector concerned;
*The state of the art and technology; and
*Reasonable consumer expectations concerning safety.A product that is not a safe product is a dangerous product. A product is not dangerous solely because other products are safer or it was feasible to make the product itself safer (reg.2).
Products deemed safe by conformity
Products are deemed safe products where they conform to:
*UK safety legislation where there is no EU legislation (reg.6(1)); or
*A voluntary UK standard that gives effect to a European standard that itself has been published in the Official Journal (reg.6(2)).Antiques
A supplier has a defence where (reg.30):
*The product is second hand goods;
*The product is anantique ;
*The supplier sells the product, rather than supplying it for use on some other basis; and
*The supplier informs the purchaser that the product is an antique.Enforcement
Enforcement authorities
Enforcement authorities that have a duty to enforce the regulations are (reg.10):
*England:
**County Council s;
**District Council s;
**London Borough Council s;
**Common Council of the City of London ;
**Council of the Isles of Scilly ;
*Scotland:
**Councils for a local government area; and
*Wales:
**County Councils orCounty Borough Council s.
*Northern Ireland:
**District Councils.Enforcement authorities must act proportionately and encourage voluntary action but may take urgent action in the case of a serious risk (reg.10(5)). They have the power to make
test purchase s (reg.21) and powers ofentry and search (regs.22-23, 25-27). Authorities must undertakemarket surveillance (reg.36) and make information available to the public (reg.39) It is a crime to obstruct an officer of an enforcement authority, punishable onsummary conviction to a fine of up to level 5 on thestandard scale (reg.24(1)).afety notices
An enforcement authority may serve a safety notice being a:
*Suspension notice preventing marketing or sale of the goods while safety evaluations, checks and controls and performed (reg.11);
*Requirement to mark to ensure an adequate safety marking (reg.12);
*Requirement to warn to issue a warning about a dangerous product to past and future consumers;
*Withdrawal notice to withraw a dangerous product from the market and, possibly, to warn past consumers (reg.14);
*Recall notice to recall a dangerous product (reg.15).The Secretary of State can require information or a product
sample from a producer and it is a crime not to comply unless the information is protected bylegal professional privilege or theright to silence (reg.43).Appeal against a notice can be made to aMagistrates' Court in England and Wales, and Northern Ireland, and to a Sheriff in Scotland (reg.17).Breach of a safety notice is a crime and, on
summary conviction in theMagistrates' Court , an offender can be sentenced to up to three months'imprisonment and the statutory maximumfine . On conviction onindictment in theCrown Court , an offender can be sentenced to 12 months' imprisonment and a £20,000 fine (s.20(4)).Forfeiture
In the case of
prosecution for a breach of the regulations or an appeal against a safety notice in England and Wales and Northern Ireland, the enforcement authority may apply to the court for forfeiture of the product. Appeal is to theCrown Court (England and Wales) orCounty Court (Northern Ireland) (reg.18). In Scotland, application must be made to theProcurator fiscal with appeal to theHigh Court of Justiciary (reg.19).Further decisions under the Directive
Art.13 of the directive gives the European Commission the power to issue further decisions with which the Secretary of State must comply (reg.35).
References
Bibliography
* cite web | url=http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file23032.pdf | title=The General Product Safety Regulations 2005 - Notification guidance for producers and distributors | year=September 2005 | author=Consumer & Competition Policy Directorate | publisher=Department of Trade and Industry | accessdate=2008-04-18 , URN 05/1457
* cite web | title=Government Response to the Consultation on proposals to implement Directive 2001/95/EC on general product safety (GPSD) | url=http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file14327.pdf | author=Department of Trade and Industry | accessdate=2008-04-18 | year=June 2005
* cite web | url=http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file22713.pdf | title=The General Product Safety Regulation 2005 - Guidance for businesses, consumers and enforcement authorities | year=August 2005 | author=— | accessdate=2008-04-18
* cite web | url=http://www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si2005/20051803.htm#ex | title=General Product Safety Regulations 2005 - explanatory notes | author=Office of Public Sector Information | year=2005 | accessdate=2008-04-18 | publisher=The Stationery Office
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