EurActiv Logo
Actualités & débats européens
- dans votre langue -
Actualités en Bulgarie
Actualités en Turquie
Actualité en Allemagne
Actualités en Espagne
Actualités en France
Actualités au Royaume-Uni
Actualités en Pologne
Actualités en République tchèque
Actualités en Slovaquie
Actualités en Hongrie
Actualités en Roumanie
Actualités en Serbie
Greece News
Italy News
Bulgaria Turkey Germany Spain France United Kingdom Poland Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary Romania Serbia Greece Italy
EurActiv.com Réseau

TOUTES LES RUBRIQUES

L'UE a l'intention d'interdire les briquets sans sécurité pour les enfants

Publié 10 février 2006
Version imprimableEnvoyer à un ami

Les organisations de consommateurs saluent la décision de la Commission d'interdire les importations et le marketing des briquets qui ne respectent pas des normes élevées de sécurité pour les enfants. 

In July 2005, the Commission proposed banning lighters that were not child-resistant, but the proposal was turned down by some member states, who referred to insufficient accident data, the absence of novelty lighters and the assumption that the ban would present a barrier to trade and be in breach of World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules.  

A revised proposal for a piece of legislation banning the sale and marketing of lighters that are not "child resistant" was presented to the member states' experts at a meeting of a Committee established under the General Product Safety Directive (GPSD), on 8 - 9 February 2006. The meeting' outcome was positive. 

The new proposal includes evidence in favour of child-resistant lighters and covers novelty lighters. As to breaching the WTO trading rules, the Commission's legal services do not recognise any problem.

EU member states can still produce novelty lighters and export them to countries, which do not have requirements for lighters to be child-resistant. This market is worth 43 million euro.

Réactions : 

The European Consumers' Organisation (BEUC) and the European consumer voice in standardisation (ANEC) warmly welcome this decision that "will help avoid the many accidents caused by children under five playing with lighters".

China, which currently sells half of the lighters sold in the EU, has criticised the proposal and says that a ban of novelty lighters would be in breach of World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules. The EU signed a memorandum of understanding on product safety with China on 11 November 2005.

Previously, several EU states, namely Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Spain and the UK, opposed the ruling on the grounds that EU countries produce lighters that are not child-resistant and the ban could damage trade.

Prochaines étapes : 
  • The Commission will adopt the decision in the coming weeks.
  • The European Parliament will be informed of the decision. It has one month to examine the dossier.
  • The member states have four months to adopt implementing decisions after which the industry will have a six-month -period to implement the decision.
  • The Commission will soon launch a joint project with member states' customs and market surveillance authorities to ensure full implementation of the decision.
Contexte : 

Currently, there is no specific EU legislation applicable to lighters. However, two technical standards relate to the safety of lighters. The first, an international standard establishes specifications on quality, reliability and safety of the lighters combined with appropriate manufacturing test procedures but does not include 'child-resistance' specifications. The second is the European standard establishing child-resistance specifications for lighters. 

In order to ensure a consistently high level of consumer health and safety protection throughout the EU and to avoid barriers to trade, the Commission proposed, in July 2005, to adopt a legislation requiring member states to take measures to ensure that only lighters which are child-resistant are put on the market. This would mean banning the sale of novelty lighters that are not child resistant. Novelty lighters come in shapes toys, such as playing cards, fishing rods or motorcycles, that attract children and are considered dangerous.

The United States introduced a child-resistance requirement in 1994. In 2002 a study on the effectiveness of the requirement reported a 60% reduction in fires, injuries and deaths caused by children playing with lighters.

More in this section

Publicité