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Generally speaking, GS CEROSH first steps to determine the standard of the product, then do a test, and issue a product certificate after passing the test.
At present, there are only three institutions that can issue GS certificates: TUV, ITS, and VDE, and these three institutions are strictly in accordance with the relevant testing process, so GS cannot do it if there are no specific standards.
At present, there are many institutions that can issue CE in China, and the testing process is similar to GS, but CE is currently doing relatively badly, and if the process is strictly followed, there is no standard that cannot issue CE certificates. But you can do the product according to the instructions, for example, your product testing standards are not there, but there are corresponding large standards, then you can be classified into the big standards, and the instructions can be reflected on the certificate, so that you can do CE.
If you want to make rosh, it should be determined according to the material of the product, and it should be able to be done.
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Both CE and GS must have corresponding standards to do, and RoHS is chemical testing, which can definitely be done. If you want to export skates to Germany, you had better do GS to get customer recognition, for this product, plus the export destination is Germany, you do CE is basically a waste of money and not accepted by customers. I'm in the certification business, and if it's safety shoes, there are standards, but I can't really find standards for skates.
Otherwise, you'd better consult a TUV company to see how it goes.
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The GS certification laboratory needs to be verified, and the strength of each company is different, and the strength of the qualification that can be passed is also different.
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Try to certify the materials you use, and you don't need to do what you already have, such as the original material PP or PA, find a ** businessman, and show it to the guys.
I don't know if that's possible.
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Select Express Export. No documentation is required.
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CE marking is applicable to all EU countries and some countries with mutual recognition standards with the EU.
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The main CE certification is uniformly verified by the customs of the EU countries (from the non-EU to the EU countries through the shipment of goods to the EU countries), so everyone tacitly assumes that CE certification is one of the customs clearance documents, forming a common practice. In fact, not all products need CE certification, because sometimes the requirements are different, such as machinery, low-voltage electrical products, electromagnetic compatibility products, etc., which are mandatory and must be CE certification.
Some customs may also want to check your goods temporarily, sometimes it is the customer's own needs. Moreover, the scope of CE is very large now, so the domestic approach is basically "one size fits all", because once you face penalties and lawsuits, CE can be used as evidence in your favor and reduce risks.
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The "CE" mark is a safety certification mark that is seen as a passport for manufacturers to open and enter the European market. CE stands for European Unity (Conformite Europeenne). All products with the "CE" mark can be sold in EU member states without meeting the requirements of each member state, thus realizing the free circulation of goods within the EU member states.
CE is the abbreviation of the French Communate Europeia, which means European Conformity, that is, the European Community, in fact, CE is also in the languages of many countries of the European Community"European Community"The abbreviation of this phrase was originally abbreviated as EC in English phrase European Community, and later changed to EC because the European Community is Communate Europe in French, Comunita Europe in Italian, Communidade Europe in Portuguese, and Comunida Europe in Spanish.
In the EU market, the "CE" mark is a mandatory certification mark, whether it is a product produced by an enterprise within the European Union, or a product produced in other countries, if it wants to circulate freely in the EU market, it must be affixed with the "CE" mark to indicate that the product meets the basic requirements of the EU "New Approach to Technology Harmonization and Standardization" directive. This is a mandatory requirement for products under EU law.
CE marking forms the core of the European directive"Main requirements:", i.e. limited to the basic safety requirements in terms of products that do not endanger the safety of humans, animals and goods, rather than general quality requirements, the Harmonized Directive only sets out the main requirements, and the general directive requirements are standard tasks. Therefore, the precise meaning is: the CE mark is a safety mark and not a quality mark.
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The products are exported to Europe, if it is an EU country, then doing CE is the minimum requirement, and individual customers also require CE certificates from EU agencies, such as TUV-CE, etc.
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CE certification, i.e. limited to the basic safety requirements in terms of products that do not endanger the safety of humans, animals and goods, rather than general quality requirements, the Harmonized Directive only stipulates the main requirements, and the general directive requirements are standard tasks. CE is a mandatory certification mark for the EU market, which is a safety conformity mark rather than a quality conformity mark, and is regarded as a passport for manufacturers to open and enter the European market.
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Hello, the product exported to the EU is to do CE certification, CE certification is a mandatory requirement of the EU for products, must go through the CE certification to pass the customs inspection, smoothly exported to the EU for product sales, CE certificate is the product to the EU passport. So be sure to handle it;
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CE is the pass of the product in the EU, customs clearance and sales are used, if there is no CE, once it is found to be sold in the EU, it will face fines, and even prosecution, CE covers a wide range of products, in principle, more than 90% of the products need CE
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The vast majority of products exported to Europe must have CE certification, of course, not all products must have CE, depending on the product category.
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Yes, CE certification is a must, with this can be circulated in the European market.
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Yes, the export must meet the standard.
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There must be, just like the domestic 3C, when the mandatory standard.
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If the product is within the scope of EU harmonized standards, it must have CE marking.
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Basically, it can be said that, depending on your product, ** ranges from a few hundred to tens of thousands, and the detailed user name.
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Required, unless it is a component. We operate a lot.
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In fact, this is not to see which countries want CE standards, but to see what customers recognize! The main thing your customer said, I want the EU CE standard, then you give him CE, anyway, what standard the customer wants, go to the certification company to do the standard!!
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CE certification is required in all 27 countries of the European Union.
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Let's understand what CE is!
After the establishment of the European Union, basically member states use these standards, and some countries outside the European Union also use CE certification, such as Turkey, Croatia, etc., which have not yet formally joined the European Union.
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China cites the EU.
Third-party testing is en ...din...Rotten standards.
In fact, the content is similar, just add some difference tests.
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CE Marking - Scope of Application.
As of January 2007, there were 27 Member States, which were:
France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, United Kingdom, Denmark, Ireland, Greece, Portugal, Spain, Austria, Sweden, Finland, Malta, Cyprus, Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Bulgaria.
Current EU-15: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, United Kingdom, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and Sweden 10 countries joined since 1 May 2004: 1
Cyprus 2Czech Republic 3Love Sand Nia 4
Latvia 5Lithuania 6Malta 7
Poland 8Slovakia 9Slovenia 10
Hungary 3 countries that joined the European Union in 2007: 1Bulgaria 2
Romania 3Turkey.
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Scope of application of CE certification:
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, Romania, Bulgaria, Malta, Cyprus.
Switzerland, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway have also signed treaties on product safety. Croatia, Turkey and the Kingdom of Macedonia, three quasi-EU countries, have also committed themselves to the provisions of the treaty on travel. All this means that the CE marking requirements cover 34 countries and territories.
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CE certification + RoHS, one is electrical safety certification, and the other is environmental protection certification.
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Many customers in the EU have proposed to do social responsibility certification such as SA8000.
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。But GS is particularly well recognized in Germany. Therefore, for exporting to Germany, customers generally need GS certification.
RoHS is an environmental certification of the European Union.
Therefore, even if your product has GS certification, it is necessary to have RoHS certification.
CB is a certification recognized by all CB member countries. The CB system is a set of global mutual recognition systems established by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IECEE), and 45 certification bodies from 34 countries around the world participate in this mutual recognition system, and the member countries and member institutions of this organization are constantly expanding. After the enterprise obtains the certificate from one of the certification bodies, it can be more easily converted into the certification certificate of other institutions, so as to obtain the access certificate to enter the relevant national market.
CB is a certificate that is recognized by all CB member countries or can be easily converted into certification by other organizations.
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The biggest difference is that CE is a mandatory certification of the European Union, and all products exported to EU member states must be affixed with the CE mark as long as they are within the scope of CE. GS is a voluntary certification in Germany and is also recognized by other EU member states. If the product is GS certified, it will be relatively more competitive.
Secondly, CE is for electromagnetic compatibility and safety testing, while GS is mainly for some requirements for product safety.
Then there is the cost of certification and the cycle.
CE general certification bodies can issue certificates, and the cost is about a few thousand to ten thousand. All you need to do is provide samples and relevant information to the certification body. The cycle is generally not more than ten working days, and there is no need to audit the factory.
The GS fee consists of a test fee, a factory audit fee, a certificate annual fee, etc., and if it is an organization, there will be an additional fee. This involves a factory audit, which takes at least 6-8 weeks. It could be a little longer.
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To put it simply, GS is expensive and generally not considered by domestic companies; CE fees are cheap, as long as they can meet the needs of domestic enterprises.
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GS certification is German certification, CE certification is EU certification, generally speaking, only CE is needed to EU countries, and some German importers will need to provide GS certification if they have higher requirements.
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All of the above are masters, all of them answer very reasonably, I will briefly talk about the high cost of GS certification, the certification time is relatively long, the requirements are relatively strict, if the purchaser does not make special requirements, just do CE on it.
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Brother Ren on the 3rd floor is wrong in some aspects:
1. CE certification requires annual review for some products;
2. CE certification requires factory audit for some products;
3. CE certification is only allowed for self-declaration of some products.
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1) GS is voluntary certification, non-compulsoryce is mandatory certification, compulsory
2) GS is tested in accordance with German safety regulations.
CE is tested according to the European standard (EN).
3) GS is an independent third party authorized by Germany** to conduct testing and issue GS mark certificate, CE is with complete technical documents (including test reports) on the premise that CE4) GS must pay an annual fee.
There is no annual fee for CE.
5) GS is required to be inspected by the factory every year.
CE is not required to be audited by the factory.
6) GS is issued by the authorized testing unit GS mark, high credibility and market acceptanceCE is the factory's self-declaration of product compliance, low credibility and market acceptance.
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Well, it's all clear.
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Exporting to EU member states depends on the category of your product, you can do common CE certification, if it is food contact, you can do LFGB certification, if you want to test the material, you can do RoHS or REACH certification.
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Hello! Applying for GS certification for German luminaires is voluntary and not mandatory. However, you should know that it is better if your product has a GS certificate.
Because the GS mark certified by GS is a voluntary safety mark in Germany; But it is highly valued by consumers. Many products, including home appliances, lamps, audio and video products, communication products, office equipment, power tools, electronic toys, electronic measuring instruments, etc., are difficult to sell in or around Germany without the GS mark.
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