A variety of stakeholders are involved in CEN and CENELEC work, amongst others business, industry and commerce, service providers, public authorities, regulators, academia and research centres, European trade associations and interest groups representing environmentalists, consumers, trade unions as well as small and medium enterprises, and other public and private institutions.
European standards are driven by business and made through a transparent, balanced and consensus-based process in which relevant stakeholders are involved.
We aim to produce high-quality standards for products and services that incorporate quality, safety, environmental, interoperability and accessibility requirements. We adapt proactively to new developments and support European competitiveness, the protection of the environment and sustainable growth for the well-being of citizens and the strengthening of the single market (European Economic Area).
We actively support international standardization, and cooperate closely with the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), in order to pursue the goal of ‘one standard, one test, accepted everywhere’.
More than 200.000 technical experts from industry, associations, public administrations, academia and societal organizations are involved in the CEN and CENELEC network.
The stakeholders of the CEN and CENELEC system are: business, industry and commerce; service providers; consumer, environmental and societal organisations; public authorities and regulators; and other authorities.
Most of these stakeholders are represented in the CEN and CENELEC communities through:
The European standardization system, as it is known today, is the result of a long-standing and successful public-private cooperation involving various actors: industries, public authorities, consumers, trade unions etc. The important role that European standards play in the development and consolidation of the European Single Market and the support they provide to other EU policies, create a strong link between standardization and legislation.
These strong links are framed by the New Approach concept. Thirty percent of European standards directly support EU directives and give presumption of conformity to the law. This ensures the production of state-of-the-art, high consensus deliverables, widely accepted by the market, which gives a unique role to European standards.
Therefore a close partnership with the European Commission and the EFTA Secretariat exists and the ESOs benefit from this unique recognition as being the sole European Standards Organizations whose deliverables, the European standards (ENs), can provide direct support to European legislation. This is translated in Regulation 1025/2012 on European standardization.
Standardization requests are the mechanism by which the European Commission (EC) and the secretariat of the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) request the European Standardization Organizations (ESOs) to develop and adopt European standards in support of European policies and legislation.
This mechanism involves several steps.
Find information about specific standardization requests on the website of the European Commission.