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European Union: The European Commission updates the requirements for the use of frequencies in the 5 GHz band


On 23 November 2022, the European Commission published Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2022/2307 entitled "Revision of Implementing Decision (EU) 2022/179 on the designation and provision of the frequency bands 5150-5250 MHz, 5250-5350 MHz and 5470-5725 MHz in accordance with the technical conditions specified in the Annex". The revision comes in response to a request by the European automotive industry for the European Commission to confirm the use scenarios of the 5470-5725MHz band in Decision (EU) 2022/179 published on 8 February 2022. The European Postal and Telecommunications Commission (CEPT) then conducted a study and finally updated the implementation date from 1 March 2022 to 30 June 2023 with no technical changes in the requirements given in (EU) 2022/2307.

Click on this link to view the original decision (EU) 2022/2307.

EU: The implementation date of the RED Cybersecurity Requirements (EU) 2022/30 has been postponed by one year


Following a public consultation on 24 May 2023, on 20 July 2023, the European Commission published an announcement numbered C(2023) 4823 final, postponing the implementation date of (EU) 2022/30 from 1 August 2024 to 1 August 2025. The announcement also amends the text description in the second paragraph of Chapter 1 of (EU) 2022/30 by changing the original text "traffic data and location data" to "traffic data or location data".

Click on this link to view the original European Commission announcement.

The European Union has officially published the Revised Directive on Universal Chargers


On December 7, the European Union officially published the revised Directive (EU) 2022/2380 on universal chargers to supplement the specific implementation requirements of 3.3(a) of the RED Directive Directive 2014/53/EU for universal charging interfaces.

The Amendment Directive covers a total of 13 types of wireless devices, including smartphones, tablets, digital cameras, wireless headphones, handheld game consoles, portable speakers, e-books, keyboards, mice, portable navigation systems and laptops. According to the requirements of the new directive, all 13 types of equipment mentioned above must be equipped with a USB Type-C charging port in accordance with EN IEC 62680-1-3:2021 and can be charged using a charging cable that complies with the same standard, where devices that support fast charging should support the USB PD protocol in accordance with EN IEC 62680-1-2:2021. In addition, consumers and users may choose to purchase devices with unbundled chargers, and the manufacturer or seller should indicate whether the product is equipped with a charger with a specific mark on the packaging, indicating the charger power range requirements and the supported fast charging protocols.

The new directive will be mandatory in all EU member states from 28 December 2024, with the requirement for laptop devices to be mandatory on 28 April 2026, and new devices entering the EU market after the mandatory date should meet the requirements of the directive.

European Union: The European Commission publishes a new harmonized standard for RED


On October 4, 2023, the European Commission published Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2023/2392 in the Official Journal of the European Union containing new harmonized standards in support of the Radio Equipment Directive. The "Implementation Decision" has now been implemented, and the key points are updated as follows:

  • The cellular equipment standard EN 301 908-1 has been updated to V15.2.1, EN 301 908-1 V15.1.1 will expire on April 4, 2025, and the previous version, EN 301 908-1 V13.1.1, has already expired on September 29, 2023;
  • The DAB equipment standard EN 302 077 has been updated to V2.3.1 and EN 302 077-2 V1.1.1 will expire on April 4, 2025.

Click the this link to view the original implementation decision.

The European Union has introduced new regulations on ErP standby power consumption


On 17 April, the European Union published a new version of Regulation (EU) 2023/826 on standby power consumption in the ErP series of directives, which will be mandatory on 9 May 2025 and replace the old Regulation (EC) 1275/2008 and (EC) 107/2009. The new regulations cover most small household appliances, IT equipment (excluding desktop computers and laptops), consumer entertainment electronics, electric furniture and home decoration equipment. Regulations require devices to have power management capabilities to meet energy consumption requirements for shutdown mode, standby mode, and network standby mode.

Click this link to view the original text.

The European Commission has updated the harmonized RED standard


On 1 December 2023, the European Commission published Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2023/2669 amending the implementing decision (EU) 2022/2191 on harmonised standards for wireless communication devices used at or near the human body.

The harmonized standards EN 50360:2017/A1:2023 and EN 50566:2017/A1:2023 are used to cover the essential requirements set out in Article 3 of the Directive. The original EN 50360:2017 and EN 50566:2017 can be used until 1 June 2025.

Click on this link to view the original implementation decision.

The European Union has officially published the Act on Ecodesign and Energy Labelling for Mobile Phones and Tablets


On August 31, 2023, the European Commission published in the Official Journal OJ the Ecodesign Act (EU) 2023/1670 and the Energy Labelling Act (EU) 2023/1669 for mobile phone and tablet products, which were formulated in accordance with the requirements of the European Union's Ecodesign and Energy Labelling Work Plan 2022-2024, which will enter into force on the twentieth day after publication in the Official Journal of the European Union (OJ) and will be mandatory on June 20, 2025.

EU new energy label regulation

According to the bill, smartphones and tablets placed on the EU market must display information about their energy efficiency, battery life, protection against dust and water, and protection against accidental drops. This is the first time that a product on the EU market has been required to display a repairability score.

Ecodesign Act (EU) 2023/1670

In order to improve the energy efficiency and durability of mobile phone and tablet products, strict requirements have been put forward for the maintainability, reliability and recycling of products through eco-design principles such as open repair rights, increased product transparency, and recycling.

According to the requirements of the

Ecodesign Act, manufacturers, importers or agents are obliged to provide critical spare parts to maintenance personnel within 5-10 working days until 7 years after the end of the sale of the product model on the EU market.

If a battery or back cover assembly is not available to the customer, the manufacturer needs to ensure that the product design meets the following requirements:

1. The cycle life is not less than 500 times, and after 500 times, there is at least 83% of the remaining capacity;

2. The battery cycle life is not less than 1000 times, and after 1000 times, there is at least 80% remaining capacity;

3. The product has IP67 dustproof and waterproof design.

The Act requires manufacturers, importers or agents to publish product repair manuals on their free websites to provide professional technicians or users with information related to the repair and maintenance of products, including product identification, disassembly diagrams, fault diagnosis information, necessary circuit connection diagrams, tag diagrams, and disassembly tool requirements.

In order to improve the durability of mobile phones and tablets, the bill requires that products must meet certain reliability requirements

1. Anti-drop design;

2. Mohs 4 hardness screen design;

3. IP44 dustproof and waterproof design

4. The battery cycle life is not less than 500 times;

5. Improve the battery management function and optimize the charging efficiency

6. Availability of operating system upgrades: at least 5 years after the product is placed on the market;

7. Professional repairers use any software or firmware required for replacement without discrimination.

Energy Efficiency Rating Labelling Act (EU) 2023/1669

According to the Act, all smartphones and tablets must be labelled with an energy efficiency rating and registered on the EU's public goods database EPREL before they can be placed on the market.

new energy label
Energy efficiency labels for smartphones and tablets

In response to the two new EU Directives, the CTTL-Terminal Labs can provide a complete evaluation program for enterprises, and can contact xialijiao@caict.ac.cn if necessary.

The European Commission publishes EU 2023/2444 to postpone the EU cyber security to August 1, 2025


Following the publication of the announcement number C(2023) 4823 final on 20 July 2023, the European Commission published Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2023/2444 in the Official Journal of the European Union on 27 October 2023. The regulation amends Authorization Regulation (EU) 2022/30 and corrects the essential requirements of Article 3(3)(e) of the definition of the category of equipment that must be met. The regulation postpones the mandatory date for Section 3(3) (d), (e), and (f) of the RED Enabling Act to August 1, 2025. This will allow time for the European Committee for Standardization (CEN) and the European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization (CENELEC) to create high-quality harmonized standards. The authorisation regulation also amends the text description in the second paragraph of Chapter 1 of (EU) 2022/30 by changing the original "traffic data and location data" to "traffic data or location data".

This regulation shall enter into force on the date of publication. Click on this link to view the original article (EU) 2023/2444.

The European Union adopts the Batteries and Waste Batteries Regulation


On July 28, 2023, the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union published a new regulation on batteries and waste batteries, Regulation (EU) 2023/1542. The regulation aims to promote a circular economy in the battery industry by regulating all stages of the battery life cycle, including production, reuse, and recycling. The regulation includes labeling and information requirements for battery components and outlines targets for the recycling of used battery materials, as well as requirements for the carbon footprint of batteries (which does not apply to portable batteries). The regulation was codified on 12 July 2023, published in the Official Journal of the European Union on 28 July 2023, and will enter into force on 18 August 2023

  • Chapter 13 of the Regulation, from 18 August 2025, all batteries shall bear a separate recycling mark, from 18 August 2026, the relevant labelling requirements of the Regulation shall be fully implemented, from 18 February 2027 all batteries shall have a QR code containing the battery information required by the Regulations;
  • Chapter 11 of the Regulation (Removable and replaceable requirements for portable batteries and LMT batteries): 18 February 2027;
  • Directive 2006/66/EC, which replaces this regulation, will be repealed from 18 August 2025.

Click on this link to view the original Regulation (EU) 2023/1542.

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