Directive 2009/48/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 June 2009 on the safety of toys (Text with EEA relevance)
Modified by
- Commission Directive 2012/7/EUof 2 March 2012amending, for the purpose of adaptation to technical progress, part III of Annex II to Directive 2009/48/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council relating to toy safety(Text with EEA relevance), 32012L0007, March 3, 2012
- Commission Regulation (EU) No 681/2013of 17 July 2013amending part III of Annex II to Directive 2009/48/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council on the safety of toys(Text with EEA relevance), 32013R0681, July 18, 2013
(a) playground equipment intended for public use; (b) automatic playing machines, whether coin operated or not, intended for public use; (c) toy vehicles equipped with combustion engines; (d) toy steam engines; and (e) slings and catapults.
1. "making available on the market" means any supply of a toy for distribution, consumption or use on the Community market in the course of a commercial activity, whether in return for payment or free of charge; 2. "placing on the market" means the first making available of a toy on the Community market; 3. "manufacturer" means any natural or legal person who manufactures a toy or has a toy designed or manufactured, and markets that toy under his name or trademark; 4. "authorised representative" means any natural or legal person established within the Community who has received a written mandate from a manufacturer to act on his behalf in relation to specified tasks; 5. "importer" means any natural or legal person established within the Community who places a toy from a third country on the Community market; 6. "distributor" means any natural or legal person in the supply chain, other than the manufacturer or the importer, who makes a toy available on the market; 7. "economic operators" means the manufacturer, the authorised representative, the importer and the distributor; 8. "harmonised standard" means a standard adopted by one of the European standardisation bodies listed in Annex I to Directive 98/34/EC on the basis of a request made by the Commission in accordance with Article 6 of that Directive; 9. "Community harmonisation legislation" means any Community legislation harmonising the conditions for the marketing of products; 10. "accreditation" shall have the meaning assigned to it by Regulation (EC) No 765/2008; 11. "conformity assessment" means the process demonstrating whether specified requirements relating to a toy have been fulfilled; 12. "conformity assessment body" means a body that performs conformity assessment activities, including calibration, testing, certification and inspection; 13. "recall" means any measure aimed at achieving the return of a toy that has already been made available to the end user; 14. "withdrawal" means any measure aimed at preventing a toy in the supply chain from being made available on the market; 15. "market surveillance" means the activities carried out and measures taken by public authorities to ensure that toys comply with the applicable requirements set out in Community harmonisation legislation and do not endanger health, safety or any other aspect of public interest protection; 16. "CE marking" means a marking by which the manufacturer indicates that the toy is in conformity with the applicable requirements set out in Community harmonisation legislation providing for its affixing; 17. "functional product" means a product which performs and is used in the same way as a product, appliance or installation intended for use by adults, and which may be a scale model of such product, appliance or installation; 18. "functional toy" means a toy which performs and is used in the same way as a product, appliance or installation intended for use by adults, and which may be a scale model of such product, appliance or installation; 19. "aquatic toy" means a toy intended for use in shallow water which is capable of carrying or supporting a child on the water; 20. "design speed" means representative potential operating speed that is determined by the design of the toy; 21. "activity toy" means a toy for domestic use in which the support structure remains stationary while the activity is taking place and which is intended for the performance by a child of any of the following activities: climbing, jumping, swinging, sliding, rocking, spinning, crawling and creeping, or any combination thereof; 22. "chemical toy" means a toy intended for the direct handling of chemical substances and mixtures and which is used in a manner appropriate to a given age-group and under the supervision of an adult; 23. "olfactory board game" means a toy the purpose of which is to assist a child to learn to recognise different odours or flavours; 24. "cosmetic kit" means a toy the purpose of which is to assist a child to learn to make products such as fragrances, soaps, creams, shampoos, bath foams, glosses, lipsticks, other make-up, tooth-paste and conditioners; 25. "gustative game" means a toy the purpose of which is to allow children to make sweets or dishes which involve the use of food ingredients such as sweets, liquids, powders and aromas; 26. "harm" means physical injury or any other damage to health, including long-term health effects; 27. "hazard" means a potential source of harm; 28. "risk" means the probable rate of occurrence of a hazard causing harm and the degree of severity of the harm; 29. "intended for use by" means that a parent or supervisor shall reasonably be able to assume by virtue of the functions, dimensions and characteristics of a toy that it is intended for use by children of the stated age group.
(a) keep the EC declaration of conformity and the technical documentation at the disposal of national surveillance authorities for a period of 10 years after the toy has been placed on the market; (b) further to a reasoned request from a competent national authority, provide that authority with all the information and documentation necessary to demonstrate the conformity of a toy; (c) cooperate with the competent national authorities, at their request, on any action taken to eliminate the risks posed by toys covered by the mandate.
(a) any economic operator who has supplied them with a toy; (b) any economic operator to whom they have supplied a toy.
(a) where harmonised standards, the reference number of which has been published in the Official Journal of the European Union , covering all relevant safety requirements for the toy, do not exist;(b) where the harmonised standards referred to in point (a) exist but the manufacturer has not applied them or has applied them only in part; (c) where one or more of the harmonised standards referred to in point (a) has been published with a restriction; (d) when the manufacturer considers that the nature, design, construction or purpose of the toy necessitate third party verification.
(a) personnel with technical knowledge and sufficient and appropriate experience to perform the conformity assessment tasks; (b) descriptions of procedures in accordance with which conformity assessment is carried out ensuring the transparency and ability of reproduction of those procedures. It shall have appropriate policies and procedures in place that distinguish between tasks it carries out as a notified body and other activities; (c) procedures for the performance of activities which take due account of the size of an undertaking, the sector in which it operates, its structure, the degree of complexity of the technology of the toy in question and the mass or serial nature of the production process.
(a) sound technical and vocational training covering all the conformity assessment activities in relation to which the conformity assessment body has been notified; (b) satisfactory knowledge of the requirements of the assessments they carry out and adequate authority to carry out those assessments; (c) appropriate knowledge and understanding of the essential requirements, of the applicable harmonised standards and of the relevant Community harmonisation legislation and of its implementing regulations; (d) the ability to draw up certificates, records and reports demonstrating that assessments have been carried out.
(a) any refusal, restriction, suspension or withdrawal of an EC-type examination certificate; (b) any circumstances affecting the scope of and conditions for notification; (c) any request for information which they have received from market surveillance authorities regarding conformity assessment activities; (d) on request, conformity assessment activities performed within the scope of their notification, and any other activity performed, including cross-border activities and subcontracting.
(a) failure of the toy to meet requirements relating to the health or safety of persons; or (b) shortcomings in the harmonised standards referred to in Article 13 conferring a presumption of conformity.
(a) the Community Rapid Information Exchange notification indicates that the notification of the measure is also required by this Directive; (b) the supporting evidence referred to in Article 42(5) is enclosed with the Community Rapid Information Exchange notification.
(a) that the CE marking has been affixed in violation of Article 16 or 17; (b) that the CE marking has not been affixed; (c) that the EC declaration of conformity has not been drawn up; (d) that the EC declaration of conformity has not been drawn up correctly; (e) that technical documentation is either not available or not complete.
(a) Annex I; (b) points 11 and 13 of Part III of Annex II; (c) Annex V.
1. Decorative objects for festivities and celebrations 2. Products for collectors, provided that the product or its packaging bears a visible and legible indication that it is intended for collectors of 14 years of age and above. Examples of this category are: (a) detailed and faithful scale models; (b) kits for the assembly of detailed scale models; (c) folk dolls and decorative dolls and other similar articles; (d) historical replicas of toys; and (e) reproductions of real fire arms.
3. Sports equipment, including roller skates, inline skates, and skateboards intended for children with a body mass of more than 20 kg 4. Bicycles with a maximum saddle height of more than 435 mm, measured as the vertical distance from the ground to the top of the seat surface, with the seat in a horizontal position and with the seat pillar set to the minimum insertion mark 5. Scooters and other means of transport designed for sport or which are intended to be used for travel on public roads or public pathways 6. Electrically driven vehicles which are intended to be used for travel on public roads, public pathways, or the pavement thereof 7. Aquatic equipment intended to be used in deep water, and swimming learning devices for children, such as swim seats and swimming aids 8. Puzzles with more than 500 pieces 9. Guns and pistols using compressed gas, with the exception of water guns and water pistols, and bows for archery over 120 cm long 10. Fireworks, including percussion caps which are not specifically designed for toys 11. Products and games using sharp-pointed missiles, such as sets of darts with metallic points 12. Functional educational products, such as electric ovens, irons or other functional products operated at a nominal voltage exceeding 24 volts which are sold exclusively for teaching purposes under adult supervision 13. Products intended for use for educational purposes in schools and other pedagogical contexts under the surveillance of an adult instructor, such as science equipment 14. Electronic equipment, such as personal computers and game consoles, used to access interactive software and their associated peripherals, unless the electronic equipment or the associated peripherals are specifically designed for and targeted at children and have a play value on their own, such as specially designed personal computers, key boards, joy sticks or steering wheels 15. Interactive software, intended for leisure and entertainment, such as computer games, and their storage media, such as CDs 16. Babies’ soothers 17. Child-appealing luminaires 18. Electrical transformers for toys 19. Fashion accessories for children which are not for use in play
(a) Toys and their parts must not present a risk of strangulation. (b) Toys and their parts must not present a risk of asphyxiation by closing off the flow of air as a result of airway obstruction external to the mouth and nose. (c) Toys and their parts must be of such dimensions as to not present a risk of asphyxiation by closing off the flow of air as a result of internal airway obstruction by objects wedged in the mouth or pharynx or lodged over the entrance to the lower airways. (d) Toys, which are clearly intended for use by children under 36 months, and their component parts and any of their detachable parts must be of such dimensions as to prevent their being swallowed or inhaled. This also applies to other toys which are intended to be put in the mouth, and to their component parts and any of their detachable parts. (e) The packaging in which toys are contained for retail sale must not present a risk of strangulation or asphyxiation caused by airway obstruction external to the mouth and nose. (f) Toys contained within food or co-mingled with food must have their own packaging. This packaging, as it is supplied, must be of such dimensions as to prevent its being swallowed and/or inhaled. (g) Toy packaging, as referred to in points (e) and (f), which is spherical, egg-shaped or ellipsoidal, and any detachable parts of this or of cylindrical toy packaging with rounded ends, must be of such dimensions as to prevent it from causing airway obstruction by being wedged in the mouth or pharynx or lodged over the entrance to the lower airways. (h) Toys firmly attached to a food product at the moment of consumption, in such a way that the food product needs to be consumed in order to get direct access to the toy, shall be prohibited. Parts of toys otherwise directly attached to a food product shall fulfil the requirements set out in points (c) and (d).
(a) the maximum and minimum temperature of any accessible surfaces does not cause injury when touched; and (b) liquids and gases contained within the toy do not reach temperatures or pressures which are such that their escape from the toy, other than for reasons essential to the proper functioning of the toy, might cause burns, scalds or other physical injury.
(a) they do not burn if directly exposed to a flame or spark or other potential source of fire; (b) they are not readily flammable (the flame goes out as soon as the fire cause disappears); (c) if they do ignite, they burn slowly and present a low rate of spread of the flame; (d) irrespective of the toy’s chemical composition, they are designed so as to mechanically delay the combustion process.
(a) which, when mixed together, may explode through chemical reaction or through heating; (b) which may explode when mixed with oxidizing substances; or (c) which contain volatile components which are flammable in air and liable to form a flammable or explosive vapour/air mixture.
(a) these substances and mixtures are contained in individual concentrations equal to or smaller than the relevant concentrations established in the Community legal acts referred to in Section 2 of Appendix B for the classification of mixtures containing these substances; (b) these substances and mixtures are inaccessible to children in any form, including inhalation, when the toy is used as specified in the first subparagraph of Article 10(2); (c) a decision in accordance with Article 46(3) has been taken to permit the substance or mixture and its use, and the substance or mixture and its permitted uses have been listed in Appendix A. That decision may be taken if the following conditions are met: (i) the use of the substance or mixture has been evaluated by the relevant Scientific Committee and found to be safe, in particular in view of exposure; (ii) there are no suitable alternative substances or mixtures available, as documented in an analysis of alternatives; and (iii) the substance or mixture is not prohibited for use in consumer articles under Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006.
(a) these substances and mixtures are contained in individual concentrations equal to or smaller than the relevant concentrations established in the Community legal acts referred to in Section 2 of Appendix B for the classification of mixtures containing these substances; (b) these substances and mixtures are inaccessible to children in any form, including inhalation, when the toy is used as specified in the first subparagraph of Article 10(2); or (c) a decision in accordance with Article 46(3) has been taken to permit the substance or mixture and its use, and the substance or mixture and its permitted uses have been listed in Appendix A. That decision may be taken if the following conditions are met: (i) the use of the substance or mixture has been evaluated by the relevant Scientific Committee and found to be safe, in particular in view of exposure; and (ii) the substance or mixture is not prohibited for use in consumer articles under Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006.
No | Name of the allergenic fragrance | CAS number |
---|---|---|
(1) | Alanroot oil (Inula helenium) | 97676-35-2 |
(2) | Allylisothiocyanate | 57-06-7 |
(3) | Benzyl cyanide | 140-29-4 |
(4) | 4 tert-Butylphenol | 98-54-4 |
(5) | Chenopodium oil | 8006-99-3 |
(6) | Cyclamen alcohol | 4756-19-8 |
(7) | Diethyl maleate | 141-05-9 |
(8) | Dihydrocoumarin | 119-84-6 |
(9) | 2,4-Dihydroxy-3-methylbenzaldehyde | 6248-20-0 |
(10) | 3,7-Dimethyl-2-octen-1-ol (6,7-Dihydrogeraniol) | 40607-48-5 |
(11) | 4,6-Dimethyl-8-tert-butylcoumarin | 17874-34-9 |
(12) | Dimethyl citraconate | 617-54-9 |
(13) | 7,11-Dimethyl-4.6,10-dodecatrien-3-one | 26651-96-7 |
(14) | 6,10-Dimethyl-3.5,9-undecatrien-2-one | 141-10-6 |
(15) | Diphenylamine | 122-39-4 |
(16) | Ethyl acrylate | 140-88-5 |
(17) | Fig leaf, fresh and preparations | 68916-52-9 |
(18) | trans-2-Heptenal | 18829-55-5 |
(19) | trans-2-Hexenal diethyl acetal | 67746-30-9 |
(20) | trans-2-Hexenal dimethyl acetal | 18318-83-7 |
(21) | Hydroabietyl alcohol | 13393-93-6 |
(22) | 4-Ethoxy-phenol | 622-62-8 |
(23) | 6-lsopropyl-2-decahydronaphthalenol | 34131-99-2 |
(24) | 7-Methoxycoumarin | 531-59-9 |
(25) | 4-Methoxyphenol | 150-76-5 |
(26) | 4-(p-Methoxyphenyl)-3-butene-2-one | 943-88-4 |
(27) | 1-(p-Methoxyphenyl)-1-penten-3-one | 104-27-8 |
(28) | Methyl trans-2-butenoate | 623-43-8 |
(29) | 6-Methylcoumarin | 92-48-8 |
(30) | 7-Methylcoumarin | 2445-83-2 |
(31) | 5-Methyl-2,3-hexanedione | 13706-86-0 |
(32) | Costus root oil (Saussurea lappa Clarke) | 8023-88-9 |
(33) | 7-Ethoxy-4-methylcoumarin | 87-05-8 |
(34) | Hexahydrocoumarin | 700-82-3 |
(35) | Peru balsam, crude (Exudation of Myroxylon pereirae (Royle) Klotzsch) | 8007-00-9 |
(36) | 2-Pentylidene-cyclohexanone | 25677-40-1 |
(37) | 3.6,10-Trimethyl-3.5,9-undecatrien-2-one | 1117-41-5 |
(38) | Verbena oil (Lippia citriodora Kunth) | 8024-12-2 |
(39) | Musk ambrette (4-tert-Butyl-3-methoxy-2,6-dinitrotoluene) | 83-66-9 |
(40) | 4-Phenyl-3-buten-2-one | 122-57-6 |
(41) | Amyl cinnamal | 122-40-7 |
(42) | Amylcinnamyl alcohol | 101-85-9 |
(43) | Benzyl alcohol | 100-51-6 |
(44) | Benzyl salicylate | 118-58-1 |
(45) | Cinnamyl alcohol | 104-54-1 |
(46) | Cinnamal | 104-55-2 |
(47) | Citral | 5392-40-5 |
(48) | Coumarin | 91-64-5 |
(49) | Eugenol | 97-53-0 |
(50) | Geraniol | 106-24-1 |
(51) | Hydroxy-citronellal | 107-75-5 |
(52) | Hydroxy-methylpentylcyclohexenecarboxaldehyde | 31906-04-4 |
(53) | Isoeugenol | 97-54-1 |
(54) | Oakmoss extracts | 90028-68-5 |
(55) | Treemoss extracts | 90028-67-4 |
No | Name of the allergenic fragrance | CAS number |
---|---|---|
(1) | Anisyl alcohol | 105-13-5 |
(2) | Benzyl benzoate | 120-51-4 |
(3) | Benzyl cinnamate | 103-41-3 |
(4) | Citronellol | 106-22-9 |
(5) | Farnesol | 4602-84-0 |
(6) | Hexyl cinnamaldehyde | 101-86-0 |
(7) | Lilial | 80-54-6 |
(8) | d-Limonene | 5989-27-5 |
(9) | Linalool | 78-70-6 |
(10) | Methyl heptine carbonate | 111-12-6 |
(11) | 3-methyl-4-(2.6,6-trimethyl-2-cyclohexen-1-yl)-3-buten-2-one | 127-51-5 |
(i) those fragrances are clearly labelled on the packaging, and the packaging contains the warning set out in point 10 of Part B of Annex V; (ii) if applicable, the resulting products made by the child in accordance with the instructions comply with the requirements of Directive 76/768/EEC; and (iii) if applicable, those fragrances comply with the relevant legislation on food.
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Cadmium | |||
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Lead | |||
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Tin | |||
Organic tin | |||
Zinc |
(a) a detailed description of the design and manufacture, including a list of components and materials used in the toy as well as the safety data sheets on chemicals used, to be obtained from the chemical suppliers; (b) the safety assessment(s) carried out in accordance with Article 18; (c) a description of the conformity assessment procedure followed; (d) a copy of the EC declaration of conformity; (e) the addresses of the places of manufacture and storage; (f) copies of documents that the manufacturer has submitted to a notified body, if involved; (g) test reports and description of the means whereby the manufacturer ensured conformity of production with the harmonised standards, if the manufacturer followed the internal production control procedure referred to in Article 19(2); and (h) a copy of the EC-type examination certificate, a description of the means whereby the manufacturer ensured conformity of the production with the product type as described in the EC-type examination certificate, and copies of the documents that the manufacturer submitted to the notified body, if the manufacturer submitted the toy to EC-type examination and followed the conformity to type procedure referred to in Article 19(3).
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