Main article: List of EN standards
Number assignment starts with EN 1 (Flued oil stoves with vaporizing burners). The following predefined number ranges are an exception[to what?].7
Since standards are updated as needed (they are reviewed for currency approximately every five years), it is useful to specify a version. The year of origin is added after the standard, separated by a colon, example: EN 50126:1999.
In addition to the EN standards mentioned, there are also the EN ISO standards with the numbers ISO 1 to 59999 and the EN IEC standards from IEC 60000 to 79999, as well as EN standards outside the defined number ranges.
When an EN is adopted by a national standards body into the national body of standards, it is given the status of a national standard (e.g. German Institute for Standardisation (DIN), Austrian Standards International (ÖNORM), Austrian Standards International (SN)). The name is then prefixed by the country-specific abbreviation (e.g. ÖNORM EN ...), and the number of the European standard is usually adopted, e.g. DIN EN ISO 2338:1998 or ÖNORM EN ISO 9001:2000.
European Standards can be found on the respective Catalogues of the European Standardization Bodies (CEN, CENELEC and ETSI). The national adoptions of the European Standards can be found on the respective catalogues of the National Standardization Bodies or on the websites of the authorised resellers.
CEN develops European Standards for a wide range of products, materials, services and processes. Some sectors covered by CEN include transport equipment and services, chemicals, construction, consumer products, defence and security, energy, food and feed, health and safety, healthcare, digital sector, machinery or services. CEN adopts ISO standards in Europe, through the prefix “EN ISO” and cooperates with the International Standardization Organization through the Vienna Agreement, avoiding duplication of work and coherency in their respective catalogues of standards. CEN develops Harmonized Standards supporting the General Product Safety Regulation (GPSR, repealing the General Product Safety Directive GPSD), as well as supporting a wide range of New Legislative Framework / New Approach directives and regulations. Harmonised standards provide presumption of conformity with the Essential Requirements in certain pieces of EU legislation.8
CENELEC, the European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization is the European Standardization organization corresponding to the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), or IEC International Standards, adopted in Europe. CENELEC standards support the application of the Low Voltage Directive, Electromagnetic Compatibility Directive, Radio Equipment Directive, Ecodesign, Energy Efficiency Labelling, Machinery or Medical Devices, amongst other European legislation. Some New Legislative Framework Directives and Regulations include:
amongst other9
For four European standards the European Court of Justice decided on 5 March 2024 that these must be made available free of charge because these standards are part of European Union law. See also Malamud decision.10
"European Standards". CEN-CENELEC. https://www.cencenelec.eu/european-standardization/european-standards/ ↩
"European standards - European Commission". single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu. https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/single-market/european-standards_en ↩
Paul Cook (2002). Commentary on IEE Wiring Regulations 16th Edition, BS 7671 : 2001: Requirements for Electrical Installations Including Amendment No. 1 : 2002. IET. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-85296-237-4. 978-0-85296-237-4 ↩
Hermann J. Koch (2017). Practical Guide to International Standardization for Electrical Engineers: Impact on Smart Grid and e-Mobility Markets. Wiley. p. 90. ISBN 978-1-119-06743-6. 978-1-119-06743-6 ↩
Matthews, Clifford (2011-12-30). Engineers' Data Book. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781119969051. 9781119969051 ↩
https://www.cencenelec.eu/standards/DefEN/Pages/default.aspx What is a Euronorm?, retrieved July 5, 2017 https://www.cencenelec.eu/standards/DefEN/Pages/default.aspx ↩
Wolfgang Niedziella: Wie funktioniert Normung?"' VDE, Berlin 2007, ISBN 3-8007-3006-5. (German) /wiki/ISBN_(identifier) ↩
Verdera, Francisco (2021). "CEN European standards". Genorma. https://genorma.com/en/cen_p10021.html ↩
Verdera, Francisco (2021). "CENELEC European standards". Genorma. https://genorma.com/en/cenelec-european-standards_p10022.html ↩
"JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Grand Chamber), 5 March 2024 (*), (Appeal – Access to documents of the institutions of the European Union – Regulation (EC) No 1049/2001 – Article 4(2) – Exceptions – Refusal to grant access to a document whose disclosure would undermine the protection of commercial interests of a natural or legal person, including intellectual property – Overriding public interest in disclosure – Harmonised standards adopted by the European Committee for Standardisation (CEN) – Protection deriving from copyright – Principle of the rule of law – Principle of transparency – Principle of openness – Principle of good governance), In Case C‑588/21 P,". curia.europa.eu. European Court of Justice (ECJ). 2024-03-05. Retrieved 2024-05-01. https://curia.europa.eu/juris/document/document.jsf?text=&docid=283443&pageIndex=0&doclang=EN&mode=lst&dir=&occ=first&part=1&cid=6461672 ↩