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The
role and activities of conformity assessment
Conformity assessment defined
Testing
Inspection
Assurance of conformity
Supplier's declaration
Certification/registration
Accreditation
The role of certification
Mutual recognition agreement (MRA's)
QSAE's role in conformity assessment
The
role and activities
of conformity assessment
Conformity assessment
defined [Back to top]
Conformity assessment Is any activity concerned
with determining directly or indirectly that relevant requirements
are fulfilled. Typical examples of conformity assessment activities
are testing, inspection, assurance of conformity, accreditation
and mutual recognition agreements.
Testing [Back
to top]
Testing is perhaps the most common form of conformity
assessment. It can include other activities like measurement and
calibration. Testing also provides the basis for other forms – for
example, it is the main technique used in product certification.
Inspection [Back
to top]
With the growth of world trade and increasing trade
liberalization – as well as the rapid development of new manufacturing
and distribution technologies – have come hundreds of third-party
national and multinational inspection bodies.
These organizations examine a huge range of products,
materials, installations, plants, processes, work procedures and
services, in the private as well as the public sector, and report
on such parameters as quality, fitness for use and continuing safety
in operation. The overall aim is to reduce risk to the buyer, owner,
user or consumer of the item being inspected.
Assurance of
conformity [Back to top]
This is the activity resulting in a statement giving
confidence that a product, process or service fulfills specified
requirements. There are two main types of assurance of conformity:
- supplier's declaration is the procedure
by which a supplier gives written assurance that a product, process
or service conforms to specified requirements;
- certification is the procedure by which
a third party gives written assurance that a product, process
or service conforms to specified requirements
Supplier's declaration
[Back to top]
This is the process whereby conformity assessment
to a standard, specification or regulation is carried out by the
supplier organization itself. In other words, it is a self-assessment.
By making a self-declaration of conformity, a supplier
organization avoids the costs of third-party assessment. A supplier
may decide to take this option if it believes that it enjoys a sufficiently
high market reputation for it to dispense with independent confirmation
of conformity. However, supplier's declarations may not be appropriate
in all cases, particularly where the health, safety or environmental
risks of the product concerned are higher. A self-declaration does
not exempt the supplier from its responsibility to meet relevant
regulations – for example, in relation to product liability – and
such declarations generally need to be accompanied by effective
post-market surveillance.
Certification/registration
[Back to top]
The most well-known examples are management system
certification and product certification. Other types of certification
would include personnel certification, certification of services,
certification of forests, etc.
Management system certification. The most
well known examples are the certification of quality management
systems and environmental management systems as conforming, respectively,
to ISO 9000 and ISO 14000 standards. More than 360 000 organizations
worldwide have been certified to an ISO 9000 and/or ISO 14000 standard.
It should be noted that ISO itself does not assess the conformity
of quality or environmental management systems to ISO 9000 or ISO
14000 standards. ISO does not issue certificates of conformity to
these standards. ISO 9000 and ISO 14000 certification is carried
out independently of ISO by more than 720 "certification" or "registration"
bodies active nationally or internationally.
The terms "certification" and "registration" are
employed in a broader conformity assessment context than ISO 9000
and ISO 14000 alone and their standardized definitions show that
they are not synonymous. However, in the ISO 9000 and ISO 14000
context, "certification" and "registration" are used interchangeably
and they both mean the same thing. One term is preferred over the
other depending on the country. Likewise, the bodies that issue
ISO 9000 or ISO 14000 certificates are referred to in some countries
as "certification bodies" and in others as "registration bodies"
or "registrars".
Product certification. Many variants exist.
For example, product certification may consist of initial testing
of a product combined with assessment of its supplier's quality
management system. This may be followed up by surveillance that
takes into account the supplier's quality management system plus
testing of samples from the factory and/or the open market. Other
product certification schemes comprise initial testing and surveillance
testing, while still others rely on the testing of a sample product
– known as type testing.
Accreditation
[Back to top]
Accreditation is the procedure by which an authoritative
body gives formal recognition that a body or person is competent
to carry out specific tasks. In the ISO 9000 or ISO 14000 context,
it relates to the work of the accreditation bodies that have been
set up in a number of countries to evaluate the competence of certification
bodies. An accreditation body will accredit – approve – a conformity
assessment body as competent to carry out ISO 9000 or ISO 14000
certification in specific business sectors.
Accreditation is also carried out of testing laboratories,
inspection bodies and product certification bodies. In some countries,
accreditation is a legal requirement for conformity assessment bodies.
Even in countries where this is not the case, when there are several
conformity assessment bodies in a geographical area or business
sector, some may want to distinguish themselves from their competitors
by having an impartial evaluation of their competence by an accreditation
body based on internationally recognized criteria.
The role of
certification [Back to top]
Certification is an asset and an advantage, both
for the producer and for the purchaser, consumer or distributor.
It gives an incontestable added value to the product or service
bearing its mark.
For the manufacturer or service provider, it valorizes
the goods or service, it opens up markets and simplifies relations.
For the user, it provides assurance that the product
purchased meets defined characteristics or that an organization's
process meets specified requirements. Certain product certification
marks may represent an assurance of safety and quality. Certification
enables one to distinguish apparently identical products or services;
it offers to everyone a possibility of appeal in the event of dissatisfaction.
Mutual recognition
agreements (MRA's) [Back to top]
The primary objective of conformity assessment is
to give its users confidence that requirements applicable to products,
services, systems, processes and materials have been met. One of
the reasons why internationally traded goods and services are subject
to repeated conformity assessment controls is a lack of confidence
by users of conformity assessment in one country regarding the competence
of bodies carrying out conformity assessment activities in other
countries. Therefore, measures are needed to increase the confidence
of both private and public sector purchasers, and of regulators,
in the work of conformity assessment bodies and accreditation bodies
– particularly those in other countries.
Such confidence can be achieved through cross-border
cooperation among conformity assessment bodies and also among accreditation
bodies. This cooperation is formalized in what are known as mutual
recognition agreements (MRA's) whereby the parties involved agree
to recognize the results of each other's testing, inspection, certification
or accreditation. MRA's can be an important step towards reducing
the multiple conformity assessment that products, services, systems,
processes and materials may need to undergo, especially when they
are traded across borders. Since MRA's facilitate the acceptance
of goods and services everywhere on the basis of a single assessment
in one country, they contribute to the efficiency of the international
trading system to the benefit of suppliers and customers alike.
QSAE's
role in conformity assessment
[Back
to top]
QSAE provides the following conformity assessment
services to clients.
[Back
to top]
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