IP/07/1297
Brussels, 11th September 2007
Vice President Günter Verheugen, responsible for enterprise and industry policy, said: “Our proposal will stabilise the current application of EU law, which has worked well over 27 years. Extending supplementary indications indefinitely is supported by EU industry and sends a clear signal to our US counterparts that the EU favours a trading environment free of barriers. [In return, I hope that the USA will also accept metric-only labelled goods on its territory. This proposal also honours the culture and traditions of Great-Britain and Ireland, which are important to the European Commission.]”
The Commission proposes to allow the UK and Ireland to keep the current exceptions without requiring these countries to fix a date for ending them. The exceptions concern the pint for milk in returnable bottles and beer and cider on draught, the mile for road signs and speed indications and the troy ounce for transactions in precious metals. The exception of the acre for land registration is no longer in use in either country and will be repealed. Finally the Commission clarifies the scope of the directive as being applicable to all domains covered by the current Treaties. It is therefore no longer necessary to single out certain fields of applicability.
Stakeholders were consulted during the 10-week period up to 1 March 2007. The proposal follows the unanimous recommendation of industry to lift the sundown clause for the United Kingdom and Ireland and to permit indefinitely the use of supplementary indications.
Background information Directive 80/181/EEC harmonised within the EU the legal units of measurement for expressing quantities, in accordance with the metric “International System of Units” (SI) adopted by the General Conference of Weights and Measures set up by the Metre Convention signed in Paris on 20 May 1875. The SI metric system is recognised under WTO/TBT as the international standard. The Directive ensures a common approach, removing the barriers to trade within the Internal Market due to units of measurement in line with the international standard.
The Directive allows the United Kingdom and Ireland the use exemptions and
requires them to fix a date in order to phase these out. However, experience
showed that these usages are local without any impact to the single market and
not any impediment to cross-border trade.
The Directive authorises the use
of supplementary indications in addition to the legal units of measurement laid
down by the Directive, until 31 December 2009.
All reactions and the documents of the public consultation are available
on:
http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/prepack/unitmeas/uni_ms_en.htm