NBN en Iso-2002 (E)
NBN en Iso-2002 (E)
NBN en Iso-2002 (E)
50
Normklasse: X 51
Deze Europese norm EN ISO 14020 : 2001 heeft de status van een Belgische norm.
Deze Europese norm bestaat in drie officiële versies (Duits, Engels, Frans).
La présente norme européenne EN ISO 14020 : 2001 a le statut d'une norme belge.
La présente norme européenne existe en trois versions officielles (allemand, anglais, français).
ICS 13.020.50
English version
CEN members are bound to comply with the CEN/CENELEC Internal Regulations which stipulate the conditions for giving this European
Standard the status of a national standard without any alteration. Up-to-date lists and bibliographical references concerning such national
standards may be obtained on application to the Management Centre or to any CEN member.
This European Standard exists in three official versions (English, French, German). A version in any other language made by translation
under the responsibility of a CEN member into its own language and notified to the Management Centre has the same status as the official
versions.
CEN members are the national standards bodies of Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece,
Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and United Kingdom.
© 2001 CEN All rights of exploitation in any form and by any means reserved Ref. No. EN ISO 14020:2001 E
worldwide for CEN national Members.
EN ISO 14020:2001 (E)
Foreword
The text of the International Standard from Technical Committee ISO/TC 207 "Environmental
management" of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) has been taken over as an
European Standard by CMC.
This European Standard shall be given the status of a national standard, either by publication of an
identical text or by endorsement, at the latest by April 2002, and conflicting national standards shall be
withdrawn at the latest by April 2002.
NOTE FROM CMC: The foreword is susceptible to be amended on reception of the German language
version. The confirmed or amended foreword, and when appropriate, the normative annex ZA for the
references to international publications with their relevant European publications will be circulated with
the German version.
According to the CEN/CENELEC Internal Regulations, the national standards organizations of the
following countries are bound to implement this European Standard: Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic,
Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands,
Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.
Endorsement notice
The text of the International Standard ISO 14020:2000 has been approved by CEN as a European
Standard without any modification.
2
INTERNATIONAL ISO
STANDARD 14020
Second edition
2000-09-15
Reference number
ISO 14020:2000(E)
© ISO 2000
ISO 14020:2000(E)
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Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards bodies (ISO
member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out through ISO technical
committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a technical committee has been established has
the right to be represented on that committee. International organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in
liaison with ISO, also take part in the work. ISO collaborates closely with the International Electrotechnical
Commission (IEC) on all matters of electrotechnical standardization.
International Standards are drafted in accordance with the rules given in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 3.
Draft International Standards adopted by the technical committees are circulated to the member bodies for voting.
Publication as an International Standard requires approval by at least 75 % of the member bodies casting a vote.
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this International Standard may be the subject of
patent rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.
International Standard ISO 14020 was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 207, Environmental
management, Subcommittee SC 3, Environmental labelling.
This second edition cancels and replaces the first edition (ISO 14020:1998), which has been technically revised.
Introduction
Environmental labels and declarations are one of the tools of environmental management, which is the subject of
the ISO 14000 series.
Environmental labels and declarations provide information about a product or service in terms of its overall
environmental character, a specific environmental aspect, or any number of aspects. Purchasers and potential
purchasers can use this information in choosing the products or services they desire based on environmental, as
well as other, considerations. The provider of the product or service hopes the environmental label or declaration
will be effective in influencing the purchasing decision in favour of its product or service. If the environmental label
or declaration has this effect, the market share of the product or service can increase and other providers may
respond by improving the environmental aspects of their products or services to enable them to use environmental
labels or make environmental declarations, resulting in reduced environmental stress from that product or service
category.
1 Scope
This International Standard establishes guiding principles for the development and use of environmental labels and
declarations. It is intended that other applicable standards in the ISO 14020 series be used in conjunction with this
International Standard.
This International Standard is not intended for use as a specification for certification and registration purposes.
NOTE Other International Standards in the series are intended to be consistent with the principles set forth in this
International Standard. Other standards currently in the ISO 14020 series are ISO 14021, ISO 14024 and ISO/TR 14025 (see
Bibliography).
2.1
environmental label
environmental declaration
claim which indicates the environmental aspects of a product or service
NOTE An environmental label or declaration may take the form of a statement, symbol or graphic on a product or package
label, in product literature, in technical bulletins, in advertising or in publicity, amongst other things.
2.2
life cycle
consecutive and interlinked stages of a product system, from raw material acquisition or generation of natural
resources to the final disposal
[ISO 14040:1997]
2.3
environmental aspect
element of an organization's activities, products or services which can interact with the environment
4 General principles
4.1 General
All of the principles set out in 4.2 to 4.10 are applicable to all environmental labels and declarations.
Where other International Standards in the ISO 14020 series provide more specific requirements than ISO 14020,
such specific requirements shall be followed.
4.2 Principle 1
4.2.1 Statement
Environmental labels and declarations shall be accurate, verifiable, relevant and not misleading.
The usefulness and effectiveness of environmental labels and declarations depend upon the extent to which they
convey reliable and meaningful information about the environmental aspects of a product or service. Environmental
labels and declarations shall provide accurate information about the environmental aspects of a product or service.
The factual and technical basis for environmental labels and declarations shall be verifiable. Environmental labels
and declarations shall provide information that is relevant; they shall address only nontrivial environmental aspects
related to the actual circumstances of natural resource extraction, manufacture, distribution, use or disposal
associated with the product or service. A periodic review of the basis for environmental labels and declarations
should occur to account for innovation. Information should be gathered at a frequency consistent with the pace of
innovation. Environmental labels and declarations shall be understandable and not likely to mislead the intended
purchaser of the product or service.
4.3 Principle 2
4.3.1 Statement
Procedures and requirements for environmental labels and declarations shall not be prepared, adopted, or applied
with a view to, or with the effect of, creating unnecessary obstacles to international trade.
For guidance on the above principle, the applicable provisions and interpretations of the World Trade Organization
should be taken into account.
4.4 Principle 3
4.4.1 Statement
Environmental labels and declarations shall be based on scientific methodology that is sufficiently thorough and
comprehensive to support the claim and that produces results that are accurate and reproducible.
The information supporting environmental labels and declarations shall be gathered and assessed using methods
that are recognized and widely accepted in scientific or professional disciplines or are otherwise scientifically
defensible. The methods should follow recognized standards that have international acceptability (these may
include international, regional or national standards) or be industry or trade methods which have been subjected to
peer review, where such standards or methods exist. The methods used shall be appropriate to the claim and shall
provide information that is relevant and necessary to support the claim as well as accurate and reproducible.
4.5 Principle 4
4.5.1 Statement
Information concerning the procedure, methodology, and any criteria used to support environmental labels and
declarations shall be available and provided upon request to all interested parties.
The information shall include underlying principles, assumptions and boundary conditions. This information should
be sufficient and reasonably comprehensible to allow purchasers, potential purchasers and other interested parties
to evaluate and compare environmental labels and declarations in terms of scientific principles, relevance and
overall validity, and to assess whether an environmental label or declaration is consistent with the applicable
standards within the ISO 14020 series. This information shall also clearly indicate whether the environmental label
or declaration is a self-declared environmental claim or is based on independent validation.
The means of obtaining this information shall be made known to purchasers and potential purchasers wherever the
product or service is marketed. This can be achieved by the various means discussed in 4.10. There may be limits
to the availability of specific information due to confidential business information, intellectual property rights or
similar legal restrictions.
4.6 Principle 5
4.6.1 Statement
The development of environmental labels and declarations shall take into consideration all relevant aspects of the
life cycle of the product.
The life cycle of a product or service ranges from activities associated with the production and delivery of raw
materials or generation of natural resources to the final disposal. Consideration of the life cycle of a product or
service allows a party developing an environmental label or declaration to take into account a range of factors that
impact on the environment. It further allows that party to identify the potential for one impact to be increased in the
process of decreasing another.
Consideration should be given to the life cycle of a product or service in order to help identify appropriate and
relevant characteristics and criteria for environmental labels and declarations or to determine the significance of an
environmental claim. The extent to which the life cycle is considered may vary depending on the type of
environmental label or declaration, the nature of the claim and the product category.
This does not necessarily mean that a life cycle assessment should be undertaken.
4.7 Principle 6
4.7.1 Statement
Environmental labels and declarations shall not inhibit innovation which maintains or has the potential to improve
environmental performance.
Requirements shall be expressed in terms of performance rather than design or descriptive characteristics. This
approach leaves maximum flexibility for technical or other innovation. Prescriptive design criteria or implicit
preference for a technology should be avoided because of the possibility of restricting or discouraging
improvements in products or services which do not affect conformance to applicable environmental criteria or which
could lead to significant environmental improvement.
4.8 Principle 7
4.8.1 Statement
Any administrative requirements or information demands related to environmental labels and declarations shall be
limited to those necessary to establish conformance with applicable criteria and standards of the labels and
declarations.
All organizations, regardless of size, should have equal opportunity to use environmental labels and declarations.
Involvement should not be hindered by extraneous factors or requirements such as procedural complexity or
unreasonable information or administrative demands.
4.9 Principle 8
4.9.1 Statement
The process of developing environmental labels and declarations should include an open, participatory consultation
with interested parties. Reasonable efforts should be made to achieve a consensus throughout the process.
The process for developing standards and criteria shall be open to all interested parties. The parties shall be invited
to participate and encouraged to become involved through timely and adequate notification. Parties may choose to
participate directly or through other means such as written or electronic correspondence. Comments and input shall
be responded to in a meaningful way that addresses the substance of the comment or input. For self-declared
environmental claims developed in accordance with ISO 14021, consultation is regarded as having occurred during
the development of that International Standard.
NOTE For further guidance see ISO/IEC Guide 2 and ISO/IEC Guide 59.
4.10 Principle 9
4.10.1 Statement
Information on the environmental aspects of products and services relevant to an environmental label or
declaration shall be available to purchasers and potential purchasers from the party making the environmental label
or declaration.
Ultimately, the effectiveness of environmental labels and declarations depends on their ability to enable purchasers
and potential purchasers to take responsibility for, and make informed choices about, the environmental aspects of
their purchasing decisions and to influence purchasers and potential purchasers in their selection of products or
services. This, in turn, is related to the degree of acceptance and understanding purchasers and potential
purchasers have of the information provided about environmental aspects.
Therefore, parties using environmental labels and declarations have an incentive and a responsibility to provide
their purchasers and potential purchasers with access to information so that the purchaser and potential purchaser
may understand the meaning of any claim, symbol or term. This can be accomplished through various means, such
as advertising, explanatory panels at the retail level, free telephone numbers, and education programmes, among
others. The information provided shall be appropriate and sufficient to the nature and scope of the environmental
claim being made.
Bibliography
[1] ISO 14021, Environmental labels and declarations — Self-declared environmental claims (Type II
environmental labelling).
[2] ISO 14024, Environmental labels and declarations — Type I environmental labelling — Principles and
procedures.
[3] ISO/TR 14025, Environmental labels and declarations — Type III environmental declarations.
[4] ISO 14040, Environmental management — Life cycle assessment — Principles and framework.
ICS 13.020.50
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