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World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations

The World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations is a working party (WP.29)[1] of the Inland Transport Committee (ITC) of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE). Its responsibility is to manage the multilateral Agreements signed in 1958, 1997 and 1998 concerning the technical prescriptions for the construction, approval of wheeled vehicles as well as their Periodic Technical Inspection and, to operate within the framework of these three Agreements to develop and amend UN Regulations, UN Global Technical Regulations and UN Rules, kind of vehicle regulation.

World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations (WP.29)
AbbreviationWP.29
Formation1952
TypeWorking Party
Legal statusActive
Head
Antonio Erario (2021-)
Parent organization
UNECE Inland Transport Committee
WebsiteUNECE Transport - WP29

WP.29 was established in June 1952 as the "Working Party of experts on technical requirement of vehicles", while its current name was adopted in 2000.

At its inception, WP.29 had a broader European scope. Since 2000, the global scope of this forum was recognized given the active participation of Countries in all continents, excluding the United States and Canada, who developed incompatible standards.[2]

The forum works on regulations covering vehicle safety, environmental protection, energy efficiency and theft-resistance.

This work affects de facto vehicle design and facilitates international trade.

Organization edit

There are six permanent Working Parties which are subsidiary bodies that consider specialized tasks, consisting of people with a specific expertise:[3]

  • Noise and Tyres (GRBP)
  • Lighting and Light-Signalling (GRE)
  • Pollution and Energy (GRPE)
  • Automated and Connected Vehicles (GRVA)
  • General Safety Provisions (GRSG)
  • Passive Safety (GRSP)

1958 Agreement edit

The core of the Forum's work is based around the "1958 Agreement", formally titled "Agreement concerning the adoption of uniform technical prescriptions for wheeled vehicles, equipment and parts which can be fitted and/or be used on wheeled vehicles and the conditions for reciprocal recognition of approvals granted on the basis of these prescriptions" (E/ECE/TRANS/505/Rev.2, amended on 16 October 1995). This forms a legal framework wherein participating countries (contracting parties) agree on a common set of technical prescriptions and protocols for type approval of vehicles and components. These were formerly called "UNECE Regulations" or, less formally, "ECE Regulations" in reference to the Economic Commission for Europe. However, since many non-European countries are now contracting parties to the 1958 Agreement, the regulations are officially entitled "UN Regulations".[4][5] According to the mutual recognition principle set in the Agreement, each Contracting Party's Type Approvals are recognised by all other Contracting Parties.

Participating countries edit

 

The first signatories to the 1958 Agreement include Italy (March 28), Netherlands (March 30), Germany (June 19), France (June 26), Hungary (June 30), Sweden and Belgium. Originally, the agreement allowed participation of ECE member countries only, but in 1995 the agreement was revised to allow non-ECE members to participate. Current participants include European Union and its member countries, as well non-EU UNECE members such as Norway, Russia, Ukraine, Croatia, Serbia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Turkey, Azerbaijan and Tunisia, and even remote territories such as South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Thailand and Malaysia.

As of 2022, the participants to the 1958 Agreement, with their UN country code, were:[6][7]

UN Code Country Effective date Notes
1   Germany 28 January 1965
2   France 20 June 1959
3   Italy 26 April 1963
4   Netherlands 29 August 1960
5   Sweden 20 June 1959
6   Belgium 5 September 1959
7   Hungary 2 July 1960
8   Czech Republic 1 January 1993 (formerly Czechoslovakia)
9   Spain 10 October 1961
10   Serbia 12 March 2001 (formerly Yugoslavia)
11   United Kingdom 16 March 1963
12   Austria 11 May 1971
13   Luxembourg 12 December 1971
14    Switzerland 28 August 1973
16   Norway 4 April 1975
17   Finland 17 September 1976
18   Denmark 20 December 1976
19   Romania 21 February 1977
20   Poland 13 March 1979
21   Portugal 28 March 1980
22   Russian Federation 17 February 1987
23   Greece 5 December 1992
24   Ireland 24 March 1998
25   Croatia 8 October 1991
26   Slovenia 25 June 1991
27   Slovakia 1 January 1993
28   Belarus 2 July 1995
29   Estonia 1 May 1995
30   Republic of Moldova 20 November 2016
31   Bosnia and Herzegovina 6 March 1992
32   Latvia 18 January 1999
34   Bulgaria 21 January 2000
35   Kazakhstan 8 January 2011
36   Lithuania 29 March 2002
37   Turkey 27 February 1996
39   Azerbaijan 14 June 2002
40   North Macedonia 17 November 1991
42   European Union 24 March 1998
43   Japan 24 November 1998
45   Australia 25 April 2000
46   Ukraine 30 June 2000
47   South Africa 17 June 2001
48   New Zealand 26 January 2002
49   Cyprus 1 May 2004
50   Malta 1 May 2004
51   South Korea 31 December 2004
52   Malaysia 4 April 2006
53   Thailand 1 May 2006
54   Albania 5 November 2011
56   Montenegro 3 June 2006
57   San Marino 26 January 2016
58   Tunisia 1 January 2008
60   Georgia 25 May 2015
62   Egypt 3 February 2013
63   Nigeria 18 October 2018
64   Pakistan 24 April 2020

Most countries, even if not formally participating in the 1958 agreement, recognise the UN Regulations and either mirror the UN Regulations' content in their own national requirements, or permit the import, registration, and use of UN type-approved vehicles, or both. The United States and Canada (apart from Lighting Regulations) are the two significant exceptions; the UN Regulations are generally not recognised and UN-compliant vehicles and equipment are not authorised for import, sale, or use in the two regions, unless they are tested to be compliant with the region's car safety laws, or for limited non driving use (e.g. car show displays).[8]

Type approval edit

 
Two types of approval mark: top - according to UN regulations, bottom - according to EU regulations (or directives)

The 1958 Agreement operates on the principles of type approval and reciprocal recognition. Any country that accedes to the 1958 Agreement has authority to test and approve any manufacturer's design of a regulated product, regardless of the country in which that component was produced. Each individual design from each individual manufacturer is counted as one individual type. Once any acceding country grants a type approval, every other acceding country is obliged to honor that type approval and regard that vehicle or item of motor vehicle equipment as legal for import, sale and use. Items type-approved according to a UN Regulation are marked with an E and a number, within a circle. The number indicates which country approved the item, and other surrounding letters and digits indicate the precise version of the regulation met and the type approval number, respectively.

Although all countries' type approvals are legally equivalent, there are real and perceived differences in the rigour with which the regulations and protocols are applied by different national type approval authorities. Some countries have their own national standards for granting type approvals, which may be more stringent than called for by the UN regulations themselves. Within the auto parts industry, a German (E1) type approval, for example, is regarded as a measure of insurance against suspicion of poor quality or an undeserved type approval.[9]

UN Regulations edit

As of 2015, there are 135 UN Regulations appended to the 1958 Agreement; most regulations cover a single vehicle component or technology. A partial list of current regulations applying to passenger cars follows (different regulations may apply to heavy vehicles, motorcycles, etc.)

General lighting edit

  • R3 — Retroreflecting devices
  • R4 — Illumination of rear registration plates
  • R6 — Direction indicators
  • R7 — Front and rear position lamps, stop lamps and end-outline marker lamps
  • R19 — Front fog lamps
  • R23 — Reversing lights
  • R37 — Filament lamps (bulbs) (See: Automotive lamp types)
  • R38 — Rear fog lamps
  • R48 — Installation of lighting and light-signalling devices
  • R77 — Parking lamps
  • R87 — Daytime running lamps
  • R91 — Side marker lamps
  • R112 — Headlamp Asymmetric
  • R119 — Cornering lamps
  • R123 — AFS lamps
  • R128 — LED light sources

Headlamps edit

  • R1 — Headlamps emitting an asymmetrical passing beam and/or a driving beam, equipped with R2 or HS1 bulbs (superseded by R112, but still valid for existing approvals)
  • R5 — Sealed Beam headlamps emitting an asymmetrical passing beam and/or a driving beam
  • R8 — Headlamps equipped with replaceable single-filament tungsten-halogen bulbs (superseded by R112, but still valid for existing approvals)
  • R20 — Headlamps emitting an asymmetrical passing beam and/or a driving beam and equipped with halogen double-filament H4 bulbs (superseded by R112, but still valid for existing approvals)
  • R31 — Halogen sealed beam headlamps emitting an asymmetrical passing beam and/or a driving beam
  • R45 — Headlamp cleaners
  • R98 — Headlamps equipped with gas-discharge light sources
  • R99 — Gas-discharge light sources for use in approved gas-discharge lamp units of power-driven vehicles (See: Automotive lamp types)
  • R112 — Headlamps emitting an asymmetrical passing beam and/or a driving beam and equipped with filament bulbs
  • R113 — Headlamps emitting a symmetrical passing beam and/or a driving beam and equipped with filament bulbs

Instrumentation/controls edit

  • R35 — arrangement of foot controls
  • R39 — speedometer equipment
  • R46 — rear-view mirrors
  • R79 — steering equipment
  • R160 — event data recorder

Crashworthiness edit

  • R11 — door latches and door retention components
  • R13-H — braking (passenger cars)
  • R13 — braking (trucks and busses)
  • R14 — safety belt anchorages
  • R16 — safety belts and restraint systems
  • R17 — seats, seat anchorages, head restraints
  • R27 — advance-warning triangles
  • R42 — front and rear protective devices (bumpers, etc.)
  • R43 — safety glazing materials and their installation on vehicles
  • R94 — protection of the occupants in the event of a frontal collision
  • R95 — protection of the occupants in the event of a lateral collision
  • R116 — protection of motor vehicles against unauthorized use
  • R129 — enhanced child restraint systems (ECRS)

Environmental compatibility edit

  • R10 — electromagnetic compatibility
  • R15 — emissions and fuel consumption (superseded by R83, R84 and R101)
  • R24 — engine power measurement, smoke emissions, engine type approval
  • R51 — noise emissions
  • R68 — measurement of the maximum speed
  • R83 — emission of pollutants according to engine fuel requirements
  • R84 — measurement of fuel consumption
  • R85 — electric drive trains — measurement of the net power and the maximum 30 minutes power of electric drive trains
  • R100 — approval of battery electric vehicles with regard to specific requirements for the construction, Functional Safety and hydrogen emission.[10]
  • R101 — measurement of the emission of carbon dioxide and fuel consumption
  • R117 — approval limits for pass-by noise, wet grip, and rolling resistance. These values are also used on the tyre label

Tyres and wheels edit

  • R30 — Tyres for passenger cars and their trailers
  • R54 — Tyres for commercial vehicles and their trailers
  • R64 — Temporary use spare unit, run flat tyres, run flat-system
  • R75 — Tyres for motorcycles/mopeds
  • R88 — Retroreflective tyres for two-wheeled vehicles
  • R106 — Tyres for agricultural vehicles
  • R108 — Retreaded tyres for passenger cars and their trailers
  • R109 — Retreaded tyres for commercial vehicles and their trailers
  • R124 — Replacement wheels for passenger cars
  • R141 — Tyre Pressure Monitoring Systems (TPMS)

Automated/autonomous and connected vehicle regulations edit

Brake edit

North America edit

The most notable non-signatory to the 1958 Agreement is the United States, which has its own Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards and does not recognise UN type approvals. However, both the United States and Canada are parties to the 1998 Agreement. UN-specification vehicles and components which do not also comply with the US regulations therefore cannot be imported to the US without extensive modifications. Canada has its own Canada Motor Vehicle Safety Standards, broadly similar to the US FMVSS, but Canada does also accept UN-compliant headlamps and bumpers. The impending Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement between Canada and the European Union could see Canada recognise more UN Regulations as acceptable alternatives to the Canadian regulations.[12] Canada currently applies 14 of the 17 ECE main standards as allowable alternatives[citation needed] - the exceptions at this point relate to motorcycle controls and displays, motorcycle mirrors, and electronic stability control for passenger cars.[citation needed] These three remaining groups will be allowed in Canada by the time the ratification of the trade deal occurs.[citation needed]

Grey Market (1976-88) edit

 
1981 Lamborghini Countach LP 400S sold new in the United States via the grey market

Vehicles built in compliance with global safety and emissions regulations were still available to Americans in the period 1976-88, as individual imports. This was via the grey market.[2] Many of the finest, iconic automobiles of the Malaise era,[2] such as the Lamborghini Countach, Mercedes-Benz 500 SEL, Mercedes-Benz G-Class and Range Rover were officially forbidden to Americans, but this outlet proved viable for many years. The grey market reached 66,900 vehicles imported by individual consumers in 1985, and altered to meet U.S. design regulations.[13] It is no longer possible to import vehicle into the United States as a personal import, with four exceptions, none of which permits Americans to buy recent vehicles not officially available in the United States.[14] Even prominent billionaire Bill Gates and his Porsche 959 have proven unable.[15]

Self-certification edit

Rather than a UN-style system of type approvals, the US and Canadian auto safety regulations operate on the principle of self-certification, wherein the manufacturer or importer of a vehicle or item of motor vehicle equipment certifies—i.e., asserts and promises—that the vehicle or equipment complies with all applicable federal or Canada Motor Vehicle Safety, bumper and antitheft standards.[16] No prior verification is required by a governmental agency or authorised testing entity before the vehicle or equipment can be imported, sold, or used. If reason develops to believe the certification was false or improper — i.e., that the vehicle or equipment does not in fact comply — then authorities may conduct tests and, if a noncompliance is found, order a recall and/or other corrective and/or punitive measures. Vehicle and equipment makers are permitted to appeal such penalties, but this is a difficult direction.[17] Non-compliances found that are arguably without effect to highway safety may be petitioned to skip recall (remedy and notification) requirements for vehicles already produced.[18]

Regulatory differences edit

 
A comparison of European (top) and US (bottom) headlamp configuration on similar-year Citroën DS cars

Historically, one of the most conspicuous differences between UN and US regulations was the design and performance of headlamps. The Citroën DS shown here illustrates the large differences in headlamps during the 1940-1983 era when US regulations required sealed beam headlamps, which were prohibited in many European countries. A similar approach was evident with the US mandatory side marker lights.[19][20]

1998 Agreement edit

The "Agreement concerning the Establishing of Global Technical Regulations for Wheeled Vehicles, Equipment and Parts which can be fitted and/or be used on Wheeled Vehicles", or 1998 Agreement, is a subsequent agreement. Following its mission to harmonize vehicle regulations, the UNECE solved the main issues (Administrative Provisions for Type approval opposed to self-certification and mutual recognition of Type Approvals) preventing non-signatory Countries to the 1958 Agreement to fully participate to its activities.

The 1998 Agreement is born to produce meta regulations called Global Technical Regulations without administrative procedures for type approval and so, without the principle of mutual recognition of Type Approvals. The 1998 Agreement stipulates that Contracting Parties will establish, by consensus vote, United Nations Global Technical Regulations (UN GTRs) in a UN Global Registry. The UN GTRs contain globally harmonized performance requirements and test procedures. Each UN GTR contains extensive notes on its development. The text includes a record of the technical rationale, the research sources used, cost and benefit considerations, and references to data consulted. The Contracting Parties use their nationally established rulemaking processes when transposing UN GTRs into their national legislation. The 1998 Agreement currently has 33 Contracting Parties and 14 UN GTRs that have been established into the UN Global Registry.[21] Manufacturers and suppliers cannot use directly the UN GTRs as these are intended to serve the Countries and require transposition in national or regional law.

2013 Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (proposed) edit

As part of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) negotiations, the issues of divergent standards in automobile regulatory structure are being investigated. TTIP negotiators are seeking to identify ways to narrow the regulatory differences, potentially reducing costs and spurring additional trade in vehicles.[16]

OICA edit

Organisation Internationale des Constructeurs d'Automobiles (OICA) hosts on its web site the working documents from various United Nations expert groups including World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations.[22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Transport - Transport - UNECE" (PDF). www.unece.org.
  2. ^ a b c Rusz, Joe (December 1978). "Lamborghini Countach S". Road & Track. Newport Beach, CA, USA: CBS Inc. - CBS Publications: 38–41.
  3. ^ "WP.29 - Introduction". UNECE. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  4. ^ "WP.29 - Introduction - Transport - UNECE". www.unece.org.
  5. ^ The End of the 'ECE' Era, Driving Vision News, 29 August 2011
  6. ^ "ECE World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations Part I: Contracting Parties to the Agreement, their date of application of the UN Regulations and designated Type Approval Authority(ies) and Technical Service(s))" (PDF). Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  7. ^ "ECE/TRANS/WP.29/343/Rev.30 - Status of the Agreement, of the annexed Regulations and of the amendments thereto - Revision 30" (PDF). UNECE. 1 March 2022. Retrieved 31 March 2022.
  8. ^ "Grey market cars: Everything you need to know to avoid seeing your ride get crushed". 30 August 2013.
  9. ^ "Marketing emphasis on German E1 type approval" (PDF). Retrieved 13 November 2011.
  10. ^ "Text of the 1958 Agreement - Transport - UNECE" (PDF). www.unece.org.
  11. ^ a b Nick Bowyer (August 2020). "New UN ECE Regulations on Cyber Security and Software Updates Adopted". InterRegs. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
  12. ^ "CETA Means Big Changes For Canadian Automotive Industry". 18 October 2013. Retrieved 20 March 2014.
  13. ^ "Tax Administration Gas Guzzler Tax Compliance Can Be Increased" (PDF). United States General Accounting Office. 16 July 1987. p. 2. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  14. ^ "Foreign Car Importers Can't Break Red Tape at the Border".
  15. ^ Guy Gugliotta (22 August 1995). "FOREIGN CAR IMPORTERS CAN'T BREAK RED TAPE AT THE BORDER". The Washington Post. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  16. ^ a b "U.S. and EU Motor Vehicle Standards: Issues for Transatlantic Trade Negotiations" (PDF). 18 February 2014. Retrieved 24 September 2023.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 June 2016. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  18. ^ "eCFR — Code of Federal Regulations". www.ecfr.gov.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 May 2009. Retrieved 29 December 2010.
  20. ^ "1971 Citröen DS". 12 January 2015.
  21. ^ "Global Technical Regulations(GTRs)of UNECE". Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  22. ^ "OICA un-expert-group-documents". Oica.net. Retrieved 13 November 2011.

External links edit

  • UN Regulations
  • World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations (WP.29) – How It Works, How to Join It
  • World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations FAQ

world, forum, harmonization, vehicle, regulations, working, party, inland, transport, committee, united, nations, economic, commission, europe, unece, responsibility, manage, multilateral, agreements, signed, 1958, 1997, 1998, concerning, technical, prescripti. The World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations is a working party WP 29 1 of the Inland Transport Committee ITC of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe UNECE Its responsibility is to manage the multilateral Agreements signed in 1958 1997 and 1998 concerning the technical prescriptions for the construction approval of wheeled vehicles as well as their Periodic Technical Inspection and to operate within the framework of these three Agreements to develop and amend UN Regulations UN Global Technical Regulations and UN Rules kind of vehicle regulation World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations WP 29 AbbreviationWP 29Formation1952TypeWorking PartyLegal statusActiveHeadAntonio Erario 2021 Parent organizationUNECE Inland Transport CommitteeWebsiteUNECE Transport WP29WP 29 was established in June 1952 as the Working Party of experts on technical requirement of vehicles while its current name was adopted in 2000 At its inception WP 29 had a broader European scope Since 2000 the global scope of this forum was recognized given the active participation of Countries in all continents excluding the United States and Canada who developed incompatible standards 2 The forum works on regulations covering vehicle safety environmental protection energy efficiency and theft resistance This work affects de facto vehicle design and facilitates international trade Contents 1 Organization 2 1958 Agreement 2 1 Participating countries 2 2 Type approval 2 3 UN Regulations 2 3 1 General lighting 2 3 2 Headlamps 2 3 3 Instrumentation controls 2 3 4 Crashworthiness 2 3 5 Environmental compatibility 2 3 6 Tyres and wheels 2 3 7 Automated autonomous and connected vehicle regulations 2 3 8 Brake 3 North America 3 1 Grey Market 1976 88 3 2 Self certification 4 Regulatory differences 5 1998 Agreement 6 2013 Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership proposed 7 OICA 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksOrganization editThere are six permanent Working Parties which are subsidiary bodies that consider specialized tasks consisting of people with a specific expertise 3 Noise and Tyres GRBP Lighting and Light Signalling GRE Pollution and Energy GRPE Automated and Connected Vehicles GRVA General Safety Provisions GRSG Passive Safety GRSP 1958 Agreement editThe core of the Forum s work is based around the 1958 Agreement formally titled Agreement concerning the adoption of uniform technical prescriptions for wheeled vehicles equipment and parts which can be fitted and or be used on wheeled vehicles and the conditions for reciprocal recognition of approvals granted on the basis of these prescriptions E ECE TRANS 505 Rev 2 amended on 16 October 1995 This forms a legal framework wherein participating countries contracting parties agree on a common set of technical prescriptions and protocols for type approval of vehicles and components These were formerly called UNECE Regulations or less formally ECE Regulations in reference to the Economic Commission for Europe However since many non European countries are now contracting parties to the 1958 Agreement the regulations are officially entitled UN Regulations 4 5 According to the mutual recognition principle set in the Agreement each Contracting Party s Type Approvals are recognised by all other Contracting Parties Participating countries edit nbsp The first signatories to the 1958 Agreement include Italy March 28 Netherlands March 30 Germany June 19 France June 26 Hungary June 30 Sweden and Belgium Originally the agreement allowed participation of ECE member countries only but in 1995 the agreement was revised to allow non ECE members to participate Current participants include European Union and its member countries as well non EU UNECE members such as Norway Russia Ukraine Croatia Serbia Belarus Kazakhstan Turkey Azerbaijan and Tunisia and even remote territories such as South Africa Australia New Zealand Japan South Korea Thailand and Malaysia As of 2022 update the participants to the 1958 Agreement with their UN country code were 6 7 UN Code Country Effective date Notes1 nbsp Germany 28 January 19652 nbsp France 20 June 19593 nbsp Italy 26 April 19634 nbsp Netherlands 29 August 19605 nbsp Sweden 20 June 19596 nbsp Belgium 5 September 19597 nbsp Hungary 2 July 19608 nbsp Czech Republic 1 January 1993 formerly Czechoslovakia 9 nbsp Spain 10 October 196110 nbsp Serbia 12 March 2001 formerly Yugoslavia 11 nbsp United Kingdom 16 March 196312 nbsp Austria 11 May 197113 nbsp Luxembourg 12 December 197114 nbsp Switzerland 28 August 197316 nbsp Norway 4 April 197517 nbsp Finland 17 September 197618 nbsp Denmark 20 December 197619 nbsp Romania 21 February 197720 nbsp Poland 13 March 197921 nbsp Portugal 28 March 198022 nbsp Russian Federation 17 February 198723 nbsp Greece 5 December 199224 nbsp Ireland 24 March 199825 nbsp Croatia 8 October 199126 nbsp Slovenia 25 June 199127 nbsp Slovakia 1 January 199328 nbsp Belarus 2 July 199529 nbsp Estonia 1 May 199530 nbsp Republic of Moldova 20 November 201631 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 6 March 199232 nbsp Latvia 18 January 199934 nbsp Bulgaria 21 January 200035 nbsp Kazakhstan 8 January 201136 nbsp Lithuania 29 March 200237 nbsp Turkey 27 February 199639 nbsp Azerbaijan 14 June 200240 nbsp North Macedonia 17 November 199142 nbsp European Union 24 March 199843 nbsp Japan 24 November 199845 nbsp Australia 25 April 200046 nbsp Ukraine 30 June 200047 nbsp South Africa 17 June 200148 nbsp New Zealand 26 January 200249 nbsp Cyprus 1 May 200450 nbsp Malta 1 May 200451 nbsp South Korea 31 December 200452 nbsp Malaysia 4 April 200653 nbsp Thailand 1 May 200654 nbsp Albania 5 November 201156 nbsp Montenegro 3 June 200657 nbsp San Marino 26 January 201658 nbsp Tunisia 1 January 200860 nbsp Georgia 25 May 201562 nbsp Egypt 3 February 201363 nbsp Nigeria 18 October 201864 nbsp Pakistan 24 April 2020Most countries even if not formally participating in the 1958 agreement recognise the UN Regulations and either mirror the UN Regulations content in their own national requirements or permit the import registration and use of UN type approved vehicles or both The United States and Canada apart from Lighting Regulations are the two significant exceptions the UN Regulations are generally not recognised and UN compliant vehicles and equipment are not authorised for import sale or use in the two regions unless they are tested to be compliant with the region s car safety laws or for limited non driving use e g car show displays 8 Type approval edit nbsp Two types of approval mark top according to UN regulations bottom according to EU regulations or directives The 1958 Agreement operates on the principles of type approval and reciprocal recognition Any country that accedes to the 1958 Agreement has authority to test and approve any manufacturer s design of a regulated product regardless of the country in which that component was produced Each individual design from each individual manufacturer is counted as one individual type Once any acceding country grants a type approval every other acceding country is obliged to honor that type approval and regard that vehicle or item of motor vehicle equipment as legal for import sale and use Items type approved according to a UN Regulation are marked with an E and a number within a circle The number indicates which country approved the item and other surrounding letters and digits indicate the precise version of the regulation met and the type approval number respectively Although all countries type approvals are legally equivalent there are real and perceived differences in the rigour with which the regulations and protocols are applied by different national type approval authorities Some countries have their own national standards for granting type approvals which may be more stringent than called for by the UN regulations themselves Within the auto parts industry a German E1 type approval for example is regarded as a measure of insurance against suspicion of poor quality or an undeserved type approval 9 UN Regulations edit As of 2015 update there are 135 UN Regulations appended to the 1958 Agreement most regulations cover a single vehicle component or technology A partial list of current regulations applying to passenger cars follows different regulations may apply to heavy vehicles motorcycles etc General lighting edit R3 Retroreflecting devices R4 Illumination of rear registration plates R6 Direction indicators R7 Front and rear position lamps stop lamps and end outline marker lamps R19 Front fog lamps R23 Reversing lights R37 Filament lamps bulbs See Automotive lamp types R38 Rear fog lamps R48 Installation of lighting and light signalling devices R77 Parking lamps R87 Daytime running lamps R91 Side marker lamps R112 Headlamp Asymmetric R119 Cornering lamps R123 AFS lamps R128 LED light sourcesHeadlamps edit R1 Headlamps emitting an asymmetrical passing beam and or a driving beam equipped with R2 or HS1 bulbs superseded by R112 but still valid for existing approvals R5 Sealed Beam headlamps emitting an asymmetrical passing beam and or a driving beam R8 Headlamps equipped with replaceable single filament tungsten halogen bulbs superseded by R112 but still valid for existing approvals R20 Headlamps emitting an asymmetrical passing beam and or a driving beam and equipped with halogen double filament H4 bulbs superseded by R112 but still valid for existing approvals R31 Halogen sealed beam headlamps emitting an asymmetrical passing beam and or a driving beam R45 Headlamp cleaners R98 Headlamps equipped with gas discharge light sources R99 Gas discharge light sources for use in approved gas discharge lamp units of power driven vehicles See Automotive lamp types R112 Headlamps emitting an asymmetrical passing beam and or a driving beam and equipped with filament bulbs R113 Headlamps emitting a symmetrical passing beam and or a driving beam and equipped with filament bulbsInstrumentation controls edit R35 arrangement of foot controls R39 speedometer equipment R46 rear view mirrors R79 steering equipment R160 event data recorderCrashworthiness edit R11 door latches and door retention components R13 H braking passenger cars R13 braking trucks and busses R14 safety belt anchorages R16 safety belts and restraint systems R17 seats seat anchorages head restraints R27 advance warning triangles R42 front and rear protective devices bumpers etc R43 safety glazing materials and their installation on vehicles R94 protection of the occupants in the event of a frontal collision R95 protection of the occupants in the event of a lateral collision R116 protection of motor vehicles against unauthorized use R129 enhanced child restraint systems ECRS Environmental compatibility edit R10 electromagnetic compatibility R15 emissions and fuel consumption superseded by R83 R84 and R101 R24 engine power measurement smoke emissions engine type approval R51 noise emissions R68 measurement of the maximum speed R83 emission of pollutants according to engine fuel requirements R84 measurement of fuel consumption R85 electric drive trains measurement of the net power and the maximum 30 minutes power of electric drive trains R100 approval of battery electric vehicles with regard to specific requirements for the construction Functional Safety and hydrogen emission 10 R101 measurement of the emission of carbon dioxide and fuel consumption R117 approval limits for pass by noise wet grip and rolling resistance These values are also used on the tyre labelTyres and wheels edit R30 Tyres for passenger cars and their trailers R54 Tyres for commercial vehicles and their trailers R64 Temporary use spare unit run flat tyres run flat system R75 Tyres for motorcycles mopeds R88 Retroreflective tyres for two wheeled vehicles R106 Tyres for agricultural vehicles R108 Retreaded tyres for passenger cars and their trailers R109 Retreaded tyres for commercial vehicles and their trailers R124 Replacement wheels for passenger cars R141 Tyre Pressure Monitoring Systems TPMS Automated autonomous and connected vehicle regulations edit R155 cyber security 11 R156 software updates 11 R157 automated lane keeping systemBrake edit R90 ECE Regulation 90North America editThe most notable non signatory to the 1958 Agreement is the United States which has its own Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards and does not recognise UN type approvals However both the United States and Canada are parties to the 1998 Agreement UN specification vehicles and components which do not also comply with the US regulations therefore cannot be imported to the US without extensive modifications Canada has its own Canada Motor Vehicle Safety Standards broadly similar to the US FMVSS but Canada does also accept UN compliant headlamps and bumpers The impending Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement between Canada and the European Union could see Canada recognise more UN Regulations as acceptable alternatives to the Canadian regulations 12 Canada currently applies 14 of the 17 ECE main standards as allowable alternatives citation needed the exceptions at this point relate to motorcycle controls and displays motorcycle mirrors and electronic stability control for passenger cars citation needed These three remaining groups will be allowed in Canada by the time the ratification of the trade deal occurs citation needed Grey Market 1976 88 edit nbsp 1981 Lamborghini Countach LP 400S sold new in the United States via the grey marketVehicles built in compliance with global safety and emissions regulations were still available to Americans in the period 1976 88 as individual imports This was via the grey market 2 Many of the finest iconic automobiles of the Malaise era 2 such as the Lamborghini Countach Mercedes Benz 500 SEL Mercedes Benz G Class and Range Rover were officially forbidden to Americans but this outlet proved viable for many years The grey market reached 66 900 vehicles imported by individual consumers in 1985 and altered to meet U S design regulations 13 It is no longer possible to import vehicle into the United States as a personal import with four exceptions none of which permits Americans to buy recent vehicles not officially available in the United States 14 Even prominent billionaire Bill Gates and his Porsche 959 have proven unable 15 Self certification edit Rather than a UN style system of type approvals the US and Canadian auto safety regulations operate on the principle of self certification wherein the manufacturer or importer of a vehicle or item of motor vehicle equipment certifies i e asserts and promises that the vehicle or equipment complies with all applicable federal or Canada Motor Vehicle Safety bumper and antitheft standards 16 No prior verification is required by a governmental agency or authorised testing entity before the vehicle or equipment can be imported sold or used If reason develops to believe the certification was false or improper i e that the vehicle or equipment does not in fact comply then authorities may conduct tests and if a noncompliance is found order a recall and or other corrective and or punitive measures Vehicle and equipment makers are permitted to appeal such penalties but this is a difficult direction 17 Non compliances found that are arguably without effect to highway safety may be petitioned to skip recall remedy and notification requirements for vehicles already produced 18 Regulatory differences edit nbsp A comparison of European top and US bottom headlamp configuration on similar year Citroen DS carsHistorically one of the most conspicuous differences between UN and US regulations was the design and performance of headlamps The Citroen DS shown here illustrates the large differences in headlamps during the 1940 1983 era when US regulations required sealed beam headlamps which were prohibited in many European countries A similar approach was evident with the US mandatory side marker lights 19 20 1998 Agreement editThe Agreement concerning the Establishing of Global Technical Regulations for Wheeled Vehicles Equipment and Parts which can be fitted and or be used on Wheeled Vehicles or 1998 Agreement is a subsequent agreement Following its mission to harmonize vehicle regulations the UNECE solved the main issues Administrative Provisions for Type approval opposed to self certification and mutual recognition of Type Approvals preventing non signatory Countries to the 1958 Agreement to fully participate to its activities The 1998 Agreement is born to produce meta regulations called Global Technical Regulations without administrative procedures for type approval and so without the principle of mutual recognition of Type Approvals The 1998 Agreement stipulates that Contracting Parties will establish by consensus vote United Nations Global Technical Regulations UN GTRs in a UN Global Registry The UN GTRs contain globally harmonized performance requirements and test procedures Each UN GTR contains extensive notes on its development The text includes a record of the technical rationale the research sources used cost and benefit considerations and references to data consulted The Contracting Parties use their nationally established rulemaking processes when transposing UN GTRs into their national legislation The 1998 Agreement currently has 33 Contracting Parties and 14 UN GTRs that have been established into the UN Global Registry 21 Manufacturers and suppliers cannot use directly the UN GTRs as these are intended to serve the Countries and require transposition in national or regional law 2013 Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership proposed editAs part of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership TTIP negotiations the issues of divergent standards in automobile regulatory structure are being investigated TTIP negotiators are seeking to identify ways to narrow the regulatory differences potentially reducing costs and spurring additional trade in vehicles 16 OICA editOrganisation Internationale des Constructeurs d Automobiles OICA hosts on its web site the working documents from various United Nations expert groups including World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations 22 See also editVehicle regulation Car safety Worldwide harmonized Light vehicles Test Procedures National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 108 Automotive lighting HeadlampsReferences edit Transport Transport UNECE PDF www unece org a b c Rusz Joe December 1978 Lamborghini Countach S Road amp Track Newport Beach CA USA CBS Inc CBS Publications 38 41 WP 29 Introduction UNECE Retrieved 2 November 2021 WP 29 Introduction Transport UNECE www unece org The End of the ECE Era Driving Vision News 29 August 2011 ECE World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations Part I Contracting Parties to the Agreement their date of application of the UN Regulations and designated Type Approval Authority ies and Technical Service s PDF Retrieved 2 November 2021 ECE TRANS WP 29 343 Rev 30 Status of the Agreement of the annexed Regulations and of the amendments thereto Revision 30 PDF UNECE 1 March 2022 Retrieved 31 March 2022 Grey market cars Everything you need to know to avoid seeing your ride get crushed 30 August 2013 Marketing emphasis on German E1 type approval PDF Retrieved 13 November 2011 Text of the 1958 Agreement Transport UNECE PDF www unece org a b Nick Bowyer August 2020 New UN ECE Regulations on Cyber Security and Software Updates Adopted InterRegs Retrieved 6 November 2021 CETA Means Big Changes For Canadian Automotive Industry 18 October 2013 Retrieved 20 March 2014 Tax Administration Gas Guzzler Tax Compliance Can Be Increased PDF United States General Accounting Office 16 July 1987 p 2 Retrieved 9 September 2020 Foreign Car Importers Can t Break Red Tape at the Border Guy Gugliotta 22 August 1995 FOREIGN CAR IMPORTERS CAN T BREAK RED TAPE AT THE BORDER The Washington Post Retrieved 9 September 2020 a b U S and EU Motor Vehicle Standards Issues for Transatlantic Trade Negotiations PDF 18 February 2014 Retrieved 24 September 2023 Press Releases Archived from the original on 18 June 2016 Retrieved 30 June 2016 eCFR Code of Federal Regulations www ecfr gov Motivemagazine com Motive Tech The Difference Between US and European Lights Archived from the original on 1 May 2009 Retrieved 29 December 2010 1971 Citroen DS 12 January 2015 Global Technical Regulations GTRs of UNECE Retrieved 5 February 2014 OICA un expert group documents Oica net Retrieved 13 November 2011 External links editUN Regulations World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations WP 29 How It Works How to Join It World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations FAQ Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations amp oldid 1176860052, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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