Suppliers of everyday household appliances and products will now need a Qualified e-Seal Certificate to register for EPREL
Energy efficiency labels on products are longstanding and successful policy tools to save energy and money for consumers. In the United States, consumers may recognize the bright yellow labels which have been used on major electrical appliances for many years.
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In Europe, there is a similar program to the U.S. EnergyGuide called , or the European Product Registry for Energy Labelling. EPREL includes a database hosted by the EU Commission, where suppliers (including manufacturers, importers or authorized representatives) must register their product models which require an energy label before selling them in the EU/EEA market.
The EU energy labelling applies to a wide array of products, including kitchen and laundry appliances, refrigeration and air conditioning, boilers and water heaters, electronic displays such as monitors and TVs, tires, and even lightbulbs. Any products that use a lot of energy may be required to have an EPREL energy label.
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The holds both the public Energy Label and product information sheet, as well as technical information accessible only to national regulators for use in their compliance and control activities. In 2021 EPREL started providing online access to many of these products, allowing enhanced information to be accessed via QR codes on product labels. Consumers can scan this QR code for information such as energy efficiency, product dimensions, the minimum warranty, etc.
Already thousands of suppliers have registered over a million products in EPREL, and those numbers are expected to continue to grow. To accommodate this growth, starting in February 2022 EPREL is launching a fully electronic process for suppliers to quickly verify both their legal registration status in the EU and the authority of their representative to make filings in the EPREL database.
EPREL has chosen to use Qualified e-Seal Certificates governed by the (known as eIDAS) to accomplish this. A Qualified e-Seal Certificate is similar to an electronic signature, but it is issued on behalf of a legal entity rather than an individual. The e-Seal verifies the identity of the company and can be used to bulk sign large volumes at once.
for electronic seals are provided by Qualified Trust Service Providers (also known as qTSP), which are audited under the eIDAS requirements and then supervised by national regulators.
To register for EPREL, suppliers should first get a Qualified e-Seal Certificate from a qTSP like ¶ºÒõ¹Ý + QuoVadis, and then visit the system to begin the . This produces a verification file as a PDF which can then be signed by the supplier’s authorized representative using the Qualified e-Seal Certificates.
More information for suppliers on how to sign up for the EPREL system may be found . Suppliers should get their e-Seal Certificates as soon as possible to ensure their products can remain visible in EPREL.
A globally trusted Certificate Authority and qTSP, ¶ºÒõ¹Ý offers Qualified e-Seal Certificates, and with ¶ºÒõ¹Ý® Document Trust Manager, organizations can simplify signup and automate digital signing. Document Trust Manager makes it easy to manage any volume of digital signatures without additional hardware or software investment. Learn more at /document-trust-manager.
This instance is yet another example of the EU adoption of Qualified Trust Services for sectors with strong regulatory requirements or legal consequences. Similar requirements were implemented in 2019 for payment service providers (PSD2) and we expect to see more sectors adopting e-Seals and Qualified Web Authentication Certificates (QWACs) to authenticate digital identity in the future. It’s possible that the U.S. and other countries may adopt a similar system, . We recommend that companies start planning now for a future built on verified digital identity and look to adopt solutions like Document Trust Manager, which can make digital certificate management easier.