Relationships to countries
Members
The current members of CENELEC are: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, North Macedonia, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Spain, Slovakia, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey and the United Kingdom.Affiliate members
Albania, Belarus, Bosnia/Herzegovina, Egypt, Georgia, Israel, Jordan, Libya, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, Tunisia and Ukraine are currently "affiliate members" with a view to becoming full members.Other
CENELEC has cooperation agreements with: Canada, China, Japan, South Korea, Russia and an informal agreement with the USA.History
After the Dresden Agreement (1996), CENELEC coordinates standard development activities with IEC. Older IEC standards were converted in 1997 by adding 60000, for example IEC 27 became IEC 60027 and the same standards are also published in the EN 60000 series to indicate adoption by CENELEC as a European standard; for example IEC 60034 is also available as EN 60034. Regional European standards issued by CENELEC, which are not adopted IEC standards, are numbered in the EN 50000 series. , more than 90% of the standards passed by CENELEC used the Dresden Agreement process. The alternative process in which a member National Committee proposes a standard is called the Vilamoura process (or procedure). The Dresden Agreement was updated with the Frankfurt Agreement in October 2016,Voting
, a weighted voting system was in place, with member countries having the following number of votes: * France, Germany, Italy, and UK: 10 votes (each) * Spain: 8 votes * Belgium, Greece, Netherlands, Portugal, and Switzerland: 5 votes * Austria and Sweden: 4 votes * Denmark, Finland, Ireland and Norway: 3 votes * Luxembourg: 2 votes * Iceland: 1 vote For a proposal to pass, 71% of members need be in favor (according to weighted system above) or 71% of EEA members need be in favor (excluding Switzerland). this system was updated as follows: * France, Germany, Italy, (non-EU) UK, (non-EU) Turkey: 29 votes (each) * Poland and Spain: 27 votes * Romania: 14 votes * Netherlands: 13 votes * Belgium, Czechia, Greece, Hungary, and Portugal: 12 votes * Austria, Bulgaria, Sweden, and (non-EU) Switzerland: 10 votes * Croatia, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Lithuania, Slovakia, and (non-EU) Norway: 7 votes * Cyprus, Estonia, Latvia, Luxembourg, Slovenia, and (non-EU) North Macedonia: 4 votes * Malta and (non-EU) Iceland: 3 votes The weighted voting standard was maintained at 71%, meaning that if the 17 largest-weight countries vote for a standard it will pass (this also means the top 50%See also
* European Committee for Standardization (CEN) * European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) * European Office of Crafts, Trades and Small and Medium-sized Enterprises for Standardisation (NORMAPME) * European Norms Electrical Certification (ENEC)References
External links
* {{authority control Electrical safety standards organizations European Union and science and technology Science and technology in Europe Standards organisations in Belgium