Doktor Jons Guide to the "Use and Application of CCTV"
The "News and Views" Section - Manufacturers Press Release

So would you like to play "Spot the CCTV Camera?". Eagle eyed visitors may recognise the profusion of street furniture, surrounding a single heritage dome camera keeping watch over part  of Londons' prestigious Oxford Street shopping area.
So would you like to play "Spot the CCTV Camera?". Eagle eyed visitors may recognise the profusion of street furniture, surrounding a single heritage dome camera keeping watch over part  of Londons' prestigious Oxford Street shopping area.
So would you like to play "Spot the CCTV Camera?". Eagle eyed visitors may recognise the profusion of street furniture, surrounding a single heritage dome camera keeping watch over part  of Londons' prestigious Oxford Street shopping area.

Photos reproduced by kind
permission of Bosch Security

- Press Release - 6th November 2008


Bosch leads calls for new one-stop certification scheme for Europe 

 

Bosch Security Systems is leading calls for the creation of a ‘one-stop’ certification scheme that would require products to be tested by a single recognised authority to be cleared for use throughout Europe, rather than having to adhere to the multiple certification schemes currently in operation in each member state.

In particular, Bosch is lending its support to Certalarm, a recently created not-for-profit testing authority established entirely for the purpose of reducing the bureaucracy ­ and costs ­ associated with having fire and security products certified for use across Europe. Certalarm is attempting to establish a unique European quality mark based upon a one-stop test and certification, preferably to EN54 fire and EN50131X security standards.

If Certalarm was to be recognised in the market by end users, insurance companies, law enforcement agencies, consultants and specifiers, a great deal of unnecessary paperwork could be avoided according to Paul Wong, Managing Director of Bosch Security Systems: 

“At the moment we have this ridiculous situation where a product tested to one European standard for use in one country (eg VdS, AFNOR, IMQ, REQ, NCP, Incert etc) nearly always requires separate paperwork and documentation ­ and sometimes a separate test ­ to be used in another. 

“One recent example with our own technology involves our Easy Series intrusion detection series that was tested in CNPP in France, but all of the paperwork for certification in Sweden, Norway etc and a number of other countries had to be duplicated. Clearly this leads to a considerable amount of additional administration and cost.” 

Mr Wong also believes that the current emphasis on self-certification in the UK ­ without the need for independent testing ­ is entirely wrong. He suggests that there is a danger of some manufacturers ‘over-stating’ their products’ capabilities, with end users buying a ‘graded’ product that does not make the grade:

“It cannot be right,” he argues, “that the market is unable to compare one product against another on a truly like-for-like basis, but this is something that could be instantly overcome if there was one, independent testing scheme recognised by all. Indeed installers should be actively looking for products that have been independently tested as being the best way of ensuring that the product genuinely meets the requirements of the EN50131 standard.”

As well as creating a level playing field for products across Europe, Bosch also sees advantages in the speed with which products could be brought to market: “A Certalarm quality mark would dramatically increase the speed with which new technologies could be rolled out across Europe,” he says. 

“There is nothing holding the industry back, other than its own inertia. It is time for this new scheme to be adopted.”

-ends-

About Bosch
The Bosch Group is a leading global supplier of technology and services. In the areas of automotive and industrial technology, consumer goods, and building technology, some 272,000 associates generated sales of 46.1 billion euros in fiscal 2007. The Bosch Group comprises Robert Bosch GmbH and its roughly 300 subsidiary and regional companies in over 50 countries. This worldwide development, manufacturing, and sales network is the foundation for further growth. Bosch spends more than three billion euros each year for research and development, and in 2006 applied for over 3,000 patents worldwide. The company was set up in Stuttgart in 1886 by Robert Bosch (1861-1942) as “Workshop for Precision Mechanics and Electrical Engineering.”

The special ownership structure of Robert Bosch GmbH guarantees the entrepreneurial freedom of the Bosch Group, making it possible for the company to plan over the long term and to undertake significant up-front investments in the safeguarding of its future. Ninety-two percent of the share capital of Robert Bosch GmbH is held by Robert Bosch Stiftung GmbH, a charitable foundation. The majority of voting rights are held by Robert Bosch Industrietreuhand KG, an industrial trust. The entrepreneurial ownership functions are carried out by the trust. The remaining shares are held by the Bosch family and by Robert Bosch GmbH.

Additional information can be accessed at http://www.bosch.com

- Ends -

 

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