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© SGS Société Générale de Surveillance SA.
© SGS Société Générale de Surveillance SA.
The East African Community (EAC) has introduced East African standards (EAS) to harmonize safety and performance standards and encourage intra-EAC, continental and global trade. Producers, manufacturers, importers and brand owners operating in the region need to ensure their products comply with the relevant standards to successfully access the markets in member states.
In addition to standard harmonization and trade promotion, the new standards were developed with consideration for priority sectors contributing to gross domestic product (GDP), social economic factors and EAC policy priorities. There were over 600 standards listed in the most recent catalogue for EAS, issued in 2023, and that number is expected to rise as regional development accelerates.1
Once a standard is adopted, it is transposed into a national standard by every member of the EAC – currently, Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania and Zanzibar, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
EAS can be categorized into several product groups:
Businesses need to start by identifying which EAS is relevant to their product. Once this is done, they will have a list of requirements that need to be fulfilled, including product testing by an independent laboratory and a factory audit.
Stakeholders can streamline the compliance process and get ahead of the competition with SGS’s proprietary program – EAC-Ready Certification. Not offered by other conformity assessment bodies, this voluntary scheme is an effective way to expedite the process of acquiring the mandatory certificates of conformity required to access countries in the EAC that implement pre-export verification of conformity (PVoC) programs. It is not a substitute for PVoC certification of conformity.
Learn more about EAC-Ready Certification.
This article can also be found in our PCA Newsletter (Q2/2024) – which keeps you up to date with developments in technical barriers to trade and product conformity assessment.
You can read more articles in our previous editions in the PCA Newsletter Library.