- Source: Regulatory Compliance Mark
The Regulatory Compliance Mark (RCM) is a trademarked symbol that denotes a claim that a product is safe for use in Australia and New Zealand because it satisfies applicable regulatory requirements. These requirements comprise both the requirements under the Electrical Equipment Safety System (EESS) and the Australian Communications & Media Authority (ACMA) requirements for EMC, EME, and telecommunications and wireless devices. As of May 2024, the EESS regulates the safety of household electrical equipment in the Australian states of Queensland, Victoria, Western Australia and Tasmania.
Owned by the Electrical Regulatory Authorities Council (ERAC) – the peak body of electrical safety regulators in Australia and New Zealand – and the ACMA, RCM use is defined by AS/NZS 4417. On 1 March 2016, the RCM became mandatory and replaced ACMA's A-tick and C-tick marks. Similar to the CE mark, the RCM is not a quality indicator nor a certification mark.
See also
China Compulsory Certificate
FCC mark
Geprüfte Sicherheit
References
External links
Official website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- ISO 14000
- Regulatory Compliance Mark
- Certification mark
- CE marking
- RCM
- Compliance training
- UHF CB
- Malicious compliance
- Governance, risk management, and compliance
- Regulatory risk differentiation
- Mark W. Olson