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Standards watch

Harmonized standards (hENs) will eventually let manufacturers claim presumption of conformity for CRA Annex I and MR Annex III requirements — but only once a standard is cited in the Official Journal of the EU (OJEU). The standards watch tracks the relevant standards and, more usefully, diffs each one against your own evidence.

A curated, versioned registry of standards relevant to CRA Annex I / MR Annex III — authored and human-reviewed by Resilic, updated through releases, never scraped. Each entry shows:

  • the designation and title (e.g. prEN 50742; the EN IEC 62443-4-1/-4-2 series),
  • which regulation it is relevant to,
  • an honest status: In developmentPublished, not citedCited in the OJEU,
  • and, once one exists, the citation reference.

As of the current registry, no standard is OJEU-cited for the CRA or the MR — and the registry says exactly that, rather than implying otherwise.

The differentiator is the evidence-gap diff. Each tracked standard maps to the CRA Annex I register requirements it touches. The watch reads your register and answers, per standard: if — or when — this standard is cited, these are the named gaps in your evidence today. Expanding a standard shows the mapped requirements, your current status for each, and the open-gap list by name — so “get ready for prEN 50742” turns from a vague intention into a concrete short list.

This page is deliberately strict about one thing:

  • Presumption of conformity exists only once a standard is cited in the OJEU. For anything in In development or Published, not cited status, Resilic never uses presumption language — the wording is structurally impossible in the product for pre-citation standards, not just discouraged.
  • Holding the mapped evidence means your preparation is pertinent to the standard. It does not mean you satisfy the standard — conformity with a standard is assessed against the standard itself, which is not something Resilic performs.

Use the watch as an early-warning system: track the statuses, work the named gaps through the Annex I register at your own pace, and when a first real OJEU citation lands, the registry status flips and your remaining gaps for that standard are already itemised. No certification, no presumption theatre — just an honest diff between what a standard will expect and what your evidence shows.