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.
The registry
Section titled “The registry”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 development → Published, not cited → Cited 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.
Your named gaps, per standard
Section titled “Your named gaps, per standard”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.
The no-presumption rule
Section titled “The no-presumption rule”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.
What to do with it
Section titled “What to do with it”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.