Disclaimer: The following answer is based solely on circumstantial evidence 
only and I can provide no specific evidence of its veracity.

Papua New Guinea uses the Australian plug and runs at 240 V, 50 Hz. Based on 
that, and its proximity to Australia, it is possible that would follow the 
Australian regulation, or at least accept products tested to AS/NZS standards. 
English is one of the official languages, so in theory, manuals and warnings on 
an Australian product would be accepted. The PNG government 
website<http://www.pm.gov.pg/> is down right now, so I can make wild 
speculation such as this without a high risk of being caught making things up 
as I go.

Ted Eckert
Microsoft Corporation

The opinions expressed are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of my 
employer, residents of Papua New Guinea or anybody who pressed the red button 
from a previous message.

From: Jim Hulbert [mailto:jim.hulb...@pb.com]
Sent: Friday, July 15, 2016 10:39 AM
To: EMC-PSTC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG
Subject: [PSES] Papua New Guinea Regulatory Requirements

I've been asked if there are any regulatory requirements for EMC & Product 
Safety in Papua New Guinea.  I've done a bit of searching and all I can find is 
Type Approval requirements for radio equipment.  I can't find any requirements 
for equipment that does not contain a radio communication function.  I am 
looking for requirements for commercial products, not consumer.

Does anyone know of any requirements that I'm overlooking?

Thanks.

Jim Hulbert


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