John, in response to your attached thread you may want to review some of
the field surveys that are available from the Low Frequency Emissions
Industry Coalition (LFEIC) @
http://www.eiafoundation.org/eng/lfeic/docpublic/default.htm.

Regards.
-------------------------------
 Ed Jones
 IBM Corporation
 Somers N.Y.
---------------------- Forwarded by Edward Jones/Somers/IBM on 02/27/2001
02:12 PM ---------------------------

John Juhasz <jjuh...@fiberoptions.com>@ieee.org on 02/26/2001 01:36:30 PM

Please respond to John Juhasz <jjuh...@fiberoptions.com>

Sent by:  owner-emc-p...@ieee.org


To:   "'Rich Nute'" <ri...@sdd.hp.com>, emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
cc:
Subject:  RE: Harmonics -- WSJ opinion.





Rich,

I would think that you knew that this would generate discussion?

One comment of Mr Hunter's that stood out in particular was the very last .
. .
" . . . the only ones who benefit from the harmonic current emission
standard
are the European electricity distributors.  They "avoid
investments in bolstering their networks against the
theoretical harmonics risk" at the cost of manufacturers
and consumers."

I would say that this senitment has been echoed by many compliance
engineers.
But the comment is 'non-technical' . . . can anyone in this forum offer
any 'technical' arguments that would a)Back-up such a statement as
Mr. Hunter's or b) FAVOR the harmonic standard?

I like to give the benefit of the doubt that the standard was created based
on sound technical evidence.

John Juhasz
Fiber Options
Bohemia, NY

-----Original Message-----
From: Rich Nute [mailto:ri...@sdd.hp.com]
Sent: Monday, February 26, 2001 12:11 PM
To: emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
Subject: Harmonics -- WSJ opinion.

With thanks to Ed Jones...

On Thusday, February 22, The Wall Street Journal Europe
published an interesting opinion on the harmonic current
emissions standard.

The opinion is by Rob Hunter, a lawyer and Chairman of
the Centre for the New Europe, a Brussels-based think
tank.

Mr. Hunter is quite critical of the EU "New Approach"
process.  He says:

    "In this procedure, the EU sets vague safety and
    technical rules for everything from toys to super-
    computers -- for example, toys shall be 'safe.'  The
    EU then delegates to private standardization bodies
    the drafting of detailed requirements explaining
    what the delphic rules mean."

    "The supposed advantage of this New Approach is
    twofold.  For industry, it gets to write the detailed
    rules applying to it.  For the Commission, the New
    Approach frees it from a burdenom task; it also
    allows the Commission to claim that it has nothing to
    do with writing the standards, and hence cannot be
    held responsible."

    "All this sounds quite above-board.  It isn't."

    "For one thing, the standards are not merelay a means
    of proving compliance with the underlying legislation.
    They actually determine the meaning of the law itself."

Mr. Hunter discusses "...the way these standard-setting
bodies can be gamed by industry insiders for advantage."

Mr. Hunter goes on to show how the New Approach process
allows the Commission to sidestep "...WTO laws prohibiting
'mandatory' product measures that create 'unnecessary
obstacles' to international trade."

Mr. Hunter's opinion goes on to show that the only ones
who benefit from the harmonic current emission standard
are the European electricity distributors.  They "avoid
investments in bolstering their networks against the
theoretical harmonics risk" at the cost of manufacturers
and consumers.

Best regards,
Rich






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