CROSS-STANDARD public interest · LED luminaire
China-to-Uzbekistan LED Luminaire Compliance Gap Matrix
AI-compiled from official public sources — cross-checked by multiple AI models, not human-verified. Informational only; see disclaimer. Public-interest, source-linked comparison of common China LED luminaire documentation against Uzbekistan's national O'zStandart certification/declaration regime, O'zDSt / IEC 60598 / IEC 62560 / IEC 62471 standards, energy-efficiency programmes, and EMC requirements versus Chinese GB 30255 / GB 7000 standards and CCC certification. Uzbekistan is NOT an EAEU member and operates a national technical-regulation regime.
GAP MATRIX
Compliance Gap Matrix
| Compliance item | Common China baseline | Uzbekistan (Ozstandart) | Gap / action | Source + verification date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Energy-Efficiency Programme for Lighting (Uzbekistan) | China's equivalent is GB 30255 (Minimum allowable values of energy efficiency and energy efficiency grades for LED luminaires / room luminaires). It defines energy-efficiency grades by absolute luminous efficacy (lm/W), with the lowest grade as the minimum for market entry, and mandatory China Energy Label (CEL)registration administered by SAMR. GB 30255 covers efficacy grading and is paired with GB 7000 series for luminaire safety, but energy requirements are framed as Chinese national grades rather than mapped to Uzbekistan's programme-based approach.GB 30255 — Energy efficiency limits and grades for LED luminaires (SAC/SAMR) China Energy Label (CEL) scheme — administered by SAMR |
Uzbekistan pursues energy-efficiency policy for lighting products through national programmes and technical regulations administered in coordination with O'zStandart (the Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation) and the relevant energy authorities, rather than through a single EU-style Ecodesign regulation. The practical effect for LED lamps and luminaires is that products may need to demonstrate minimum performance(efficacy in lm/W, declared luminous flux, rated lifetime, power consumption)against applicable O'zDSt standards adopting IEC performance methods, and energy-related declarations may be required at certification or import. Because Uzbekistan structures this through programmes and O'zDSt-adopted standards (not a consolidated Ecodesign regulation with fixed Annex II thresholds), the exact mandatory minimums and their applicability must be verified for the specific product category against current Uzbekistan technical regulation at the time of export.Uzbekistan national energy-efficiency programmes for lighting (administered with O'zStandart and energy authorities) Applicable O'zDSt standards adopting IEC performance/measurement methods for LED lamps and luminaires |
Unlike the EU's single Ecodesign Regulation with fixed Annex II thresholds, Uzbekistan structures lighting energy efficiency through national programmes and O'zDSt-adopted standards, so there is no one-to-one threshold to cross-map from China's GB 30255 grades. A product meeting a given GB 30255 grade is not automatically deemed compliant in Uzbekistan: the manufacturer must (1) identify the applicable Uzbekistan energy-efficiency programme requirement for the specific product category; (2) demonstrate performance against the O'zDSt-adopted IEC measurement methods rather than GB methods; and (3) provide any energy-related declarations required at O'zStandart certification or import. China's CEL registration has no recognition in Uzbekistan.[INFORMATIONAL] Uzbekistan addresses LED lighting energy efficiency through national programmes and O'zDSt-adopted standards rather than a single EU-style Ecodesign regulation, so there is no direct threshold cross-map from China's GB 30255 grades. Verify the applicable energy-efficiency requirement for the specific product category against current Uzbekistan technical regulation, demonstrate performance via O'zDSt/IEC methods, and provide required energy declarations at O'zStandart certification or import. China's CEL registration is not recognised. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
| Energy/Performance Marking and Declarations at Import (Uzbekistan) | In China the China Energy Label (CEL)under GB 30255 is a mandatory energy label registered with the designated body before affixing, showing the energy-efficiency grade based on absolute lm/W. Product marking and declared values also follow GB 7000 series (safety)and GB 30255 (efficiency). The CEL is a Chinese national label with no mutual recognition in Uzbekistan, and its grade scale does not map onto Uzbekistan's programme/standard-based declarations.GB 30255 — Energy efficiency limits and grades for LED luminaires; China Energy Label (CEL) scheme (SAMR) GB 7000 series — Luminaire marking and safety requirements (SAC/SAMR) |
Where Uzbekistan's energy-efficiency programmes or applicable O'zDSt standards require it, LED lamps and luminaires may need to carry declared performance information (rated power, luminous flux, efficacy, rated lifetime, colour temperature/CRI as applicable)and any required energy/performance marking on packaging and product documentation in a form acceptable to O'zStandart and to customs at import. The in-country importer typically holds the conformity certificate or declaration and is responsible for ensuring the product as placed on the market carries the required declarations. Unlike the EU there is no single mandatory rescaled A-G energy label tied to an EPREL-type registry; declarations are framed by the applicable O'zDSt standard and programme requirement, so verify the exact marking/declaration content required for the product category.Applicable Uzbekistan energy-efficiency programme marking/declaration requirements for lighting Applicable O'zDSt standards adopting IEC marking/declared-value provisions for LED lamps and luminaires |
China's CEL is a registered national energy label with a fixed grade scale; Uzbekistan has no equivalent single rescaled energy label or EPREL-type registry, and its marking/declaration obligations flow from the applicable O'zDSt standard and energy programme. Practical gaps for a Chinese exporter: (1) the CEL and its grade are not accepted in Uzbekistan — declared values must instead be presented per O'zDSt/IEC methods and in the language/format O'zStandart and customs accept; (2) the in-country importer, not the Chinese manufacturer, typically holds the certificate/declaration and bears the on-market declaration duty; (3) the exact required marking content differs by product category and must be confirmed against current Uzbekistan technical regulation rather than assumed from EU or China practice.[INFORMATIONAL] Uzbekistan has no single rescaled A-G energy label or EPREL-type registry; energy/performance marking and declared values follow the applicable O'zDSt standard and national energy programme, and the in-country importer typically carries the on-market declaration duty. China's CEL is not recognised. Confirm the exact required marking/declaration content for the product category against current Uzbekistan technical regulation before shipment. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
| Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) for Lighting (Uzbekistan) | China addresses lighting EMC through GB/T 17743 (limits and methods of measurement of radio disturbance characteristics of electrical lighting and similar equipment, equivalent to CISPR 15), GB/T 17626 series (immunity, equivalent to IEC 61000-4 methods)and GB/T 18595 (EMC immunity requirements for general lighting equipment, equivalent to IEC 61547). EMC compliance is verified within the CCC certification process for in-scope luminaires. These are Chinese national standards aligned to IEC/CISPR but assessed under the CN scheme, with no mutual recognition by O'zStandart.GB/T 17743 — Radio disturbance characteristics of electrical lighting (equivalent to CISPR 15) GB/T 18595 — EMC immunity requirements for general lighting equipment (equivalent to IEC 61547) |
LED lamps and luminaires placed on the Uzbekistan market are expected to meet electromagnetic compatibility requirements through applicable O'zDSt standards adopting the relevant IEC/CISPR methods (analogous to CISPR 15 for lighting emissions and IEC 61547 for immunity), demonstrated within the O'zStandart conformity certification or declaration of conformity. EMC evidence (test reports against the O'zDSt-adopted standard)forms part of the conformity-assessment file. Coordination with Uzbekistan's national radio/communications regulator applies for products with radio functionality (see leduz-emc-02). Exact O'zDSt standard references and editions should be verified for the product category at time of export.Applicable O'zDSt standards adopting CISPR 15 (lighting EMC emissions) and IEC 61547 (lighting EMC immunity) O'zStandart conformity assessment — EMC test evidence within certification/declaration file |
Although both regimes trace to the same IEC/CISPR base (CISPR 15, IEC 61547), the conformity evidence is assessed under different schemes: China verifies EMC inside CCC against GB/T 17743 / GB/T 18595, while Uzbekistan requires evidence against the applicable O'zDSt-adopted standard within an O'zStandart certification or declaration. Practical gaps: (1) CN CCC EMC results are not automatically accepted by O'zStandart — test reports must reference the O'zDSt-adopted standard and be issued/recognised in a form O'zStandart accepts; (2) the exact O'zDSt edition and any national deviations must be confirmed for the product category; (3) the importer typically holds the conformity document. Because the underlying technical limits are IEC-aligned, the engineering gap is usually small, but the documentary/conformity-route gap is real.[INFORMATIONAL] Uzbekistan and China both base lighting EMC on CISPR 15 / IEC 61547, but conformity is assessed under different national schemes. CN CCC EMC results are not automatically accepted by O'zStandart — provide test evidence against the applicable O'zDSt-adopted standard within an O'zStandart certification or declaration, and confirm the standard edition and any national deviations for the product category. The engineering gap is usually small; the conformity-route gap is the operative one. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
| Radio/Wireless Type Approval for Connected Luminaires (Uzbekistan) | In China, wireless-enabled luminaires require SRRC (State Radio Regulation Commission, now under MIIT)type approval for the radio module, in addition to CCC for the luminaire and the lighting EMC standards. SRRC type approval governs permitted bands and transmit power for products sold in China. SRRC approval is a Chinese national authorisation and is not recognised by Uzbekistan's radio regulator.SRRC type approval — radio equipment authorisation for wireless-enabled products in China (MIIT) CCC — China Compulsory Certification for in-scope luminaires (CNCA/CQC) |
LED luminaires with radio functionality (Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Zigbee, or other RF control)are additionally subject to Uzbekistan's national radio/communications regulation. Beyond O'zStandart conformity for electrical safety and EMC, such products typically require radio-equipment authorisation/registration with the national communications regulator covering permitted frequency bands, emitted power, and radio conformity. The in-country importer usually coordinates this radio authorisation alongside the O'zStandart certification. Verify the current radio-authorisation procedure, the responsible national authority, and the permitted band/power conditions for the specific radio technology before export, as RF authorisation is separate from product safety/EMC conformity.Uzbekistan national radio/communications regulation — radio-equipment authorisation/registration for RF-enabled products Applicable O'zDSt/IEC radio and EMC standards for connected lighting (band/power conformity) |
Both China and Uzbekistan require separate radio authorisation for connected luminaires, but they are independent national schemes with no mutual recognition: a CN SRRC type approval does not satisfy Uzbekistan's radio regulator. A Chinese exporter of a smart/connected LED product must (1) obtain Uzbekistan radio-equipment authorisation/registration for the RF module against the permitted national band/power plan, separately from the O'zStandart product certification; (2) confirm the responsible national communications authority and current procedure; (3) ensure the importer coordinates both the radio authorisation and the O'zStandart conformity. Non-connected luminaires avoid this second track entirely, so confirming whether the product is RF-enabled is the first scoping question.[INFORMATIONAL] Connected LED luminaires need Uzbekistan radio-equipment authorisation/registration from the national communications regulator, separate from O'zStandart product conformity. A CN SRRC type approval is not recognised in Uzbekistan. Confirm the responsible national authority, the permitted band/power conditions, and the current procedure for the specific radio technology before export; non-RF products are out of scope for this second track. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
| Photobiological Safety of LED Lamps and Luminaires (Uzbekistan) | China addresses photobiological safety through GB/T 20145 (photobiological safety of lamps and lamp systems, equivalent to IEC/CIE 62471)and references within the GB 7000 series (luminaire safety). Risk-group classification follows the same exempt/low/moderate/high-risk-group framework as IEC 62471. Assessment is done under the CN scheme for CCC-scope luminaires; GB/T 20145 results are Chinese national-scheme evidence and are not automatically recognised by O'zStandart.GB/T 20145 — Photobiological safety of lamps and lamp systems (equivalent to IEC/CIE 62471) GB 7000 series — Luminaire safety (SAC/SAMR) |
Photobiological safety (blue-light hazard and related optical-radiation risks)for LED lamps and luminaires entering Uzbekistan is addressed through applicable O'zDSt standards adopting the IEC 62471 method (photobiological safety of lamps and lamp systems) and the lamp/luminaire safety standards (O'zDSt adoptions of IEC 60598 and IEC 62560). Evidence of photobiological safety classification (e.g., exempt / low-risk group determination per the IEC 62471 method)is presented within the O'zStandart conformity certification or declaration of conformity for the product. The exact O'zDSt edition adopting IEC 62471 and any national hazard-group labelling expectation should be verified for the product category at time of export.Applicable O'zDSt standards adopting IEC 62471 (photobiological safety of lamps and lamp systems) O'zDSt adoptions of IEC 60598 / IEC 62560 — lamp and luminaire safety (photobiological aspects within conformity file) |
China's GB/T 20145 and Uzbekistan's O'zDSt-adopted IEC 62471 share the same risk-group method, so the underlying photobiological assessment is technically equivalent. The gap is procedural rather than technical: (1) CN GB/T 20145 test results are not automatically accepted by O'zStandart — the photobiological-safety evidence must reference the O'zDSt-adopted IEC 62471 standard within an O'zStandart certification or declaration; (2) any national hazard-group labelling expectation in Uzbekistan must be confirmed (Uzbekistan does not impose the EU's specific energy-label blue-light-class box, so do not assume the EU labelling format applies); (3) confirm the applicable O'zDSt edition for the product category. Because the method is IEC-based, an existing IEC 62471 report (or a GB/T 20145 report aligned to it)can often be leveraged, subject to O'zStandart acceptance.[INFORMATIONAL] Uzbekistan and China both base photobiological safety on the IEC 62471 risk-group method (O'zDSt adoption vs GB/T 20145), so the technical assessment is equivalent; the gap is procedural. Provide photobiological-safety evidence against the O'zDSt-adopted IEC 62471 standard within an O'zStandart certification or declaration, confirm any national hazard-group labelling expectation (do not assume the EU energy-label blue-light box applies), and verify the applicable O'zDSt edition for the product category. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
| LED Lamp/Luminaire Safety Construction (O'zDSt / IEC 60598 / IEC 62560) | China's equivalent luminaire safety standards are the GB 7000 series (GB 7000.1 general requirements, plus particular-requirement parts, aligned to IEC 60598)and GB 24906 / GB/T 24908-type standards for self-ballasted LED lamp safety (aligned to IEC 62560). CCC certification verifies these for in-scope residential luminaires. China's grid is 220/380 V 50 Hz — identical nominal to Uzbekistan — so safety construction for the China market is electrically suitable, but assessment is under the CN scheme and GB editions, not O'zDSt.GB 7000 series — Luminaires safety (general and particular requirements, aligned to IEC 60598) GB 24906 / GB/T 24908 — Self-ballasted LED lamp safety/performance (aligned to IEC 62560) |
General product safety for LED luminaires entering Uzbekistan is demonstrated against O'zDSt standards adopting IEC 60598 series (luminaires — general and particular requirements)and, for self-ballasted LED lamps, IEC 62560 (self-ballasted LED lamps for general lighting services — safety), within the O'zStandart conformity certification or declaration. These cover electrical safety, insulation, temperature rise, mechanical strength, protection against electric shock, and creepage/clearance. Uzbekistan's 220/380 V, 50 Hz grid matches China's 220/380 V 50 Hz nominal, so the input rating and safety margins designed for China generally remain valid — but the conformity evidence must still be presented against the O'zDSt-adopted IEC editions. Verify the applicable O'zDSt safety standard editions and whether certification or declaration is the required route for the product category.O'zDSt adoptions of IEC 60598 series — luminaires, general and particular safety requirements O'zDSt adoption of IEC 62560 — self-ballasted LED lamps for general lighting services (safety) |
China's GB 7000 / GB 24906 and Uzbekistan's O'zDSt adoptions both trace to IEC 60598 / IEC 62560, and the identical 220/380 V 50 Hz grid means no electrical re-rating is generally needed — so the design gap is minimal. The operative gap is conformity-route and documentary: (1) CN CCC and GB test results are not automatically accepted by O'zStandart; safety evidence must reference the O'zDSt-adopted IEC editions within an O'zStandart certification or declaration; (2) determine whether the product category requires mandatory certification or permits a declaration of conformity under the national regime; (3) the in-country importer typically holds the conformity document and is the on-market responsible party; (4) markings/instructions may need to be in the language/format O'zStandart and customs accept. An existing IEC 60598/62560 CB-scheme report can often shorten the route, subject to O'zStandart acceptance.[INFORMATIONAL] LED luminaire/lamp safety for Uzbekistan rests on O'zDSt adoptions of IEC 60598 / IEC 62560; the 220/380 V 50 Hz grid matches China so no electrical re-rating is generally needed and the design gap is minimal. The real work is the conformity route: present safety evidence against the O'zDSt-adopted IEC editions within an O'zStandart certification or declaration, confirm whether certification or declaration applies, and route through an in-country importer. CN CCC/GB results are not automatically accepted; an existing IEC CB report can often help. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
| Restricted Substances — No Horizontal RoHS Regime in Uzbekistan | China operates a restricted-substance regime via GB/T 26572 (concentration limits for the original six RoHS substances — Pb, Hg, Cd, Cr(VI), PBB, PBDE — at the same thresholds as EU RoHS)and China RoHS 2 (SJ/T 11364 marking for restricted use of hazardous substances, requiring an orange/green hazardous-substance disclosure label on EEE sold in China). The four EU phthalates added by EU 2015/863 are not in China's mandatory list. China RoHS focuses on disclosure labelling rather than blanket market-access restriction for all ten substances.GB/T 26572 — Concentration limits for restricted substances in EEE (original 6 substances) SJ/T 11364 — Marking for the restricted use of hazardous substances in EEE (China RoHS 2 disclosure label) |
Uzbekistan does NOT operate a horizontal RoHS-type restricted-substance regime for electrical and electronic equipment. It is not a member of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), so the EAEU technical regulation on hazardous-substance restriction in EEE (TR EAEU 037/2016)does not apply, and there is no EU-RoHS-equivalent national directive that restricts the ten RoHS substances across all EEE as a market-access condition. Where substance limits apply to LED luminaires in Uzbekistan, they arise only through specific product, electrical-safety, or chemical/sanitary rules (e.g., materials in contact requirements, hazardous-chemical handling)rather than a single horizontal restricted-substance list. Exporters should NOT assume an EU RoHS Declaration of Conformity is required or sufficient; instead confirm whether any product-specific or chemical-safety substance requirement attaches under current Uzbekistan technical regulation.Uzbekistan — no horizontal RoHS-type restricted-substance technical regulation for EEE (not an EAEU member; TR EAEU 037/2016 does not apply) Substance requirements, if any, arise via specific product / electrical-safety / chemical-safety rules under Uzbekistan technical regulation |
This is a reverse gap relative to the EU comparison: where the EU adds requirements beyond China, Uzbekistan imposes LESS in the way of a horizontal restricted-substance regime. China requires GB/T 26572 limits and a China-RoHS disclosure label; Uzbekistan has no equivalent horizontal RoHS market-access condition. Practical points for a Chinese exporter: (1) an EU RoHS DoC or the four-phthalate testing required for the EU is NOT a Uzbekistan market-access requirement and should not be assumed mandatory; (2) the China-RoHS orange/green disclosure label is a Chinese domestic marking and is not required for Uzbekistan; (3) however, confirm whether any product-specific, electrical-safety, or chemical/sanitary rule under Uzbekistan technical regulation imposes substance constraints on particular materials — do not treat absence of horizontal RoHS as a blanket exemption from all chemical rules.[INFORMATIONAL] Uzbekistan has NO horizontal RoHS-type restricted-substance regime for EEE and is not an EAEU member (TR EAEU 037/2016 does not apply), so the EU/China hazardous-substance restriction model does not map directly. An EU RoHS DoC or four-phthalate testing is not a Uzbekistan market-access requirement and should not be assumed mandatory; the China-RoHS disclosure label is domestic-only. Still confirm whether any product-specific or chemical/sanitary rule imposes substance constraints on particular materials before treating this as a full exemption. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
| O'zStandart Conformity Certification / Declaration — Overall Market-Access Route | In China, the primary mandatory route for in-scope residential luminaires is CCC (China Compulsory Certification), administered by CNCA and conducted by authorised bodies such as CQC, against GB 7000 (safety), GB 30255 (efficiency)and the EMC GB standards. Products outside mandatory CCC scope may use voluntary CQC certification. CCC is a Chinese national third-party certification scheme; it carries no recognition in Uzbekistan and does not substitute for an O'zStandart certificate or declaration.CCC — China Compulsory Certification for in-scope luminaires (CNCA/CQC) GB 7000 / GB 30255 — safety and energy-efficiency basis assessed within CCC |
Market access for LED luminaires in Uzbekistan runs through the national technical-regulation regime administered by O'zStandart (the Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation). Depending on the product category and the applicable technical regulation, a product is placed on the market via either mandatory conformity certification (third-party certificate issued by an accredited Uzbek conformity-assessment body)or a declaration of conformity, supported by a conformity-assessment file: O'zDSt/IEC safety test reports (IEC 60598 / IEC 62560), EMC evidence (CISPR 15 / IEC 61547), photobiological-safety evidence (IEC 62471), and any required energy/performance declarations. The in-country importer typically holds the certificate or declaration and is the on-market responsible party. There is no EAC mark (Uzbekistan is non-EAEU); the relevant evidence and any conformity marking follow the O'zStandart national scheme. Verify the route (certification vs declaration)and the accredited body for the specific product category.Uzbekistan technical-regulation regime — O'zStandart conformity certification or declaration of conformity for regulated products Conformity-assessment file: O'zDSt/IEC 60598, IEC 62560, CISPR 15, IEC 61547, IEC 62471 evidence as applicable |
CCC and the O'zStandart regime are parallel national schemes with no mutual recognition. A Chinese exporter cannot rely on a CCC certificate for Uzbekistan and must build a separate O'zStandart conformity file. Key gaps: (1) determine, for the product category, whether mandatory certification or a declaration of conformity is the required route under Uzbekistan technical regulation; (2) engage an accredited Uzbek conformity-assessment body and, in practice, the in-country importer who holds the document; (3) supply O'zDSt/IEC-referenced test reports — CCC/GB reports are not automatically accepted, though an IEC CB-scheme report can often be leveraged; (4) note there is NO EAC mark (unlike EAEU members)and no EU RoHS DoC requirement (see leduz-rohs-01). The conformity-route and local-importer dimensions are the main practical workload, since the technical standards are IEC-aligned.[INFORMATIONAL] Market access in Uzbekistan runs through O'zStandart conformity certification or a declaration of conformity (route varies by product category), supported by O'zDSt/IEC-referenced safety, EMC, and photobiological-safety evidence, and typically held by the in-country importer. There is no EAC mark (non-EAEU)and no EU RoHS DoC requirement. CCC/GB results are not automatically accepted, though an IEC CB-scheme report can often be leveraged. Confirm the required route and accredited body for the product category before export. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
| Importer, Marking, Language and Customs Documentation (Uzbekistan) | For the China domestic market, the manufacturer or domestic distributor handles CCC marking, Chinese-language product marking and instructions (per GB 7000 marking and GB 5296.x-type instruction requirements), and the China RoHS disclosure label. China is the export origin, so there is no in-country importer-of-record concept for the China side; export documentation (commercial invoice, packing list, certificate of origin)is prepared by the Chinese exporter for the destination's customs. China's domestic marking/language and CCC mark are not applicable to or accepted in Uzbekistan.GB 7000 series — Chinese product marking requirements; GB 5296.x-type instruction requirements China export documentation — commercial invoice, packing list, certificate of origin |
Placing LED luminaires on the Uzbekistan market in practice requires an in-country importer to handle the O'zStandart conformity certificate or declaration, customs clearance, and on-market obligations. Uzbekistan is landlocked, so goods arrive by rail/road (typically via regional corridors)rather than seaport, and import documentation (contract, invoice, conformity certificate/declaration, certificate of origin)must align with customs requirements. Product marking, packaging text, and user instructions generally need to be acceptable to O'zStandart and customs, which in practice means Uzbek (and often Russian)language information for declared values, ratings, and safety instructions. Confirm the current importer-of-record obligations, the accepted languages, and any required conformity marking with the importer and O'zStandart for the specific product.Uzbekistan customs and import documentation requirements (contract, invoice, conformity certificate/declaration, certificate of origin) Uzbekistan marking/language expectations (Uzbek, often Russian) for declared values, ratings, and safety instructions |
The operational gap for a Chinese exporter is the in-country importer and localisation layer, which has no China-domestic equivalent: (1) an Uzbekistan importer-of-record is needed to hold the O'zStandart conformity document and clear customs; (2) goods move by rail/road into a landlocked market, so logistics and the certificate of origin/import-contract documentation must suit overland corridors; (3) marking, packaging text, declared values, and safety instructions generally need Uzbek (and often Russian)language, not Chinese; (4) the CCC mark and Chinese-language labelling are not accepted. None of this is a substance/RoHS issue — it is the conformity-holding, language, and customs layer that differs from both China-domestic practice and the EU model. Confirm importer obligations, accepted languages, and any conformity marking with the importer and O'zStandart for the specific product before shipment.[INFORMATIONAL] Placing LED luminaires on the Uzbekistan market in practice requires an in-country importer-of-record to hold the O'zStandart conformity document and clear customs, overland (rail/road)logistics into a landlocked market, and Uzbek/Russian-language marking, declared values, and safety instructions. The CCC mark and Chinese-language labelling are not accepted. This is a conformity-holding, language, and customs layer — not a RoHS/substance issue. Confirm importer obligations, accepted languages, and any required conformity marking for the specific product before shipment. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
| Electrical Safety & Voltage/Frequency Match (220/380 V, 50 Hz) | China's mains supply is 220 V single-phase / 380 V three-phase at 50 Hz — identical nominal to Uzbekistan. Electrical safety is assessed against GB 7000 series (aligned to IEC 60598)and GB 24906/GB 19510-type standards for LED lamp/control-gear safety (aligned to IEC 62560 / IEC 61347), verified within CCC for in-scope luminaires. Because the grid is the same, a China-market design needs no electrical re-rating for Uzbekistan; the difference is the conformity scheme (GB/CCC vs O'zDSt/O'zStandart), not the electrical engineering.GB 7000 series — luminaire electrical safety (aligned to IEC 60598) GB 24906 / GB 19510 — LED lamp and control-gear safety (aligned to IEC 62560 / IEC 61347) |
Uzbekistan's mains supply is nominally 220 V single-phase / 380 V three-phase at 50 Hz. Electrical safety for LED luminaires is assessed against O'zDSt standards adopting IEC 60598 (luminaires)and IEC 62560 (self-ballasted LED lamps)within the O'zStandart conformity certification or declaration, covering protection against electric shock, insulation, temperature limits, creepage and clearance, and earthing where applicable. Because Uzbekistan's 220/380 V 50 Hz nominal is the same as China's, an LED luminaire designed and rated for the Chinese grid is generally electrically suitable for Uzbekistan without input re-rating — the input-voltage/frequency engineering is a genuine match. The remaining work is presenting the safety evidence against the O'zDSt-adopted IEC editions through the O'zStandart route. Confirm the plug/connection type and any installation-wiring expectations for the destination market.O'zDSt adoptions of IEC 60598 / IEC 62560 — electrical safety of luminaires and self-ballasted LED lamps Uzbekistan mains: 220 V single-phase / 380 V three-phase, 50 Hz (matches China nominal) |
This is a low-gap area technically because the 220/380 V 50 Hz grids are identical — no input re-rating, transformer change, or frequency redesign is required to move a China-market LED luminaire to Uzbekistan. The gap is conformity-scheme and documentary, not electrical: (1) the safety evidence must reference the O'zDSt-adopted IEC 60598 / IEC 62560 editions within an O'zStandart certification or declaration, and CN GB/CCC reports are not automatically accepted (an IEC CB-scheme report can often be leveraged); (2) confirm the destination plug/connection type and any installation-wiring or earthing expectation; (3) confirm whether mandatory certification or a declaration is the route for the product category. The voltage/frequency match is a genuine advantage versus markets with different grids, but it does not remove the O'zStandart conformity obligation.[INFORMATIONAL] Uzbekistan's 220/380 V 50 Hz grid matches China's nominal, so a China-market LED luminaire generally needs no input re-rating — this is a genuine engineering advantage. The remaining obligation is conformity: present electrical-safety evidence against the O'zDSt-adopted IEC 60598 / IEC 62560 editions within an O'zStandart certification or declaration (CN GB/CCC reports are not automatically accepted; an IEC CB report can help), and confirm the plug/connection type and route (certification vs declaration) for the product category. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
| Performance, Marking and Self-Ballasted LED Lamp Conformity (IEC 62560 / IEC 60598) | China assesses self-ballasted LED lamp performance and safety under GB 24906 (safety)and GB/T 24908 (performance), and luminaire marking under the GB 7000 series, with declared values following GB measurement methods and the China Energy Label for efficiency. Product marking and instructions are in Chinese for the domestic market. These GB-based declared values and Chinese-language markings are not accepted by O'zStandart, which requires O'zDSt/IEC-referenced declarations and Uzbek/Russian information.GB 24906 / GB/T 24908 — self-ballasted LED lamp safety and performance GB 7000 series — luminaire marking and accompanying information (Chinese-language domestic) |
Beyond core electrical safety, LED lamps and luminaires for Uzbekistan must carry correct product marking and declared characteristics consistent with the O'zDSt-adopted IEC standards: rated voltage/frequency, rated power, luminous flux, cap/base type, colour temperature, and safety markings per the IEC 60598 / IEC 62560 marking provisions. Self-ballasted LED lamps are assessed against the O'zDSt adoption of IEC 62560 for both safety and the declared-performance basis; integrated luminaires against IEC 60598. Marking and accompanying information generally need to be in a form acceptable to O'zStandart and customs (Uzbek, often Russian). Confirm the required marking content and the declared-performance method (O'zDSt/IEC, not GB) for the product category, and ensure the importer's documentation reflects the as-shipped declared values.O'zDSt adoption of IEC 62560 — self-ballasted LED lamps (safety and declared characteristics) O'zDSt adoption of IEC 60598 — luminaire marking and accompanying-information provisions |
China and Uzbekistan both rest on IEC 60598 / IEC 62560 for marking and declared performance, so the technical basis is aligned, but: (1) declared values must be presented per the O'zDSt-adopted IEC method, not the GB method, and a GB/T 24908 performance report is not automatically accepted by O'zStandart; (2) marking and accompanying information must be in Uzbek (and often Russian), not Chinese; (3) the importer's documentation must match the as-shipped declared values to clear customs and support the conformity certificate/declaration; (4) the China Energy Label is irrelevant in Uzbekistan, where energy declarations follow the national programme/standard route (see leduz-ecodesign). As with safety, an IEC CB-scheme report and IEC-referenced test data can shorten the route subject to O'zStandart acceptance — the gap is conformity-route and localisation, not core engineering.[INFORMATIONAL] Product marking and declared characteristics for Uzbekistan follow the O'zDSt-adopted IEC 60598 / IEC 62560 method, in Uzbek/Russian, within an O'zStandart certification or declaration. GB-based declared values, Chinese-language marking, and the China Energy Label are not accepted. The technical basis is IEC-aligned so an IEC CB-scheme report and IEC-referenced data can shorten the route; the real work is the conformity route and localisation. Confirm required marking content and the declared-performance method for the product category before shipment. | O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation2026-06-15 · reference |
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- O'zStandart — Uzbek Agency for Technical Regulation · accessed 2026-06-15 · reference · used in 11 rows