CROSS-STANDARD public interest · Refrigerator / cold appliance

China-to-Armenia Household Refrigerator 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 Chinese household refrigerator compliance (CCC, GB 4706.13, GB 12021.2) against Armenia's EAEU / Customs Union Technical Regulations (TR CU 004/2011 LVD, TR CU 020/2011 EMC, EAC conformity mark), GOST IEC 60335-2-24 safety, and the EAEU energy-efficiency label requirements.

Dataset 2026-06-11 Last verified 2026-06-15 7 rows

Compliance Gap Matrix

Gap matrix
Compliance item Common China baseline Armenia (EAEU / EAC) Gap / action Source + verification date
Electromagnetic Compatibility — Household Refrigerating Appliances (TR CU 020/2011 + GOST CISPR 14 series) China's EMC requirements for household appliances (including refrigerators) are primarily governed by GB 4343.1-2018 (Electromagnetic disturbance characteristics of household appliances, electric tools and similar apparatus — Part 1: Emission limits and measurement methods; mandatory, equivalent to CISPR 14-1:2016) and GB/T 4343.2-2020 (Part 2: Immunity — product family standard; recommended, equivalent to CISPR 14-2:2015). These standards are enforced under the CCC mandatory certification regime administered by SAMR/CNCA. Because both China's GB 4343.1 and Armenia's GOST CISPR 14-1 descend from the same CISPR 14 base, the technical content is closely aligned, but CCC test reports generated by CNAS-accredited Chinese laboratories against GB 4343.1 are not directly accepted as the basis for EAC conformity under TR CU 020/2011.GB 4343.1-2018 — Electromagnetic disturbance characteristics of household appliances, electric tools and similar apparatus — Part 1: Emission limits and measurement methods (mandatory; equivalent to CISPR 14-1:2016; enforced under CCC by SAMR/CNCA)
GB/T 4343.2-2020 — Part 2: Immunity — product family standard (recommended; equivalent to CISPR 14-2:2015)
Household refrigerating appliances placed on the Armenian market must comply with Technical Regulation TR CU 020/2011 (On electromagnetic compatibility of technical means). The applicable harmonised standards are the interstate / GOST adoptions of the CISPR 14 series: GOST CISPR 14-1 (emission — requirements for household appliances, electric tools and similar apparatus, equivalent to CISPR 14-1) and GOST CISPR 14-2 (immunity — product family standard, equivalent to CISPR 14-2). These cover conducted and radiated disturbance limits and immunity for appliances including refrigerators, and are relevant to modern inverter-driven compressors and their switching electronics. Conformity is demonstrated by certification or a declaration of conformity issued by an EAEU-accredited body; EMC is typically covered together with low-voltage safety in a single EAC conformity assessment, and the EAC mark (ЕАС) covers both regulations.TR CU 020/2011 — Technical Regulation of the Customs Union On electromagnetic compatibility of technical means (EAEU; EAC mark)
GOST CISPR 14-1 — Electromagnetic compatibility — Requirements for household appliances, electric tools and similar apparatus — Part 1: Emission (interstate adoption of CISPR 14-1)
GOST CISPR 14-2 — Part 2: Immunity — product family standard (interstate adoption of CISPR 14-2)
Although GB 4343.1 and GOST CISPR 14-1 share a CISPR 14 lineage, two gaps remain: (1) Conformity-route gap — the EAC conformity assessment under TR CU 020/2011 must be issued by an EAEU-accredited body; CNAS reports against GB 4343.1 cannot substitute and must be re-issued or supported by GOST CISPR 14 testing, with EMC normally bundled with TR CU 004/2011 safety in one EAC certificate or declaration. (2) Inverter-compressor models — modern refrigerators with variable-speed inverter compressors may generate emission phenomena whose coverage in existing GB 4343.1 test data should be verified against the GOST CISPR 14-1 emission test configurations before any attempt to re-use data through the CB / accredited-body route.[INFORMATIONAL] Conformity to TR CU 020/2011, demonstrated via GOST CISPR 14 testing, is mandatory for household refrigerators in Armenia and is normally covered together with TR CU 004/2011 safety under one EAC certificate or declaration. Chinese CCC EMC test data (GB 4343.1-2018) cannot be directly used; re-issuance through an EAEU-accredited body is required. Inverter-compressor models warrant particular attention to emission test coverage. Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC)2026-06-15 · reference
Energy Efficiency & Labelling — EAEU Energy-Efficiency Label for Household Refrigerators China's mandatory energy-efficiency standard for household refrigerators is GB 12021.2-2015 (Minimum allowable values of energy efficiency and energy efficiency grades for household refrigerators), which establishes energy-efficiency grades (Grade 1 most efficient, Grade 5 minimum threshold) and minimum annual energy-consumption limits. The standard is mandatory (GB), enforced by SAMR, with the China Energy Label (CEL) administered by NDRC and based on GB 12021.2; products must display the CEL before sale. The GB 12021.2 grade framework uses a 1-to-5 scale and a different EEI calculation basis than the EAEU energy-efficiency class methodology — Chinese grades and EAEU classes are not directly comparable without recalculation.GB 12021.2-2015 — Minimum allowable values of energy efficiency and energy efficiency grades for household refrigerators (mandatory; enforced by SAMR/NDRC under China Energy Label system)
GB/T 8059-2016 — Household and similar refrigerating appliances (test method standard, aligned with IEC 62552 series)
Within the EAEU, energy-efficiency labelling for household refrigerating appliances follows the EAEU energy-efficiency labelling framework (Eurasian Economic Commission decisions on energy-efficiency requirements and the energy label for household appliances), which establishes an energy-efficiency class displayed on a colour-coded label and a corresponding Energy Efficiency Index (EEI) calculated from rated volume, compartment configuration, and a reference-consumption formula. The label shows the efficiency class, annual energy consumption (kWh/year), net volumes per compartment type, and noise level, broadly mirroring the GOST / IEC 62552 measurement basis. For appliances placed on the Armenian market, the energy-efficiency class must be determined per the EAEU methodology and the label affixed before sale. Measurement is performed to the GOST adoption of the IEC 62552 series (GOST IEC 62552 — Household refrigerating appliances — Characteristics and test methods).EAEU energy-efficiency labelling framework — Eurasian Economic Commission decisions on energy-efficiency requirements and the energy label for household appliances (refrigerating appliances in scope)
GOST IEC 62552 — Household refrigerating appliances — Characteristics and test methods (interstate adoption of the IEC 62552 series; measurement basis)
Two gaps exist between Chinese energy compliance and EAEU requirements: (1) Different EEI / class basis — the EAEU energy-efficiency class is derived from an EEI formula based on rated volume and compartment type, whereas GB 12021.2-2015 uses a 1-to-5 grade framework; a Chinese Grade 1 or Grade 2 rating does not guarantee a given EAEU class without independent recalculation to the EAEU methodology. (2) Label format — the EAEU energy-efficiency label (with its class scale, kWh/year, net volumes, and noise) differs from the China Energy Label and must be produced for the Armenian market; the CEL cannot serve as the EAEU label. Measurement to the GOST IEC 62552 series is required to substantiate the EAEU class, though China's GB/T 8059 measurement aligns with the same IEC 62552 base, which can ease re-testing.[INFORMATIONAL] The EAEU energy-efficiency class and label are mandatory for household refrigerators in Armenia. Chinese GB 12021.2 grades do not substitute for the EAEU class — independent recalculation to the EAEU methodology (with GOST IEC 62552 measurement) and an EAEU-format energy label are required. China's IEC 62552-aligned test data can ease re-testing but does not replace the EAEU class determination. Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC)2026-06-15 · reference
Hazardous-Substance Restriction (RoHS-style) — TR EAEU 037/2016 China's RoHS-style regime is the Administrative Measures for the Restriction of the Use of Hazardous Substances in Electrical and Electronic Products (China RoHS 2, MIIT et al., in force 2016), supported by GB/T 26572-2011 (limit requirements for restricted substances) and the GB/T 39560 series (IEC 62321 equivalent test methods). It restricts the same six substances (Pb, Hg, Cd, Cr(VI), PBB, PBDE) and requires marking (the orange e-Environmental Protection Use Period logo and a substance table) plus, for products in the State Compliance Management Catalogue, conformity assessment. While the restricted-substance lists and limits broadly align with TR EAEU 037/2016, the conformity-assessment, marking, and declaration mechanisms differ.Administrative Measures for the Restriction of the Use of Hazardous Substances in Electrical and Electronic Products (China RoHS 2, MIIT et al., 2016)
GB/T 26572-2011 — Requirements of concentration limits for certain restricted substances in electrical and electronic products
GB/T 39560 series — Determination of certain substances in electrotechnical products (equivalent to IEC 62321 series)
Technical Regulation TR EAEU 037/2016 (On restriction of the use of hazardous substances in electrical and electronic products) is the EAEU's RoHS-style regulation. It restricts the content of lead, mercury, cadmium, hexavalent chromium, polybrominated biphenyls (PBB), and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE) in electrical and electronic products — including household refrigerating appliances — to defined maximum concentration values by homogeneous material. Conformity is demonstrated by a declaration of conformity registered with an EAEU-accredited body, and the product carries the single EAC conformity mark covering TR EAEU 037/2016 (often alongside TR CU 004 and TR CU 020). Technical documentation must substantiate the restricted-substance content, typically through supplier declarations, material analysis, or test reports.TR EAEU 037/2016 — Technical Regulation On restriction of the use of hazardous substances in electrical and electronic products (EAEU; EAC mark; RoHS-style)
GOST IEC 62321 series — Determination of certain substances in electrotechnical products (interstate adoption; substantiates restricted-substance content)
The substance lists and concentration limits are broadly comparable, so the main gap is procedural: (1) Separate declaration — TR EAEU 037/2016 requires a declaration of conformity registered with an EAEU-accredited body and the EAC mark; China RoHS 2 marking and any China conformity assessment do not satisfy this and cannot be relied on as evidence. (2) Documentation — the EAEU technical file must substantiate restricted-substance content (supplier declarations, GOST IEC 62321 / IEC 62321 test reports, BOM), in Russian, to support the registered declaration. (3) Bundled EAC — TR EAEU 037/2016 conformity is typically combined with TR CU 004 and TR CU 020 under one EAC marking, so the substance evidence must be assembled together with the safety and EMC package for the same applicant/importer.[INFORMATIONAL] TR EAEU 037/2016 (RoHS-style) requires a registered declaration of conformity and EAC marking for household refrigerators in Armenia. China RoHS 2 marking does not substitute. The restricted-substance limits are broadly comparable, so the work is largely documentary — assembling GOST IEC 62321-backed evidence in Russian and bundling it with the TR CU 004 / TR CU 020 EAC package. Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC)2026-06-15 · reference
EAC Conformity Mark — Multi-Regulation Assessment (TR CU 004 + TR CU 020 + TR EAEU 037) In China, household refrigerating appliances require China Compulsory Certification (CCC) covering both safety (GB 4706.13) and EMC (GB 4343.1) before sale, administered by CNCA-designated certification bodies; CCC is a mandatory third-party certification and does not use manufacturer self-declaration. Energy labelling (China Energy Label based on GB 12021.2) and China RoHS 2 marking are separate mandatory requirements. There is no single EAC-equivalent mark in China: CCC covers safety/EMC, the China Energy Label covers energy, and China RoHS handles hazardous substances, each issued and displayed separately.CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — safety (GB 4706.13) + EMC (GB 4343.1); mandatory; administered by CNCA/SAMR
China Energy Label — Measures for the Administration of Energy Efficiency Labels (NDRC/SAMR); based on GB 12021.2-2015
China RoHS 2 — Administrative Measures for the Restriction of the Use of Hazardous Substances in Electrical and Electronic Products (MIIT et al., 2016)
Household refrigerating appliances placed on the Armenian market must bear the single EAC conformity mark (ЕАС, Eurasian Conformity), demonstrating conformity with all applicable EAEU Technical Regulations. For a standard household refrigerator this means conformity with at minimum: (1) TR CU 004/2011 — low-voltage electrical safety; (2) TR CU 020/2011 — electromagnetic compatibility; and (3) TR EAEU 037/2016 — restriction of hazardous substances (RoHS-style). Conformity is established through certification (by an EAEU-accredited certification body) or, where the regulation permits, a declaration of conformity registered in the EAEU register; both routes require testing in an EAEU-accredited laboratory and a technical file. After a positive assessment, the EAC mark is affixed to the product and packaging, and the manufacturer/importer keeps the certificate(s) or declaration(s) and supporting technical documentation. Unlike the EU CE system, EAC certification commonly requires third-party involvement and an applicant established in the EAEU.TR CU 004/2011 — On the safety of low-voltage equipment (electrical safety)
TR CU 020/2011 — On electromagnetic compatibility of technical means (EMC)
TR EAEU 037/2016 — On restriction of the use of hazardous substances in electrical and electronic products (RoHS-style)
EAC (Eurasian Conformity) mark — single EAEU conformity marking affixed after certification or registered declaration
Chinese manufacturers must build a complete EAEU conformity package — CCC, China Energy Label and China RoHS do not substitute for any EAEU requirement: (1) EAC certificate(s) or registered declaration(s) — covering TR CU 004, TR CU 020 and TR EAEU 037, issued via an EAEU-accredited body; (2) Technical file — test reports to GOST IEC 60335-2-24, GOST CISPR 14, and GOST IEC 62321 (or accepted IEC/CB equivalents), risk assessment, drawings, circuit diagrams, and BOM, in Russian; (3) EAC mark physically affixed to product and packaging; (4) EAEU energy-efficiency label (separate from EAC conformity); (5) an applicant/importer established in the EAEU to hold the certificate or lodge the declaration (see frigam-market-002). Because the EAEU standards are IEC-derived, existing IEC / CB Scheme test data may reduce re-testing, but the certificates/declarations themselves must be issued within the EAEU framework.[INFORMATIONAL] The EAC mark (covering TR CU 004, TR CU 020, and TR EAEU 037) is mandatory for household refrigerators in Armenia. Chinese CCC, China Energy Label and China RoHS are entirely separate systems — none substitutes for EAC certification or declaration. Because EAEU standards are IEC-derived, IEC / CB test data may reduce re-testing, but certificates or declarations must be issued within the EAEU framework, and an EAEU-established applicant/importer is required. Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC)2026-06-15 · reference
In-Country Importer / EAEU Applicant — Certification Holder and Customs Entry China has no direct regulatory equivalent requiring manufacturers of export-bound products to designate a foreign-country resident legal applicant responsible for holding the destination-market certificate and cooperating with market surveillance. Under the CCC domestic regime, the certification holder is the responsible party for domestic market compliance only — this role does not extend to or satisfy EAEU applicant or in-country-importer requirements. Chinese exporters typically appoint overseas distributors or trading companies on a commercial basis, without a statutory EAEU-style applicant obligation.N/A — no direct Chinese regulatory equivalent for the EAEU applicant / in-country importer obligation Under the EAEU conformity-assessment framework, an EAC certificate or registered declaration of conformity must be held by an applicant established within the EAEU — typically the importer or an authorised representative resident in an EAEU member state (Armenia, Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, or Kyrgyzstan). A manufacturer established only in China cannot itself hold an EAC declaration; it must act through an EAEU-resident applicant, who lodges the declaration or holds the certificate, retains the technical file, and is the point of contact for the accredited body and market-surveillance authorities. Armenia is landlocked, so goods typically arrive by road or rail; customs clearance into Armenia requires the EAC documentation to be in place. The in-country importer is responsible for ensuring the EAC mark, Russian-language documentation, and conformity evidence accompany the goods.EAEU Treaty and EEC conformity-assessment procedures — applicant must be established in an EAEU member state
TR CU 004/2011, TR CU 020/2011, TR EAEU 037/2016 — applicant/holder requirements for certificate or registered declaration
EAEU Customs Code — customs clearance into Armenia requires EAC conformity documentation
This is a structural gap with no Chinese regulatory analogue. A Chinese refrigerator manufacturer cannot place product on the Armenian market on its own EAC declaration; it must (1) appoint an EAEU-established importer or authorised applicant to hold the EAC certificate or lodge the registered declaration; (2) ensure that applicant retains the Russian-language technical file and conformity evidence and is named for market-surveillance contact; and (3) plan road/rail logistics into landlocked Armenia with EAC documentation completed before customs clearance. Without an EAEU-resident applicant, no EAC certificate or valid declaration can exist, and the goods cannot be lawfully cleared or placed on the market regardless of the underlying test results.[INFORMATIONAL] An EAEU-established importer or authorised applicant is a hard gate for the Armenian market: it must hold the EAC certificate or lodge the registered declaration, keep the Russian-language technical file, and serve as market-surveillance contact. A China-only manufacturer cannot self-hold EAC conformity. Road/rail logistics into landlocked Armenia require EAC documentation completed before customs clearance. Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC)2026-06-15 · reference
Refrigerant — R-600a Flammable Refrigerant Handling under TR CU 004 / GOST IEC 60335-2-24 China addresses flammable-refrigerant charge limits for household refrigerating appliances within GB 4706.13-2014, which incorporates R-600a flammability provisions derived from IEC 60335-2-24 (the same base as the GOST version). China also regulates refrigerant safety through GB 9237 (safety requirements for refrigerating systems, aligned with ISO 5149). China operates its HFC phase-down under the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol (ratified June 2021, administered by the Ministry of Ecology and Environment), which is separate from any EAEU scheme. Chinese refrigerators already built around R-600a are well-positioned for the Armenian market on the refrigerant dimension, since both China's GB 4706.13 and Armenia's GOST IEC 60335-2-24 share the IEC 60335-2-24 Annex AA basis.GB 4706.13-2014 — flammable refrigerant (R-600a) charge-limit provisions in household refrigerating appliances (derived from IEC 60335-2-24)
GB 9237 — Safety requirements for refrigerating systems and heat pumps (aligned with ISO 5149)
Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol — China HFC phase-down schedule (ratified June 2021, administered by MEE)
In Armenia and the wider EAEU, the flammable-refrigerant requirements for household refrigerating appliances are addressed within the safety regime — TR CU 004/2011 via GOST IEC 60335-2-24, whose Annex AA (mirroring IEC 60335-2-24 Annex AA) sets the maximum R-600a (isobutane) charge per compartment configuration, ventilation, and ignition-source requirements. R-600a is a hydrocarbon refrigerant with very low GWP (≈3) and is widely used in EAEU-market household refrigerators. Manufacturers must: (1) verify the refrigerant charge complies with the GOST IEC 60335-2-24 Annex AA flammability limits; (2) declare the refrigerant designation (R-600a / isobutane) and charge quantity in grams in the product documentation and on the rating plate; and (3) include flammable-refrigerant safety markings and handling instructions in Russian. The EAEU does not operate an EU-style F-Gas phase-down scheme; because R-600a is a hydrocarbon, the EAEU obligations focus on the flammable-charge safety requirements rather than fluorinated-gas quota controls.TR CU 004/2011 — On the safety of low-voltage equipment (covers appliance-level flammable-refrigerant safety via the harmonised standard)
GOST IEC 60335-2-24 — Annex AA: Requirements for appliances using flammable refrigerants (R-600a charge limits, ventilation, ignition-source requirements; interstate adoption of IEC 60335-2-24)
ISO 817 — Refrigerants — Designation and safety classification (R-600a classified A3: higher flammability, lower toxicity)
Because both China's GB 4706.13 and Armenia's GOST IEC 60335-2-24 share the IEC 60335-2-24 Annex AA basis, the technology gap for R-600a appliances is minimal; the work is mainly documentation and verification: (1) the EAEU technical file and rating plate must declare the refrigerant designation (R-600a / isobutane) and charge weight in grams, with flammable-refrigerant safety markings and instructions in Russian; (2) the R-600a charge must be confirmed against GOST IEC 60335-2-24 Annex AA maximum limits for the relevant room volume and appliance configuration — Chinese CCC test data should be checked to ensure it was generated under equivalent configurations; (3) there is no EAEU F-Gas quota system to navigate for a hydrocarbon refrigerant, so the refrigerant dimension is generally the lowest-friction part of the EAC package. Any model still using an HFC (e.g., R-134a) would need separate assessment, but is uncommon in current household refrigerator ranges.[INFORMATIONAL] R-600a is well-suited to the Armenian / EAEU market and is not subject to any EAEU F-Gas quota scheme. The refrigerant dimension is largely documentary: declare R-600a designation and charge weight, confirm the charge against GOST IEC 60335-2-24 Annex AA limits, and provide Russian-language flammable-refrigerant safety markings. Because China's GB 4706.13 and Armenia's GOST IEC 60335-2-24 share the same IEC Annex AA basis, the engineering gap is minimal. Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC)2026-06-15 · reference
Electrical Safety — Household Refrigerating Appliances (TR CU 004/2011 + GOST IEC 60335-2-24) China's mandatory safety standard for household refrigerating appliances is GB 4706.13-2014 (Safety of household and similar electrical appliances — Particular requirements for refrigerating appliances, ice-cream appliances and ice-makers), technically derived from IEC 60335-2-24:2010 but with Chinese national deviations, read together with GB 4706.1-2005 (general requirements). GB 4706.13-2014 is mandatory (GB) and enforced by SAMR under the China Compulsory Certification (CCC) regime; products must be CCC-certified by a CNCA-designated body before sale in China. Because both China's GB 4706.13 and Armenia's GOST IEC 60335-2-24 descend from the same IEC 60335-2-24 base, the technical content is closely aligned, but CCC test reports issued against GB 4706.13 are not accepted as conformity evidence under TR CU 004/2011.GB 4706.13-2014 — Safety of household and similar electrical appliances — Particular requirements for refrigerating appliances, ice-cream appliances and ice-makers (mandatory; derived from IEC 60335-2-24:2010 with national deviations; enforced under CCC by SAMR/CNCA)
GB 4706.1-2005 — General requirements (read in conjunction with GB 4706.13)
Armenia is a member of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), so low-voltage household refrigerating appliances placed on the Armenian market must comply with Technical Regulation TR CU 004/2011 (On the safety of low-voltage equipment), which applies to equipment rated 50–1000 V AC. The applicable safety standard is the interstate / GOST adoption of IEC 60335-2-24 (GOST IEC 60335-2-24, Safety of household and similar electrical appliances — Particular requirements for refrigerating appliances, ice-cream appliances and ice-makers), read together with GOST IEC 60335-1 (general requirements). Key requirements cover protection against electric shock, insulation resistance and dielectric strength, thermal cut-outs, creepage and clearance distances, mechanical strength, earthing continuity, and appliance markings. Conformity is demonstrated through certification or a declaration of conformity issued by an EAEU-accredited body, after which the single EAC conformity mark (ЕАС) is affixed before market placement. Armenia's grid is 220/380 V, 50 Hz, which matches China's 220/380 V 50 Hz nominal, so no design change for voltage or frequency is normally required.TR CU 004/2011 — Technical Regulation of the Customs Union On the safety of low-voltage equipment (EAEU; EAC mark)
GOST IEC 60335-2-24 — Safety of household and similar electrical appliances — Particular requirements for refrigerating appliances, ice-cream appliances and ice-makers (interstate adoption of IEC 60335-2-24)
GOST IEC 60335-1 — Safety of household and similar electrical appliances — General requirements (read in conjunction with Part 2-24)
Because both standards descend from IEC 60335-2-24, the engineering gap is usually modest, but the conformity-assessment gap is structural: (1) Conformity route — TR CU 004/2011 requires either certification or a registered declaration of conformity issued by an EAEU-accredited body; CCC certificates and CNAS-laboratory reports against GB 4706.13 are not directly accepted and must be re-issued or supported by GOST IEC 60335-2-24 testing. (2) IECEE CB Scheme reports based on IEC 60335-2-24 may reduce re-testing scope because the GOST version is an IEC adoption — manufacturers should confirm acceptance and national-deviation coverage with the accredited body. (3) The EAC route requires an applicant/importer established in the EAEU (see frigam-market-access). (4) Documentation must be in Russian (the EAEU working language) including the operating manual, rating-plate data, and the EAC mark; Chinese-language CCC documentation does not satisfy this.[INFORMATIONAL] Conformity to TR CU 004/2011, demonstrated via GOST IEC 60335-2-24 testing and an EAC certificate or declaration, is mandatory for household refrigerators in Armenia. Chinese CCC certification to GB 4706.13 does not satisfy the EAEU route; re-issuance through an EAEU-accredited body is required, though IEC 60335-2-24 CB Scheme reports may reduce re-testing scope. An EAEU-established applicant/importer and Russian-language documentation are also needed. Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC)2026-06-15 · reference

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