DOCUMENTATION AND OTHER VENDOR REQUIREMENTS FOR ELECTRIC FENCE ENERGIZERS ELECTRICAL SAFETY REPORT COVERING: AS/NZS 3014:2003 Electrical Installations - Electric Fences (Contains mandatory information that must appear in Electric Fence Energizer Instruction Manuals). DECLARED This product is a declared (AKA Proclaimed or Prescribed) article. It consequently requires a current Australian Approval certificate. In Australia all states except NSW require it to also be registered by the importer on the EESS Database. In practical terms, this means that, unless you are going to produce a special version for sale in NSW only, it is "de-facto mandatory" for any declared article intended for sale in Australia and New Zealand. Currently, (2023) The NSW Dept of Fair Trading does not fully support EESS, so any articles with NSW XXXXX approval numbers must have the approval number marked on the product (not its packaging). All other "brands" of approval are stored on the ERAC database and so for those an RCM is sufficient. The rating label must also carry the model name the product was registered under. The recommended practice is to put both the RCM and approval number on the product, regardless of who the approver is. NZ Specific: • In New Zealand the retailer must sign and keep an on hand an SDoc (Statutory Declaration of Compliance) as well as copies of all relevant Approval documentation. • NZ safety laws now require rating labels to specifically indicate that the product is designed to operate at the NZ standard 230V. That is, it must either simply say "230V", or state a range that includes that figure eg "220 - 240V" In NZ, a product labelled "240V" is deemed to be "unsafe" operated at 230V. DEC-LABELLING This item is either a declared article itself, or it contains declared articles (240V lead components, AC adaptor etc). All declared articles must be labelled in accordance with the requirements of their approval certificates. Currently (2023) items with approvals issued by the NSW Dept of Fair Trading must be marked with their "NSWXXXXX" approval number. With approvals issued by all other authorized bodies (SAA approvals, UL etc), provided the approval is registered on the ERAC database, the item can be marked with just an RCM. However there is nothing to stop you putting both the approval number AND the RCM on the label. With the current state of confusion about ERAC, that is the recommended procedure . EMC REPORT COVERING: AS CISPR 11:2017 Industrial, scientific and medical equipment - Radio-frequency disturbance characteristics - Limits and methods of measurement.