What is ATEX? – two EU directives explained | FullCare
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What is ATEX? – the two EU directives on explosion protection

ATEX is the European Union's framework for explosion protection — the name stands for ATmosphères EXplosives. It rests on two directives: one imposing duties on the manufacturer, the other on the operator. Here is a plain-language summary of what this means in practice.

2 directives2014/34/EU · 1999/92/EC
Decree 3/2003Hungarian transposition
0/1/2 · 20/21/22Gas & dust zones
IEC 60079Applicable standard
Basics

What is ATEX? – two key EU directives

The ATEX framework consists of two directives that address two different actors. It is worth being clear about which one applies to whom:

2014/34/EU

"ATEX Product Directive" (ATEX 114)

Manufacturer · importer · distributor

Covers the manufacturing and placing on the market of equipment and protective systems intended for use in explosive atmospheres — the goal is a properly certified, marked Ex product.

1999/92/EC

"ATEX Workplace Directive" (ATEX 137 / 153)

Employer · operator

Imposes duties on the employer / operator: risk assessment, zone classification, selection of suitable equipment, explosion protection document and training.

Practical translation. There are two big areas of responsibility: the manufacturer/distributor is responsible for placing properly certified Ex equipment on the market, and the operator is responsible for using it in the right place, in the right way, and safely.
Operator side

Employer / operator duties — Hungarian decree 3/2003

In Hungary, the 1999/92/EC workplace directive is transposed by Decree 3/2003 (III. 11.) FMM–ESzCsM, "on the minimum occupational safety requirements for workplaces with potentially explosive atmospheres". The operator's main duties are:

  • Assess the explosion risks — for gas (G) and dust (D) atmospheres.
  • Classify zones within the work areas (0/1/2 for gas, 20/21/22 for dust).
  • Have the Explosion Protection Document (EPD) prepared before initial commissioning.
  • Define and implement the necessary technical and organisational protective measures.
  • Keep the EPD up to date — on every technological change, and in practice reviewed at least every 3 years.
"This document is the explosion protection document (hereinafter: EPD) for the potentially explosive areas of the plant, prepared on the basis of Decree 3/2003 (III. 11.) FMM–ESzCsM." — typical opening line from the introduction of an EPD.
Where I help

How does ATEX-FullCare support operators?

Risk assessment & zone classification

For gas (G) and dust (D) atmospheres — see zone classification for drawings and zone maps to IEC 60079-10.

EPD preparation or update

Full Explosion Protection Document for existing facilities, in line with Decree 3/2003.

Periodic inspection

IEC 60079-17 inspection with photo-documented report and a prioritised defect list.

Who is responsible for what?

If the roles (operator, designer, contractor, authority) are not clear, see the ATEX knowledge base — who does what? page.

Next step

Not sure whether your site is subject to ATEX?

Book a free 30–60 minute online needs assessment, or fill in the 2-minute self-test. We talk through what is actually needed — and I close with a concrete written quote.

Knowledge base

These also help you understand ATEX

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