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Political agreement on EU data protection reform reached

New rules on data protection for application across all European Union (EU) Member States are likely to take effect in early 2018. The legislative package, recently agreed by the EU, will introduce an enhanced level of protection for individuals’ data privacy.

Fri 22 Jan 2016

Background

In 2012, the European Commission put forward a proposal for a General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”), to update and modernise the legislative framework regulating how personal data is handled and managed across the EU. On 15 December 2015, after lengthy and difficult negotiations, the European Parliament and the Council of Ministers reached political agreement on the final draft of the GDPR.

The GDPR will replace the 1995 Data Protection Directive (95/46/EC), implemented in the UK through the Data Protection Act 1998, and will introduce significant changes to EU data protection rules.

Key changes

Impact on the Lloyd’s market

Insurers and intermediaries collect and use personal and sensitive data from policyholders and prospective insureds. The new regulatory regime will apply to Lloyd’s managing agents and intermediaries, in their capacity of controllers and processors of data used in their business. Market participants should re-examine their processes and procedures in order to ensure compliance with the rules.

Next steps

The European Parliament is expected to adopt the final text of the GDPR in the coming months. Once adopted and published in the Official Journal of the EU, there will then be a two-year period before it is applied. The new rules are likely to be enforced in early 2018.

As the GDPR takes the form of a regulation, it will apply directly in EU Member States, which do not need to transpose it into their national laws. It will also require adoption of secondary legislation at EU and/or Member State level.