Apple says it will issue an operating system update in an effort to stop sales of iPhone 12’s being banned in several Countries.

France’s National Frequency Agency (ANFR) banned the sale of the iPhone 12 in the country because it found that the device emits more than the permitted electromagnetic waves according to EU regulations. Its Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) was above the legal limit.

The agency gave Apple an ultimatum, telling it to use “all available means” to resolve the issue quickly, or face a recall of all iPhone 12 units ever sold in France. Today, Apple has responded, promising to issue a software update that will settle the dispute.

Fears in France over iPhone 12 radiation levels has spread to several other Countries, with Apple claiming their procedures are flawed. Dutch officals who have seen the radiation data claim differently.

On the day Apple released the iPhone 15, the ANFR watchdog ordered sales of the 2020 device to be halted and threatened a full recall of every iPhone 12 sold in the country if the issue wasn’t remedied via a software update.

Initally Apple told regulators the phone was within the legal limit for radiation absorbed by the body when the phone is in use.

French authorites re did the tests and came to the same conclusion, the iPhone 12 was unsafe/

Apple repeated that line in a statement given to Reuters, maintaining there are no safety concerns with the phone.

However, the company still plans on issuing an update to bring the emissions in line with the “specific protocol” used over the channel.

The statement reads: “We will issue a software update for users in France to accommodate the protocol used by French regulators. We look forward to iPhone 12 continuing to be available in France,” Apple said in a statement.

“This is related to a specific testing protocol used by French regulators and not a safety concern.”

The issue pertained to the iPhone 12’s Specific Absorption Rate (SAR), which pertains to the rate the body takes on the radio frequency when the phone is held to the ear or kept in the pocket for instance.

So how much radiation is too much radiation? Well the specific absorption rate for when the iPhone 12 held close to the body (i.e. in the pocket to held up to the ear) is apparently 5.74 watts per kilogram above the legal limit.

Because the iPhone 12 has now been succeeded by three further generations, the halt in sales would have been unlikely to affect the company’s bottom line too much. However a recall would have been an almighty pain in le derrière.