Building safety-critical systems is a slog of documentation, audits and paper trails, and the tools you lean on have to be trustworthy enough that a certification body will vouch for them. Fennec Engineering has just cleared that bar: its Advanced Safety Acceleration Platform (ASAP) has earned T2 qualification from TÜV Rheinland, confirming the automated traceability platform holds up under some of the strictest functional-safety standards in the business.
If you’ve never had to sweat over an IEC 61508 audit, here’s why that matters. Any software tool that touches a safety-critical development workflow can, in principle, introduce or hide a defect. To manage that risk, standards like IEC 61508 and ISO 13849 classify tools by how much damage they could do and how thoroughly they’ve been vetted. ASAP is now certified as a T2 offline support tool, meaning it can flag a fault in the safety lifecycle but won’t silently inject one of its own — a distinction that saves engineering teams from having to re-qualify the tool themselves.
What Fennec is really selling here is time. ASAP is a full-lifecycle, NRTL-qualified safety SaaS platform aimed at automating the traceability work that normally eats up weeks of manual cross-referencing between requirements, hazards, test cases and evidence. The ‘acceleration’ in the name is the pitch: keep the rigor demanded by IEC 61508 and ISO 13849, but strip out the tedium that makes safety documentation a bottleneck.
The practical upshot of the T2 label is subtle but real. Under these standards, using an unqualified tool typically forces development teams to justify their toolchain as part of every audit — extra work, extra risk, extra cost. A tool that arrives pre-qualified by a recognized body like TÜV Rheinland lets those teams point to the certificate instead of building their own case from scratch. For anyone shipping industrial machinery, robotics or embedded control systems, that’s the difference between a smooth assessment and a painful one.
ASAP isn’t a gadget you’ll unbox, and Fennec hasn’t published pricing. But it sits at an increasingly important seam in modern hardware: the point where autonomous machines, collaborative robots and safety controllers meet the compliance regimes that decide whether they’re allowed anywhere near people. As more of that world moves to cloud-based tooling, a SaaS platform that carries a formal safety qualification is a notable step.
The T2-qualified version of ASAP is now available, following its announcement in mid-June 2026. For engineering teams already living inside IEC 61508 and ISO 13849 workflows, it’s less a new toy and more one less thing to argue about in the next audit.