Title: Standards Development Workshop
1(No Transcript)
2- Standards Development Workshop
- by Alain Samne
- Technical Group ManagerEngineering, Machinery
and EnergyTPM for ISO/TC 67 - Doha (QA), 2006-04-03/04
3An introduction to the ISO Global Village of
standardization
- Facing increasing demands and trade
- So where does ISO fit into all this?
- How about a regional ISO
- Examples of standards in the real-world
- ISO and Innovation
4Facing increasing demands and trade
5An increasing demand for International Standards
- Globalization of trade in products and services
- Global supply chain
- Delocalization of procurement and investment
- Public demand for consumer and environmental
protection - International solidarity to face terrorism,
epidemics and natural disasters and climate
change - Pervasive information and communication
technologies
In support of a sustainable world development
6A new political framework fortechnical
harmonization
- WTO TBT and SPS, and GATS (services) agreements
- Developments of bi- and multi-lateral trade
agreements - Good regulatory practices (GRPs), public
governance and reference to consensus-based
standards - Global companies and their global specifications
- Major emerging economies China, India, Brazil,
Russia - Increasing impact of NGOs
7World Trade Report 2005
- Six essential elements for International
Standards defined in 2nd Triennial Review of TBT
Agreement, 2000 (Annex 4) - Transparency easily accessible information
- Openness non-discriminatory
- Impartiality and consensus fair practices
- Effectiveness and relevance market demand
- Coherence no overlap
- Development dimension technical assistance to
participate - the ISO system is fully compliant
Exploring the links between trade, standards and
the WTO
8Non-tariff barriers affecting market access
9Some objectives A positive contribution to
globalization
- Developing International Standards for voluntary
application with the aim of - Facilitating exchange of goods and services among
the people of all countries - Improving communication and collaboration in all
spheres of activity - Supporting the smooth and equitable growth of
trade for a safe and sustainable development - Reducing the digital divide
- Associating all stakeholders through transparent
and democratic mechanisms based on national
contribution and international networking
10So where does ISO fit into all this?
11ISO in a Nutshell
- A non-governmental organization (NGO) established
in 1947 - Worldwide federation of national standards bodies
(NSB) - Decentralized structure
- Largest of the 3 apex international standards
organizations (ISO, IEC, ITU) - Develops voluntary consensus-based standards and
other deliverables - Maintains development-partnerships with other
standards development organisations (e.g. CEN,
OECD, OIML)
12The ISO system
At 15 February 2006
156 national members
- IT tools
- Standards development procedures
- Consensus building
- Dissemination
177 active TCs 3 000 technical bodies 50 000
experts
Central Secretariatin Geneva 150 staff
13ISO Membership
- Member body (full member)The national body
"most representative of standardization in its
country". Entitled to participate and exercise
full voting rights on any technical committee and
policy committee of ISO. - Correspondent memberAn organization in a country
which does not yet have a fully-developed
national standards activity. Do not take an
active part, but are entitled to be kept informed
about work of interest to them.intended to be
held for a limited duration and is reviewed by
the ISO Council not later than five years after
the date of registration with ISO - Subscriber memberFor countries with very small
economies. Pay reduced membership fees that
nevertheless allow them to maintain contact with
international standardization.
14Some Statistics
Some statistics
- Organizations
- Full members (member body) 99
- Correspondent members 46
- Subscriber members 10
- A-Liaison organizations 495
- Developing country members 121
- Involvement
- ISO members with secretariats 40 (12)
- ISO members with convenorship 50 (17)
- ISO members also P members 97
- ISO members also O members 125
15Statistics (2)
- Groups
- Technical Committees 178
- Subcommittees 514
- Working Groups 2111
- Individuals (may have multiple roles)
- Chairmen 631
- Secretaries 459
- Convenors 1538
16Distribution of ISO members per continent
At 15 February 2006
MB distribution per continent
MBMCMS distribution per continent
28
42
30
17
37
38
42
17
3
4
Oceania
Europe
Americas
Total 102
Total 156
Africa
Asia
17 of standards published vs. processing time
(start-to-finish 2001 compared with 2005)
Last update 2006-01-01
2001
2005
18ISO Key mission statement
- To be the leading value adding platform and
partner for the production of global and market
relevant International Standards covering
products, services, good conformity assessment,
management and organizational practices
19ISOs added value
- Recognized experience in international consensus
building - Brand name, ethics and wide recognition
- Diversified scope, broad range of
deliverablesand cross-sector consistency - Strong national membership base, ensuring
adequate consensus, dissemination of deliverables
and market feedback for their maintenance and
development
20ISOs added value (cont.)
- Extensive networking, at both international and
regional levels - Ability to provide International Standards to
assist in the implementation and harmonization
of regulations - Leadership for the production of standards and
guides for conformity assessment - Leadership in the use of IT tools for the
production and dissemination of standards
21Management systems standards
- Quality Management Systems (QMS)
- ISO 9000 series
- ISO 29001 Oil and Gas sector-specific
- Environmental Management Systems (EMS)
- ISO 14000 series
22World total number of ISO 90012000 certificates
23World total number of ISO 14001 certificates
24Future ISO 26000 Guidance on social
responsibility (SR)
- What it should be
- Description of the principles of SR, definition
of SR concepts, issues concerning SR (SR core
context) - Guidance to help all-types of organizations and
businesses to understand, develop and implement
suitable SR practices - Compatible with inter-governmental instruments,
including international labour standards - What it will not be
- A management systems standard
- A set of certifiable requirements
- A duplication of ILO and other international
(C)SR initiatives - Target publication date Q3 2008
25Conformity assessment, metrology and testing
- WTO and international acceptance of tests and
certificates - Reconciling facilitation of trade and progress in
quality, security, health, consumer and
environmental protection - International recognition and acceptance to be
based on confidence and good practices (GP) - The way forward implementing the ISO/IEC
Standards and Guides, with a double level of
consensus, amongst countries and across
stakeholders
26How about a regional ISO
27Regional standards bodies Major functions
- Facilitation of intra-regional trade through the
harmonization of standards (removal of technical
barriers to trade) - Coordination of policies towards standardization
and related fields between the members (in the
region, but also towards international standards
bodies) - Forum for the exchange of views and experiences
- (in some regions) Development of regional
standards (in addition to and/or on the basis of
International Standards)
28International StandardsRegional cooperation
- Over 200 free trade agreements in operation in
the world opportunity and threat for
International Standards - Promotes the adoption of, and reference to,
International Standards in technical regulations - Increases links between standardization and
conformity assessment (ISO 17025) - Global relevance of International Standards
29Regional standards bodies
30Regional standards bodies
- ACCSQ (ASEAN Consultative Committee for Standards
and Quality) - AIDMO (Arab Industrial Development and Mining
Organization) - ARSO (African Regional Organization for
Standardization) - CEN (European Committee for Standardization)
- COPANT (Pan-American Standards Commission)
- EASC (Euro-Asian Council for Standardization,
Metrology and Certification) - PASC (Pacific Area Standards Congress)
31The World Standards Cooperation (WSC)
- The leading international standardization
organizations collaborate to meet the challenges
of converging technologies - Multi-discipline and cross sector
- For electrotechnology
- For telecommunications
32Future collaborative arrangementsPSDO
- PSDO Partner Standards Development Organization
- Answering current sector-recognized standards
- Publication and commercial arrangements currently
being discussed with the candidate SDOs of ASTM
and IEEE (in consultation with ANSI) - Specific modalities of implementation are being
developed and evaluated - Derivative work
- Normative referencing
- Joint development
33Some challenges ahead
- Limited resources time, experts, funding,
knowledge management - Corporate buy-in of big-picture benefits as
opposed to short-term investments - True international participation good
intentions are not always good enough - Project leaders Experts in their field but not
necessarily in standardization - Corporate insistence to reference a single set of
international standards (e.g. BPs ETP, Shells
DEP)
34and in the energy sector
- ISO technical committees cover many energy (and
related) sectors including - TC 27 Coal
- TC 28 Petroleum Products
- TC 67 Materials, equipment offshore
structures for the PPNGI - TC 85 Nuclear energy
- TC 180 Solar energy
- TC 193 Natural gas
- TC 197 Hydrogen energy
- TC 203 Technical energy
- Visit the ISO Online website for additional
information on the above - ISO Technical Committees
35Examples of standards in the real-world
36Order and variety seduction
- An enterprise can stock fewer types of parts used
for a greater range of applications.
37Market and society transactions
- Suppliers can base the development of their
products and services on specifications that have
acceptance in their sectors.
38Conformity, testing and metrology
- Laboratories and certification bodies use
internationally agreed criteria to check that
products, materials, services or people meet
specifications of a standard.
39In the Oil and Gas sector
Standards in the real world Examples For
everyone
- ISO/CSs monthly information magazine
- An excellent resource for business, industry,
consumer and government - Facilitates communication in all spheres
40More information
41Conclusion !!
- The ISO system
- contributes to positive globalization
- and sustainable development
42ISO and Innovation
- A short video clip
- ISO Innovation 2005.exe
43Thank you for your attention !
http//www.iso.org