U.S. Automation Systems & Integration Experts Invited to Participate in Int'l Standards Development

Oct. 2, 2012
U.S. leadership in developing and overseeing international standards plays a major role in bolstering the nation’s larger economic health.

U.S. leadership in developing and overseeing international standards plays a major role in bolstering the nation’s larger economic health. U.S. companies and organizations can increase their competitive advantage over foreign competitors by helping to determine the standards that direct international trade and industry, providing essential support to the U.S. economy as a whole.

In its role as the official U.S. member body to the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) facilitates the involvement of U.S. stakeholders from the private and public sectors in international standardization work. U.S. experts in relevant fields, such as automation systems and integration, are given the opportunity to help determine the future of their industries through active participation in U.S. Technical Advisory Groups (TAGs) to a variety of ISO Technical Committees (TCs) and Subcommittees (SCs). U.S. TAGs are tasked with developing and implementing U.S. positions on ISO activities, including the approval, revision, and withdrawal of ISO standards.

The Electronic Commerce Code Management Association (ECCMA) serves as the ANSI-accredited administrator of the U.S. TAG to ISO TC 184, Automation systems and integration, as well as to two of its SCs. The U.S. TAG is currently seeking industry, government, and other interested experts to participate in the following ISO groups, which work on a variety of standards related to automation, especially in those areas related to manufacturing systems and integration:

TC 184, Automation systems and integration
TC 184, SC 4, Industrial data
TC 184, SC 5, Interoperability, integration, and architectures for enterprise systems and automation applications
U.S. experts in automation systems and integration have the opportunity to get involved right away at industrial data working group meetings that will take place on November 11-16 in Miami.

“Becoming a U.S. delegate to an international meeting is a tremendous opportunity for an individual’s career development and for the company they represent,” said S. Joe Bhatia, ANSI president and CEO. “Time and again we have seen that those who understand how to effectively influence and address standardization and compliance issues have the greatest success in the global marketplace.”

To participate in a U.S. TAG or learn about other ISO-related activities, contact Karen Hughes, ANSI program manager, ISO P membership ([email protected]; 212.642.4992). A list of all current ANSI-accredited U.S. TAGs to ISO is available here.

American National Standards Institute- http://www.ansi.org/

Sponsored Recommendations

Put the Plant Floor in Your Pocket with Ignition Perspective

Build mobile-responsive HTML applications that run natively on any screen.

Ignition: Industrial-Strength System Security and Stability

Ignition is built on a solid, unified architecture and proven, industrial-grade security technology, which is why industrial organizations all over the world have been trusting...

Iron Foundry Gains Competitive Edge & Increases Efficiency with Innovative Technology

With help from Artek, Ferroloy implemented Ignition to digitally transform their disconnected foundry through efficient data collection and analysis while integrating the new ...

Empowering Data Center Growth: Leveraging Ignition for Scalability and Efficiency

Data center growth has exploded over the past decade. Initially driven by organizations moving their computer assets to the cloud, this trend has only accelerated. With the rise...