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ASABE Standards training. Prepared December 2011. Who is ASABE?. The American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers Non-profit, membership-based engineering organization Also an ANSI-accredited standards developing organization (SDO)
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ASABE Standards training Prepared December 2011
Who is ASABE? • The American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers • Non-profit, membership-based engineering organization • Also an ANSI-accredited standards developing organization (SDO) • ANSI – the American National Standards Institute • We are not the government (nor is ANSI)
Standards, codes, and regulations – what’s the difference? • Regulations – anyone in that jurisdiction must comply • Codes – often adopted by jurisdictions – sometimes with deviations-- to become regulations • Standards – consensus-based; voluntary compliance, unless written into a code or regulation; often used as a sound, scientific basis for regulations and codes
Alphabet Soup? • ASABE – that’s us, the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (ASAE – our former name – same minus the “and Biological”; our standards promulgated before the name change retain the “ASAE” designation) • “03 Committee” – ASABE divisional oversight committee for standards; they approve each standards project, and have final sign-off on a completed standard • ANSI – the American National Standards Institute; they accredit ASABE and other standards developers • SDO – Standards Developing Organization; ASABE is an ANSI-accredited SDO • ISO – the Organisation for International Standardization • IEC – the International Electrotechnical Commission • TC – Technical Committee; usually within ISO or IEC • SC – SubCommittee; usually within ISO or IEC • TAG – Technical Advisory Group; ASABE administers the US TAG to ISO/TC 23 – we put forward the US position, established by the US TAG, to ISO (via ANSI)
ASABE’s role in standards – p. 1 Engineering standards for agricultural & biological systems
ASABE’s role in standards – p. 2 • ASABE staff • Helps you through the process • Ballots the committees • Maintains records and rosters • Ensures compliance with ANSI-accredited Procedures • Committee members • Determine if topic is relevant to ASABE’s interests • Draft technical content of standards • Vote on technical content of standards • Address concerns from commenters
ASABE’s role in standards – p. 3 • ASABE is also involved in international standards • ISO ASABE administers the US position for: • TC 23, Tractors and machinery for agriculture & forestry • …and TC 23 subcommittees 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 14, and 19 • TC 234, Aquaculture and fisheries • TC 238, Solid biofuels for combustion • IEC ASABE administers the US position for: • subcommittee 61H, Safety of electrically-operated farm appliances
How does an ASABE standard become a standard? • Identify a need – …and a “champion” for the project • ASABE staff ballots the appropriate oversight committee for approval of the project (need, scope, affected parties) • *public comment on project • Existing or new ASABE committee (SDC) develops technical content of standard • ASABE staff ballots SDC on technical content • *public comment on technical content • ASABE staff ballots oversight committee for final approval (balance, comments addressed, stayed within scope) • *ANSI approval of final draft • ASABE staff publishes standard *if proposed as American National Standard
Visualizing the ASABE process If disapproved… If disapproved… If disapproved…
How does an ASABE standard become an international standard? • De Facto • Other countries simply acknowledge that the ASABE standard is what they use • Adoption into ISO or IEC • Someone (normally the US TAG) proposes to ISO or IEC that a new work item be started (notify ASABE staff!) • During the drafting process, the ASABE document is brought forward as the basis document • Some, or all, of the ASABE document is incorporated into the draft ISO/IEC standard • The US TAG members vote approval or disapproval on the draft ISO/IEC standard, and put forward any necessary comments • ASABE Manager of International Standards compiles those votes and comments into the US’s official position and submits them (via ANSI) to ISO • When standard is approved, option exists to adopt back as ASABE standard (see next slide)
What’s this ISO adoption business? • In a world where most companies are selling in multiple countries, it is much more cost-effective to be able to manufacture one piece of equipment, in one configuration, for sale in multiple countries, rather then multiple configurations, one for each country. • To facilitate this, ASABE often adopts ISO standards as ASABE standards – sometimes identically, sometimes with slight deviations • Adoption of international standards by ASABE indicates US support of the international effort
Frequently Asked Questions • Who can suggest a standard topic to ASABE? • Anyone • Who serves on ASABE standards development committees? • Impacted/interested parties; with balance • How do I vote? • Log into ASABE Web Forums • Login name: usually the letter “M” followed by your 7-digit ASABE number • Password: contact ASABE staff if you need to have your password reset • Who can provide input for ASABE standards? • Anyone! • Why do I have to jump through these hoops to get a standard approved? • What seems like a bunch of red tape is in place to ensure that everyone gets an opportunity to provide input, and to be sure that no one group can dominate the process
Tips & Tricks • Make sure there is a need for the standard • Find a “champion” to lead the project, or at least to make sure it stays on track • Get involved early. If you wait until most of the work is done, those who’ve worked hard to craft the draft language tend to be less receptive to changes. • Be sure to submit reasonable comments/rationale • Proposed new language is ALWAYS appreciated!
Supporting the ASABE Standards Program • If you support standards, they will be there to support your business • Ensure design compatibility • Enhance safety and performance • Provide a common test method • If you DON’T support standards, there are no standards to support you when you need them • No documents to point to in a lawsuit • No basis for compatible designs; expensive design and tooling changes • Standards are apart from your business, but need to be a part of your business • While standards are most often promulgated through third parties, they should be viewed as an essential part of your business, including participation and financial support – a real cost of doing business • Support ASABE standards by: • Participating • Direct financial support, either through your company, or a personal donation • Funds are used to support individual standard projects, help cover training costs for ASABE staff, to bring in other experts (ANSI/ISO training for members, etc.), and sometimes for special projects outside the normal scope of operation
More help • Useful links: http://www.asabe.org/standards/other-links-of-interest.aspx • Contact ASABE Standards staff • Scott Cedarquist Director, Standards & Technical Activities http://www.asabe.org/contact-us.aspx#staff2076 (269) 932-7031 • Travis Tsunemori Staff Engineer http://www.asabe.org/contact-us.aspx#staff2078 (269) 932-7009 • Ted Tees Manager of International Standards http://www.asabe.org/contact-us.aspx#staff2077 (269) 932-7005 • Carla VanGilder Standards Administrator http://www.asabe.org/contact-us.aspx#staff2079 (269) 932-7015