
(ISO: Geneva) -- The International Organization for Standardization recently approved the development of an international standard on energy management. The standard will provide organizations and companies a practical and widely recognized approach to increase energy efficiency, reduce costs, and improve their environmental performance by addressing the technical and management aspects of rational energy use. The standard is intended to be broadly applicable to various sectors of national economies, including utility, manufacturing, commercial building, general commerce, and transportation sectors, and therefore, could have influence on as much as 60 percent of the world’s energy demand.
“The urgency to reduce greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions, the reality of higher prices from reduced availability of fossil fuels, and the need to promote energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy sources, provide a strong rationale for developing this new standard building on the most advanced best practices and existing national or regional standards,” says ISO Secretary-General Alan Bryden.
Following the examples of the ISO 9000 series on quality management and the ISO 14000 series on environmental management, the project committee ISO/PC 242—“Energy management,” will consider the development of a standard containing relevant terms and definitions, and providing management system requirements together with guidance for use, implementation, measurement, and metrics.
The standard will be based on the continual improvement and plan-do-check-act approach used in ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 to aid compatibility and integration.
The future standard is expected to:
- Provide public and private organizations and companies with a well-recognized framework for integrating energy efficiency into their management practices
- Offer organizations with operations in more than one country a single, harmonized standard for implementation across the organization
- Provide a logical and consistent methodology for identifying and implementing improvements that may contribute to a continual increase in energy efficiency across facilities
- Assist organizations to better utilize existing energy consuming assets, thus reducing costs and/or expanding capacity
- Offer guidance on benchmarking, measuring, documenting, and reporting energy intensity improvements and their projected effect on reductions in GHG emissions
- Create transparency and facilitate communication on the management of energy and promote energy management best practices, thus reinforcing the value of good energy management behaviors
- Assist facilities in evaluating and prioritizing the implementation of new energy-efficient technologies
- Provide a framework for organizations to encourage suppliers to better manage their energy, thus promoting energy efficiency throughout the supply chain
- Facilitate the use of energy management as a component of GHG emission reduction projects.
The secretariat of ISO/PC 242 will be held jointly by the ISO members for the United States, the American National Standardization Institute, and for Brazil, ABNT Associação Brasileira de Normas Técnicas.
For more information, visit www.iso.org/iso/pressrelease.htm?refid=Ref1122.
About The Author
Quality Digest
For 40 years Quality Digest has been the go-to source for all things quality. Our newsletter, Quality Digest, shares expert commentary and relevant industry resources to assist our readers in their quest for continuous improvement. Our website includes every column and article from the newsletter since May 2009 as well as back issues of Quality Digest magazine to August 1995. We are committed to promoting a view wherein quality is not a niche, but an integral part of every phase of manufacturing and services.