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How ISO Standards Support Renewable Energy

IRENA Workshop
Federal Ministry for the Environment Bonn (Germany)

24 October 2012
Kevin McKinley
ISO Deputy Secretary-General
Updated 1 July 2012

ISO – A Global System


164 national members
5 000 people
98% of world GNI
97% of world population
Over 625
Collection of 19 180 organizations
ISO Standards
Customer in liaison

1 208 standards
produced
Vision Internal
in 2011 Financial & Process
Strategy
217 active TCs
Central
3 354 technical Secretariat
bodies Learning Growth in Geneva
100 000 experts 157 FTE staff
ISO example of stakeholder engagement
for ISO 26000 “Social Responsibility”
 WG directly under Board
 436 participating experts,
195 observers from 99 countries
 42 intl organizations in liaison
 Awareness and training for
developing countries
- 37 reg/intl workshops,
- 10 national events
- 3800 participants
 More than 26000 formal
international comments
addressed during development
 Published 1 Nov 2010
Vast range of ISO subjects - responding to global needs …
2008 2010
− Industrial furnaces & equipment − Asset management
− Network services billing − Natural gas fuelling stations
− Road traffic safety mgt systems − Pigments, dyestuffs & extenders
− Product recall − Safety amusement rides and devices
− Consumer product safety − Treated wastewater re-use for irrigation
− Cross border trade of − Biogas
second-hand goods − Energy savings
− Anti-counterfeiting tools 2011
− Energy management − Project, programme & portfolio mgt
− Additive manufacturing
2009 − Facilities management
− Fraud countermeasures and controls − Outsourcing
− Traditional Chinese medicine − Risk management
− Sustainability in event mgt − Bionics
− Energy efficiency & renewable sources − Fireworks
terminology − Coal bed methane
− Sustainability criteria for bioenergy − Carbon capture and storage
2012
− Railway applications
− Sustainable development in communities
− Plastic and rubber machines
Environment − Compliance programs
− Forensic sciences
Economic
Societal
SG/15891893 - 2011-05-12 Energy Management – 5
Energy - the value added by International Standards

 Promote good energy management practices


 Support scientific cooperation and possible harmonization of public
policies
 Help improve consumers and users understanding and confidence
 Avoid unnecessary technical barriers to trade related to
energy policies
 Enable the creation of world markets for energy technologies
Energy - the value added by International Standards (cont)

 Performance definitions,
measurement and test methods

 Codification of best practices and


management systems

 Design of checklists and guides

 Interoperability

 State-of-the-art knowledge
formalized by recognized experts
through double level of consensus,
amongst stakeholders and across
countries
Examples of ISO standardization
supporting renewable energy
 ISO Technical Committees specifically
involved: Solar Energy, Hydrogen
Technologies, Geothermal

 Joint Working Group with IEC on


Wind Turbines

 ISO/PC 248, Sustainability criteria


for bioenergy preparing the future
standard ISO 13065

 ISO/TC 255 Biogas

 ISO/IEC JTC 2 Joint Project Committee –


Energy efficiency and renewable energy
sources – Common terminology
TC 242 - Evolution of new energy standards

 After ISO 50001 was published ISO Project committee 242 was converted to ISO/TC 242 and
the following WGs created:
 ISO/TC 242/WG 1 Energy Management
 ISO/TC 242/WG 2 Energy performance metrics
 ISO/TC 242/WG 3 Joint TC 242 - TC 257 WG: Measurement & verification of
organizational energy performance - General principles and guidelines
 ISO/TC 242/WG 4 Opportunities for Improvement
TC 242 – New projects approved
 ISO/AWI 17570 Energy baseline general principles and guidance
 ISO/AWI 17578 Energy performance indicators (EnPIs) General principles and guidance
 ISO/AWI 17580 Monitoring, measurement, analysis and verification of organizational energy
performance
 ISO/CD 50002 Energy audits
 ISO/AWI 50003 Energy management system audits and auditor competency
 ISO/AWI 50004 Guidance for the implementation, maintenance and improvement of an EnMS
 ISO/PWI 50005 Energy management systems – Modular implementation of the energy
management system ISO 50001 including the use of energy performance evaluation techniques
Why government should assist national involvement
in International Standards on energy management

 Promote good energy management practices


 Supporting scientific cooperation and possible
harmonization of public policies
 Help improve consumers and users
understanding and confidence
 Avoiding unnecessary technical barriers to
trade related to energy policies
 Enable creation of world markets for energy
efficient technologies
So what is the future …. Evolution of new energy standards
 20 ISO Technical Committees involved in aspects of energy efficiency and renewables
 ISO Strategic advisory group (SAG) on Energy efficiency and renewable energy sources
 ISO/IEC JTC 2 Joint Project Committee – Energy efficiency and renewable energy sources –
Common terminology

 Industrial energy efficiency (e.g. ISO/TCs 17, 86, 115, 117, 118, 203, 244)

 Increase of efficiency of road vehicles and tyres (ISO/TC 22, work with UNECE WP 29 and
ITF)

 Energy efficiency of buildings (ISO/TC 163 and ISO/TC 205)

 ISO/TCs on solid, liquid and gaseous biofuels

 ISO/PC 248 Sustainability criteria for bioenergy

 Recent committees: ISO/TC 265 Carbon capture and storage, ISO/TC 263 Coalbed methane

SG/15891893 - 2011-05-12 Energy Management – 12


SG/16101689
SG/16101689
Output 3:
Awareness improved on the role and
benefits of International Standards and
their use.
International Standards are therefore
increasingly used

Building awareness on the importance of


using standards in all spheres of economic
activity to achieve sustainable development
goals is a key element of national quality
policies.
It is also useful in engaging stakeholders and
the ultimate users of International Standards
in national and international standardization
work.

ISO and Environment


Results of ISO DC Action Plan 2005-2010
 Around 450 activities
carried out covering all
Action Plan objectives

 Around 17’000 staff and


stakeholders from ISO
developing country
members participated

 Total of over 8.8 million


CHF spent directly on the
Action Plan from 2005 to
2010 (excluding ISO CS
costs)

14
Funding of Action Plan 2011-2015
 For 2011, ISO Council has allocated 1.2 million CHF for developing countries and an additional
485’000 CHF for 2012

 The Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida), as main donor, will
support the Action Plan through a 5-year project signed in March 2011 for 5.2 million CHF

 Sida is also financing a specific project for 8 Middle East and North African countries to
encourage implementation of ISO 26000 on Social Responsibility for 2.4 million CHF

 DIN (Deutsches Institut fuer Normung), the ISO member from Germany, has pledged to
provide an annual amount of 100’000 CHF

 SECO (Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs) has signed an agreement for 440‘000
CHF to support the Action Plan from 2011-2013

 Other ISO members contribute to the ISO Funds-in-Trust

 The German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) has signed
an agreement to support the Action Plan 2011-2015 for 800’000 CHF

15
Workshops
Seminars
Training-of-trainers
Conferences
ISO 14001 - ISO 14040 -
Environmental
Management Life Cycle
Systems Analysis

Main
areas of ISO/PC 248
Sustainability Environmental
criteria for Environment Footprinting
support bioenergy

ISO 14064-65
ISO 50001 – – Greenhouse
Energy Gas
National Management quantification,
Regional Systems reporting and
verification
Global

ISO and Environment


Objectives:
• To raise awareness on ISO 50001 in
order to engage policymakers, standards
authorities and prospective standard
users and provide avenues for the
development of national complementary
policies to support the adoption of
energy-efficient products and services.
Some activities are carried out jointly with
the United Nations Industrial
Development Organization (UNIDO).
ISO 50001 –
Outputs:
Energy • National and regional workshops targeted
Management at participants from standardization
Systems community, industry, government and
academia.
• Regional Training of Trainers to create a
pool of national trainers to disseminate
knowledge about the importance of
applying the standard
• Sponsorships to participate in ISO
technical committee meetings

Regional events held:


• Oman, Thailand, Sri Lanka, South
Africa, Senegal, Mauritius, Croatia, Viet
Nam, Uruguay, Barbados and Tunisia.

ISO and Environment


Objectives:
• To discuss the social, economic and
environmental aspects of the
production, supply chain, and use of
bioenergy, and identify criteria that
could prevent it from being
environmentally destructive or socially
ISO/PC 248 aggressive.
Sustainability
criteria for Outputs:
bioenergy • Sponsorships to participate in ISO
technical committee meetings

Sponsorships to TC Meetings held in:


• Frankfurt (2011)
• Chicago (2012)

ISO and Environment


Implications for ISO and IRENA
 Energy and renewables standardization is inefficient at the
local or regional level where implications are global
 ISO’s energy and renewables work is extensive - but gaps
being identified and prioritized for potential new areas
 Essential to have clear international policy direction and
needs
 Opportunity for IRENA to advise, guide and support the
development of new ISO standards addressing global
renewable energy challenges
Confidence has a nickname …

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