ASTM Subcommittee will focus on sustainable manufacturing.

Press Release Summary:



Newly created by ASTM International Committee E60 on Sustainability, subcommittee E60.13 on Sustainable Manufacturing will facilitate development and use of sustainable manufacturing processes. According to E60.13 chairman Amy Costello, subcommittee will develop standards that manufacturers can use to benchmark, assess, act on, and communicate sustainability metrics, including standards for evaluating, improving and measuring gate-to-gate processes in the production of finished goods.



Original Press Release:



ASTM International Forms New Subcommittee on Sustainable Manufacturing



W. CONSHOHOCKEN, Pa.-To facilitate the development and use of sustainable manufacturing processes, ASTM International's Committee E60 on Sustainability has created a new subcommittee, E60.13 on Sustainable Manufacturing. The new group will hold its first meeting during Committee E60's October 2012 meeting in Atlanta, Ga.



Sustainable manufacturing has become an ongoing topic of discussion across a wide range of industries. Consisting of processes that minimize negative environmental impacts while conserving energy and other natural resources, sustainable manufacturing also incorporates economically sound processes that are safe for employees, communities and consumers.



According to Amy Costello, environmental sustainability manager, Armstrong World Industries, and E60.13 chairman, Subcommittee E60.13 evolved out of a presentation on the nature of sustainable manufacturing given by representatives of the National Institute of Standards and Technology during the April 2012 E60 committee meeting. The purpose of the presentation was to discuss the need for sustainable manufacturing standards and E60's potential role in developing those standards.



"As manufacturers embark on the journey of benchmarking and developing sustainability metrics, they will quickly realize that they are in uncharted territory," says Costello. "While there are many sources of information about sustainable manufacturing, few standards exist."



Costello notes that the subcommittee will develop standards that manufacturers can use to benchmark, assess, act on and communicate sustainability metrics, including standards for evaluating, improving and measuring gate-to-gate processes in the production of finished goods.



The following proposed new standards will be the first to be developed by new Subcommittee E60.13:

• ASTM WK35702, Practice for Materials and Energy Information Modeling for Sustainable Products;

• ASTM WK35703, Terminology for Sustainable Manufacturing;

• ASTM WK35705, Guide for Sustainability Improvement of Manufacturing Processes; and

• ASTM WK38312, Specification for the Classification of Manufacturing Wastes and Associated Claims.



Costello says that the standards will play an important role in helping manufacturers communicate the sustainability of their processes and increase consumer confidence in manufacturer claims.



"For example," Costello says, "is Company A's claim to be a net-zero waste facility the same as Company B's claim? How is waste determined within a manufacturing facility? Is it just the material that you send to the landfill or do you count material that is incinerated too? Standardizing this type of basic language and creating standards to evaluate and measure processes will help both manufacturers and consumers."



ASTM International welcomes participation in the development of its standards. For more information on becoming an ASTM member, visit http://www.astm.org/JOIN.



ASTM International is one of the largest international standards development and delivery systems in the world. ASTM International meets the World Trade Organization (WTO) principles for the development of international standards: coherence, consensus, development dimension, effectiveness, impartiality, openness, relevance and transparency. ASTM standards are accepted and used in research and development, product testing, quality systems and commercial transactions.



For more news in this sector, visit www.astm.org/sn-environmental or follow us on Twitter @ASTMEnvironment.



ASTM Committee E60 Next Meeting: Oct. 23-25, October Committee Week, Atlanta, Ga.



Technical Contact: Amy Costello, Armstrong World Industries, Lancaster, Pa., Phone: 717-396-3377; aacostello@armstrong.com



ASTM Staff Contact: Stephen Mawn, Phone: 610-832-9726; smawn@astm.org

ASTM PR Contact: Barbara Schindler, Phone: 610-832-9603; bschindl@astm.org

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