'ASTM International' ('ASTM') is an international
standards developing organization that develops and publishes voluntary technical
standards for a wide range of materials, products, systems, and services.
ASTM predates other standards organizations such as
BSI (1901),
DIN (1917) and
AFNOR (1926), but differs from these in that it is not a
national standards body, that role being taken in the USA by
ANSI. However, ASTM has a dominant role among standards developers in the USA, and claims to be the world's largest developer of standards. Using a
consensus process, ASTM supports thousands of volunteer technical committees, which draw their members from around the world and collectively develop and maintain more than 12,000 standards. The Annual Book of ASTM Standards consists of 77 volumes.
History
ASTM International was formed in
1898 in the
United States as the 'American Society for Testing and Materials' by a group of
scientists and
engineers, led by
Charles Benjamin Dudley, to address the frequent
rail breaks plaguing the fast-growing
railroad industry. The group developed a standard for the steel used to fabricate rails.
Standards
The standards produced by ASTM International fall into four categories:
★ the Standard
Specification, that defines the requirements to be satisfied by subject of the standard.
★ the Standard
Test Method, that defines the way a test is performed. The result of the test may be used to assess compliance with a Specification.
★ the Standard Practice, that defines a sequence of operations that, unlike a test, does not produce a result.
★ the Terminology Standard, that provides agreed definitions of terms used in the other standards.
The quality of the standard test methods is such that they are frequently used world-wide, even in places where ASTM specifications are not used.
Membership and organization
Membership in the organization is open to anyone with an interest in its activities
[1]. Standards are developed within committees, and new committees are formed as needed, upon request of interested members. Membership in most committees is
voluntary and is initiated by the member's own request, not by appointment nor by invitation. Members are categorized as producers, users and "general interest". The latter include academics and consultants. Users include industry users, who may be producers in the context of other technical committees, and end-users such as consumers. In order to meet the requirements of
antitrust laws, producers must constitute less than 50% of every committee or subcommittee, and votes are limited to one per producer company. Because of these restrictions, there is often a substantial waiting-list of producers seeking organizational memberships on the more popular committees.
As of 2007, more than 30,000 members, including over 1100 organizational members
[2], from more than 100 countries.
★ ASTM International has 120 members in
China as of 2005
[3]
ASTM International is recognized by the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.
Mandatory use of voluntary standards
ASTM International has no role in requiring or enforcing compliance with its standards. The standards, however, may become mandatory when referenced by an external contract, corporation, or government.
★ In the
United States, ASTM standards have been adopted, by incorporation or by reference, in many federal, state, and municipal government regulations. The
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act, passed in
1995, requires the federal government to use privately developed consensus standards whenever possible. The Act reflects what had long been recommended as best practice within the federal government.
★ Other governments (local, worldwide, etc) also have referenced ASTM standards
[4]
★ Corporations doing international business may choose to reference an ASTM standard.
References
1. Open membership in ASTM
2. ASTM Organizational Membership Directory
3. ASTM Standardization News, August 2005 Feature by Zhang Li Hon, ''Standards: The New Focus in China’s Exchange with the World"
4. [1]Transport Canada use of ASTM
See also
★
Materials property
★
Standards organizations
★
Standards
★
International standards
External links
★
ASTM International