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IAEI News>Issue Listing>May/June 2002 >Role of Testing and Certification Bodies
The electrical safety system in North America depends on an interplay of different organizations and publications. All of them have to be carefully coordinated for the system to work. Publications include laws, regulations, codes, standards, and recommended practices. Organizations that are essential to electrical safety include standards-developing organizations, electrical installation companies, electric utilities, code enforcement groups (electrical inspectors), and testing and certification bodies. This article discusses the role of testing and certification bodies, particularly Intertek Testing Services’ ETL SEMKO division, and how they relate to other essential players in the electrical safety system. Intertek Testing Services is a global independent testing organization. The author is an employee of Intertek Testing Services N A, Inc., ETL SEMKO, frequently called simply ETL SEMKO. In this article, ETL SEMKO will be used for the company name. Codes and Standards Private-sector standards-developing organizations (SDOs) create codes and standards for electrical products and installations, in response to regulations and other indications of public needs for standards. The most widely used publication relating to electrical safety is the National Electrical Code (NEC), sponsored by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA). The NEC is an installation guide, which has been adopted into law in many jurisdictions. The committee that writes the NEC has members representing a broad range of interests, including certification bodies. Several certification bodies send representatives to the National Electrical Code Committee, including ETL SEMKO, which presently has 10 members on the committee. The NEC covers only electrical installations. It is essential that materials used for these installations, such as conduit and cable, and products connected to the wiring system, such as electric machines, meet certain minimum criteria for safety; thus there are also product standards. Products that connect to a building’s wiring system need to be compatible with the electric system, so product standards have to be compatible with requirements of the Code. To ensure that compatibility, SDOs that sponsor product standards, such as IEEE, ISA and particularly UL, maintain membership on the National Electrical Code Committees. The product standards that are sponsored by these SDOs are also written by technical committees representing varied interests. A large majority of electrical product safety standards are UL standards. The technical committees responsible for UL standards are called Standards Technical Panels (STPs). ETL SEMKO has about 25 employees on one or more UL STPs. Enforcement Another significant point in 90.7 is that the laboratory, i.e., the certification body, should be properly qualified. There are many organizations that qualify or accredit testing laboratories and certification bodies. The main qualifying body, and the one with enforcement powers in the workplace, is the U. S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). OSHA has qualified 19 nationally recognized testing laboratories (NRTL) as of this writing. Some NRTLs are OSHA-accepted for hundreds of product standards; others, for just a few. The NRTLs’ scopes of acceptance may be found on OSHA’s website, www.osha-slc.gov . ETL SEMKO Services in
Product Safety ETL Listing ETL Classification Service ETL Recognized Component ETL Field Evaluation and Labeling ETL SEMKO will always make a good-faith effort to notify the authority having jurisdiction in advance of a field evaluation, although successful contact is not guaranteed. Where the apparatus is found to effectively conform to the applicable requirements, ETL SEMKO will apply a "Field Evaluated" label, which identifies ETL, but does not bear the word, "Listed," nor does it identify a standard. Field evaluation labels are serialized, and ETL SEMKO maintains records that connect each label with the item to which it was originally applied. Limited Production Certification CB Test Certificate Field Examination Impact of World Trade ETL SEMKO and a few other certifiers in the U.S. have joined not only the CB Scheme, but also a companion program for apparatus used in hazardous (classified) locations, known as the IEC Ex Scheme. There is another international program known as the Full Certification Scheme (FCS). CB Scheme depends on mutual acceptance of test results, while FCS depends on a certification body in one member country accepting another’s certification (listing) in its entirety. The Full Certification Scheme is comparatively new, and worldwide participation is rather limited, as of this writing, but is expected to grow. Summary William T. Fiske is director of engineering for Intertek Testing Services, ETL SEMKO Americas, a post he has held since 1997. Mr. Fiske has been employed by ITS since 1977. He is a member of ASQ, CSA, IEEE, ISA, and NFPA. He serves on NFPA's National Electrical Code Committee as principal member of CMP-1 and alternate member of CMP-14, as well as the Committee on Electrical Equipment in Chemical Atmospheres. Mr. Fiske serves on the ISA committee SP12 (Instrumentation in Classified Locations) and 5 of its subcommittees, and on 14 UL Standards Technical Panels (STP). Fiske is a licensed professional engineer, registered in Louisiana, New York and Texas.
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