World Standards Day celebrated in Shanxi

By Yuan Shenggao (China Daily)

Updated: 2020-10-23

5f920e1fa31099a2249bcfb3.png

Tourism facilities in Taolingou village in Yangquan city are developed according to standardized processes. [Photo by Han Jichuan for China Daily]

Province first outside Beijing to host international event

World Standards Day in China was held in Taiyuan, Shanxi province on Oct 14, marking the first time the event was celebrated in a province outside the capital city of Beijing.

The event, sponsored by the International Organization for Standardization and other international organizations, is held in ISO member countries and regions in cooperation with local industrial authorities to highlight the importance of standardization in industrial development.

A development research center of the China National Institute of Standardization was established in Taiyuan on the same day.

The moves show that Shanxi has made great achievements in standardization in its process to transform from an energy resource-reliant province into an economy with diversified sectors, according to local officials.

Shanxi began its pilot practice for industrial standardization in 2018, becoming the first province in China's central and western regions to go in this direction.

During the past three years, Shanxi has taken charge of or got involved in the formulation of 10 international standards, 149 national standards, 191 industrywide standards and 631 local standards, covering areas such as agriculture, tourism, manufacturing, mining and social administration, according to local authorities.

Tian Shihong, vice-minister of the State Administration for Market Regulation and chief of the Standardization Administration of China, praised Shanxi's efforts in promoting regional development with standardization.

"Over the past three years, Shanxi has accumulated rich experience that is conducive to promoting standardization throughout the country by exploring and presenting its innovative practices, especially in the area of using standardization to help economic transformation,"Tian said.

During the celebration, many local entrepreneurs shared their examples of best practices in standardization.

Ren Cuiying is a senior engineer from Taiyuan Iron and Steel Group. She told visitors who were on a tour of the company, which was a part of the celebration, that the group's stainless steel branch has set more than 70 percent of the standards for China's stainless steel sheet products.

The executive also introduced the company's famed "hand-torn steel" to the visitors. With a thickness of 0.02 millimeters, or one-third of the diameter of a human hair, the product can be easily torn apart by hand.

"The formal name of the product is broadsheet super-thin stainless steel foil. It is a high-end and standard-setting product in the industry," Ren said, adding the product can be used in the fields of aerospace, electronics, petrochemicals and automobiles.

"Most of the steel foil products made in China are more than 0.038 mm in thickness. We are among the few companies in the world capable of producing soft steel foil of 0.02 mm," Ren said.

1 2 >