Standards are an important tool which, if well used, can contribute to a healthy and clean environment. ECOS works to raise awareness about the need for new or revised standards for crucial environmental sectors, policies or innovations, and pushing for robustness and environmental ambition in policies and laws that use standards for implementation. For over two decades, ECOS has been working to ensure an effective participation of environmental NGOs in standardisation, and a more inclusive standardisation system.
Our job is, however, still far from done: we strongly believe that the way standards are developed can be significantly improved. An area that requires particular attention is the degree to which standardisation organisations and their processes ensure effective and balanced participation of different types of stakeholders, including those representing the environmental voice. Environmental stakeholders can add significant value to the process and the quality of standards by providing environmental and scientific perspectives, as well as technical expertise which may otherwise not be available to standards makers. Our participation ensures that the standards developed can better contribute to a broad range of environmental challenges. For the green transition to become a reality, standards need to be developed with a closer involvement by governments and societal stakeholders and should not solely be at the discretion of market players.
Our lives are touched by standards in many unseen ways. From the ground we walk on and the appliances in our homes to the food on our plates – standards are everywhere! ECOS seeks to make them better for the environment. Read on to get to know some of the standards we’ve been working on this year.
Our toolkit aims to explore how to best engage civil society in standards-making, gathering best practices from environmental NGOs involved in standardisation at national level, and puts forward a number of recommendations for National Standardisation Bodies (NSBs), national governments and environmental NGOs themselves.
Download the pdfECOS is co-funded by the European Commission and EFTA
Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or EISMEA. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.