Cyprus Organisation for Standardisation

Cyprus Organisation for Standardisation or CYS, is the National Standardisation Body of Cyprus, whose principal activity is the production of standards and the supply of standards-related services.

Cyprus Organisation for Standardisation
Formation2005
TypeNon-profit organisation operating under the Cyprus Government
HeadquartersNicosia, Cyprus
Servicesproduction of standards and standards related services
Official languages
SubsidiariesCyprus Certification Company
Staff
17 (2020)
Websitewww.cys.org.cy
CYS Board of Directors
PresidentOthonas Theodoulou (CCCI)
Members
  • George Papanastasiou (OEB)
  • Dr. Kyriacos Kalli (CUT)
  • Savvas Savva (MoECI)
  • Maria Tsiakka (MoF)
  • Andreas Kyprianou (ETEK)
  • Sofoklis Constantinou (Consumers Ass.)
SecretaryCYS General Manager

Introduction

Since January 2005, was autonomised from the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Tourism, and operates under private law “The 2002 Law for Standardisation, Accreditation and Technical Regulation”.

The sole shareholder of CYS is the Minister of Finance who appoints, for a 3-year term, its board of directors constituted by 7 members representing the major national stakeholder interested for quality issues: Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Commerce, Industry & Tourism, Employers Federation, Chamber of Commerce, Technical Chamber, Consumers Association and Academia.

CYS is a full member of the European Standards Organisations (ESO’s – CEN,[1] CENELEC,[2] ETSI[3]) as well as the International Standards Organisations ISO [4] and IEC.

Through its active participation in the European and international Standardisation, CYS promotes the national interest through the issuing and application of standards.[5]

History of Standardisation

Sample of Cyprus copper ingot

There exists archaeological evidence which indicates that the use of standards in Cyprus begun from the ancient times. Copper oxhide ingots (ingots of copper in the shape of a cow hide) were seen in Cyprus between the 16th and 12th Centuries BC. During this period Cypriot copper manufacturers designed a standard shape for the copper ingots to facilitate handling, transport and storage in ships holds and storerooms. In addition, most of the ingots had a standard weight of 25 kg. Furthermore, Cypriot producers introduced a marking system using Cypro Minoan script to indicate that the ingots were made from Cypriot mines that followed standard procedures of production and quality control.[6]

On a national and consistent basis standards started being used at the beginning of the 20th century during the British Colonial Administration in the field of Public Works (road and building construction) with the implementation of British Standards. This practice continued and after the establishment of the Republic of Cyprus in 1960.

The principles of Standardization have been introduced on a nationwide and systematic basis in the mid seventies after the establishment of the Cyprus Organisation for Standards and Control of Quality by corresponding legislation (N.68/75).

In 2002, through the Standardization, Accreditation and Technical Information Law (N.156(I)/2002), the activities of standardization have been allocated to the Cyprus Certification Company, which is now known as the Cyprus Organisation For Standardization (CYS).[5]

Examples of National Standards
CYS 94:Part:1985Specification for fresh halloumi
CYS 92:1989Specification for fresh milk
CYS 301:2009Operation and Management of Leisure Kart Facilities:Safety
CYS 106:2012Specification for Low density polyethylene (LDPE) pipes for agricultural applications
CYS EN ISO 9001:2015Quality management systems - Requirements[7]
CYS EN ISO 14001:2015Environmental management systems - Requirements with guidance for use[8]

Cyprus National Standards

CYS 106 title page

CYS, as a full member of CEN, CENELEC and ETSI, has the obligation to adopt all European Norms (ENs) issued. Furthermore, in case an ISO or other national standard (e.g. BS, DIN etc.) is proven necessary for the national market CYS has the authority to adopt the standard as national, in collaboration with the issuing standardization body.

In general, the designation of CYS standard shows their origin (# denotes a number):[9]

  • CYS # is used for Cyprus national standards, developed primarily for the specific needs of the Cypriot society and economy.
  • CYS EN # is used for the adopted European standards published by CEN and CENELEC.
  • CYS ISO or IEC # is used for the adopted ISO or IEC standards.[10]
  • CYS EN ISO # is used for International standards that have been adopted as a European standards and therefore adopted as national.

As of present, there are only 31 valid purely National Standards, as the majority were withdrawn due to existence of equivalent or superseding ENs.

CYS Sectors and Technical Standardization Committees

In order to promote European standards and support the industry in its effort to apply the European Standards, CYS has divided standardization into 13 sectors (Mirror Committees) according to specific topics.

Where it is required, CYS recommends the set up of National Technical Standardization Committees. At this moment there are 16 active National Technical Committees and most of them deal with standardization in the construction industry.

Mirror CommitteesTitleESO MappingTechnical CommitteesTitle
MC01Building & Civil EngineeringCENCYS/TC 1Building Lime
MC02Mechanical EngineeringCYS/TC 2Aggregates
MC03Health CareCYS/TC 4Bricks
MC04Health & SafetyCYS/TC 5Natural Stones
MC05Heating, Cooling & VentilationCYS/TC 6Concrete
MC06Transport & PackagingCYS/TC 8Plastics piping systems
MC07Information Technology & TelecommunicationsETSICYS/TC 9Food
MC08Household Goods, Sports and LeisureCENCYS/TC 12Armourstones
MC09Chemicals & EnvironmentCYS/TC 13Solar thermal systems
MC10GasCYS/TC 14Precast concrete products
MC11Food & BiotechnologyCYS/TC 15Concrete reinforcement steel
MC12ServicesCYS/TC 16Playground, Waterparks and Go-Karts safety
MC13Electrical - Electronic EngineeringCENELECCYS/TC 17Concrete asphalt
CYS/TC 18Eurocodes
CYS/TC 20Doors, windows, shutters, building hardware and curtain wallings
CYS/TC 21Cyprus Lefkara Embroidery - Lefkaritiko
CYS/TC 22Hydrocarbons

Both, Mirror and Technical Committees monitor the respective standardization activities at International and European level and consult CYS accordingly, e.g. if standards need to be withdrawn, the preparation of national annexes or the development of supplementary standards.

To facilitate the operation of the committees, CYS has been working with ISO to provide an electronic platform - Livelink, where members can exchange information and manage the respective committees at minimum effort and cost.[5]

Centre of Information and Customer service

CYS Centre of Information and Customer service, provides full access to all international, European and national Standards, and is open for the public in order to provide all relevant information.

It offers the possibility of reading, studying and purchasing standards. Furthermore, it provides free access to users in international databases of standards like Perinorm.

In CYS Centre are available for sale – in hardcopy and electronic form – all standards of International Organisations of Standardisation (ISO, IEC), European Organisations of Standardisation (CEN, CENELEC) as well as other National Organisations of Standardisation (BSI, ΕΛΟΤ, CYS, DIN) which CYS library is the exclusive supplier in Cyprus.

References

  1. CEN Members | www.cen.eu
  2. CENELEC Members | www.cenelec.eu
  3. ETSI Members | www.etsi.org Archived 2014-09-04 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ISO members | www.iso.org
  5. Official CYS website | www.cys.org.cy
  6. Cyprus Copper Ingot | Celebrating World Standards Day 2012
  7. ISO 9001:2015 - Quality management systems - Requirements | ISO 9001
  8. ISO 14001:2004 - Environmental management systems - Requirements with guidance for use | ISO 14001
  9. CYS Procedures and Regulations
  10. "How to master the best IT & SMS techniques as to attain an ISO certification 20000". www.e-startupindia.com. Retrieved 2018-05-04.
  1. CEN - European Committee for Standardization
  2. CENELEC - European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization
  3. ETSI - European Telecommunications Standards Institute
  4. ISO - International Organization for Standardization
  5. IEC - International Electrotechnical Commission
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.