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International Accreditation Day
Accreditation: Delivering Trust in the Global Market
June 9th 2008 has been designated as the first International
Accreditation Day by the International Accreditation Forum (IAF) and
International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation (ILAC).
Accreditation – as independent and authoritative attestation
of the competence, impartiality and integrity of conformity assessment
bodies (CABs) and in turn the value and credibility of the corresponding
attestations of conformity – underpins trust in the global market.
The value of accreditation has been widely recognised and adopted by
economies and societies worldwide. Trust, the theme for this year’s
International Accreditation Day, has been chosen to highlight the way in
which accreditation rules and procedures are harmonized at a worldwide
level to underpin free global trade of products and services conforming
to customer’s requirements and to legal requirements regarding health
and safety and protection of public interests in general.
Accreditation touches, in some way, every level of our lives. When
something is supplied, whether it is drinking water or complex IT
systems, trust is placed in the supplier. The competence of the supplier
can be evaluated through the use of third-party assessment. But it
is through accreditation of third-party evaluators that society can have
confidence that when something is measured, calibrated, inspected,
tested or certified the job has been done competently. The ability to
distinguish between a proven, competent evaluator ensures that the
selection of a laboratory or certification body is an informed and
trusted choice and not a gamble.
In competitive and open markets, both government and business rely on
trust to ensure a fair exchange of safe goods and services. The
essential aspect of accreditation is that it underpins this confidence
because it is a valid means of verifying claims about quality,
performance and reliability. With the globalization not only of
trade, but of many other issues such as climate change and environmental
protection, security and health, trust must be achieved on a global
scale. The use of internationally-recognised standards as the
reference criteria for accreditation and the development of the ILAC and
IAF Multilateral Agreements are therefore key to building trust across
borders and promoting best practices in conformity assessment
worldwide.
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