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The PAS (Publicly Available Specification) is a consultative document where the development process and written format is based on the British Standard model. Any organisation, association or group who wish to document standardised best practice on a specific subject, both for the benefit of their industry and to help promote their expertise, can commission a PAS, subject to the BSI acceptance process. The main difference is in the area of consensus; a British Standard must reach full consensus between all stakeholders on technical content, whilst a PAS invites comments from any interested party but does not necessarily incorporate them. This means that the timescale for the development of a PAS can be shorter, typically around 8 months, and is why it is sometimes referred to as the “Rapid Standard Development Process”. A PAS occupies the intellectual space between in-house and national standards; it allows you to set the standard for an entire industry. The PAS requires less consensus-building than an ISO, European or British Standard and offers the sponsor more control over how the content is developed. Whilst writing a private document would offer the sponsor complete control over content, BSI’s independence in facilitating the consensus-building process across the industry confers credibility and ensures a high level of technical robustness. Crucially, the development of a PAS cannot conflict with, or contradict, existing or draft work within the formal standards arena and must complement, not conflict with, any legislation in the subject area. It is also written in accordance with BS drafting rules, which means that the content must be technically robust and cannot be technically constrained (i.e. it cannot include patented or proprietary methods or products). It is written unambiguously and with objectively verifiable requirements or recommendations. We can help you develop a document that ensures consistency and consensus throughout your organisation or industry. All PAS project proposals are examined by a BSI acceptance panel of experts in the subject field, whose acceptance is a condition of BSI being able to work on a project. This is to provide extra assurance that the project is viable and that it does not conflict with current formal projects. PAS benefits: Examples: • Faster development process than a full consensus British Standard • Capture and share knowledge across the industry • An effective tool to build awareness and develop a market • A credible document as a result of BSI’s independence in facilitating the process of consensus building with the stakeholders • A PAS can be produced for product specifications, codes of practice, guidelines, vocabularies • A document that provides a benchmark for assessment • A PAS has the potential to be developed for promotion into the formal standards process at the National, European or International level BSI committees, whilst the traditional route for developing a standard, are relatively costly and time consuming. The PAS is a route to the production of standards and introduction to the market very quickly without the cost and time expenditure of involving a committee.
List of specificationsThis list is not complete PAS
Wrap PASThe first Wrap PAS was published 2002. Wrap stands for Waste and Recycling Action Program and is a company set up by Environment Agency. Their main objective is to reduce waste. All landfill in the UK will be full within a few years and there is a huge need to invent other methods to take care of the waste. One of their campaigns at the moment is Love Food Hate Waste. Buy the amount of food you plan to eat and don't fill the fridge with stuff you have to get rid of in a week. One big thing that Wrap is doing is helping Local Authorities to reduce their waste.
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