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1. Identity statement
Reference TypeConference Paper (Conference Proceedings)
Sitemtc-m16b.sid.inpe.br
Holder Codeisadg {BR SPINPE} ibi 8JMKD3MGPCW/3DT298S
Repositorydpi.inpe.br/ce@80/2007/01.11.17.51   (restricted access)
Last Update2007:04.09.02.50.32 (UTC) administrator
Metadata Repositorydpi.inpe.br/ce@80/2007/01.11.17.51.51
Metadata Last Update2018:06.05.03.33.44 (UTC) administrator
Citation KeyEricDMess:2007:DaMoSu
TitleData Modeling to Support Environmental Information Exchange Throughout the Supply Chain
FormatPrint; CD-ROM; On-line.
Year2007
Access Date2024, Apr. 27
Secondary TypeCI
Number of Files4
Size2786 KiB
2. Context
Author1 Eric D, Simmon
2 Messina, John
Affiliation1 National Institute of Standards and Technology
2 National Institute of Standards and Technology
Author e-Mail Address1 eric.simmon@nist.gov
2 john.messina@nist.gov
EditorLoureiro, Geilson
Curran, Ricky
e-Mail Addresseric.simmon@nist.gov
Conference NameISPE International Conference on Concurrent Engineering, 14 (CE 2007).
Conference LocationSão José dos Campos
Date2007, July 16-20
PublisherInstituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE)
Publisher CitySão José dos Campos
Pages372-378
Book TitleProceedings
OrganizationInstituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE)
History (UTC)2007-03-05 21:54:47 :: eric.simmon@nist.gov -> ce2007 ::
2007-03-30 13:38:31 :: ce2007 -> eric.simmon@nist.gov ::
2007-04-09 02:56:33 :: eric.simmon@nist.gov -> ce2007 ::
2007-04-12 21:44:30 :: ce2007 -> administrator ::
2007-05-18 15:21:56 :: administrator -> ce2007 ::
2007-05-21 19:34:49 :: ce2007 -> administrator ::
2007-12-04 15:45:38 :: administrator -> eric.simmon@nist.gov ::
2007-12-04 19:49:55 :: eric.simmon@nist.gov -> administrator ::
2018-06-05 03:33:44 :: administrator -> marciana :: 2007
3. Content and structure
Is the master or a copy?is the master
Content Stagecompleted
Transferable1
Keywordsdata modeling model supply chain RoHS environment environmental legislation
AbstractWith an ever-increasing awareness of the environmental impact of manufacturing, more and more political organizations (countries, states, and unions) are enacting legislation designed to protect the environment. One category of this restrictive legislation is called Extended Producer Responsibilities (EPR). EPR directives place greater responsibility on manufacturers for the environmental impact of their products. These laws shift the focus from the products origin to the products final destination and from the process of manufacturing to the product itself. The highest impact of these directives is the Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) directive, finalized by the European Union in 2003. The RoHS directive restricts imports of new electrical and electronic equipment containing lead and five other hazardous substances. For manufacturers to successfully comply with RoHS and similar legislation, they need the ability to exchange material content information. This information would then propagate through the supply chain from the raw material suppliers all the way to the final producer. While a solution could be generated for any single piece of legislation, the problem is that companies will need to successfully deal with potentially dozens of laws and directives. To deal with this problem, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) (a US Government Research Laboratory) developed a data model to address the underlying material declaration problem using a software development methodology. This data model was used in the development of IPCs 1752 Material Declaration standard. IPCs 1752 standard helps the electronics industry comply with RoHS by providing a data exchange mechanism by which businesses can declare the presence or absence of the restricted materials. While IPC 1752 was created to deal with EUs RoHS, the data model was designed with the intent that it would be able to support future RoHS-like legislation (China RoHS, California RoHS, etc). Even if different solutions were developed for each piece of Legislation, they can interoperate provided they are based on the same data model. This paper looks at the data model designed for the IPC1752 standard, the methodology that was used to create it, and how it can be adapted to similar RoHS-like laws and directives.
AreaETES
TypeInformation Modelling for Innovation and Sustainability
doc Directory Contentaccess
source Directory Content
CE 2007 RoHS Paper.doc 05/03/2007 16:46 253.5 KiB 
paper.pdf 05/03/2007 16:50 87.5 KiB 
agreement Directory Contentthere are no files
4. Conditions of access and use
Languageen
Target Filepaper/paper.pdf
User Groupadministrator
eric.simmon@nist.gov
administrator
Visibilityshown
Read Permissiondeny from all and allow from 150.163
5. Allied materials
Host Collectionlcp.inpe.br/ignes/2004/02.12.18.39
cptec.inpe.br/walmeida/2003/04.25.17.12
6. Notes
Mark1
Empty Fieldsarchivingpolicy archivist callnumber contenttype copyholder copyright creatorhistory descriptionlevel dissemination documentstage doi edition group identifier isbn issn label lineage mirrorrepository nextedition nexthigherunit notes numberofvolumes orcid parameterlist parentrepositories previousedition previouslowerunit progress project readergroup resumeid rightsholder schedulinginformation secondarydate secondarykey secondarymark serieseditor shorttitle sponsor tertiarymark tertiarytype url versiontype volume
7. Description control
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