ISO/TC 223 Societal Security Behind the scenes of ISO 22301 Stefan Tangen Secretary of ISO/TC 223 Societal security
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security
Behind the scenes of ISO 22301
Stefan TangenSecretary of ISO/TC 223 Societal security
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security
Example on cargo security
SWEDEN 2001• Safe Swedish rules• Stakeholders are happy• No motive to participate in
EU harmonization projects• Waste of time and money!
GERMANY 2001• Transit country • East european causes
problem on autobahn• Dont use lashings• …lots of lashing producers!
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security
Europe, 2004
• CEN publish EN 12195-1 which is adopted as national rule in Germany
• Swedish stakeholdersextremely upset
• Swedish stakeholderslose huge amounts of time and money(indefinite future)
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security
”Off the record-stories”
J.R Ewings(?):
• NFPA
• SII
• BSI
• ASIS
• TC secretary
• DS
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security
First deliverable: ISO/PAS 22399:2007
Guideline for incident preparedness and operational continuity management
A ‘best of five’ document based on:
1. NFPA 1600:2004, Standard on disaster/emergency management and business continuity programs, National Fire Protection Association.
2. BS 25999-1:2006, Business continuity management - Code of practice, BSI British Standards.
3. HB 221:2004, Business continuity management, Standards Australia/Standards New Zealand, ISBN 0-7337-6250-6
4. INS 24001:2007, Security and continuity management systems – Requirements and guidance for use, Standards Institution of Israel.
5. Business Continuity Guideline, Central Disaster Management Council, Cabinet Office, Government of Japan, 2005
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security -secretariat
• Chair: Åsa Kyrk Gere (replacedKrister Kumlin)
• Secretary: Stefan Tangen• P-members: 46• O-members: 20• Working Groups: 6• DC contact group • Twinning• Work Items: 11• Publications: 5
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security
ISO/TC 223 Scope
• ISO/TC 223 develops international standards that aim to increase societal security, i.e. protection of society from and response to incidents, emergencies, and disasters caused by intentional and unintentional human acts, natural hazards, and technical failures.
• An all-hazards perspective is used covering adaptive, proactive and reactive strategies in all phases before, during and after a disruptive incident.
• The area of societal security is multi-disciplinary and involves actors from both the public and private sectors, including not-for-profit organisations.
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security
ISO/TC 223 Organization
ISO/TC 223SocietalSecurity
WG 1Framework on
Societal Security
Management
WG 2 Terminology
WG 3Command, Control,
Coordination and
Cooperation
WG 5Video
surveillance
WG 4Preparedness and
Continuity
WG 6Mass evacuation
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security
Ongoing work – the ISO 22300 series
WG 1
ISO/CD 22397 Public/Private partnershipsISO/DIS 22398 Guidelines for exercises and testing
WG 2
User friendly standards
WG 3
ISO/DIS 22322 Emergency management – Public warning systemsISO/CD 22324 Emergency management – Colour coded alertISO/WD 22325 Emergency management – Capability assessmentISO/WD 22351/52 Emergency management – Shared situation awareness
WG 4
ISO/FDIS 22313 Business continuity management systems – Guidance ISO/NP 22316 Organisational resilience – Principles and guidance
WG 5
ISO/DIS 22311 Video surveillance
WG 6
ISO/WD 22315 Mass evacuation
ISO/TC 223 Societal Security
Published standards!
• ISO 22320 Societal security – Emergency management – Incident response
• Published 2011-11-02• ISO 22300 Societal security – Terminology
• Published 2012-05-15• ISO 22301 Societal security – Business continuity
management systems - Requirements
• Published 2012-05-15