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4 solid proofs of quality at Proton Technology

ISO EN 17025. This is the general accreditation for labs. The standard sets out required skills for testing and calibration labs to prove that their operations are carried out competently and produce reliable results. Each country has its own regulatory body that approves and follows up the accreditation. In Sweden that body is Swedac, the Swedish Board for Accreditation and Conformity Assessment, which is the national accreditation body and is also responsible for international collaboration on the standard.

ILAC. This is the international organisation for accreditation bodies, which makes it possible for Proton Technology to market itself and benchmark itself against other actors in other countries. Membership in ILAC makes it possible for us to operate outside Europe as well, in the US and other countries.

ISO 9001/ISO 14001. This is a quality management standard for business processes in a company or organisation and a standard for environmental management. The quality management system describes how to work in order to continuously improve your business to meet your customers’ needs.

SUSTAINABILITY. Proton Technology wants to profile itself as a sustainable testing centre in corrosion testing. In addition to helping our customers with testing and quality assurance, which is sustainable by definition, Proton Technology has clear goals and activities. For a leading test centre like Proton Technology, sustainability is largely associated with a sustainable organisation.

Ackred. nr. 1975 Provning ISO/IEC 17025 system, knowledge and documentation, it also contributes to ensuring and developing my own skills. So our customers can rest assured that the test results are objective and that we do our work correctly and with the right expertise.”

Everything from better to best

Because Proton Technology has a clear internationalisation strategy, the accreditations are also a way of validating the methods and competitive edge of the business in other countries. Of course, the customers’ requirements are also a key driver of Proton Technology’s strategy.

“The fact is, our very first accreditation was the result of a requirement from IKEA,” Stefan says. “They were very clear that if we wanted to do testing for them, we had to be accredited. It was a big step back then, but it was a very positive one for our business.”

In addition to international standards, customers in a variety of industries have their own standards and requirements that they have formulated and that Proton Technology tests for, which means that our lab staff have more than 250 different testing methods to follow.

“Our work is a customer-driven process – all testing has to be done at the right level from the customer’s perspective. We are a premium lab offering services from better to best.”

Accreditation and certification – what is the difference?

Accreditation means that a company or organisation receives unbiased, internationally accepted approval that they have the skill, systems and routines to carry out certain specific tasks in testing, inspection or certification.

Certification under accreditation means that an organisation, product or person has been found by an accredited certification body to meet certain requirements set out in standards or other governing documents. With certifications, regular checks are made that certified personnel keep their skills up to date or that a certified product continues to live up to the requirements.

Source: Swedac

Regularly testing the corrosion and adhesion quality of the surface coatings of our products is a necessity for ensuring high quality, no matter where in the world the product will be used. There is also a powerful argument for sustainability because high quality means a longer product life span.

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