The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has been awarded the 2009 Automotive Industry Action Group's (AIAG) Chairman's Award, the organization's highest honor. NIST was honored for its more than 14 years of work with AIAG. AIAG credited the collaborations with delivering tens of millions of dollars in cost savings to the automotive industry.
NIST's contributions to AIAG have been in engineering and product development, electronic commerce and supply chain management. NIST's Manufacturing Engineering Laboratory contributed to several standards efforts, including the ISO's standard for the exchange of product model data, product data management interoperability, dimensional mark-up language standardization, quality measurement data specification development, inventory visibility and interoperability guidelines and intercontinental supply chain management.
Researcher Peter Denno of NIST's Manufacturing Engineering Laboratory also was recognized at the Oct. 8 ceremony for his contribution to AIAG with a 2009 Outstanding Achievement Award for his leadership and contributions on the Materials Off-Shore Sourcing (MOSS) data standardization and process management supply chain management project. Denno led the development of information exchange standards for the MOSS project to improve the efficiency of operating long-distance supply chains of ocean-going automotive parts into U.S. assembly plants. Supply chain logistics account for about 10 percent of the cost of the average car—the same amount as labor. Denno also received the Outstanding Achievement Award in 2008.
AIAG is a not-for-profit organization of automotive sector original equipment manufacturers, suppliers, service providers, and government and academia representatives. These groups have worked collaboratively to drive cost and complexity from the supply chain via global standards development and harmonized business practices.