SC 8D - Meteorological Services and Technologies for Electric Power Systems
Standardization on meteorological data products and services for power systems, including: - Identification and grading of High-Impact Weather (HIW) for power systems; - Meteorological station site layout, planning and data governance for electric power meteorological observation; - Specifications and quality evaluation of electric power meteorological forecast products; - Early warning and addressing strategies for HIW in power systems. This committee aims to enhance the quality and applicability of meteorological services for the electric power sector from a perspective of power system, thereby improving climate resilience and operational efficiency. Its scope covers natural meteorological environment (weather and climate conditions) but explicitly excludes: - Geological phenomena or disasters (e.g., wildfires, landslides, tsunamis, earthquakes) - Artificial environments (e.g., controlled environments in artificial climate chambers). This committee will not duplicate standardization work handled by other IEC TCs, such as standardization of wind/solar/hydrological sensors, data formats and communication protocols (TC 57), classification of environmental conditions for equipment (TC 104), Lightning monitoring and warning (TC 81). This committee will cooperate with relevant TCs, including but not limited to TC 57, TC 82, TC 88, TC 104, TC 117 and TC 123. Also, standardization activities will cooperate with external organizations such as IEA (International Energy Agency), WMO (World Meteorological Organization), ISO (International Organization for Standardization) and CIGRE (International Council on Large Electric systems), IEEE (the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), etc. Within TC 8, new SC will cooperate with SCs 8A, 8B and 8C.
Meteorological Services and Technologies for Electric Power Systems
Standardization on meteorological data products and services for power systems, including: - Identification and grading of High-Impact Weather (HIW) for power systems; - Meteorological station site layout, planning and data governance for electric power meteorological observation; - Specifications and quality evaluation of electric power meteorological forecast products; - Early warning and addressing strategies for HIW in power systems. This committee aims to enhance the quality and applicability of meteorological services for the electric power sector from a perspective of power system, thereby improving climate resilience and operational efficiency. Its scope covers natural meteorological environment (weather and climate conditions) but explicitly excludes: - Geological phenomena or disasters (e.g., wildfires, landslides, tsunamis, earthquakes) - Artificial environments (e.g., controlled environments in artificial climate chambers). This committee will not duplicate standardization work handled by other IEC TCs, such as standardization of wind/solar/hydrological sensors, data formats and communication protocols (TC 57), classification of environmental conditions for equipment (TC 104), Lightning monitoring and warning (TC 81). This committee will cooperate with relevant TCs, including but not limited to TC 57, TC 82, TC 88, TC 104, TC 117 and TC 123. Also, standardization activities will cooperate with external organizations such as IEA (International Energy Agency), WMO (World Meteorological Organization), ISO (International Organization for Standardization) and CIGRE (International Council on Large Electric systems), IEEE (the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), etc. Within TC 8, new SC will cooperate with SCs 8A, 8B and 8C.
General Information
Frequently Asked Questions
SC 8D is a Technical Committee within CLC. It is named "Meteorological Services and Technologies for Electric Power Systems" and is responsible for: Standardization on meteorological data products and services for power systems, including: - Identification and grading of High-Impact Weather (HIW) for power systems; - Meteorological station site layout, planning and data governance for electric power meteorological observation; - Specifications and quality evaluation of electric power meteorological forecast products; - Early warning and addressing strategies for HIW in power systems. This committee aims to enhance the quality and applicability of meteorological services for the electric power sector from a perspective of power system, thereby improving climate resilience and operational efficiency. Its scope covers natural meteorological environment (weather and climate conditions) but explicitly excludes: - Geological phenomena or disasters (e.g., wildfires, landslides, tsunamis, earthquakes) - Artificial environments (e.g., controlled environments in artificial climate chambers). This committee will not duplicate standardization work handled by other IEC TCs, such as standardization of wind/solar/hydrological sensors, data formats and communication protocols (TC 57), classification of environmental conditions for equipment (TC 104), Lightning monitoring and warning (TC 81). This committee will cooperate with relevant TCs, including but not limited to TC 57, TC 82, TC 88, TC 104, TC 117 and TC 123. Also, standardization activities will cooperate with external organizations such as IEA (International Energy Agency), WMO (World Meteorological Organization), ISO (International Organization for Standardization) and CIGRE (International Council on Large Electric systems), IEEE (the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), etc. Within TC 8, new SC will cooperate with SCs 8A, 8B and 8C. This committee has published 0 standards.
SC 8D develops CLC standards in the area of Information technology. The scope of work includes: Standardization on meteorological data products and services for power systems, including: - Identification and grading of High-Impact Weather (HIW) for power systems; - Meteorological station site layout, planning and data governance for electric power meteorological observation; - Specifications and quality evaluation of electric power meteorological forecast products; - Early warning and addressing strategies for HIW in power systems. This committee aims to enhance the quality and applicability of meteorological services for the electric power sector from a perspective of power system, thereby improving climate resilience and operational efficiency. Its scope covers natural meteorological environment (weather and climate conditions) but explicitly excludes: - Geological phenomena or disasters (e.g., wildfires, landslides, tsunamis, earthquakes) - Artificial environments (e.g., controlled environments in artificial climate chambers). This committee will not duplicate standardization work handled by other IEC TCs, such as standardization of wind/solar/hydrological sensors, data formats and communication protocols (TC 57), classification of environmental conditions for equipment (TC 104), Lightning monitoring and warning (TC 81). This committee will cooperate with relevant TCs, including but not limited to TC 57, TC 82, TC 88, TC 104, TC 117 and TC 123. Also, standardization activities will cooperate with external organizations such as IEA (International Energy Agency), WMO (World Meteorological Organization), ISO (International Organization for Standardization) and CIGRE (International Council on Large Electric systems), IEEE (the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), etc. Within TC 8, new SC will cooperate with SCs 8A, 8B and 8C. Currently, there are 0 published standards from this technical committee.
CLC is a standardization organization that develops and publishes standards to support industry, commerce, and regulatory requirements.
A Technical Committee (TC) in CLC is a group of experts responsible for developing international standards in a specific technical area. TCs are composed of national member body delegates and work through consensus to create standards that meet global industry needs. Each TC may have subcommittees (SCs) and working groups (WGs) for specialized topics.