The Philippine Star

SASSMAPI lauds DTI-BPS for seizure, destructio­n of substandar­d angle bars

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Local manufactur­ers welcomed the seizure and subsequent destructio­n of P740,000 worth of substandar­d steel angle bars conducted by the Department of Trade and Industry – Bureau of Product Standards (DTIBPS), noting that this is a big step toward protecting the public against the sale and use of hazardous sub-quality constructi­on products.

The Steel Angles, Shapes, and Sections Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of the Philippine­s Inc. (SASSMAPI) said its members fully support the DTI-BPS in going after sources of substandar­d steel products, especially now that the country is bracing for powerful quakes that may be caused by the imminent movement of several active Philippine fault lines.

The DTI-BPS reported that it prevented the sale and distributi­on of 600 pieces of substandar­d equal-leg steel angle bars worth P740,000 that were seized in Valenzuela City after they were found to be “non-conforming” with the elongation requiremen­t of Philippine National Standard (PNS) 657:2008 (hot-rolled steel sections-equal-leg angles-specificat­ions) as confirmed by third-party testing.

The substandar­d equal-leg steel angle bars were destroyed in the presence of DTI-BPS representa­tives last Jan. 20 at the manufactur­er’s warehouse in Valenzuela City using an oxy-acetylene torch prior to transfer to the manufactur­er’s smelting facility. The agency did not disclose the identity of the manufactur­er.

Tan noted that the PNS 657:2008 quality standard on elongation is critical as it sets the parameters for the permanent extension in the gauge length of a steel bar measured after rupture.

SASSMAPI president Ramon Tan said the group is ready to lend its resources to the DTI–BPS in enforcing the quality standards for equal-leg steel angle bars. It is among the 111 products covered under the BPS’s Mandatory Product Certificat­ion Schemes.

The DTI-BPS is implementi­ng two mandatory product certificat­ion schemes consisting of the Philippine Standard (PS) Quality and Safety Certificat­ion Mark Licensing Scheme and the Import Commodity Clearance (ICC).

“Products covered by the mandatory certificat­ion, whether locally manufactur­ed or imported, are not allowed to be distribute­d in the Philippine market without the necessary PS or ICC marks,” the DTI said.

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