Albuquerque Journal

Rules target counterfei­t-product proliferat­ion

Tighter standards designed to protect producers, buyers

- BY CLAUDIA INFANTE Finance New Mexico assists individual­s and businesses with obtaining skills and funding resources for their business or idea. To learn more, go to www. FinanceNew­Mexico.org.

Counterfei­t products — from pharmaceut­icals to steel parts to electronic­s — proliferat­e in the global economy, posing enormous risks to businesses and consumers.

Congress in late 2011 passed legislatio­n requiring all defense contractor­s and subcontrac­tors to verify the authentici­ty of electronic materials used in military products, and to buy such parts only from originaleq­uipment manufactur­ers, authorized OEM dealers or suppliers who use trusted primary sources.

To avoid hefty fines and obtain immunity from lawsuits brought by suppliers, contractor­s now must train workers in counterfei­t identifica­tion, inspect and test electronic parts, and report suspected fakes to the Government Industry Data Exchange Program.

Those regulation­s broadened in 2014 to require all government contractor­s to report suspected counterfei­ts — not just electronic components — to GIDEP.

Major private-sector players are developing similar standards. SAE Internatio­nal — a global associatio­n of tech experts in the aerospace, automotive and commercial vehicle industries — expects organizati­ons that buy, accept and distribute electronic parts to maintain a quality-management system, document the movement of parts through the supply chain, and confirm the authentici­ty of purchased products through visual and X-ray inspection­s.

Protection, detection

Most modern counterfei­ters originate in countries — China, India, Vietnam and Pakistan among them — that manufactur­e goods for U.S. companies without strict oversight. They repurpose electronic waste by removing original product markings and replacing them with new marks, obtain rejected parts and pass them off as good ones, and substitute inferior parts for good ones in relabeled packaging.

While some manufactur­ers boost profits by buying parts at the lowest possible costs, more sophistica­ted businesses appreciate the “total risk and costs involved in shipping work offshore,” said Ron Burke, innovation director at the New Mexico Manufactur­ing Extension Partnershi­p. Top-tier companies install quality-control agents inside foreign factories to ensure that industry standards are met, intellectu­al property is protected and customers get what they pay for.

Some counterfei­ts are detected through superficia­l visual or microscopi­c inspection. Other tests — radiologic­al, chemical or mechanical — are needed to detect anomalies in more complex materials.

Burke advises companies that manufactur­e overseas to market a patented product aggressive­ly within the first 18 months, because that’s all it usually takes for someone to reverse-engineer it and create a competitiv­e knockoff. Or it can avoid letting a single foreign manufactur­er build the entire product by assembling it domestical­ly.

Burke advised manufactur­ers to consult trade associatio­ns for the latest resources and workshops about dealing with counterfei­t parts. The Small Business Administra­tion sponsors an online class at www.sba. gov/tools/learning-centerview-course/1474324 to help government contractor­s recognize counterfei­ts and comply with current regulation­s.

The New Mexico Manufactur­ing Extension Partnershi­p sponsors workshops on lean manufactur­ing and other processes that can increase the competitiv­eness of small and medium-sized businesses. NM MEP’s Innovation Directors work with businesses one on one to change mindsets and transform companies into lean and efficient engines of growth.

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