AFNOR Annual General Meeting: positive results for 2024 before a tricky 2025

At their annual general meeting on June 30, 2025 in Saint-Denis, the members of AFNOR validated the good results achieved in 2024 and the efforts to be undertaken for 2025 and beyond.

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On June 30, 2025, the Association Française de Normalisation (AFNOR) held its annual general meeting in Saint-Denis, France, to present the results of the past year and to outline its future activities. The Board of Directors then met under the chairmanship of Guy Maugis, who has been confirmed in this position, and who will continue until June 2026, the year of AFNOR’s centenary, his mandate begun three years earlier.

The members of the French Standards Association, who numbered over 1,600 at December 31, 2024, approved the year’s moral and financial reports. The financial results for the standardization and standards publishing activities show a net profit of €1.8 million, based on sales of €76.6 million, excluding public subsidies (€7.9 million). These figures can be consulted in the 2024 Activity and Social Responsibility Report , available here .

These results, bolstered by those of the subsidiaries, the international network and the new AFNOR BAO business , provide the Group with a welcome respite from the difficulties that lie ahead. Indeed, the next financial year, starting in 2025,

will have to do almost entirely without the subsidy paid by the State to support the general interest mission entrusted to AFNOR Normalisation. The only thing that has been maintained is a 50% contribution to the financing of subscriptions to European and international standardization organizations, to which AFNOR must necessarily belong in order to ensure its mission of representation and enable French stakeholders to participate in the development of EN, ISO or IEC standards.

© copyright Arthur Enard

Preserving France’s capacity for influence

The new geopolitical situation will also require tenacity. Faced with those who are disappointed by multilateralism and those who do not want to trade in circles, we must reiterate that standardization will always be a positive-sum game, which is played by many, seeks consensus and prefers to avoid bilateral power struggles “, write Guy Maugis, Chairman of AFNOR, and Olivier Peyrat, Chief Executive Officer, in the preface to their annual report.

Efforts must also be maintained to continue defending France’s ability to influence the international standardization scene. The 2025 edition of the International Standardization Barometer, which measures the volume of voluntary standardization work led by each country at ISO, IEC, CEN and Cenelec, highlights the rise of China, which has taken the lead in strategic areas such as ports and logistics. At ISO, for the first time, the country ranks3rd if we stop counting on December 31, 2024, which places France in5th place.

Board memberships

In the consumer association category :

  • Confédération nationale des associations familiales catholiques (CNAFC), represented by Alain d’Anselme (renewal)
  • Fédération nationale Familles de France (FFF), represented by Clémentine Becker

In the NGO category :

  • HOP (Halte à l’obsolescence programmée), represented by Laetitia Vasseur

In the category of direct or indirect company representatives :

  • Air Liquide, represented by Hervé Barthelemy
  • Cetim, represented by Philippe Lubineau
  • EDF, represented by Pascal Terrien, as representative of the stakeholders in the electrotechnology sector
  • Fédération française du bâtiment (FFB), represented by Eric Durand (renewal)
  • LCIE Bureau Veritas, represented by Marie-Elisabeth d’Ornano (renewal)
  • Medef, represented by Garance Pineau
  • Schneider Electric, represented by Carine Glas as President of the French Electrotechnical Committee (renewal)

 

Find the full composition of AFNOR’s Board of Directors here.



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