Carbon monoxide alarm mounted on a wall, a kitchen is visible in the background

U.S. State CO Risk Assessment Report

Recognizing the serious threat carbon monoxide presents, UL Standards & Engagement has developed the CO Risk Assessment to evaluate each U.S. state’s code and regulatory efforts, health outcomes, and public awareness. Explore the results.

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Your State May Not Require Life-Saving Carbon Monoxide Protection. Why Not?

Regulations and codes regarding CO alarm installation requirements are currently inconsistent across the U.S., leading to tragedy for hundreds each year. Read from ULSE President and CEO Jeff Marootian on how we're working to advance CO safety.

A woman connects her e-bike battery before going on a nice ride

The Toll of E-Mobility Fires and the Cost of Inaction

E-mobility devices have transformed urban transportation, but their swift rise in popularity has also led to an increase in deadly battery fires. These fires are not just statistics — they represent lives lost, families displaced, and communities scarred. Read how we're working with local, state, and federal leaders to address this issue.

Jeff Marootian

The View on Day One

A message on standards, safety, and the future, from ULSE President and CEO Jeff Marootian.

Safety Science in Action

To create a safer, more sustainable world, data and scientific discoveries must be amplified and translated into action.

 

That's what we do at UL Standards & Engagement. Through data analysis, expert testimony, and deliberation, we work to bring members of standards technical panels into alignment on a common set of safety requirements. 

 

Distinguished by our independent research and scientific acumen, we’ve been driving cutting-edge science into practical safety guidance since we developed our first standard for tin-clad fire doors in 1903.

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We develop and publish consensus standards that help guide the safety, performance, and sustainability of new and evolving products, technologies, and services that range from household appliances, smoke alarms, and batteries to building materials, cybersecurity, and autonomous vehicles.

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Delivering Standards for Safety, Performance, and Sustainability

Safety standards are documents that outline the process through which a product or service is tested and evaluated to confirm its compliance with requirements that help to instill safety, security, and sustainability. Since publishing its first standard in 1903, UL Standards & Engagement has developed more than 1,700 standards. In extending our global public safety mission, we partner with national and regional standards bodies in countries around the world to build a safer, more sustainable world.

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Accredited Standards Developers in Canada and the U.S.

We are proud to be an accredited standards developer in Canada and the U.S. and authorized to develop national standards for Mexico. This means that we are able to develop standards to advance safety, performance, and sustainability to meet stakeholder needs and bridge standards development gaps across much of North America. 

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Our Stakeholders

Stakeholders are essential to the development and maintenance of UL standards through their voluntary service on our technical committees and technical panels to share expertise and achieve consensus. We convene manufacturers, retailers, consumers, trade associations, regulators, and other authorities from around the world to capture varied and vested interests across different groups. This approach enables input, reviews, and open discussion from wide-ranging perspectives — all facilitated by our non-voting standards development organization.

As an accredited, globally influential standards development organization, we apply research and safety science to keep pace with new discoveries and technology.