Why S-Series and DITA XML Align with a Decarbonization Through Efficiency Approach
Instinctively, the answer remains the same: it’s not our business.
We develop neither energy technologies nor carbon capture solutions.
But this question quickly leads to another, more fundamental one: what is the impact of the way we work?
Because before being a physical object, a system, or a machine, every project is first an effort. An effort of writing, design, validation, coordination. And like any poorly controlled effort, it can generate waste.
The Primary Source of Impact: Unnecessary Work
In many industrial environments, documentation is still produced as a final, fixed deliverable, often recreated project after project. We rewrite what already exists, we duplicate, we adapt marginally, we correct late. The result:
- multiplication of versions,
- lengthy iterations,
- production rework,
- redundant translations,
- unnecessary printing and distribution.
This waste is rarely perceived as environmental. Yet it is structural: more human work, more machine cycles, more energy mobilized to produce… redundant information.
Streamlining Writing Reduces Overall Effort
- clear from the outset,
- structured,
- designed to last,
- conceived for reuse.
This approach, purely intellectual at first, has very concrete consequences:
- fewer revisions,
- fewer late corrections,
- less strain on production and maintenance workflows.
This is where documentation ceases to be a simple support tool and becomes a lever for overall efficiency.
From General Principle to Standards: Why It Matters
This is precisely where S-Series and DITA XML make complete sense.
At a pedagogical level, their philosophy can be summarized simply:
Write less, but better; write once, use multiple times.
DITA XML is based on content modularity.
S-Series extend this approach to the entire product lifecycle (design, support, maintenance, logistics).
We no longer speak of documents, but of controlled information blocks, updated in a single location and reused wherever relevant.
From Documentation Reduction to Resource Reduction
This approach has several cumulative effects:
- Reduced writing effort: less duplication, fewer reviews, fewer unnecessary translations.
- End of disposable documentation: we maintain content, we don’t replace it.
- Targeted digital distribution: less printing, less transportation, less storage.
- Consistency over time: fewer errors related to obsolete information.
In other words, we shift from a logic of information overproduction to a logic of knowledge maintenance, very close to the principles of the circular economy.
The Expert Level: Direct Impact on Machine Usage
At a more operational level, the impact becomes even more tangible. In a structured S-Series environment:
- documentation is synchronized with systems (PLM, MRO, ILS),
- instructions are precise, contextualized, and up to date.
This translates into:
- fewer maintenance errors,
- fewer unnecessary disassemblies,
- fewer superfluous machine cycles,
- better availability of equipment.
A machine that is better used, better maintained, and less unnecessarily operated is also a more efficient machine throughout its lifecycle.
Standardization and Decarbonization
Through Alignment
Finally, S-Series introduce an often underestimated lever: standardization.
By harmonizing documentation practices among stakeholders:
- we avoid rewriting the same content at each supplier,
- we limit custom developments,
- we reduce the multiplication of tools and parallel workflows.
This is a form of silent decarbonization, through alignment and pooling, far from compensation(1) or greenwashing(2) approaches.
(1) Compensation approaches consist of continuing to emit greenhouse gases while “offsetting” these emissions through external mechanisms: typically purchasing carbon credits (reforestation, renewable energy projects elsewhere in the world, etc.). Emissions are not truly reduced, they are neutralized on paper. This is often criticized because it avoids addressing root causes.
(2) Greenwashing approaches are more about greenwashing: communicating environmental efforts without them being substantial or systemic. This can take the form of labels, flattering CSR reports, isolated “green features” in a product, or published carbon footprints without a genuine reduction plan behind them.
Conclusion:
Decarbonization Through System Efficiency
S-Series and DITA XML are not inherently “green” standards. They promise neither carbon neutrality nor technological breakthrough.
However, they promote documentation that is:
- more efficient,
- more sustainable,
- more streamlined.
By reducing unnecessary effort, content duplication, and superfluous machine usage, these standards and documentation systems fully align with a decarbonization through efficiency approach, consistent with a responsible and realistic approach to the profession.
This is not an ecological revolution.
But it is a structural transformation that, at the scale of complex industrial systems, makes all the difference.
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