Metrication
Metrication or
metrification refers to the introduction of the
SI metric system as the
international standard for physical measurementsâ€"a long-term series of independent and systematic conversions from the various separate
local systems of
weights and measures.Metrication began in France in the 1790s and spread during the following two centuries to encompass all but three countriesâ€"5% of the world's population.
Today, only the
United States,
Liberia and
Myanmar have not officially adopted the metric system,
[The World Factbook. (2006). Washington: Central Intelligence Agency. Appendix G. Retrieved 2006-08-08 from [https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/appendix/appendix-g.html https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/appendix/appendix-g.html].] although it is widely used in these countries in science and engineering. The
United Kingdom and
St Lucia are currently in the process of official conversion; other countries in the former
British Empire completed metrication during the second half of the 20th century, the most recent being the
Republic of Ireland, which finalised conversion in early 2005. Only
France, the United States, the United Kingdom and
Japan have seen significant popular opposition to metrication, based on localism, tradition, cultural aesthetics, economic impact, or distaste for measures viewed as "foreign".
Medieval trade was organised on a city-by-city basis by
guilds, which set local laws on weights and measures. For example, the
ell or
elle was a unit of length commonly used in Europe, but its value varied from 40.2 centimetres in one part of
Germany to 70 centimetres in
The Netherlands to 94.5 centimetres in
Edinburgh. A survey of Switzerland in 1838 revealed that the
foot had 37 different regional variations, the
ell had 68, there were 83 different measures for dry grain and 70 for fluids, and 63 different measures for "dead weights".
When
Isaac Newton wrote his important work
Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica in 1687, he quoted his measurements in
Parisian feet so his readers could understand their size. Various efforts were made to have local intercity or national standards for measurements, such as a Scottish law of 1641 and the British standard
Imperial unit system of 1845, which is still used for some things in the UK. However,
revolutionary France was to produce the definitive
International System of Units which has come to be used by most of the world today.
The desire for a single international system of measurement derives from growing international trade and the need to apply common
standards to goods. For a company to buy a product produced in another country, they need to be sure that the product will arrive as described. The mediæval
ell was abandoned in part because its value could not be standardised. It can be argued that the primary advantage of the International System of Units is simply that it is international, and the pressure on countries to conform to it grew as it became increasingly an international standard. SI is not the only example of international standardisation; several powerful international standardisation organisations exist for various industries, such as the
International Organization for Standardization, the
International Electrotechnical Commission, and the
International Telecommunication Union.
See main article: International System of UnitsScientists, chiefly in France, had been advocating and discussing a decimal system of measurement based on natural units at least since 1640, but the first official adoption of such a system was after the
French Revolution of 1789. The creators of the
metric system tried to choose units that were non-arbitrary and practical. The original system started with the
metre as the unit of
distance, the
gram as the unit of
mass, and the
second as the unit of time. Derived units are made from logical combinations of base units. For example, the
speed of an object is defined by the number of metres it moves every second — m/s.
An object that is
accelerating has a changing speed, so its m/s changes per second, thus the unit is m/s². The
force exerted on an object can be described by its mass times the resulting acceleration of the object, thus—kg·m/s²â€"which is the
newton (symbol N), named in honour of
Isaac Newton. Further base units dealing with electricity, light and quantities of atoms were added later as these sciences became better understood.
The current version of this system was agreed upon in 1971 and is organised and maintained by the
International Bureau of Weights and Measures (abbreviated BIPM, based on the French version of the name). To avoid confusion over the precise value of base units, this organisation also defines a precise
recipe on how to recreate the unit, which is decided by the
General Conference on Weights and Measures held every four years. While this is the preferred definition for base units, the
kilogram is currently defined based on an artifact, an
international prototype which is a small object of platinum-iridium dubbed
"Le Grand Kilo" maintained by the BIPM.
Time has resisted
metrication. With the
French revolutionary calendar there was an attempt at a decimal time system with 100 seconds in a minute, 100 minutes in an hour and 10 hours in a day (100,000 seconds in a day as opposed to 86,400 currentlyâ€"a French revolutionary second would be thus 14% shorter). The proposed system also included a ten-day week; the system , which the Church opposed, was dropped on
1 January 1806 in "a political move by Napoleon Bonaparte who decided that it was better to have the Church on his side."
[O'Connor, J. J. & Robertson, E. F. (2005). "Decimal time and angles".MacTutor History of Mathematics archive. Fife, Scotland: St. Andrews University. Retrieved from http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/Decimal_time.html on 2006-08-01.] It is also interesting to note that the
Chinese calendar had a better option for a decimal day system,
ke, up until the 17th century.
There are three common routes that nations take in converting from traditional measurement systems to the metric system. The first is a quick, so called "Big-bang" route which was used by
India in the early 1960s and several other
developing nations since then. The second two routes are both variations on the slower phase-in route that tends to be favoured by
industrial nations.
The first route, "Big-bang", is to simultaneously outlaw the use of
pre-metric measurement, metricise, reissue all government publications and laws, and change education systems to metric. India's changeover lasted from
1 April 1960, when metric measurements became legal, to
1 April 1962, when all other systems were banned. The Indian model was extremely successful and was copied over much of the developing world.
The second possibility, and first phase-in route, is to pass a law permitting the use of metric units in parallel with traditional ones, followed by education of metric units, then progressively banning the use of the older measures. This has generally been a slow route to metric. The
British Empire permitted the use of metric measures in 1873, but the changeover was not completed in most countries until the 1970s and 1980s when governments took an active role in the now-independent parts of the empire.
Japan, too, followed this route and did not complete the changeover for 70 years.
A final possibility is to redefine traditional units in terms of metric values. These redefined units often stay in use long after metrication is said to have been completed.
China followed this route, and thus while scientists in China know and use the kilogram, common people retain the
jin, which now has a value of 500 g. (This route was once
proposed for England with the
pound to be redefined as 500 g, but the plan did not receive government support.) In
the Netherlands, 500 g is informally referred to as a
pond (pound) and 100 g as an
ons (ounce), and in
Germany and
France 500 g is informally referred to respectively as
ein Pfund and
une livre (one pound). In Denmark, the re-defined
pund (500 g) is occasionally used, particularly among older people and (older) fruit growers, since these were originally paid according to the number of pounds of fruit produced. In
Sweden and
Norway a
mil (mile) is informally equal to 10 km. In the 19th century
Switzerland had a non-metric system completely based on metric terms, e. g. 1
Fuss (foot) equal to 0.30m = 10
Zoll (inches) equal to 0.03m = 10
Linien (lines) equal to 0.003m.
It is difficult to judge the degree to which ordinary people change to using metric in their daily lives. In countries that have recently changed,
older segments of the population tend to still use an older and more familiar system. Also, local variations abound in what exactly becomes metricated and what does not. In
Canada, for example, ovens and cooking temperatures are usually measured in
degrees Fahrenheit, and Canadians almost invariably use Fahrenheit for cooking; though this is not necessarily by choice but may instead be due to the overwhelming influence of the neighbouring and largely non-metricated
United States. In the
UK, which is still in the process of changing over, Fahrenheit is almost never encountered while other metric units are often used interchangeably with older measurements. Such countries could be said to be "semi-metric".
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World map colour-coding year of metrication; Green is 1800, Red is most recent |
The metric system, developed in France around the turn of the 19th century, was quickly taken up by Europe's scientists before spreading to traders and industrialists and finally to the common people. France's neighbour, the
Kingdom of the Netherlands (present
The Netherlands,
Belgium, and
Luxembourg), changed in 1820.
Spain and its remaining American colonies changed in the 1850s and 1860s.
Italy and
Germany went metric after their respective unifications in 1861 and 1871, followed shortly by
Portugal,
Norway,
Sweden,
Austria-Hungary and
Finland. By 1900, 39 countries in Europe and Latin America were using the metric system.
The first
Asian nations to convert were
Mongolia (1918),
Cambodia and
Afghanistan (in the 1920s). Japan began its slow conversion process in 1891 when it received a copy of the metre standard from the
Institute in France. In 1924, the government decided to replace fully the traditional
shaku-kan system within ten years; however, public opposition delayed implementation. The U.S. occupation of the late 1940s briefly caused a de facto conversion to
U.S. customary units. Metrication was completed in Japan by 1969, although some of the old units are still in informal use. India's conversion was far quicker, paradoxically helped by low popular literacy and the fact that there was previously no nationwide standard measurement system—British
Imperial units were used by the upper class, while various regional systems were used by the poor. From 1956 to 1961,
India both changed to metric units and decimalised its currency.
China began conversion in the 1920s, but the process was not completed until Communist times. China also decimalised its native measurement units and redefined them as even amounts of metric units. Thus
jin was redefined to equal 500 grams. The
Soviet Union changed from
traditional units to metric in 1924.
Those
Arab nations that were
colonized by France adopted the system early:
Algeria changed in 1840,
Tunisia in 1890, and this extended to the other Arab countries after the conquest of the
Ottoman Empire in 1918.
Jordan, which had been a British
mandate, was the last Arab nation to convert, in the 1950s. The German colonies of
Rwanda and
Burundi and the
Belgian Congo (now
Democratic Republic of Congo) were the first sub-Saharan African states to go metric in 1910. French territories in Africa were de facto metric while under French rule. On independence all gradually passed official metric weights and measures laws during the 1950s and 1960s. The last African states to go metric were the former British colonies of southern and eastern Africa.
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Logo of the Australian Metrication Board |
Britain and its former colonies (with the notable exception of the
United States) began their conversion process in the later part of the 20th century.
South Africa began a ten-year process of metrication in 1967 with the creation of
Metrication Advisory Board, a
Metrication Department and a
South African Bureau of Standards.
Australia began work in 1969 with a publicity campaign involving lecture tours, theatrical advertisements and the free distribution of metric-sized items, including calendars, rulers and A4-sized leaflets. Public opposition was on points of detail only, and the process was declared completed in 1977.
Canada and
New Zealand followed similar plans in the 1970s.
Ireland completed a very gradual changeover process on
20 January 2005 with the conversion of road
speed limits to km/h. Ireland began metrication in 1970 when schools switched to teaching the metric system only.
There are three common exceptions to the default use of the metric system: the UK, the USA, and the global air and sea transport industry. Contrary to popular belief, the USA and the UK do not use a common system (see
English unit,
Imperial unit and
U.S. customary units for details). With the exception of length, with the yard standardised at 0.9144 m by an international conference in 1958, most units differ in value in the USA and UK. A
gallon of liquid, for example, is 3.8 litres (but spelt 'liters') in the USA but 4.5 litres in the UK. The US also has a
dry gallon, which is 4.4 litres. There are other isolated exceptions. Automobile
tire pressure is measured in
psi in countries such as
Brazil which are otherwise completely metric, and automotive wheel diameters are still set as whole
inch measurements (though tyre widths are measured in millimetres). Office space is often rented in traditional units, such as
square foot in Ireland and Hong Kong,
shaku in
Japan or
pyoung in
Korea. The diameter of pipes of iron used for
plumbing is still measured in inches (e.g. a 1/2 inch) in
Denmark. Additionally, the market power of the U.S.A. continues to push non-metric units, such as
dots per inch for imperial graphical resolution, in otherwise metric countries.
United Kingdom
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Logo of Metrication of UK Board of Trade |
Main article: Metrication in the UK
The UK made initial moves to convert to metric as long ago as 1862, when the
Select Committee on Weights and Measures favoured the introduction of metric weights and measures accompanied by
decimalisation of the currency.[
1] The country decimalised
its currency over a century later,
in 1971. In 1965, it became government policy that conversion to metric would occur. When Britain joined the
Common Market in 1973, it was made a condition of joining that Britain should switch to metric units. Since this was already government policy, this presented few problems, but Britain nevertheless negotiated derogations (delayed switchovers) for certain items, the most obvious being the road signs. Items of cultural significance such as the pint of beer and the pint of milk were also included in derogations. Britain agreed that, at some time in the future, it would set a date when these units would be converted. No such date has yet been set. In the meantime, some public resistance to metrication has arisen, which some see as the imposition of a foreign system and to be connected with other unpopular ideas from mainland Europe, such as the
euro. The "
metric martyrs" were shop owners in the UK who were fined for refusing to use metric units and for overcharging customers who preferred to shop in metric.
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An example of metrication of UK consumer products. Two of the four items are purely metric. Milk is often sold as "1.136 litres / 2 pints". These sausages are labeled "340g / 12oz" |
The result has been a mixture of metric and non-metric units, although metric units have gradually been phased in. Metric units have been taught and used in UK schools since the late 1960s, at first in science lessons only, but from 1974 in all subjects. Some industries also converted or largely converted decades ago. For example, the
paper industry converted in 1970 and the
construction industry between 1969 and 1972. Certain products continue to be produced to imperial sizes but with metric size descriptions (for example, 13mm (rather than as half-inch) thick
plasterboard). Draught beer and cider are still sold in
pints, milk may be sold in pints in returnable containers, and the
mile,
yard,
foot, and
inch are used for road signs and associated measurements. The
acre is used for land registration (although any registration since 1995 has used metric measurements). These units are defined in terms of SI units. Other exceptions include aviation, shipping, and rail transport (for example, the foot for aircraft altitude,
nautical miles for distance, and
knots for speed, although the latter two have been grandfathered into official SI). [
2] [
3] [
4]
In August 2005, a story appeared in some British newspapers saying that the
European Commission announced it would require Britain to set a legal deadline for the completion of metrication. [
5] The story was subsequently denied by the
EU.
GĂĽnter Verheugen, the European Commissioner for Enterprise and Industry, said that he had no plans to pressure Britain to speed up its measurement conversion; he was quoted as saying a month later, in September 2005: "I personally have a lot of sympathy for the pint and for the mile in the UK." There have also been calls by many countries for the UK to adopt the metric system before the
2012 Olympics in
London, especially with respect to road signs. (See also
Euroscepticism in the United Kingdom.)
United States
Main article: Metrication in the United States
See also: Fair Packaging and Labeling ActThe government of the United States of America officially uses the metric system, and thus the military, and government agencies such as NASA, employ it on a regular basis. American schools are required to teach the metric system, but for practical purposes they also teach U.S. standard units alongside. The U.S. scientific community also has an established use of metric units. The general public and much of private industry remain the main exception to the use of metric units in the United States. Although
Thomas Jefferson recommended measurement and currency decimalisation,
[Jefferson, Thomas (1790). Plan for Establishing Uniformity in the Coinage, Weights, and Measures, of the United Sates,1st Cong., 2d sess., collected in American State Papers Miscellaneous Volume 1. Washington: House of Representatives. pp 13â€"20. Viewed at Library of Congress website on 2006-07-26.]metrication has been the official policy of federal government since the
Convention du Mètre (Metre Convention), and several laws encourage or require use of metric units in various contexts,
[Brown, Gary. (2006). Metric System Laws. U. S. Metric Association. Retrieved 3 August 2006 from http://lamar.colostate.edu/~hillger/laws/index.html] the progress of metrication has been much slower in the United States than in the rest of the world. Non-metric units continue to be used predominantly in everyday life, in commerce, and in
aviation, although most
scientific work in the United States is now conducted using metric units. Most products are now required by law to be labeled with both metric and non-metric units, and a number of companies and government agencies are switching to metric standards. The metric system is taught in schools, in the context of the sciences.
One peculiar example of this is bottled
soft drinks, commonly sold in units of two litres, and with units of 500 ml, one litre, and three litres being less common. This is a result of the introduction of
PET bottling technology coinciding with a particularly strong metrication push in the mid to late 1970s; consumers found that they could buy a
two-litre plastic bottle of their favorite soft drink more cheaply than they could four one-pint glass bottles, and the convention stuck. Smaller units, however, continue to be sold more often in fluid ounces, such as 8-ounce (240 ml) and 12-ounce (355 ml) aluminium cans and 20 ounce (591 ml) and 24-ounce (710 ml) PET bottles.
Some other products, notably
toiletries such as
shampoo,
mouthwash, and
dental floss, have begun to be sold in metric sizes (e.g., 700 ml shampoo, 50 m dental floss), and
PowerBars and similar products have always been sold in metric sizes. The
Fair Packaging and Labeling Act requires many (but not all) consumer goods to be dual labelled with the customary unit (e.g., "50 m / 54.7 yd").
The United States continues to use only
miles for road distance signs, with the exception of
Interstate 19 in
Arizona and some roads in
Hawaii.
Delaware Route 1 in
Delaware between
Dover Air Force Base and
Interstate 95 uses a dual-measurement system in which distances are in miles but exit numbers are based on the kilometric distances from the road's beginning. Some states have experimented with dual-unit signs, particularly near the borders with
Canada and
Mexico, but there are as yet no plans for large-scale conversion. Originally, U.S. legislation set October 2000 as a deadline by which states must undertake construction work and statistics in metric for states to be eligible for federal funding, but that requirement has since been rescinded. There is presently little political or popular support for a comprehensive switch to the metric system.
St. Lucia
The Caribbean island nation of St. Lucia is one of the last parts of the former British Empire to retain the Imperial system of units. In 2001, the government of St. Lucia announced that the island would convert to the metric system inline with the rest of
CARICOM[Best-Joseph, Sariah (Contact). (2001). St. Lucia Presses Ahead with Metric System. St. Lucia Bureau of Standards. Retrieved 3 August 2006 from http://www.stlucia.gov.lc/pr2002/st__lucia_presses_ahead_with_metric_system.htm ] Following the example of other nations, the conversion process is governed by a Metrication Board and is supported by the island's industry.
[St Lucia moving to metric system. (17 March 2005). Carribbean Net News. Retrieved 3 August 2005 from http://www.caribbeannetnews.com/2005/03/17/moving.shtml]Liberia and Myanmar
Liberia has used the U.S. system of weights and measures since its founding in the 19th century by freed
slaves from the United States. In modern times instability and civil war has meant that measurement reform has not been a high priority and the country in fact uses a mixture of U.S., metric and local customary measures.
Myanmar has not officially adopted "everyday use" of the metric system, but unofficial metrication has taken place and the Myanmar economy primarily operates using the metric system.
Air and sea transport
Some industries have resisted metrication. Non-metric measures in air and sea transport retain worldwide dominance. In these areas the
nautical mile is still widespread. This may be because various historical versions of the nautical mile were originally designed to represent a minute of arc of on the surface of the Earth at certain points (the definition in use today is standardised as 1852 metres exactly). It may also be because of the conservative nature of those industries. While the metre was also based on the Earth with 100 km equal to an arc of 1
grad, those units of angle have not seen widespread use, though they do appear on some maps.
The
knot, nautical miles per hour, remains the prime unit of speed for maritime and air navigation. (However, before the 1960s,
statute miles per hourâ€"which bear no relationship to the Earthâ€"was most often used for this purpose, and remained in fairly common use for some purposes into the 1970s and later.) For aviation, altitudes are usually estimated based on air pressure values and described in nominal feet rather than nominal metres. However, several countries and air forces (mainly but not only former
Warsaw Pact) use metres for altitude. Thus an individual pilot can sometimes operate with altitudes in metres and sometimes in feet. The policies of the
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) relating to measurement are:
* there should be a single system of units throughout the world
* the single system should be SI
* the use of the foot for altitude is a permitted variation
Consistent with ICAO policy, aviation has undergone a lot of metrication over the years. For example, the United Kingdom and Ireland metricated runway length and many other measures several decades ago. The United States metricated temperature reports in 1996 and the US military has metricated some reports of visual range. Metrication is also gradually taking place in cargo weights/dimensions and fuel volume/weight.
Confusion over units during the process of metrication can sometimes lead to accidents. One of the most famous examples is the
Gimli Glider, a
Boeing 767 that ran out of fuel in
Canada in 1983 due, in large part, to confusion at
Air Canada during Canada's metrication.
While not strictly an example of national metrication, the use of two different systems was the contributing factor in the loss of the
Mars Climate Orbiter in 1998.
NASA specified metric units in the contract. NASA and other organisations worked in metric units but one subcontractor,
Lockheed Martin, provided thruster performance data to the team in
pound force seconds instead of
newton seconds. The spacecraft was intended to orbit
Mars at about 150 km altitude but the incorrect data meant that it descended to about 57 km and probably burned up in the Martian atmosphere.
Interestingly, considering it was the birthplace of the metric system,
France experienced a particularly rough journey to metrication. The traditional French measuring system was chaotic, with size of units differing in each small town, and often even within towns.
Lyon had two different values of
pound in general use, one of 14 ounces, and another of 15 ounces, the latter only being used for measuring
silk. The revolutionary government, which saw the newly conceived metric system (commissioned by the previous king) as a good fit for its ideology of "pure reason", first attempted a quick conversion, legalising metric units in 1795 and, just four years later, banning the use of traditional units. Massive popular opposition led
Napoleon, after he came to power, to roll back these reforms. He publicly denounced the previous government for "tormenting people with trifles". It appears that it was decimalisation that disturbed the people most — as, although Napoleon decreed that there should be "such fractions and multiples as were generally used", he redefined the old base units in metric terms. The original metric system was made law again in France in 1837.
Japan also saw popular resistance to its 1920s metrication program, where opponents of the metric system believed that the adoption of a foreign measuring system would have a bad influence on national sentiment, cause dislocations in public life, needless expense to the nation, prove disadvantageous to foreign trade, and would hurt the national language and culture. In 1933, the government postponed the date of the first stage of conversion by five years, and the date of the second stage by ten years. The U.S. occupation resulted in a temporary conversion to U.S. customary units. The post-war manufacturing boom required an international standard measurement system and the issue was pursued again in the 1950s and 1960s. The process was not completed until 1969. Traditional units are, however, still used for measurements of sake and the area of land and apartments. Nevertheless, local units had been defined in terms of metric units (e.g., 1 shaku = 10/33 metre) as early as 1891. For the measurement of sake, 10 Japanese cups (180 millilitres each) equal 1 shoh (traditional flask size of 1.8 litre capacity). Rice cookers are typically sold as having capacities such as 5 cups or 10 cups. (Note that the traditional Japanese cup is 180 millilitres while the American cup is 240 millitres.)
Overall, few countries have experienced much popular opposition to metrication. Some, such as 19th century Europe, Russia, India and China, converted before most of their populations were literate, so the initial conversion affected few people. For others, such as Ireland, the previous system was seen as foreign and unloved.* Conversion of units
* Metric clothes sizes (EN 13402)
* Preferred numbers
* Metric meterstick
* Language reform
* Anti-metrication
*A timeline of the metric system and its use
Websites supporting metrication:
*The Metrication Board of Ireland
*The United Kingdom Metric Association campaigns for a total metric switchover in the UK
*Timeline of metric system in UK
*U.S. Metric Association discusses progress of metrication in several countries.
*Metrication matters provides resources to support your metrication program.
*One Metre: Metric in Canada
*Canadian Metric Association
Websites opposing metrication:
*Freedom to Measure discusses the freedom to choose a measurement system
*British Weights and Measures Association