Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012 Le Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) est un système de classification des industries qui a été conçu par les organismes statistiques du Canada, du Mexique et des États-Unis. Le SCIAN est articulé autour des principes de la production, afin de s'assurer que les données sur les industries qui sont classées en fonction du SCIAN se prêtent à l'analyse de questions liées à la production, comme le rendement industriel. SCIAN Canada 2012 constitue une mise à jour du SCIAN Canada 2007. Cette nouvelle version a pris effet en 2013 en même temps que les enquêtes-entreprises de Statistique Canada sont intégrées dans un modèle opérationnel généralisé. 2012-01-11 2017-07-19 Statistique Canada STATCAN.infostats-infostats.STATCAN@canada.ca Économie et industrieClassificationClassification des industriesCodes de classificationSystèmes de classificationStatistiques entreprisesIndustrie - Classifications typesSCIAN 2012 Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012 - élémentsCSV http://www.statcan.gc.ca/eng/statistical-programs/document/NAICS-SCIAN-2012-Element_B.csv Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012 - Structure de la classificationCSV http://www.statcan.gc.ca/eng/statistical-programs/document/NAICS-SCIAN-2012-Structure_B.csv Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012HTML http://www.statcan.gc.ca/subjects-sujets/standard-norme/naics-scian/2012/index-indexe-eng.htm Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012HTML http://www.statcan.gc.ca/subjects-sujets/standard-norme/naics-scian/2012/index-indexe-fra.htm Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012PDF http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/12-501-x/12-501-x2012001-eng.pdf Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012PDF http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/12-501-x/12-501-x2012001-fra.pdf

Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012

Le Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) est un système de classification des industries qui a été conçu par les organismes statistiques du Canada, du Mexique et des États-Unis. Le SCIAN est articulé autour des principes de la production, afin de s'assurer que les données sur les industries qui sont classées en fonction du SCIAN se prêtent à l'analyse de questions liées à la production, comme le rendement industriel. SCIAN Canada 2012 constitue une mise à jour du SCIAN Canada 2007. Cette nouvelle version a pris effet en 2013 en même temps que les enquêtes-entreprises de Statistique Canada sont intégrées dans un modèle opérationnel généralisé.

Ressources

Nom de la ressource Type de ressource Format Langue Liens
Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012 - éléments Jeu de données CSV Anglais
Français
Accès
Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012 - Structure de la classification Jeu de données CSV Anglais
Français
Accès
Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012 Guide HTML Anglais Accès
Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012 Guide HTML Français Accès
Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012 Guide PDF Anglais Accès
Système de classification des industries de l'Amérique du Nord (SCIAN) 2012 Guide PDF Français Accès

Commentaires (22)

Hi, I am wondering whether a correspondance between NAICS codes and Input-Output Industry Codes (IOIC) available. What I am looking for is which NAICS industries are contained in a single IOIC catogory. It is reported for BS71A000 IOIC code but I could not find anything for the rest. http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/13-604-m/2014075/t/tbl-3-eng.htm

Hi Miyuru, The following response has been posted on behalf of the data owner: "Thank you for your interest in Statistics Canada data. Regarding the content question submitted, please contact us at Infostats, STATCAN.infostats-infostats.STATCAN@canada.ca or 1-800-263-1136." Thanks and hope this helps, Tasha, the Open Government Team

Will CSV files be available for NAICS 2017?

Hi Julie, Thank you for your question. I have sent this to the data owner for action. -Tasha, the Open Government Team

As described in every single comment on this page.. please fix the .CSV download to something more readable. It's been 1 year since people have brought up the issue.

Hi Drew, Thank you for your comment. I have sent this to the data owner for clarification/ action. Once we get a reply, we will post it here for you. Thanks, Tasha, the Open Government Team

A CSV without descriptions looking like "manufacturing and installing building equipment, such as power boilers; manufacturing pre-fabricated buildings (31-33)" would be helpful. Also someway to seperate the english and french descriptions would be ideal too.

There seems to be an issue with the accents and special characters in the CSV file. I opened the file as UFT-8, as suggested in the comments, but that does not seem to address the issue. See example: 1,en,76910,01/01/2012,50,Exclusion(s),39161," ","operating highways, streets and bridges (48-49)" Please let me know how I can address this and/or when a corrected file will be made available.

Hi Ahmad, Thank you for your comments. I have forwarded them to the data owner for action. Thanks, Tasha, the Open Government Team

There seems to be an issue with the accents and symbols in the file. I opened at UTF-8, as suggested in the comments, but the file still shows data issues. See example below: 1,en,76910,01/01/2012,50,Exclusion(s),39161," ","operating highways, streets and bridges (48-49)"

There appear to be numerous errors in the csv file. For example 238130 has title "Framing contractors US" this is not the US version of the classification system. No offense except where deserved but these files seem to be really amateurishly handled, HTML encoded twice (these are csv files not web pages utf-8 anyone?), looks like copy and pasted from some US document and only partially converted over to the Canadian market.

Hi Mike, Thank you for your comment. I have forwarded this to the data owner for action. -Tasha, the Open Government Team

Hi Mike, The response below has been posted on behalf of the data owner: "Thank you for your feedback. The formatting issues for this dataset will be reviewed. The NAICS information is best interpreted with explanations found within the NAICS supplementary documents. You can find this by viewing the HTML, and PDF resource links on the NAICS Open Data resource page. Regarding the example cited, classification 238130 with the title "Framing contractors US” The superscripts at the end of NAICS class titles are used to signify comparability: CAN - Canadian class only No superscript- Canadian, Mexican and United States classes are comparable US - Canadian and United States classes are comparable MEX - Canadian and Mexican classes are comparable For further questions on the content of the data, be sure to contact Statistics Canada through the Contact Us section on our website". Thanks and hope this helps! -Tasha, the Open Government Team

I am using the financial performance data for 2013. the financial measures are expressed as average. Is there any easy way to find the total number of industries by NAICS code?

Hello Miguel, Thank you for your interest in Statistics Canada data. NAICS Canada 2012 consists of 20 sectors,102 sub-sectors, 323 industry groups, 711 industries and 922 Canadian industries, and replaces NAICS Canada 2007. For further research, Industry Canada has an online application that explores the classification system called Canadian Industry Statistics, found here: https://www.ic.gc.ca/eic/site/cis-sic.nsf/eng/h_00004.html.

csv files have html encoding of French. Earlier comment on this thread about checking supplimentary html/pdf misses the point. If you are downloading a csv version you probably want to use the codes in a program/spreadsheet programmatically. You, or at least I, don't really care about human readable descriptions: I want the source listing of the codes in a machine readable format without having to convert it to utf-8 then find a 3rd party tool that can replace html encoded accent codes into proper utf-8 etc.

Thanks for your feedback, we have sent your comment to the data owner for their response. The Open Government Team

So many issues. Misses the most basic information: NAICS code (e.g., MPG111000). Which is also missing from the direct download link from SUT on CANSIM Table 381-0034.

Hi Jesse, here's the suggestion from the data owner: "Thank you for your feedback. The NAICS information is best interpreted with explanations found within the NAICS supplementary documents. You can find this by downloading the HTML, and PDF resource links on the NAICS Open Data resource page. Regarding the Supply and Use Tables found within CANSIM, the footnotes on that table state the following: 'The supply and use tables are built around three classification systems, namely the Input-Output Industry Classification (IOIC), the Input-Output Final Demand Classification (IOFDC), and the Supply and Use Product Classification (SUPC). Each classification has four levels of hierarchy, consisting of the detailed level, link-1997 level, link-1961 level and summary level. These classifications are available upon request.' Please contact us at infostats@statcan.gc.ca for more information regarding our datasets." I hope that helps.

CSV files are full of HTML code.

It would be useful to know what encoding was used for the CSV files (i.e. UTF-8, Windows-ANSI, etc.). The french characters do not come through with Windows default settings.

Thank you for your comment. The following response has been posted on behalf of the data owner "The CSV files are encoded using UTF-8"