%ALawniczak, Mara%ADurbin, Richard%AFlicek, Paul%ALindblad-Toh, Kerstin%AWei, Xiaofeng%AArchibald, John%ABaker, William%ABelov, Katherine%ABlaxter, Mark%AMarques Bonet, Tomas%AChilders, Anna%ACoddington, Jonathan%ACrandall, Keith%ACrawford, Andrew%ADavey, Robert%ADi Palma, Federica%AFang, Qi%AHaerty, Wilfried%AHall, Neil%AHoff, Katharina%AHowe, Kerstin%AJarvis, Erich%AJohnson, Warren%AJohnson, Rebecca%AKersey, Paul%ALiu, Xin%ALopez, Jose%AMyers, Eugene%APettersson, Olga%APhillippy, Adam%APoelchau, Monica%APruitt, Kim%ARhie, Arang%ACastilla-Rubio, Juan%ASahu, Sunil%ASalmon, Nicholas%ASoltis, Pamela%ASwarbreck, David%AThibaud-Nissen, Françoise%AWang, Sibo%AWegrzyn, Jill%AZhang, Guojie%AZhang, He%ALewin, Harris%ARichards, Stephen%BJournal Name: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences; Journal Volume: 119; Journal Issue: 4 %D2022%I %JJournal Name: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences; Journal Volume: 119; Journal Issue: 4 %K %MOSTI ID: 10323075 %PMedium: X %TStandards recommendations for the Earth BioGenome Project %XA global international initiative, such as the Earth BioGenome Project (EBP), requires both agreement and coordination on standards to ensure that the collective effort generates rapid progress toward its goals. To this end, the EBP initiated five technical standards committees comprising volunteer members from the global genomics scientific community: Sample Collection and Processing, Sequencing and Assembly, Annotation, Analysis, and IT and Informatics. The current versions of the resulting standards documents are available on the EBP website, with the recognition that opportunities, technologies, and challenges may improve or change in the future, requiring flexibility for the EBP to meet its goals. Here, we describe some highlights from the proposed standards, and areas where additional challenges will need to be met. %0Journal Article