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ISO 14000 INTRODUCTION
   In the present day, environmental matter is not
    limited only in one country or specific area. The
    environmental impact effects everywhere and leads
    to problem all over the world.
   Environmental conservation has become so
    complicated that it causes pressure to all business
    organizations.
   The International Organization for Standardization
    had led to the development of the International
    Standard for environmental management system
    series (ISO 14000).
ISO 14000 INTRODUCTION

•After the success of the ISO9000 series of quality
standards in 1987, the International Standards
Organization is nearing completion and publication of a
comprehensive set of standards for environmental
management.

•This series of standards is designed to cover the whole
area of environmental issues for organizations in the
global marketplace.
Continues..
   The structure of the standards is as follows:
      Environmental Management Systems (EMS)
      Environmental Auditing and Related Environmental
       Investigations (EA)
      Environmental Labeling (EL)
      Environmental Performance Evaluation (EPE)
      Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)
      Terms and Definitions (T&D)


   ISO 14000 Series is the set of standards relating to
    environmental management system.
   Generally, the standard used for certification is
        ISO 14001 Environmental Management Systems -
       Specifications with Guidance for Use.
ISO 14000 SERIES
   The ISO 14000 series is a set of standards
    concerning EMS including the activities of
    designing, producing, delivering and
    servicing.
   The concept of the standard is to enable the
    organization to continually develop and
    improve its EMS.
    Although the series comprises of many
    standards, the standard ISO 14001 is used
    as the direction for EMS certification.
WHO SHOULD
IMPLEMENT ISO 14000
   Any organization: manufacturers and service
    organizations.
   Any activities of each organization may cause the
    environmental aspects and impacts such as noise,
    dust, waste, contaminants in manufacturing process
    and ineffectively resources consumption in servicing.
    These can be minimized by implementing EMS.
   Although each country has already had her own
    environmental regulations, organizations are able to
    apply ISO 14000 series effectively within their system
    on voluntary basis and the benefit obtained is not only
    for organizations themselves but their society also.
WHAT IS ISO 14000
   ISO 14000 is a series of voluntary
    international standards pertaining to
    environmental issues.
   They are designed to reduce the
    environmental effects from all aspects of
    business activities. It is believed that higher
    efficiency would be realized and "the cost of
    doing business" would also be reduced , by
    minimizing business exposure to
    environmental issues.
What is not ISO 14000
   Is not a PRODUCT and PERFORMANCE standard.
   Does not establish levels of pollutants or performance.
   Does not establish test standards.
   Does not involve initial performance testing.
   Does not requires or establish final performance goal.
   Does not require the meeting of zero emissions.
   Does not mandate best practice technology.
   Does not require disclosure of performance levels.
   Does not require disclosure of audit results.
HISTORY OF ISO 14000
   The reasons for developing these national
    standards stemmed from the European success
    terms of the ISO 9000 Quality Management
    Standards, and from the "green movement" in
    Europe. These standards were envisioned to
    provide a market-driven, competitive attitude in
    business.

   ISO 14000, which is an evolution of ISO 9000
    standards, is designed to address process
    improvements in these environmental areas by
    way of energy audits, hazardous materials
    management, and other techniques
    ISO 14000 holds great promise for reduced
    waste and higher material quality because it
    emphasizes the elimination of waste early in the
    procurement process, especially in industries
    such as coatings where there are significant
    amounts of raw material input.


   ISO 14000 identifies and eliminates all waste
    that enters production through current
    procurement practices before it enters the
    manufacturing environment.
   When ISO 9000 quality management systems
    are integrated with ISO 14000 environmental
    systems, the two processes support each other.
    Opportunities for better quality practices exist in
    the quest for better environmental practices,
    and better environmental processes are often
    the result of improved quality.
   A merged system, which is currently available,
    is often the answer for companies seeking
    improvement in both areas.
   Historically, document disarray and
    communication redundancies have made
    implementation of ISO 9000 and ISO 14000
    slow and costly. .
   The advent of new Web-based technologies,
    however, makes it possible for companies to
    host entire documentation, project
    management, and training systems for the
    implementation of ISO 9000 and ISO 14000
    standards, significantly reducing the cost of
    each individual component and minimizing the
    time to implementation.
60
          EVOLUTION OF ISO 14000
                                                    Second Edition
                                                    of BS 7750
50      BSI developed its own                       published
        committee to develop
        BS7750 and its first edition
40      was established         ISO sets up a new
                              committee: ISO/Technical
30                            Committee 207 for
                              Environmental
   ISO                        Management and European
   establishes                Commission publishes Eco-
20 SAGE
                              management and Audit
                              Scheme (EMAS)
10


 0
        1991             1992             1993            1994
Work on the revision of ISO 14001

Continues..
   60
                        begins and Remainder of the initial
                        ISO/TC 207 work programme completed

                       ISO 14001 route to EMAS registration
   50                 and BS 7750 withdrawn
      BS 7750 route to EMAS
      registration
   40 and First five ISO 14000
      Standards published
   30

Verification to EMAS
    20
begins

   10


    0
          1995         1996          1997         1998
ISO 14000 SERIES

Organizational              Product Evaluation
Evaluation Standards        Standards


   Organizational evaluation standards are
    operational and effective because, the focus
    was on the process rather than the product.
   The development and acceptance of
    product evaluation standards will be much
    more difficult.
The structure of the standards is as
follows:
     Environmental Management Systems
     (EMS)
     Environmental Auditing and Related
     Environmental Investigations (EA)
     Environmental Labeling (EL)
     Environmental Performance
     Evaluation (EPE)
     Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)
     Terms and Definitions (T&D)


                      ORGANISATIONAL EVALUATION STANDARDS



                                     EA
      EMS                   14010 general principles             EPE
14001 specification         14011 audit procedures          14031 guidelines
                             14012 auditor criteria
PRODUCT EVALUATION STANDARDS
                                Environmental Labeling
                                14020 Basic Principles
  Environmental Aspects in       14021 Self Discipline
     Product Standards           14022 Symbols
   Guide 64 EAPS Guide           14023 Testing
                                    and Verification
                                  14024 Third Party


    Life Cycle Assessment
  14040 principles Framework
  14041 Goals and Definition
  14042 Impact Assessment
14043 Improvement Assessment
ISO 14000 FAMILY
ISO 14000          Title            General Description        Thrust Area
 Standard
14001:1996    Environmental          Main organizational      Organizational
               Management          environmental standard
                Systems—          and the ISO standard to
             Specification with   which an EMS is formally
             Guidance for Use            registered

14004:1996     Environmental      Complementary document      Organizational
               Management             to ISO 14001 which
                Systems—          provides more information
             General Guidelines        and assistance in
               on Principles,          understanding and
               Systems and          implementing the EMS
                 Supporting                standard.
                Techniques

14010:1996     Guidelines for       Covers the concepts of    Organizational
              Environmental         environmental auditing
             Auditing—General         which can be used
                Principles          separately to create an
                                        organizational
                                      environmental audit
                                     program or is used to
                                   implement a program in
                                  support of the ISO 14001
                                  EMS audit requirements
ISO 14000                Title                 General Description            Thrust Area
 Standard

14011:1996          Guidelines for            Provides additional detail      Organizational
              Environmental Auditing—       into the auditing of an EMS.
              Audit Procedures: Auditing
                   of Environmental
                Management Systems


14012:1996          Guidelines for             Presents the consensus         Organizational
               Environmental Auditing:        international requirements
               Qualification Criteria for        for certification as an
               Environmental Auditors        environmental auditor; each
                                                  national registration
                                             accreditation organization is
                                            charged with developing and
                                              implementing the program
                                            for registering auditors to the
                                                   national program.

  14020-       Environmental Labeling            Series that includes            Product
14025 :1998                                     requirements for self-           specific
                                               declaration, testing and
                                            validation and symbols used
ISO 14000             Title               General Description            Thrust Area
 Standard

14031:2000        Guidelines on           Presents methods for           Organizational
                  Environmental       monitoring and measuring the
             Performance Evaluation   environmental performance of
                                       an organization or elements
                                         within the organization


14040:1997   Life Cycle Assessment         Provides principles and         Product-
14041:1998                            framework, inventory analysis,       specific
                                           impact assessment and
14042:1999
                                             interpretation of the
14043:1999                                  environmental aspects
                                           associated with specific
                                      products or services including
                                          the design, manufacture,
                                        distribution, inventory, use .
14050:1998        Terms and           Details the          Overall
                     Definitions      terminology and
                                    use of ISO 14000
                                     specific language
                                    for consistency of
                                    meaning to support
                                        the efforts of
                                       developing and
                                     implementing the
                                         standards




ISO Guide 64:1997   Guide for the   Provides guidelines   Product-specific
(formerly 14060)     Inclusion of     to specification
                    Environmental   writers to consider
                       Aspects        and incorporate
                      in Product       environmental
                     Standards           aspects.
ISO 14000 POLICY
   Prevention of pollution.

   Continual Environmental Improvement.

   Commitment to comply with
    Environmental Laws and Regulations

   Applicable in size and scope.
ISO 14000 Policy, Continued

   Establish framework for setting and
    reviewing objectives and targets

   Documented, implemented,
    maintained, and communicated to
    employees.

   Available to the public
ELEMENTS OF ISO 14001
 ISO-14001, outlines 18 elements that must be
  followed if a facility wishes to be in conformance.
 The 18 elements are divided into six clauses
 Six clauses are

              4.1 General Requirements
              4.2 Environmental Policy
              4.3 Planning
              4.4 Implementation & Operation
              4.5 Checking & Corrective action
              4.6 Management review
4.2: ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY.
Ensure commitment to the EMS and
define policy that:
    Is based on company’s mission and values.
    is appropriate to the nature, scale and
     environmental impacts of the business
    includes a commitment to continual
     improvement
    includes a commitment to comply with
     relevant environmental legislation and
     regulations
    is documented, maintained and
     communicated to all employees
    is available to public
4.3.1: ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS


Environmental aspects of activities, products, or
 services that the organization can control must be
 established, maintained, and kept up to date, in
 order to determine which can have significant
 impacts on the environment.


The organization shall insure that the aspects
 related to these significant impacts are considered
 in setting its environmental objectives.
PROCESS OF IDENTIFYING
   ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS
                                      Periodically
 Define Scope                         Review and
                                        Update



 Define Process                      Record Results




  Gather Data                          Evaluate
                                       Impacts



                       Identify        Identify
   Assemble          Environmental   Environmental
appropriate people     Aspects         Impacts
Example: Environmental Aspects
Activity       Aspect           Potential      Regulated   Rating
                                Impact

MSW        Air Emissions        Air quality    Yes         51
Combustion (Nox, SO2,           degradation,
           metals,              smog, acid
           dioxin, CO)          deposition
Residuals      Residuals        Land/water    Yes          51
Handling       (ash)            contamination
               Disposal
Boiler water   Chemical         Land/water    Yes          30
production     spills/release   contamination
               s
Recyclables Windblown           Aesthetics     Yes         36
Receiving   Litter
4.3.2: LEGAL AND OTHER
 REQUIREMENTS.
Procedures to ensure that the company can identify
            legal and other environments
requirements are required to be established and
maintained.
It is also required to know how the organization
 Access and identify legal and other requirements
 Keep track of changes to legal and other
requirements
Communicate relevant information about legal and
other requirements to employees
4.3.3: OBJECTIVES AND TARGETS.

 Documented environmental objectives and targets
  for each relevant function and level within the
  organization are required to be established and
  maintained.

 These set objectives and targets must address legal
  consideration and other requirements, the facility's
  significant environmental aspects, technological
  options, financial/ operational/business requirements,
  and views of interested parties.

 These objectives and targets must be consistent with
  the environmental policy.
4.3.4: ENVIRONMENTAL
MANAGEMENT PROGRAM(S).

 A program(s) for achieving set objectives and targets
 is required to be established and maintained.
 The program must include designated responsible
  parties for achieving objectives and targets at each
  relevant function and level of the organization and the
  means and timeframe by which the objectives and
  targets are to be achieved.
 In addition, the program must be amended as needed
  to ensure that the environmental management program
  applies to new developments and new or modified
  activities, products, or services.
4.4.1: STRUCTURE AND
RESPONSIBILITY.
 Roles, responsibilities, and authorities are required to be
  defined, documented, and communicated to facilitate
  effective environmental management.
 Sufficient resources must be provided to implement and
  control the environmental management system.
 A specific management representative(s) must be appointed
  to ensure that EMS requirements are established,
  implemented, and maintain in accordance with the standard.
 The management representative must have defined roles,
  responsibilities, and authority for reporting on EMS
  performance to top management
4.4.2: TRAINING AWARENESS AND
       COMPETENCE.
   Appropriate training for all personnel whose work
  may create a significant impact on the environment
  must be identified.
   Procedures are required to be established and
  maintained to make employees aware of:
 The importance of conformance with the
  environmental policy and procedures and with EMS
  requirements,
 The potential environmental impacts of work
  activities
 Roles and responsibilities in achieving
  conformance with policy, procedures, EMS
  requirements
4.4.3: COMMUNICATION.

 Procedures for internal communication between
 levels and functions of the company are required to
 be established and maintained.

 Procedures must also be developed for receiving,
 documenting and responding to relevant
 communication from external parties.

 Finally, processes for external communications
 must be considered and the decision recorded.
4.4.4: ENVIRONMENTAL
 MANAGEMENT SYSTEM.

 Information describing core elements of the
  management system and their interaction is
  required to be established and maintained.
 The information must also provide direction to
  related documentation.
 ISO 14000 requires documentations much similar
  to ISO 9000 which makes integration of two
  systems easier.
4.4.5: DOCUMENT CONTROL.

  Procedures for controlling all documents required
  by the standard are required to be established and
  maintained.
These procedures must ensure the following:
 The documents can be located ,
 The documents are periodically reviewed,and
  approved by authorized personnel,
 The current versions are available at locations
  where operations essential to the functioning of
  EMS are done.
 Obsolete documents are promptly removed
 Further, documentation must be legible,
4.4.6: OPERATIONAL CONTROL.
  Operations and activities associated with the
  significant environmental aspects are required to be
  identified.
  These activities must be planned,and an
  organization must:
 establish and maintain documented procedures to
  cover situations where their absence could lead to
  deviations from the environmental policy and the
  objectives and targets,
 stipulate criteria in the operational procedures, and
 establish and maintain procedures related to the
  environmental aspects and communicating those
  relevant procedures and requirements to suppliers
  and contractors
4.4.7: EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
        AND RESPONSE.

 Procedures to identify potential for and respond to
 accidents and emergency situations, are required to
 be established and maintained.

 In addition, the emergency procedures must be
 reviewed and revised, when necessary, especially
 after an accident or emergency situation.

 Where practicable, it is required that these
 procedures are periodically tested through drills,
 exercises, etc.
4.5.1: MONITORING AND
   MEASUREMENT
 Develop and maintain procedures to regularly
  monitor and measure performance against objectives
  and targets
 Maintain and document program for calibrating
  monitoring equipment
 Identify and investigate non-conformance and
  implement corrective and preventative action
 Establish and maintain program to conduct periodic
  internal audits
 The organization must also maintain a documented
  procedure for periodically evaluating compliance with
  relevant environmental laws and regulations
4.5.2: NONCONFORMANCE &
 CORRECTIVE AND PREVENTIVE
 ACTION.
 Procedures     for defining responsibility and authority for
       handling and investigating nonconformance, taking
    action to mitigate any environmental impacts, and for
    corrective and preventive action completion, are
    required to be established and maintained.
    Environmental incidents includes emission, chemical
    spills
    All environmental incidents require full evaluation of
    root cause, initial response, and identification and
    implementation of corrective and/or preventative
    action
4.5.3: RECORDS.
 Procedures for identification, maintenance, and
  disposition of environmental records are required to
  be established and maintained.
 The records must be legible, identifiable and
  traceable to the activity involved.
 The records must be stored/maintained so that they
  are readily retrievable and protected against damage,
  deterioration, or loss.
 Retention times must be established and recorded.
 Records must be maintained, as appropriate, to
  demonstrate conformance to the standard.
4.5.4: ENVIRONMENTAL
    MANAGEMENT SYSTEM AUDIT.
A program and procedures for conducting periodic
environmental system audits are required to be
established and maintained.

The audit program/procedures must:
 determine whether the EMS conforms to
   requirements of the standard and has been
   properly implemented and maintained

    ensure that information on the audit results are
     provided to management
4.5.4: ENVIRONMENTAL
 MANAGEMENT SYSTEM AUDIT.
The audit program/procedures must:

 be based on the environmental importance of the
  activity concerned and results of previous audits

 cover audit scope, frequency, methodologies, and
  responsibilities and requirements for conducting
  audits, and reporting results.
4.6: MANAGEMENT REVIEW.

Review is to involve the top management in the EMS
continuous improvement process.
Conduct Annual (at least) Management Review of
EMS to ensure:
       Its continuing suitability, adequacy and
      effectiveness
       Adequate information is collected to perform
      the management review
       Address the need for changes to policy,
      environmental aspects, objectives,elements of
      the environmental management system.
EMS
    A continual cycle of planning, implementing,
reviewing and improving the actions that an
organization takes to meet its environmental
obligations.
Environmental Management System

• Serves as a tool to improve environmental performance

• Provides a systematic way of managing an organization’s
environmental affairs

• Is the aspect of the organization’s overall management structure
that addresses immediate and long-term impacts of its products,
services and processes on the environment

• Gives order and consistency for organizations to address
environmental concerns through the allocation of resources,
assignment of responsibility and ongoing evaluation of practices,
procedures and processes

• Focuses on continual improvement of the system
Environmental Management System
An EMS follows a Plan-Do-Check-Act Cycle, or PDCA. The diagram
shows the process of first developing an environmental policy,
planning the EMS, and then implementing it.

The process also includes checking the system and acting on it. The
model is continuous because an EMS is a process of continual
improvement in which an organization is constantly reviewing and
revising the system.


This is a model that can be used by a wide range of
organizations        — from manufacturing facilities to
service industries and     government agencies
Environmental management system model
  1. Environmental policy
Initially, the organization’s top management should have
commitment and define the policy on EMS which is used for the
direction of implementing and improving its EMS.

  2. Planning
In order to achieve environmental policy, at least, the organization
should :
  •Identify the environmental aspects of its activities and specify
those          which have significant impacts on the environment.
  Identify legal and other requirements to which the organization
involved.
  Establish objectives and targets of its activities having impacts t
       environment.
  Establish environmental programs for achieving its objectives
and targets.
3.   Implementation
  In order to achieve environmental planning, at least, the
organization should :

  •Define  roles, responsibilities and authorities for facilitating EMS
effectively.

  •Communicate    to the staffs at each level for the importance of
conformance to the environmental policy; provide appropriate
training to personnel performing the tasks to gain their knowledge
and competence.

  •Establish   and control documentation relating to EMS.

  •Control operations and activities to meet the specified objectives
and targets.

  •Identifypotential accidents and emergency situations for
preventing and mitigating the environmental impacts that may be
associated with them and periodically test such procedures where
practicable.
4.   Checking and corrective action

 To   ensure that the organization is performing in
accordance with the stated EMS programmes, at least, the
organization should:
  • Monitor and measure its operations and activities against
the     organization’s plans.
  • Identify non-conformance and take action to mitigate any
impact caused.
  •Record the on-going activities of the EMS.
  •Conduct periodic EMS audits.



 
   5. Management review

 The   organization’s top management should review and
continually improve its EMS, with the objective of improving its
overall environmental performance.
Environmental management system model
ISO 14000 Concepts
The basic concept underlying the ISO 14000 series is that in
order to consistently meet environmental performance
expectations, an organization must implement and maintain an
effective environmental management system.

 While the system cannot guarantee that environmental
incidents will never occur,
      --it is intended to minimize the likelihood and severity of
their occurrence
      -- it can guarantee that when they occur, there is a
mechanism in             place to investigate the causes and to take
corrective and           preventive action.
Key EMS concepts
   Continual improvement
    - It is to note that an effective EMS doesn’t just happen.
    An effective EMS needs ongoing management support.
    This endorses the concept of continual improvement.
    - The concept of continual improvement recognizes that
    problems will occur, but a committed organization learns
    from its mistakes and prevents similar problems from
    occurring in the future.
    - ISO 14000 Continuous improvement model begins with
    top mgmt’s commitment to corporate governance by a
    set of overarching principle’s including:
              • Environmental protection as one of the highest
                corporate priorities with clear assignment   of
                responsibilities and accountabilities to all
                employees.
   Compliance with all environmental laws and regulations applicable to
    the organization’s activities, products and services.
   Ongoing communication on environmental commitment and
    performance with all stakeholders.
   Strategic planning that sets forth environmental performance
    objectives and targets, implemented through a disciplined mgmt
    process.
   Periodic performance measurement, as well as systems audits and
    mgmt reviews, to achieve continual improvement wherever possible.


   Employee involvement
-   Getting employee involvement in designing and implementing
    the EMS demonstrates the organization’s commitment to the
    environment. So to build and achieve an effective EMS mgmt
    should communicate the importance of:
      • Conviction and commitment towards effective environmental
        mgmt for organization’s survival.
      • Building environmental mgmt in all aspects of orgznal oprns-
        product and process development.
      • Addressing environmental problems as opportunities.
   Flexibility

    - Dynamicity in EMS will :
      1. Allow the organization to adapt to rapidly changing business
    environment
      2. Help making the formulated EMS understandable to all
    concerned who must implement it.
      3. Allow assessment of how organization manages environmental
    obligations and finds cost-effective solutions.
Some unique and important characteristics
of ISO 14001 are:

       It is comprehensive: all members of the
       organization participate in environmental
       protection, the EMS considers all stakeholders,
       and there are processes to identify all
       environmental impacts.

        It is proactive: it focuses on forward thinking
       and action instead of reacting to command and
       control policies.

        It is a systems approach: it stresses improving
       environmental protection by using a single
       environmental management system across all
       functions of the organization.
Legal and other requirement
 Compliance to laws and regulations
Issuance of consent and permit conditions
 Organization – specific codes and programmes that it voluntarily
subscribes.
 Standards and guidelines in the regions where the organization
undertakes business.
Purpose
   If one does not know what laws are applicable,
    how can one be sure if the facility is in
    compliance with them or not?
   Noncompliance may cost an organization
    dearly in many ways, e.g., loss of productivity,
    health, safety, and environment.
   Organization is required to establish and
    maintain a procedure to identify legal
    requirements.
   By anticipating new requirements and making
    changes to operations and activities, one can
    avoid future compliance obligations and their
    associated costs.
In order to be in conformance with this provision of ISO
    14001 an organization must be able to demonstrate three
    specific points
   First, the organization must understand which
    environmental laws and regulations (federal, state and
    local) govern its operations

   Second, it must also be able to explain how the
    requirements of the appropriate laws and regulations
    apply to the organization.

   Third, the organization must be able to demonstrate that it
    keeps up to date with the appropriate laws and
    regulations and their specific requirements
Questions That Need To Be
Answered

1.Has the organization developed a procedure to identify
   applicable environmental legal and regulatory
   requirements?

2. Has the organization developed a procedure to
identify any voluntary requirement to which it subscribes?

3.Does the organization have a procedure to insure
completeness and availability of the required documents?

4.Is the information relative to Legal and Other
Requirements kept up to date?
OBJECTIVES AND
TARGETS
ENVIRONMENTAL OBJECTIVES


 Environmental objectives, in consistence
 with the environmental policies,
 encompass significant environmental
 impacts and applicable laws and
 regulations.
ENVIRONMENTAL TARGETS


     Environmental target is a
 performance requirement based on the
 underlying environmental objective to be
 achieved.
PURPOSE

The purpose of the procedure is to
ensure that the organization
establishes documented
environmental objectives and
standards.
PURPOSE
                    POLICY



ENVIRONMENTA     LEGAL &             OPINION OF
L ASPECTS        OTHER               THE
                 REQUIREMENTS        PARTIES


                   OBJECTIVES
                   & TARGETS




TECHNOLOGY     FINANCE       OPERATION    OTHER
                                          FUNCTION
SCOPE


 The procedure applies to environmental
 objectives and targets set at each
 relevant function and level within the
 organization.
PROCEDURE
   Top management is responsible to establish environmental
    objectives on an annual basis.

   Plant/ Department managers involve operation staff in developing
    environmental objectives for improvement in environmental
    performance.

   Each department manager is responsible to provide inputs and
    evaluate potential impacts in specific functions.

   Manager makes preliminary evaluation of its environmental
    performance, and enlists primary objectives.

   Progress towards the objectives/targets is reviewed at management
    review meetings and communicated to operational staff via bulletin
    boards.
OUTLINING OBJECTIVES AND TARGETS

   Objectives are set to establish overall and often long
    term goals of the organization.

   Invariably, the operational targets should be
    identified at the departmental level and included in
    the frame work of annual budgetary/planning process.

   It should be consistent with the overall business
    mission of the organization.

   Objectives should be kept flexible.
CONTD..,
   Targets should be set at several levels of the
    organization.

   Evaluation and modification of environmental
    objectives and targets may be carried out annually by
    an update of the environmental aspects.

   Opportunities might exist for suppliers and
    contractors to assist the organization in conformance
    to the standard should not be ignored.
EXAMPLE
                                                    OBJECTIVES
•Reduce usage of hazardous chemicals
•Improve employee awareness of
environmental issues.
•Improve compliance with waste
water discharge permit limits.


                                                       TARGETS
      •Eliminate use of CFC to the extent
      possible.
      •Zero period limit violations by the end of
      the current year.
      •Reduce use of electricity by 10% over a
      two year period.

                                                           PERFORMANCE
                                                           INDICATORS
            •Emission/wastes per unit
            production
            •Environmental
            incidents/violations
            •Environmental operational cost.
STEPS TO BE TAKEN
   A cross functional team of an organization set realistic objectives
    and standards.

   Work out the information sources that the cross functional team
    will need to establish objectives and standards.

   Examine if any other information might be useful to the team-
    identify the availability of the information.

   List the significant environmental impacts those are already
    identified and categorize impacts make a brief notes of the impact.

   Examine processes and activities.
CONTD..,
   Identify the applicable regulatory requirements that may affect the
    production facility, and for which specific actions have been
    identified.

   List models of communication with interested parties and ascertain
    the need for additional objectives to address views of customers,
    suppliers and others.

   Re-examine the lists of objectives developed in the earlier steps

   Determine effective performance indicators for each of the selected
    objectives.

   For each selected objective, determine and develop the action
    plan.
EMP
        Objectives
        and targets



            EMP
            defined




      Monitoring and
      measurement executed
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
    PROGRAMME



 Toensure that objectives and targets
 are achieved, an action plan is
 needed.

 AnEMP is a a road map for
 achieving environmental goals.
ISO 14001- 4.3.4
 Environmental management programme
  requires that an organization shall establish
  and maintain a programme for achieving its
  objectives and targets.
 It will include,

         • Designation of responsibility for
           achieving objectives and targets at each
           relevant function and level of the
           organization.
         • The means and time frame b y which they
           are to be achieved.
PURPOSE - EMP
   To accomplish an organization’s functions and
    objectives, the EMP has a direct linkage to the
    organization’s environmental objectives and
    targets.

   EMP should develop specific, prioritized
    actions dealing with the products, processes,
    services, projects and facilities that relate to
    establishing significant environmental aspects,
    objectives and targets.
Contd..,
   EMP should describe how the organization
    will translate its goals into concrete action
    plans to achieve the delineated objectives and
    targets.

   It should not only designate responsibilities for
    achieving goals, but also define the means and
    time frame for achieving the goals.
DEVELOPING EMP
 For a dynamic EMP, it should be integrated
  with existing organizational structures.
 It should receive due representations at the
  business management levels, jointly with the
  other groups within the organization.
 An action plan should be prepared on how the
  organization will meet its objectives and
  targets.
Contd…,
   The action plan may be initiated with projects
    for new products, processes and equipment.

   These would be expected where the business
    investments are aimed at reducing
    environmental effects, to allow high
    performance level, or cost reduction.

   It is investigated and identified during initial
    gap analysis and review.
GAP ANALYSIS


   Is a technique for setting targets for the
    objectives that can be achieved through
    information from the comparative or
    benchmark study.

   It examines performance over time.
EMP ON SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES AND
            TARGETS

ACTION   PRIORITY   RESPONSIBILITY   SCHEDULE   RESOURCES   REMARK
ITEMS                                           REQD.
DRIVERS INFUENCING AN
ORGANIZATION

                            In
            ost s         pa tere
          C ng              rt st
          savi                ies ed


    M



                           M R
  Op ar

                            an i s
    p o k et
                              ag k
       rt u                     e
           ni
                         m
              t ie
                           en

                     s
                             t
BASELINE ASSESSMENT
ACTIVITIES
 Establish the scope of your assessment.

 Try mapping out the physical boundaries of your
 proposed ISO-14000

 Use a series of simple process flow diagrams.
 Identify any changes to the environment that your
 organization causes and activities that cause them.

 Review of existing management practices.
DEVELOPING ENVIRONMENTAL
   INDICATORS

                             DEV
                   NTIFY        ELO
             IDE                    P
 •Key environmental costs and      •Measures of performance
  benefits to your organization     that are achievable
• Any other key concerns to your
                                   • Simple indicators that are not
  orgn or key interested parties
                                     confusing when you
• Actions required to implement      evaluate or communicate the
  data collection                     information.
• How indicator information will
  be used(communicating
  performance to work force).
CO
       IMPROVING                           IM NT
                                             PR IN
                                                OV UA
       ENVIRONMENTAL                              EM L
                                                    EN
       PERFORMANCE                                     T

        Review the findings of the baseline assessment(find
the potential cost savings)

       Brainstorm with anyone who has had experience of
continual improvement

       Ask other employees for ideas and Prioritize
improvement programmes that give the “Quick wins”

        Develop indicators, which enable you to track the
effectiveness of any initiatives

        Celebrate your successes and communicate these
back to the work force using your indicators.
STEP-BY-STEP PLAN

     1)Management commitment
     2)Choose a leader
     3)Budget and schedule
     4)Cross-functional team
     5)Involve employees
     6)Initial review
     7)Establish plan
     8)Identify environmental aspects
     9)Establish environmental policy and
       objectives
     10)Procedures/documents
     11)Plan for change
     12)Train employees
     13)ISO 14000 implementation
     14)Assess performance
1. Ga ining Ma na ge me nt Commitme nt:
         An organization must have commitment and careful
          planning to figure out
  1) What it needs to do,
  2) How it will be done, and
  3) Which people of the organization
    should be involved
      2.Choos ing a le a de r:

              The choice of the leader is critical.

               The person must have some experience with
the quality management programme and have the time and
temperamental commitment .
               Necessary authority, an understanding of the
organization and project management skills
3. P re pa ring a budge t a nd S che dule :

       Leader is responsible for preparing a preliminary
 budget in which costs will likely include staff
 and employee time, training consultant fees, materials.
       The schedule should consider the various tasks
and roadblocks, depending on the dimension and
complexity of the organization.

 4. Cons tituting a proje ct te a m:
                  A team with representation from key
          management functions and production or service
          areas can identify and assess issues, opportunities
          and existing processes.
5. Employe e pa rticipa tion:
                A great source of knowledge
on environmental and health and safety
issues related to their areas well as on the
effectiveness of current processes and
procedures.
    6. Unde rta king a n initia l re vie w:
            Preparation of a list of the environmental
             requirements of the organization
            (regulations, guidelines and other
            documents).
            The preparatory review itself should be
            comprehensive in consideration of input
            processes and output.
7.Es ta blis hing a pla n:
        Quantified targets will show
management the quantum of workload required
 for implementation what resources are needed
and opportunities for cost-effective
improvement.

8.Eva lua ting Environme nta l a s pe cts :

                Actual environmental aspects and
        impacts of the organization should be listed out.
                To each of these identified aspects, the
        level of risk involved with conformance and
        nonconformance should be evaluated.
9.Es ta blis hing a n e nvironme nta l policy a nd obje ctive s :
      Foundation and direction for the management system.
          The policy needs to clarify compliance with
          environmental legislation that may affect the
          organization and stress a commitment to
          continuous improvement.

              The organization will declare its primary
environmental objectives.
   10.P re pa ring proce dure s a nd Docume nts :
       Develop procedures and other system documents
which might involve modifying current environmental
 procedures or adapting other business procedures
(such as quality,ergonomics, health
and safety management procedures)
11.P la nning for Cha nge :

        It should be made sure that the system is
sufficiently flexible and simple.
        Avoid making it so rigid to reflect the realities
of operations and activities.

 12.Tra ining of Employe e s :

                    Training of employees wit regard to the
             environmental impacts of their activities, any
              new/modified procedures and
              any new responsibilities.
13.Imple me nta tion of IS O14000:
                    To clean up the obvious problems, and
                    identify areas where the organization is not
                    complying with the regulations or
  customer demands. Those areas where that organization
  stands to gain greater efficiency should be targeted.
  (scrap and waste reduction projects, recycling and
  elimination of liabilities)
     14.As s e s s ing the pe rforma nce :
          Planned comprehensive periodic audit to ensure
that it is effective in operation, meeting specified goals,
and the system continues to perform in accordance with
relevant regulations and standards.
          Management review is also required to ensure
 that it is suitable and effective in operation.
Provides the opportunity to improve the system and
environmental performance over time.
BARRIERS FOR SME’s IN IMPLEMENTATION OF
       ISO14000

                                                    La ck of re s ource s
La ck of tra ining

                                                    Ina ppropria te tools
La ck of Awa re ne s s
                                                     a nd te chnique s

La ck of ince ntive s
                                                    La ck of s kills

La ck of Guida nce
                                                    Inte rna l a nd e xte rna l
                     High cos t of imple me nta tion barriers
                     a nd ma inte na nce
                           •
Clauses for
implementation
   Structure and Responsibility (Clause
    4.4.1)
   Training, Awareness, and Competence
    (Clause 4.4.2
   Communication
    (4.4.3)
   EMS documentation(4.4.4)
   Document control(4.4.5)
   Operational control
    (4.4.6)
   Emergency Preparedness and Response
    (Clause 4.4.7)
Successful Implementation
   Stipulating the EMS policy
   Planning
   Implementation of the EMS according to
    the       policy
   Checking and corrective actions
   Environmental management system
    review
Issues related to
implementation
   although the standards provide guidance in
    terms of functional requirements, they are
    silent with regard to implementation
    methods or organizational processes that
    are fraught with human and systems
    change issues.
   manage transitions and focus on shared
    visions and behavioral norms as core
    supports for the change effort.
   Change is scary and the courage to forge
    ahead must be summoned.
Issues.. transition
 It is often useful to begin the process
  of change by starting at the end; by
  looking at the end result,
 Link the change effort to a vision (the
  core) of a desired future state;
 when people share a common vision
  of a desired future, they are likely
  more willing and more able to make
  changes that will move the business
  forward.
Issues ..
communication.
   It is possible that new patterns of communication will
    have to be adopted such that appropriate feedback
    and interaction can be achieved.
   Information needs to be shared and employees need
    to know that sharing this information is crucial in
    establishing the basis for environmental controls.
   Reward and incentive programs should be evaluated
    for conformity with the goals that the organization is
    trying to achieve.
   This "open-book" management represents a shift away
    from traditional command and control and may be
    distrusted by top and mid-level managers.
Issues…awareness

   Personnel within the organization
    need to understand that competition
    among businesses and the increasing
    awareness about the state of our
    environment and the costs associated
    with its maintenance can make
    environmental performance a
    competitive differentiator.
Issues…
         Attitude &
interpretation
   Many companies tend to isolate environmental issues
    and keep them "harbored" within the environmental
    department.
   ISO 14001 requires a commitment to the prevention of
    pollution. Note the use of the verbiage prevention of
    pollution as opposed to pollution prevention.
    Prevention of pollution is defined in the standard as
    the "use of processes, materials or products that
    avoid, reduce or control pollution, which may include
    recycling, treatment, process changes, control
    mechanisms, efficient use of resources and material
    substitution."
Issues.. Product process
      designs
   industrial products that are being
    designed and developed today will dictate
    the impact that industry will have on the
    environment in the future, process and
    product design engineers hold a key to
    future industry - environment interactions.
Issues.. product life cycle

   When the product is finally disposed
    of, the product may end up almost
    anywhere, in any country, in a high-
    technology landfill, an incinerator, on
    the side of the road, or in a river that
    supplies drinking water to a small
    community.
Issues…product life cycle

 Industrial ecology is an approach to
  industry-environment interactions to
  aid in evaluating and minimizing life
  cycle problems.
 It involves the design of industrial
  products and processes from the dual
  perspectives of product
  competitiveness and environmental
  interactions.
Issues.. processes
   processes define much of the flow of solids,
    liquids, gases and energy into a
    manufacturing facility and are responsible
    for much of the flows of solids, liquids,
    gases and energy leaving that facility.
   Product designers must consider industry-
    environment interactions that are primarily
    outside the province of the process
    designer: choice of materials, product
    packaging, environmental impacts during
    product use, and the optimization of product
    recycling.
No longer…
   Environmental managers have been talking
    about integrating environmental issues into
    the business decision making at an
    organization, however, historically, this has
    been met with resistance. Now, all facility
    personnel will have to start integrating
    environmental issues into their day-to-day
    activities.
    It can no longer be an end-of-the-pipe
    issue.
Non Conformance,
Monitoring and         Corrective and
Measurement           Preventive Actions




 Records
                 EMS Audits
ISO Explanation
   The ISO 14001,4.5.1- Monitoring and
    Measurement, requires that the organization
    shall establish and maintain documented
    procedures to monitor and measure , on a
    regular basis, the key characteristics of its
    operations and activities that can have a
    significant impact on the environment
   This shall include the recording of information
    to track performance,relevant operational
    controls and conformance with the
    organization’s environmental objectives and
    targets
PURPOSE…….

   To assess how well the EMS is working
   Helps to Manage a Business better
   Identify the performance indicators to
    monitor the EMS
   To gauge the Environmental Performance
   Analyze root causes of Problems
   Identify areas where corrective action is
    needed
   Improve performance and increase
    efficiency of the organization
Getting Started…..
       Which operations
      & activities may have
           significant
     environmental impacts



        Which are the key
      characteristics of these
           operations
           & activities




       How can you measure
       these characteristics?
Procedure for Performing Monitoring and
Measurement
 Key Process Characteristics
 Process and Outcome Measures

 Equipment Calibration

 Regulatory Compliance

 Environmental Performance

 Audit versus Performance Evaluation

 Linkages of Environmental Information
Auditing and EPE


  AUDIT                    EPE



     Periodic               Ongoing


  Sample of data            Frequent


   Independent            Line Function


Verify Conformance      Assess Performance
ISO Explanation
   ISO 14001,4.5.2 - Nonconformance and
    corrective and preventive action , requires
    that the organization shall establish and
    maintain procedures for defining
    responsibility and authority for
    handling and investigating non
    conformance , taking corrective action
    to mitigate any impact caused, and for
    initiating and completing corrective and
    preventive action
Purpose


   Management      System
     Review         Audit



          Corrective
           Action
Typical Causes of EMS
Problems
Getting Started
   The results of monitoring and measurements,audit
    findings and other systemic reviews should be
    documented and reviewed and must lead to corrective
    actions.If the organization already has an ISO 9000 QMS
    ,a corrective and preventive action process already
    exists.The same model may be used for EMS purposes.
   For a documented problem . The root cause of the
    systematic failure should be determined.The
    organization must be committed to implementing
    corrective actions as quickly as possible. The corrective
    and Preventive action process should specify
    responsibilities and schedules.Progress should be
    reviewed regularly and any deficiencies followed up
Contd...
   The extent of planning and documentation
    required for corrective and preventive actions
    may vary with the severity of the problem(and
    its potential environmental impacts).An
    appropriate suggestion is “A simple method
    always works better”
   It should be ensured that adequate data and
    information is collected to determine why a
    problem has occurred and what corrective
    actions may be necessary.
EMS Elements that Lead to corrective Action and Management
Reviews


                                          Employee
Monitoring              Audits
                                         Involvement



                     Corrective
                      Action
                      Process


                   Management
                     Review
Hints that should not be Ignored!
   Workers on the shop floor are in the best position to
    see problems and suggest solutions.
   All employees should be informed that it is their
    responsibility to identify and perform corrective
    actions. This would include reporting nonconformance
    of operational and procedural natures.It should also be
    well communicated to all employees that everyone is
    responsible for solving nonconformance as well.
   A suitable system improvement process e.g.., via
    suggestion boxes,incentive programmes should be
    employed for greater employee participation.
   In small companies same employees might have been
    engaged in multiple function,including management
    review and corrective action processes..A strong link
    should exist between the processes for better EMS
    effectiveness...
ISO Explanation

   ISO 14001,4.5.3 - Records, states that the
    organization shall establish and maintain
    procedures for the identification,
    maintenance and disposition of
    environmental records. These records
    shall include training records and the
    results of audits and reviews
Key Questions in Records
    Management
 Identify what records to be maintained.
 Authorize who keeps them and where and
  how they are kept.
 Determine how long they are kept
  (retention time)
 Determine how they are accessed and
  disposed ,including good storage and
  retrieval system
Purpose...
   Records Management under ISO14001 must be
    able to prove that the organization is actually doing
    what it says!
   To prove that the organization is actually
    implementing the EMS as designed,one should
    have a system for managing EMS records.
   While records have value internally over time one
    may need to provide evidence of EMS
    implementation to external parties (such as
    customers, a registrar , or the public).
   For records Management, the organization shall
    develop procedures to maintain, identify,collect,
    index and store records.
TYPES OF RECORDS
   Environmental aspects determination documentation
   Legal and other regulatory requirements and records of
    regulatory violations.
   Permits consents, licenses and other approvals
   Progress reports towards meeting objectives and targets.
   Hazardous material spills, other incident reports and follow
    ups.
   MSDS
   Sampling and monitoring data
   Maintenance records
   Calibration and maintenance records for instrumentation
   Training records
   EMS audit and regulatory compliance audit reports
   Management review documentation
Intro...
 EMS  audit refers to a systematic and
 documented verification process to
 determine whether an organization’s
 EMS conforms to the audit criteria set
 by the organization and for the
 communication of the audit results to
 the top Management.
Purpose
   To determine whether or not EMS conforms to planned
    arrangements for environmental management including
    the requirements of this International Standards and
    has been properly implemented and maintained
   Provide information on the results of audits to
    Management
   Results of EMS audits should be linked to the
    corrective and preventive actions.
   Systematic identification and reporting of EMS
    deficiencies provides a great opportunity for the
    Management functions to focus on the environment
    and ensure its cost effectiveness
   External Auditing is suggested
Getting Started

 The organization should have an
 Audit Procedure describing

 Audit Scope

 Audit Frequency

 Audit Methods

 Key responsibilities

 Reporting Mechanism
AUDIT FREQUENCY
              The nature of the Operations
The significant Environmental aspects/impacts identified
       The results of the monitoring programme
               Findings of Previous audits
                audited at least annually



  AUDITING METHODS - Internal,External auditors
        The number will depend on the size and
      complexity of the organizational functions
  Auditing Techniques ,Management System Concepts
         Quality systems,Legal compliance etc
Linkages between EMS audits,Corrective Action and
  Management Reviews


              Periodic EMS
                  audits



   EMS                            Corrective
Established                         Action
                                   Process



               Management
                Review
Intro
 Management reviews ensure how the
  EMS will remain viable.
 It can be used to demonstrate top
  management’s ongoing support for the
  environmental issues.
 It shall address the possible need for
  changes to policy, objectives, and other
  elements of the EMS.
MR Considers
   Progress on objectives and targets towards
    continuing suitability,adequacy and EMS
    effectiveness
   New standards legislation and regulations
   Audit results
   Environmental Performance measures
   Reports of emergencies (e.g, spills,leaks, other
    incidents)
   New scientific/technical data on products,
    materials and processes used
   Internal and External Communications etc
Getting Started
   It should involve- those who have the right information
    and knowledge and who have the authority to make
    decisions.
   Schedule and frequency for Management reviews
    should be determined, typically once or twice in a year.
   It should assess whether different organizational
    functions have complied with policy and procedures
    using audit reports.
   It should be determined if Capital and other resources ,
    including information management systems are adequate
    to support the EMS requirements of the Organization.
Contd….
   It should be determined if the operational
    controls,procedures, corrective and preventive actions
    and the continuous improvements efforts have resulted
    in enhanced environmental performance.changes that
    result in process improvements should be documented
   Possible improvements in the organizational structure ,
    operational procedures , training requirements , work
    instructions , pollution prevention , waste management,
    energy utilization, process improvements, that may lead
    to environmental opportunities and organizational benefits
    should be determined
Business Transformation Through
ISO 14000
Case Studies
Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited

 A. Water Conservation Measures
 Reuse of wastewater generated from filter press operation for
 other miscellaneous uses and recirculation of cooling water at
 jiggering and kiln areas.

 B. Energy Conservation Measures
 Optimise Kiln loading, insulation of ducts, Process flow
 improvement by introduction of capacitor bank, use of high
 efficiency motors and variable speed drives.

 C. Air pollution control measures
 Introduction of wet scrubber for standardised glazing Dust
 Extraction System, reconditioning of Dust Extraction System of
 Shot blasting machine at foundry
Case Studies
Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited…Contd.

D. Waste Minimisation Programmes
Recovery of solid waste generated at grid washing
Crushing and reuse of rejected ceramic tiles

E. Mitigation of Green house Gases
Energy efficiency studies have been conducted on kilns furnaces,
dryers & boilers and implemented efficiency improvement
programme to reduce specific fuel consumption, which in turn
reduces green house gases emission.
Case Studies
        Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited…Contd.
 Cost Benefit Analysis for Implementing ISO 14000 System

Costs                                       Annual Cost (in Rs. Lacs)

Consultancy Fee                                      3.64
Training fee                                         2.02
Certification fee (per 3 years)                               2.48

Investment on Environmental Pollution control Equip.     11.05
Miscellaneous Costs                                   0.65
       Total                                     Rs. 19.84 Lacs

Quantified Benefits                            Annual Savings( in Rs
  Lacs )
Power Savings                                         15.0
Fuel Savings                                          14.0
Lubricants Savings         Rs.                                    00.6
Savings in Waste disposal costs                       00.2
Resource Savings                                      40.0
Savings through Recycling                             30.3

        Total                               Rs. 100.1 Lacs per year
Copley Square Hotel

   A prominent hotel created an aggressive
    environmental program that provides a foundation
    for ISO 14001 registration. The hotel is an historic
    one with an upscale clientele. Their aggressive
    approach to reducing their impact on the
    environment helped them identify many ongoing
    benefits. The major benefit areas were: recycling,
    energy use reduction, and water use reduction.
    The following are the major actions and their
    results:
RECYCLING



   :
            
   Energy Use Reduction:
   • Energy efficient lighting was installed in public areas which are
    light 24 hours per day. 60 watt incandescent corridor ceiling lights
    were replaced 15 watt compact fluorescent lights: savings equal
    $3,622 annually plus 90% reduction in labor costs. 90 watt
    incandescent lights in table lamps in the lobby and elevator
    landings were replaced with 22 watt compact fluorescent lights:
    savings equal $1,540 annually and reduced labor costs. 30 watt exi
    sign lights were replaced with 1.8 watt LED exit signs: savings
    equal $1,179 annually.
   • Install compact fluorescent bulbs in guest room table lamps and
    hanging lamps: predicted payback equal 1.81 years.
   • Install compact fluorescent bulbs in back areas which are lit 24
    hours: savings equal to $59.57 per bulb.
   • Remind employees to turn off all energy using devices that are no
    being used: no estimate of savings.
   Water Use Reduction:
   • Installing toilets with 1.5 gallon capacity,
    replacing ones with 3.5 gallon capacity will save
    $3,276 and 430,000 gallons annually.
   • Showerheads of greater efficiency will save
    $6,546 and 859,000 gallons annually.
   • Guest have been offered the option of reusing
    their towels and linens when staying more than
    one night. Projected savings are $4,000
    annually.
   Comments
   This case includes savings that are well known and some
    that are innovative. Some of the reasons the program has
    been successful are:
   • Everyone in the hotel participates in the program and can
    contribute from within their job responsibilities. Thus, the
    power of each individual to contribute in a positive way is
    harnessed.
   • Small savings are as important as big ones. This
    recognizes that small savings add up and creates a culture
    that values contributions at all levels of the organization and
    of any size. The cumulative effect of many small acts of
    environmental impact reduction may not be quantifiable, but
    it may be significant.
ISO 14000-SERIES

BENEFITS AND OTHER ISSUES
REASONS FOR
IMPLEMENTING ISO 14000
    Recognition
   Bottom-line benefits
   Trade
   Regulatory
   Financial sector
INDUSTRY ACCEPTANCE OF
ISO 14000 SERIES
   ISO 14001 – market driven approach to
    environmental protection.

   It is seen as market place trend by many
    organizations.

   There is noticeable change in the mindset
    of organizations for responding to their
    environmental obligations.
ISO-14000 IN SMALL
ORGANISATIONS
   ISO 14001 is flexible to fit into any size,
    industry or facility.
    ADVANTAGES:
   Lines of communication are short
   Organizational structure and climate are
    less complex
   People often perform multiple functions
COST ESTIMATES

COST INCLUDES :
 Staff/ employee time,

 Consultant expenses and

 Training of personnel.
COST ESTIMATES
   Total implementation time can usually be
    estimated as one workday per employee.

   12 to 14 months to fully implement ISO
    14001's 62 elements

   Implementation costs can range from
    $20,000 to $250,000
BENEFITS OF ISO 14000
   Better conformance to environmental
    regulations,
    Greater marketability,
   Better use of resources,
   Higher quality goods and services,
   Increased levels of safety,
   Improved image and
   Increased profits.
SOME ISSUES RELATED TO
ISO 14000
 There is no guarantee that certification
will result in increased profits for a company.

   ISO 14000 which is stricter than ISO 9000.

 Multisite registration of subsidiaries is
permitted only if there is a common
management and central control of each site
ISO 14000 AND ISO 9000


SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES
SIMILARITIES BETWEEN ISO
14000 AND ISO 9000
•   Policy and Defined organization and responsibilities

•   Defined and documented standard practices

•   Control of critical operations

•   Document control Training

•    Records system

•    Internal audits

•    Corrective action system

•    Management review for continual improvement
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ISO
14000 AND ISO 9000
        ISO 9000                            ISO 14000

1.Encourage organizations to          1.Deals with the management of
institute quality assurance          the environmental effects of an
management programs.                 organization
2.The major system requirements      2.Customers as well as many
are defined by customers             additional stakeholders


3.Includes evaluation of suppliers 3.Include methods of evaluating
and review of customer contracts. environmental impacts and
                                   systems


4.The goals of a                     4.The situation for environmental
quality system are generally quite   systems is not so straightforward
clear
OTHER EMS STANDARDS


British Standard 7750 (BS 7750) -the
  world's first standard for environmental
  management systems (EMS) and

The European Eco-Management and Audit
  Scheme (EMAS) -European Union
INTEGRATING SYSTEMS FOR
BUSINESS
INTEGRATING SYSTEMS
FOR BUSINESS
   Develop and maintain a comprehensive
    business management system -quality and
    environmental requirements

   Must be based firmly in the needs and
    values of the Business itself

   Each new requirement that emerges can be
    carefully considered and integrated into the
    existing systems
    framework.
INTEGRATING SYSTEMS
FOR BUSINESS-
CONTINUES….
 Companies that are registered to ISO 9001 already
  have a head start.

   These systems satisfy internal business needs as well
    as the external requirements

   Systems which are non-value adding should be closely
    examined and improved
INTEGRATING SYSTEMS
FOR BUSINESS-
CONTINUES….
   Conduct a gap analysis to determine which system
    elements are in place and which elements need to be
    improved or developed
   Use ISO 14001 as a guideline or model of a
    comprehensive EMS.
   Examine the company's existing environmental
    systems, as well as quality systems
   Determine the business' priorities for improving
    existing systems and developing new systems.
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Iso 14000 new presentation by Muhammad Fahad Ansari 12IEEM14

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3. ISO 14000 INTRODUCTION  In the present day, environmental matter is not limited only in one country or specific area. The environmental impact effects everywhere and leads to problem all over the world.  Environmental conservation has become so complicated that it causes pressure to all business organizations.  The International Organization for Standardization had led to the development of the International Standard for environmental management system series (ISO 14000).
  • 4. ISO 14000 INTRODUCTION •After the success of the ISO9000 series of quality standards in 1987, the International Standards Organization is nearing completion and publication of a comprehensive set of standards for environmental management. •This series of standards is designed to cover the whole area of environmental issues for organizations in the global marketplace.
  • 5. Continues..  The structure of the standards is as follows:  Environmental Management Systems (EMS)  Environmental Auditing and Related Environmental Investigations (EA)  Environmental Labeling (EL)  Environmental Performance Evaluation (EPE)  Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)  Terms and Definitions (T&D)  ISO 14000 Series is the set of standards relating to environmental management system.  Generally, the standard used for certification is  ISO 14001 Environmental Management Systems - Specifications with Guidance for Use.
  • 6. ISO 14000 SERIES  The ISO 14000 series is a set of standards concerning EMS including the activities of designing, producing, delivering and servicing.  The concept of the standard is to enable the organization to continually develop and improve its EMS.  Although the series comprises of many standards, the standard ISO 14001 is used as the direction for EMS certification.
  • 7. WHO SHOULD IMPLEMENT ISO 14000  Any organization: manufacturers and service organizations.  Any activities of each organization may cause the environmental aspects and impacts such as noise, dust, waste, contaminants in manufacturing process and ineffectively resources consumption in servicing. These can be minimized by implementing EMS.  Although each country has already had her own environmental regulations, organizations are able to apply ISO 14000 series effectively within their system on voluntary basis and the benefit obtained is not only for organizations themselves but their society also.
  • 8. WHAT IS ISO 14000  ISO 14000 is a series of voluntary international standards pertaining to environmental issues.  They are designed to reduce the environmental effects from all aspects of business activities. It is believed that higher efficiency would be realized and "the cost of doing business" would also be reduced , by minimizing business exposure to environmental issues.
  • 9. What is not ISO 14000  Is not a PRODUCT and PERFORMANCE standard.  Does not establish levels of pollutants or performance.  Does not establish test standards.  Does not involve initial performance testing.  Does not requires or establish final performance goal.  Does not require the meeting of zero emissions.  Does not mandate best practice technology.  Does not require disclosure of performance levels.  Does not require disclosure of audit results.
  • 10. HISTORY OF ISO 14000  The reasons for developing these national standards stemmed from the European success terms of the ISO 9000 Quality Management Standards, and from the "green movement" in Europe. These standards were envisioned to provide a market-driven, competitive attitude in business.  ISO 14000, which is an evolution of ISO 9000 standards, is designed to address process improvements in these environmental areas by way of energy audits, hazardous materials management, and other techniques
  • 11. ISO 14000 holds great promise for reduced waste and higher material quality because it emphasizes the elimination of waste early in the procurement process, especially in industries such as coatings where there are significant amounts of raw material input.  ISO 14000 identifies and eliminates all waste that enters production through current procurement practices before it enters the manufacturing environment.
  • 12. When ISO 9000 quality management systems are integrated with ISO 14000 environmental systems, the two processes support each other. Opportunities for better quality practices exist in the quest for better environmental practices, and better environmental processes are often the result of improved quality.  A merged system, which is currently available, is often the answer for companies seeking improvement in both areas.
  • 13. Historically, document disarray and communication redundancies have made implementation of ISO 9000 and ISO 14000 slow and costly. .  The advent of new Web-based technologies, however, makes it possible for companies to host entire documentation, project management, and training systems for the implementation of ISO 9000 and ISO 14000 standards, significantly reducing the cost of each individual component and minimizing the time to implementation.
  • 14. 60 EVOLUTION OF ISO 14000 Second Edition of BS 7750 50 BSI developed its own published committee to develop BS7750 and its first edition 40 was established ISO sets up a new committee: ISO/Technical 30 Committee 207 for Environmental ISO Management and European establishes Commission publishes Eco- 20 SAGE management and Audit Scheme (EMAS) 10 0 1991 1992 1993 1994
  • 15. Work on the revision of ISO 14001 Continues.. 60 begins and Remainder of the initial ISO/TC 207 work programme completed ISO 14001 route to EMAS registration 50 and BS 7750 withdrawn BS 7750 route to EMAS registration 40 and First five ISO 14000 Standards published 30 Verification to EMAS 20 begins 10 0 1995 1996 1997 1998
  • 16. ISO 14000 SERIES Organizational Product Evaluation Evaluation Standards Standards  Organizational evaluation standards are operational and effective because, the focus was on the process rather than the product.  The development and acceptance of product evaluation standards will be much more difficult.
  • 17. The structure of the standards is as follows: Environmental Management Systems (EMS) Environmental Auditing and Related Environmental Investigations (EA) Environmental Labeling (EL) Environmental Performance Evaluation (EPE) Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) Terms and Definitions (T&D) ORGANISATIONAL EVALUATION STANDARDS EA EMS 14010 general principles EPE 14001 specification 14011 audit procedures 14031 guidelines 14012 auditor criteria
  • 18. PRODUCT EVALUATION STANDARDS Environmental Labeling 14020 Basic Principles Environmental Aspects in 14021 Self Discipline Product Standards 14022 Symbols Guide 64 EAPS Guide 14023 Testing and Verification 14024 Third Party Life Cycle Assessment 14040 principles Framework 14041 Goals and Definition 14042 Impact Assessment 14043 Improvement Assessment
  • 19. ISO 14000 FAMILY ISO 14000 Title General Description Thrust Area Standard 14001:1996 Environmental Main organizational Organizational Management environmental standard Systems— and the ISO standard to Specification with which an EMS is formally Guidance for Use registered 14004:1996 Environmental Complementary document Organizational Management to ISO 14001 which Systems— provides more information General Guidelines and assistance in on Principles, understanding and Systems and implementing the EMS Supporting standard. Techniques 14010:1996 Guidelines for Covers the concepts of Organizational Environmental environmental auditing Auditing—General which can be used Principles separately to create an organizational environmental audit program or is used to implement a program in support of the ISO 14001 EMS audit requirements
  • 20. ISO 14000 Title General Description Thrust Area Standard 14011:1996 Guidelines for Provides additional detail Organizational Environmental Auditing— into the auditing of an EMS. Audit Procedures: Auditing of Environmental Management Systems 14012:1996 Guidelines for Presents the consensus Organizational Environmental Auditing: international requirements Qualification Criteria for for certification as an Environmental Auditors environmental auditor; each national registration accreditation organization is charged with developing and implementing the program for registering auditors to the national program. 14020- Environmental Labeling Series that includes Product 14025 :1998 requirements for self- specific declaration, testing and validation and symbols used
  • 21. ISO 14000 Title General Description Thrust Area Standard 14031:2000 Guidelines on Presents methods for Organizational Environmental monitoring and measuring the Performance Evaluation environmental performance of an organization or elements within the organization 14040:1997 Life Cycle Assessment Provides principles and Product- 14041:1998 framework, inventory analysis, specific impact assessment and 14042:1999 interpretation of the 14043:1999 environmental aspects associated with specific products or services including the design, manufacture, distribution, inventory, use .
  • 22. 14050:1998 Terms and Details the Overall Definitions terminology and use of ISO 14000 specific language for consistency of meaning to support the efforts of developing and implementing the standards ISO Guide 64:1997 Guide for the Provides guidelines Product-specific (formerly 14060) Inclusion of to specification Environmental writers to consider Aspects and incorporate in Product environmental Standards aspects.
  • 23. ISO 14000 POLICY  Prevention of pollution.  Continual Environmental Improvement.  Commitment to comply with Environmental Laws and Regulations  Applicable in size and scope.
  • 24. ISO 14000 Policy, Continued  Establish framework for setting and reviewing objectives and targets  Documented, implemented, maintained, and communicated to employees.  Available to the public
  • 25. ELEMENTS OF ISO 14001  ISO-14001, outlines 18 elements that must be followed if a facility wishes to be in conformance.  The 18 elements are divided into six clauses  Six clauses are 4.1 General Requirements 4.2 Environmental Policy 4.3 Planning 4.4 Implementation & Operation 4.5 Checking & Corrective action 4.6 Management review
  • 26. 4.2: ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY. Ensure commitment to the EMS and define policy that:  Is based on company’s mission and values.  is appropriate to the nature, scale and environmental impacts of the business  includes a commitment to continual improvement  includes a commitment to comply with relevant environmental legislation and regulations  is documented, maintained and communicated to all employees  is available to public
  • 27. 4.3.1: ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS Environmental aspects of activities, products, or services that the organization can control must be established, maintained, and kept up to date, in order to determine which can have significant impacts on the environment. The organization shall insure that the aspects related to these significant impacts are considered in setting its environmental objectives.
  • 28. PROCESS OF IDENTIFYING ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS Periodically Define Scope Review and Update Define Process Record Results Gather Data Evaluate Impacts Identify Identify Assemble Environmental Environmental appropriate people Aspects Impacts
  • 29. Example: Environmental Aspects Activity Aspect Potential Regulated Rating Impact MSW Air Emissions Air quality Yes 51 Combustion (Nox, SO2, degradation, metals, smog, acid dioxin, CO) deposition Residuals Residuals Land/water Yes 51 Handling (ash) contamination Disposal Boiler water Chemical Land/water Yes 30 production spills/release contamination s Recyclables Windblown Aesthetics Yes 36 Receiving Litter
  • 30. 4.3.2: LEGAL AND OTHER REQUIREMENTS. Procedures to ensure that the company can identify legal and other environments requirements are required to be established and maintained. It is also required to know how the organization  Access and identify legal and other requirements  Keep track of changes to legal and other requirements Communicate relevant information about legal and other requirements to employees
  • 31. 4.3.3: OBJECTIVES AND TARGETS.  Documented environmental objectives and targets for each relevant function and level within the organization are required to be established and maintained.  These set objectives and targets must address legal consideration and other requirements, the facility's significant environmental aspects, technological options, financial/ operational/business requirements, and views of interested parties.  These objectives and targets must be consistent with the environmental policy.
  • 32. 4.3.4: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT PROGRAM(S).  A program(s) for achieving set objectives and targets is required to be established and maintained.  The program must include designated responsible parties for achieving objectives and targets at each relevant function and level of the organization and the means and timeframe by which the objectives and targets are to be achieved.  In addition, the program must be amended as needed to ensure that the environmental management program applies to new developments and new or modified activities, products, or services.
  • 33. 4.4.1: STRUCTURE AND RESPONSIBILITY.  Roles, responsibilities, and authorities are required to be defined, documented, and communicated to facilitate effective environmental management.  Sufficient resources must be provided to implement and control the environmental management system.  A specific management representative(s) must be appointed to ensure that EMS requirements are established, implemented, and maintain in accordance with the standard.  The management representative must have defined roles, responsibilities, and authority for reporting on EMS performance to top management
  • 34. 4.4.2: TRAINING AWARENESS AND COMPETENCE. Appropriate training for all personnel whose work may create a significant impact on the environment must be identified. Procedures are required to be established and maintained to make employees aware of:  The importance of conformance with the environmental policy and procedures and with EMS requirements,  The potential environmental impacts of work activities  Roles and responsibilities in achieving conformance with policy, procedures, EMS requirements
  • 35. 4.4.3: COMMUNICATION.  Procedures for internal communication between levels and functions of the company are required to be established and maintained.  Procedures must also be developed for receiving, documenting and responding to relevant communication from external parties.  Finally, processes for external communications must be considered and the decision recorded.
  • 36. 4.4.4: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM.  Information describing core elements of the management system and their interaction is required to be established and maintained.  The information must also provide direction to related documentation.  ISO 14000 requires documentations much similar to ISO 9000 which makes integration of two systems easier.
  • 37. 4.4.5: DOCUMENT CONTROL. Procedures for controlling all documents required by the standard are required to be established and maintained. These procedures must ensure the following:  The documents can be located ,  The documents are periodically reviewed,and approved by authorized personnel,  The current versions are available at locations where operations essential to the functioning of EMS are done.  Obsolete documents are promptly removed  Further, documentation must be legible,
  • 38. 4.4.6: OPERATIONAL CONTROL. Operations and activities associated with the significant environmental aspects are required to be identified. These activities must be planned,and an organization must:  establish and maintain documented procedures to cover situations where their absence could lead to deviations from the environmental policy and the objectives and targets,  stipulate criteria in the operational procedures, and  establish and maintain procedures related to the environmental aspects and communicating those relevant procedures and requirements to suppliers and contractors
  • 39. 4.4.7: EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS AND RESPONSE.  Procedures to identify potential for and respond to accidents and emergency situations, are required to be established and maintained.  In addition, the emergency procedures must be reviewed and revised, when necessary, especially after an accident or emergency situation.  Where practicable, it is required that these procedures are periodically tested through drills, exercises, etc.
  • 40. 4.5.1: MONITORING AND MEASUREMENT  Develop and maintain procedures to regularly monitor and measure performance against objectives and targets  Maintain and document program for calibrating monitoring equipment  Identify and investigate non-conformance and implement corrective and preventative action  Establish and maintain program to conduct periodic internal audits  The organization must also maintain a documented procedure for periodically evaluating compliance with relevant environmental laws and regulations
  • 41. 4.5.2: NONCONFORMANCE & CORRECTIVE AND PREVENTIVE ACTION.  Procedures for defining responsibility and authority for handling and investigating nonconformance, taking action to mitigate any environmental impacts, and for corrective and preventive action completion, are required to be established and maintained.  Environmental incidents includes emission, chemical spills  All environmental incidents require full evaluation of root cause, initial response, and identification and implementation of corrective and/or preventative action
  • 42. 4.5.3: RECORDS.  Procedures for identification, maintenance, and disposition of environmental records are required to be established and maintained.  The records must be legible, identifiable and traceable to the activity involved.  The records must be stored/maintained so that they are readily retrievable and protected against damage, deterioration, or loss.  Retention times must be established and recorded.  Records must be maintained, as appropriate, to demonstrate conformance to the standard.
  • 43. 4.5.4: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM AUDIT. A program and procedures for conducting periodic environmental system audits are required to be established and maintained. The audit program/procedures must:  determine whether the EMS conforms to requirements of the standard and has been properly implemented and maintained  ensure that information on the audit results are provided to management
  • 44. 4.5.4: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM AUDIT. The audit program/procedures must:  be based on the environmental importance of the activity concerned and results of previous audits  cover audit scope, frequency, methodologies, and responsibilities and requirements for conducting audits, and reporting results.
  • 45. 4.6: MANAGEMENT REVIEW. Review is to involve the top management in the EMS continuous improvement process. Conduct Annual (at least) Management Review of EMS to ensure:  Its continuing suitability, adequacy and effectiveness  Adequate information is collected to perform the management review  Address the need for changes to policy, environmental aspects, objectives,elements of the environmental management system.
  • 46. EMS A continual cycle of planning, implementing, reviewing and improving the actions that an organization takes to meet its environmental obligations.
  • 47. Environmental Management System • Serves as a tool to improve environmental performance • Provides a systematic way of managing an organization’s environmental affairs • Is the aspect of the organization’s overall management structure that addresses immediate and long-term impacts of its products, services and processes on the environment • Gives order and consistency for organizations to address environmental concerns through the allocation of resources, assignment of responsibility and ongoing evaluation of practices, procedures and processes • Focuses on continual improvement of the system
  • 48. Environmental Management System An EMS follows a Plan-Do-Check-Act Cycle, or PDCA. The diagram shows the process of first developing an environmental policy, planning the EMS, and then implementing it. The process also includes checking the system and acting on it. The model is continuous because an EMS is a process of continual improvement in which an organization is constantly reviewing and revising the system. This is a model that can be used by a wide range of organizations — from manufacturing facilities to service industries and government agencies
  • 49.
  • 50. Environmental management system model 1. Environmental policy Initially, the organization’s top management should have commitment and define the policy on EMS which is used for the direction of implementing and improving its EMS. 2. Planning In order to achieve environmental policy, at least, the organization should : •Identify the environmental aspects of its activities and specify those which have significant impacts on the environment. Identify legal and other requirements to which the organization involved. Establish objectives and targets of its activities having impacts t environment. Establish environmental programs for achieving its objectives and targets.
  • 51. 3. Implementation In order to achieve environmental planning, at least, the organization should : •Define roles, responsibilities and authorities for facilitating EMS effectively. •Communicate to the staffs at each level for the importance of conformance to the environmental policy; provide appropriate training to personnel performing the tasks to gain their knowledge and competence. •Establish and control documentation relating to EMS. •Control operations and activities to meet the specified objectives and targets. •Identifypotential accidents and emergency situations for preventing and mitigating the environmental impacts that may be associated with them and periodically test such procedures where practicable.
  • 52. 4. Checking and corrective action To ensure that the organization is performing in accordance with the stated EMS programmes, at least, the organization should: • Monitor and measure its operations and activities against the organization’s plans. • Identify non-conformance and take action to mitigate any impact caused. •Record the on-going activities of the EMS. •Conduct periodic EMS audits.  5. Management review The organization’s top management should review and continually improve its EMS, with the objective of improving its overall environmental performance.
  • 54. ISO 14000 Concepts The basic concept underlying the ISO 14000 series is that in order to consistently meet environmental performance expectations, an organization must implement and maintain an effective environmental management system. While the system cannot guarantee that environmental incidents will never occur, --it is intended to minimize the likelihood and severity of their occurrence -- it can guarantee that when they occur, there is a mechanism in place to investigate the causes and to take corrective and preventive action.
  • 55. Key EMS concepts  Continual improvement - It is to note that an effective EMS doesn’t just happen. An effective EMS needs ongoing management support. This endorses the concept of continual improvement. - The concept of continual improvement recognizes that problems will occur, but a committed organization learns from its mistakes and prevents similar problems from occurring in the future. - ISO 14000 Continuous improvement model begins with top mgmt’s commitment to corporate governance by a set of overarching principle’s including: • Environmental protection as one of the highest corporate priorities with clear assignment of responsibilities and accountabilities to all employees.
  • 56. Compliance with all environmental laws and regulations applicable to the organization’s activities, products and services.  Ongoing communication on environmental commitment and performance with all stakeholders.  Strategic planning that sets forth environmental performance objectives and targets, implemented through a disciplined mgmt process.  Periodic performance measurement, as well as systems audits and mgmt reviews, to achieve continual improvement wherever possible.  Employee involvement - Getting employee involvement in designing and implementing the EMS demonstrates the organization’s commitment to the environment. So to build and achieve an effective EMS mgmt should communicate the importance of: • Conviction and commitment towards effective environmental mgmt for organization’s survival. • Building environmental mgmt in all aspects of orgznal oprns- product and process development. • Addressing environmental problems as opportunities.
  • 57. Flexibility - Dynamicity in EMS will : 1. Allow the organization to adapt to rapidly changing business environment 2. Help making the formulated EMS understandable to all concerned who must implement it. 3. Allow assessment of how organization manages environmental obligations and finds cost-effective solutions.
  • 58. Some unique and important characteristics of ISO 14001 are: It is comprehensive: all members of the organization participate in environmental protection, the EMS considers all stakeholders, and there are processes to identify all environmental impacts. It is proactive: it focuses on forward thinking and action instead of reacting to command and control policies. It is a systems approach: it stresses improving environmental protection by using a single environmental management system across all functions of the organization.
  • 59. Legal and other requirement Compliance to laws and regulations Issuance of consent and permit conditions Organization – specific codes and programmes that it voluntarily subscribes. Standards and guidelines in the regions where the organization undertakes business.
  • 60. Purpose  If one does not know what laws are applicable, how can one be sure if the facility is in compliance with them or not?  Noncompliance may cost an organization dearly in many ways, e.g., loss of productivity, health, safety, and environment.  Organization is required to establish and maintain a procedure to identify legal requirements.  By anticipating new requirements and making changes to operations and activities, one can avoid future compliance obligations and their associated costs.
  • 61. In order to be in conformance with this provision of ISO 14001 an organization must be able to demonstrate three specific points  First, the organization must understand which environmental laws and regulations (federal, state and local) govern its operations  Second, it must also be able to explain how the requirements of the appropriate laws and regulations apply to the organization.  Third, the organization must be able to demonstrate that it keeps up to date with the appropriate laws and regulations and their specific requirements
  • 62. Questions That Need To Be Answered 1.Has the organization developed a procedure to identify applicable environmental legal and regulatory requirements? 2. Has the organization developed a procedure to identify any voluntary requirement to which it subscribes? 3.Does the organization have a procedure to insure completeness and availability of the required documents? 4.Is the information relative to Legal and Other Requirements kept up to date?
  • 64. ENVIRONMENTAL OBJECTIVES Environmental objectives, in consistence with the environmental policies, encompass significant environmental impacts and applicable laws and regulations.
  • 65. ENVIRONMENTAL TARGETS Environmental target is a performance requirement based on the underlying environmental objective to be achieved.
  • 66. PURPOSE The purpose of the procedure is to ensure that the organization establishes documented environmental objectives and standards.
  • 67. PURPOSE POLICY ENVIRONMENTA LEGAL & OPINION OF L ASPECTS OTHER THE REQUIREMENTS PARTIES OBJECTIVES & TARGETS TECHNOLOGY FINANCE OPERATION OTHER FUNCTION
  • 68. SCOPE The procedure applies to environmental objectives and targets set at each relevant function and level within the organization.
  • 69. PROCEDURE  Top management is responsible to establish environmental objectives on an annual basis.  Plant/ Department managers involve operation staff in developing environmental objectives for improvement in environmental performance.  Each department manager is responsible to provide inputs and evaluate potential impacts in specific functions.  Manager makes preliminary evaluation of its environmental performance, and enlists primary objectives.  Progress towards the objectives/targets is reviewed at management review meetings and communicated to operational staff via bulletin boards.
  • 70. OUTLINING OBJECTIVES AND TARGETS  Objectives are set to establish overall and often long term goals of the organization.  Invariably, the operational targets should be identified at the departmental level and included in the frame work of annual budgetary/planning process.  It should be consistent with the overall business mission of the organization.  Objectives should be kept flexible.
  • 71. CONTD..,  Targets should be set at several levels of the organization.  Evaluation and modification of environmental objectives and targets may be carried out annually by an update of the environmental aspects.  Opportunities might exist for suppliers and contractors to assist the organization in conformance to the standard should not be ignored.
  • 72. EXAMPLE OBJECTIVES •Reduce usage of hazardous chemicals •Improve employee awareness of environmental issues. •Improve compliance with waste water discharge permit limits. TARGETS •Eliminate use of CFC to the extent possible. •Zero period limit violations by the end of the current year. •Reduce use of electricity by 10% over a two year period. PERFORMANCE INDICATORS •Emission/wastes per unit production •Environmental incidents/violations •Environmental operational cost.
  • 73. STEPS TO BE TAKEN  A cross functional team of an organization set realistic objectives and standards.  Work out the information sources that the cross functional team will need to establish objectives and standards.  Examine if any other information might be useful to the team- identify the availability of the information.  List the significant environmental impacts those are already identified and categorize impacts make a brief notes of the impact.  Examine processes and activities.
  • 74. CONTD..,  Identify the applicable regulatory requirements that may affect the production facility, and for which specific actions have been identified.  List models of communication with interested parties and ascertain the need for additional objectives to address views of customers, suppliers and others.  Re-examine the lists of objectives developed in the earlier steps  Determine effective performance indicators for each of the selected objectives.  For each selected objective, determine and develop the action plan.
  • 75. EMP Objectives and targets EMP defined Monitoring and measurement executed
  • 76. ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT PROGRAMME  Toensure that objectives and targets are achieved, an action plan is needed.  AnEMP is a a road map for achieving environmental goals.
  • 77. ISO 14001- 4.3.4  Environmental management programme requires that an organization shall establish and maintain a programme for achieving its objectives and targets.  It will include, • Designation of responsibility for achieving objectives and targets at each relevant function and level of the organization. • The means and time frame b y which they are to be achieved.
  • 78. PURPOSE - EMP  To accomplish an organization’s functions and objectives, the EMP has a direct linkage to the organization’s environmental objectives and targets.  EMP should develop specific, prioritized actions dealing with the products, processes, services, projects and facilities that relate to establishing significant environmental aspects, objectives and targets.
  • 79. Contd..,  EMP should describe how the organization will translate its goals into concrete action plans to achieve the delineated objectives and targets.  It should not only designate responsibilities for achieving goals, but also define the means and time frame for achieving the goals.
  • 80. DEVELOPING EMP  For a dynamic EMP, it should be integrated with existing organizational structures.  It should receive due representations at the business management levels, jointly with the other groups within the organization.  An action plan should be prepared on how the organization will meet its objectives and targets.
  • 81. Contd…,  The action plan may be initiated with projects for new products, processes and equipment.  These would be expected where the business investments are aimed at reducing environmental effects, to allow high performance level, or cost reduction.  It is investigated and identified during initial gap analysis and review.
  • 82. GAP ANALYSIS  Is a technique for setting targets for the objectives that can be achieved through information from the comparative or benchmark study.  It examines performance over time.
  • 83. EMP ON SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES AND TARGETS ACTION PRIORITY RESPONSIBILITY SCHEDULE RESOURCES REMARK ITEMS REQD.
  • 84. DRIVERS INFUENCING AN ORGANIZATION In ost s pa tere C ng rt st savi ies ed M M R Op ar an i s p o k et ag k rt u e ni m t ie en s t
  • 85. BASELINE ASSESSMENT ACTIVITIES Establish the scope of your assessment. Try mapping out the physical boundaries of your proposed ISO-14000 Use a series of simple process flow diagrams. Identify any changes to the environment that your organization causes and activities that cause them. Review of existing management practices.
  • 86. DEVELOPING ENVIRONMENTAL INDICATORS DEV NTIFY ELO IDE P •Key environmental costs and •Measures of performance benefits to your organization that are achievable • Any other key concerns to your • Simple indicators that are not orgn or key interested parties confusing when you • Actions required to implement evaluate or communicate the data collection information. • How indicator information will be used(communicating performance to work force).
  • 87. CO IMPROVING IM NT PR IN OV UA ENVIRONMENTAL EM L EN PERFORMANCE T Review the findings of the baseline assessment(find the potential cost savings) Brainstorm with anyone who has had experience of continual improvement Ask other employees for ideas and Prioritize improvement programmes that give the “Quick wins” Develop indicators, which enable you to track the effectiveness of any initiatives Celebrate your successes and communicate these back to the work force using your indicators.
  • 88. STEP-BY-STEP PLAN 1)Management commitment 2)Choose a leader 3)Budget and schedule 4)Cross-functional team 5)Involve employees 6)Initial review 7)Establish plan 8)Identify environmental aspects 9)Establish environmental policy and objectives 10)Procedures/documents 11)Plan for change 12)Train employees 13)ISO 14000 implementation 14)Assess performance
  • 89. 1. Ga ining Ma na ge me nt Commitme nt: An organization must have commitment and careful planning to figure out 1) What it needs to do, 2) How it will be done, and 3) Which people of the organization should be involved 2.Choos ing a le a de r: The choice of the leader is critical. The person must have some experience with the quality management programme and have the time and temperamental commitment . Necessary authority, an understanding of the organization and project management skills
  • 90. 3. P re pa ring a budge t a nd S che dule : Leader is responsible for preparing a preliminary budget in which costs will likely include staff and employee time, training consultant fees, materials. The schedule should consider the various tasks and roadblocks, depending on the dimension and complexity of the organization. 4. Cons tituting a proje ct te a m: A team with representation from key management functions and production or service areas can identify and assess issues, opportunities and existing processes.
  • 91. 5. Employe e pa rticipa tion: A great source of knowledge on environmental and health and safety issues related to their areas well as on the effectiveness of current processes and procedures. 6. Unde rta king a n initia l re vie w: Preparation of a list of the environmental requirements of the organization (regulations, guidelines and other documents). The preparatory review itself should be comprehensive in consideration of input processes and output.
  • 92. 7.Es ta blis hing a pla n: Quantified targets will show management the quantum of workload required for implementation what resources are needed and opportunities for cost-effective improvement. 8.Eva lua ting Environme nta l a s pe cts : Actual environmental aspects and impacts of the organization should be listed out. To each of these identified aspects, the level of risk involved with conformance and nonconformance should be evaluated.
  • 93. 9.Es ta blis hing a n e nvironme nta l policy a nd obje ctive s : Foundation and direction for the management system. The policy needs to clarify compliance with environmental legislation that may affect the organization and stress a commitment to continuous improvement. The organization will declare its primary environmental objectives. 10.P re pa ring proce dure s a nd Docume nts : Develop procedures and other system documents which might involve modifying current environmental procedures or adapting other business procedures (such as quality,ergonomics, health and safety management procedures)
  • 94. 11.P la nning for Cha nge : It should be made sure that the system is sufficiently flexible and simple. Avoid making it so rigid to reflect the realities of operations and activities. 12.Tra ining of Employe e s : Training of employees wit regard to the environmental impacts of their activities, any new/modified procedures and any new responsibilities.
  • 95. 13.Imple me nta tion of IS O14000: To clean up the obvious problems, and identify areas where the organization is not complying with the regulations or customer demands. Those areas where that organization stands to gain greater efficiency should be targeted. (scrap and waste reduction projects, recycling and elimination of liabilities) 14.As s e s s ing the pe rforma nce : Planned comprehensive periodic audit to ensure that it is effective in operation, meeting specified goals, and the system continues to perform in accordance with relevant regulations and standards. Management review is also required to ensure that it is suitable and effective in operation. Provides the opportunity to improve the system and environmental performance over time.
  • 96. BARRIERS FOR SME’s IN IMPLEMENTATION OF ISO14000 La ck of re s ource s La ck of tra ining Ina ppropria te tools La ck of Awa re ne s s a nd te chnique s La ck of ince ntive s La ck of s kills La ck of Guida nce Inte rna l a nd e xte rna l High cos t of imple me nta tion barriers a nd ma inte na nce •
  • 97.
  • 98. Clauses for implementation  Structure and Responsibility (Clause 4.4.1)  Training, Awareness, and Competence (Clause 4.4.2  Communication (4.4.3)  EMS documentation(4.4.4)  Document control(4.4.5)  Operational control (4.4.6)  Emergency Preparedness and Response (Clause 4.4.7)
  • 99. Successful Implementation  Stipulating the EMS policy  Planning  Implementation of the EMS according to the policy  Checking and corrective actions  Environmental management system review
  • 100.
  • 101. Issues related to implementation  although the standards provide guidance in terms of functional requirements, they are silent with regard to implementation methods or organizational processes that are fraught with human and systems change issues.  manage transitions and focus on shared visions and behavioral norms as core supports for the change effort.  Change is scary and the courage to forge ahead must be summoned.
  • 102. Issues.. transition  It is often useful to begin the process of change by starting at the end; by looking at the end result,  Link the change effort to a vision (the core) of a desired future state;  when people share a common vision of a desired future, they are likely more willing and more able to make changes that will move the business forward.
  • 103. Issues .. communication.  It is possible that new patterns of communication will have to be adopted such that appropriate feedback and interaction can be achieved.  Information needs to be shared and employees need to know that sharing this information is crucial in establishing the basis for environmental controls.  Reward and incentive programs should be evaluated for conformity with the goals that the organization is trying to achieve.  This "open-book" management represents a shift away from traditional command and control and may be distrusted by top and mid-level managers.
  • 104. Issues…awareness  Personnel within the organization need to understand that competition among businesses and the increasing awareness about the state of our environment and the costs associated with its maintenance can make environmental performance a competitive differentiator.
  • 105. Issues… Attitude & interpretation  Many companies tend to isolate environmental issues and keep them "harbored" within the environmental department.  ISO 14001 requires a commitment to the prevention of pollution. Note the use of the verbiage prevention of pollution as opposed to pollution prevention. Prevention of pollution is defined in the standard as the "use of processes, materials or products that avoid, reduce or control pollution, which may include recycling, treatment, process changes, control mechanisms, efficient use of resources and material substitution."
  • 106. Issues.. Product process designs  industrial products that are being designed and developed today will dictate the impact that industry will have on the environment in the future, process and product design engineers hold a key to future industry - environment interactions.
  • 107. Issues.. product life cycle  When the product is finally disposed of, the product may end up almost anywhere, in any country, in a high- technology landfill, an incinerator, on the side of the road, or in a river that supplies drinking water to a small community.
  • 108. Issues…product life cycle  Industrial ecology is an approach to industry-environment interactions to aid in evaluating and minimizing life cycle problems.  It involves the design of industrial products and processes from the dual perspectives of product competitiveness and environmental interactions.
  • 109. Issues.. processes  processes define much of the flow of solids, liquids, gases and energy into a manufacturing facility and are responsible for much of the flows of solids, liquids, gases and energy leaving that facility.  Product designers must consider industry- environment interactions that are primarily outside the province of the process designer: choice of materials, product packaging, environmental impacts during product use, and the optimization of product recycling.
  • 110. No longer…  Environmental managers have been talking about integrating environmental issues into the business decision making at an organization, however, historically, this has been met with resistance. Now, all facility personnel will have to start integrating environmental issues into their day-to-day activities.  It can no longer be an end-of-the-pipe issue.
  • 111.
  • 112.
  • 113. Non Conformance, Monitoring and Corrective and Measurement Preventive Actions Records EMS Audits
  • 114.
  • 115. ISO Explanation  The ISO 14001,4.5.1- Monitoring and Measurement, requires that the organization shall establish and maintain documented procedures to monitor and measure , on a regular basis, the key characteristics of its operations and activities that can have a significant impact on the environment  This shall include the recording of information to track performance,relevant operational controls and conformance with the organization’s environmental objectives and targets
  • 116. PURPOSE…….  To assess how well the EMS is working  Helps to Manage a Business better  Identify the performance indicators to monitor the EMS  To gauge the Environmental Performance  Analyze root causes of Problems  Identify areas where corrective action is needed  Improve performance and increase efficiency of the organization
  • 117. Getting Started….. Which operations & activities may have significant environmental impacts Which are the key characteristics of these operations & activities How can you measure these characteristics?
  • 118. Procedure for Performing Monitoring and Measurement  Key Process Characteristics  Process and Outcome Measures  Equipment Calibration  Regulatory Compliance  Environmental Performance  Audit versus Performance Evaluation  Linkages of Environmental Information
  • 119. Auditing and EPE AUDIT EPE Periodic Ongoing Sample of data Frequent Independent Line Function Verify Conformance Assess Performance
  • 120.
  • 121. ISO Explanation  ISO 14001,4.5.2 - Nonconformance and corrective and preventive action , requires that the organization shall establish and maintain procedures for defining responsibility and authority for handling and investigating non conformance , taking corrective action to mitigate any impact caused, and for initiating and completing corrective and preventive action
  • 122. Purpose Management System Review Audit Corrective Action
  • 123. Typical Causes of EMS Problems
  • 124. Getting Started  The results of monitoring and measurements,audit findings and other systemic reviews should be documented and reviewed and must lead to corrective actions.If the organization already has an ISO 9000 QMS ,a corrective and preventive action process already exists.The same model may be used for EMS purposes.  For a documented problem . The root cause of the systematic failure should be determined.The organization must be committed to implementing corrective actions as quickly as possible. The corrective and Preventive action process should specify responsibilities and schedules.Progress should be reviewed regularly and any deficiencies followed up
  • 125. Contd...  The extent of planning and documentation required for corrective and preventive actions may vary with the severity of the problem(and its potential environmental impacts).An appropriate suggestion is “A simple method always works better”  It should be ensured that adequate data and information is collected to determine why a problem has occurred and what corrective actions may be necessary.
  • 126. EMS Elements that Lead to corrective Action and Management Reviews Employee Monitoring Audits Involvement Corrective Action Process Management Review
  • 127. Hints that should not be Ignored!  Workers on the shop floor are in the best position to see problems and suggest solutions.  All employees should be informed that it is their responsibility to identify and perform corrective actions. This would include reporting nonconformance of operational and procedural natures.It should also be well communicated to all employees that everyone is responsible for solving nonconformance as well.  A suitable system improvement process e.g.., via suggestion boxes,incentive programmes should be employed for greater employee participation.  In small companies same employees might have been engaged in multiple function,including management review and corrective action processes..A strong link should exist between the processes for better EMS effectiveness...
  • 128.
  • 129. ISO Explanation  ISO 14001,4.5.3 - Records, states that the organization shall establish and maintain procedures for the identification, maintenance and disposition of environmental records. These records shall include training records and the results of audits and reviews
  • 130. Key Questions in Records Management  Identify what records to be maintained.  Authorize who keeps them and where and how they are kept.  Determine how long they are kept (retention time)  Determine how they are accessed and disposed ,including good storage and retrieval system
  • 131. Purpose...  Records Management under ISO14001 must be able to prove that the organization is actually doing what it says!  To prove that the organization is actually implementing the EMS as designed,one should have a system for managing EMS records.  While records have value internally over time one may need to provide evidence of EMS implementation to external parties (such as customers, a registrar , or the public).  For records Management, the organization shall develop procedures to maintain, identify,collect, index and store records.
  • 132. TYPES OF RECORDS  Environmental aspects determination documentation  Legal and other regulatory requirements and records of regulatory violations.  Permits consents, licenses and other approvals  Progress reports towards meeting objectives and targets.  Hazardous material spills, other incident reports and follow ups.  MSDS  Sampling and monitoring data  Maintenance records  Calibration and maintenance records for instrumentation  Training records  EMS audit and regulatory compliance audit reports  Management review documentation
  • 133.
  • 134. Intro...  EMS audit refers to a systematic and documented verification process to determine whether an organization’s EMS conforms to the audit criteria set by the organization and for the communication of the audit results to the top Management.
  • 135. Purpose  To determine whether or not EMS conforms to planned arrangements for environmental management including the requirements of this International Standards and has been properly implemented and maintained  Provide information on the results of audits to Management  Results of EMS audits should be linked to the corrective and preventive actions.  Systematic identification and reporting of EMS deficiencies provides a great opportunity for the Management functions to focus on the environment and ensure its cost effectiveness  External Auditing is suggested
  • 136. Getting Started  The organization should have an  Audit Procedure describing  Audit Scope  Audit Frequency  Audit Methods  Key responsibilities  Reporting Mechanism
  • 137. AUDIT FREQUENCY The nature of the Operations The significant Environmental aspects/impacts identified The results of the monitoring programme Findings of Previous audits audited at least annually AUDITING METHODS - Internal,External auditors The number will depend on the size and complexity of the organizational functions Auditing Techniques ,Management System Concepts Quality systems,Legal compliance etc
  • 138. Linkages between EMS audits,Corrective Action and Management Reviews Periodic EMS audits EMS Corrective Established Action Process Management Review
  • 139.
  • 140.
  • 141. Intro  Management reviews ensure how the EMS will remain viable.  It can be used to demonstrate top management’s ongoing support for the environmental issues.  It shall address the possible need for changes to policy, objectives, and other elements of the EMS.
  • 142. MR Considers  Progress on objectives and targets towards continuing suitability,adequacy and EMS effectiveness  New standards legislation and regulations  Audit results  Environmental Performance measures  Reports of emergencies (e.g, spills,leaks, other incidents)  New scientific/technical data on products, materials and processes used  Internal and External Communications etc
  • 143.
  • 144. Getting Started  It should involve- those who have the right information and knowledge and who have the authority to make decisions.  Schedule and frequency for Management reviews should be determined, typically once or twice in a year.  It should assess whether different organizational functions have complied with policy and procedures using audit reports.  It should be determined if Capital and other resources , including information management systems are adequate to support the EMS requirements of the Organization.
  • 145. Contd….  It should be determined if the operational controls,procedures, corrective and preventive actions and the continuous improvements efforts have resulted in enhanced environmental performance.changes that result in process improvements should be documented  Possible improvements in the organizational structure , operational procedures , training requirements , work instructions , pollution prevention , waste management, energy utilization, process improvements, that may lead to environmental opportunities and organizational benefits should be determined
  • 147. Case Studies Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited A. Water Conservation Measures Reuse of wastewater generated from filter press operation for other miscellaneous uses and recirculation of cooling water at jiggering and kiln areas. B. Energy Conservation Measures Optimise Kiln loading, insulation of ducts, Process flow improvement by introduction of capacitor bank, use of high efficiency motors and variable speed drives. C. Air pollution control measures Introduction of wet scrubber for standardised glazing Dust Extraction System, reconditioning of Dust Extraction System of Shot blasting machine at foundry
  • 148. Case Studies Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited…Contd. D. Waste Minimisation Programmes Recovery of solid waste generated at grid washing Crushing and reuse of rejected ceramic tiles E. Mitigation of Green house Gases Energy efficiency studies have been conducted on kilns furnaces, dryers & boilers and implemented efficiency improvement programme to reduce specific fuel consumption, which in turn reduces green house gases emission.
  • 149. Case Studies Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited…Contd. Cost Benefit Analysis for Implementing ISO 14000 System Costs Annual Cost (in Rs. Lacs) Consultancy Fee 3.64 Training fee 2.02 Certification fee (per 3 years) 2.48 Investment on Environmental Pollution control Equip. 11.05 Miscellaneous Costs 0.65 Total Rs. 19.84 Lacs Quantified Benefits Annual Savings( in Rs Lacs ) Power Savings 15.0 Fuel Savings 14.0 Lubricants Savings Rs. 00.6 Savings in Waste disposal costs 00.2 Resource Savings 40.0 Savings through Recycling 30.3 Total Rs. 100.1 Lacs per year
  • 150. Copley Square Hotel  A prominent hotel created an aggressive environmental program that provides a foundation for ISO 14001 registration. The hotel is an historic one with an upscale clientele. Their aggressive approach to reducing their impact on the environment helped them identify many ongoing benefits. The major benefit areas were: recycling, energy use reduction, and water use reduction. The following are the major actions and their results:
  • 151. RECYCLING  : 
  • 152. Energy Use Reduction:  • Energy efficient lighting was installed in public areas which are light 24 hours per day. 60 watt incandescent corridor ceiling lights were replaced 15 watt compact fluorescent lights: savings equal $3,622 annually plus 90% reduction in labor costs. 90 watt incandescent lights in table lamps in the lobby and elevator landings were replaced with 22 watt compact fluorescent lights: savings equal $1,540 annually and reduced labor costs. 30 watt exi sign lights were replaced with 1.8 watt LED exit signs: savings equal $1,179 annually.  • Install compact fluorescent bulbs in guest room table lamps and hanging lamps: predicted payback equal 1.81 years.  • Install compact fluorescent bulbs in back areas which are lit 24 hours: savings equal to $59.57 per bulb.  • Remind employees to turn off all energy using devices that are no being used: no estimate of savings.
  • 153. Water Use Reduction:  • Installing toilets with 1.5 gallon capacity, replacing ones with 3.5 gallon capacity will save $3,276 and 430,000 gallons annually.  • Showerheads of greater efficiency will save $6,546 and 859,000 gallons annually.  • Guest have been offered the option of reusing their towels and linens when staying more than one night. Projected savings are $4,000 annually.
  • 154. Comments  This case includes savings that are well known and some that are innovative. Some of the reasons the program has been successful are:  • Everyone in the hotel participates in the program and can contribute from within their job responsibilities. Thus, the power of each individual to contribute in a positive way is harnessed.  • Small savings are as important as big ones. This recognizes that small savings add up and creates a culture that values contributions at all levels of the organization and of any size. The cumulative effect of many small acts of environmental impact reduction may not be quantifiable, but it may be significant.
  • 156. REASONS FOR IMPLEMENTING ISO 14000  Recognition  Bottom-line benefits  Trade  Regulatory  Financial sector
  • 157. INDUSTRY ACCEPTANCE OF ISO 14000 SERIES  ISO 14001 – market driven approach to environmental protection.  It is seen as market place trend by many organizations.  There is noticeable change in the mindset of organizations for responding to their environmental obligations.
  • 158. ISO-14000 IN SMALL ORGANISATIONS  ISO 14001 is flexible to fit into any size, industry or facility. ADVANTAGES:  Lines of communication are short  Organizational structure and climate are less complex  People often perform multiple functions
  • 159. COST ESTIMATES COST INCLUDES :  Staff/ employee time,  Consultant expenses and  Training of personnel.
  • 160. COST ESTIMATES  Total implementation time can usually be estimated as one workday per employee.  12 to 14 months to fully implement ISO 14001's 62 elements  Implementation costs can range from $20,000 to $250,000
  • 161. BENEFITS OF ISO 14000  Better conformance to environmental regulations,  Greater marketability,  Better use of resources,  Higher quality goods and services,  Increased levels of safety,  Improved image and  Increased profits.
  • 162. SOME ISSUES RELATED TO ISO 14000  There is no guarantee that certification will result in increased profits for a company.  ISO 14000 which is stricter than ISO 9000.  Multisite registration of subsidiaries is permitted only if there is a common management and central control of each site
  • 163. ISO 14000 AND ISO 9000 SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES
  • 164. SIMILARITIES BETWEEN ISO 14000 AND ISO 9000 • Policy and Defined organization and responsibilities • Defined and documented standard practices • Control of critical operations • Document control Training • Records system • Internal audits • Corrective action system • Management review for continual improvement
  • 165. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ISO 14000 AND ISO 9000 ISO 9000 ISO 14000 1.Encourage organizations to 1.Deals with the management of institute quality assurance the environmental effects of an management programs. organization 2.The major system requirements 2.Customers as well as many are defined by customers additional stakeholders 3.Includes evaluation of suppliers 3.Include methods of evaluating and review of customer contracts. environmental impacts and systems 4.The goals of a 4.The situation for environmental quality system are generally quite systems is not so straightforward clear
  • 166. OTHER EMS STANDARDS British Standard 7750 (BS 7750) -the world's first standard for environmental management systems (EMS) and The European Eco-Management and Audit Scheme (EMAS) -European Union
  • 168. INTEGRATING SYSTEMS FOR BUSINESS  Develop and maintain a comprehensive business management system -quality and environmental requirements  Must be based firmly in the needs and values of the Business itself  Each new requirement that emerges can be carefully considered and integrated into the existing systems framework.
  • 169. INTEGRATING SYSTEMS FOR BUSINESS- CONTINUES….  Companies that are registered to ISO 9001 already have a head start.  These systems satisfy internal business needs as well as the external requirements  Systems which are non-value adding should be closely examined and improved
  • 170. INTEGRATING SYSTEMS FOR BUSINESS- CONTINUES….  Conduct a gap analysis to determine which system elements are in place and which elements need to be improved or developed  Use ISO 14001 as a guideline or model of a comprehensive EMS.  Examine the company's existing environmental systems, as well as quality systems  Determine the business' priorities for improving existing systems and developing new systems.