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EMS The Standard

This document provides an overview of environmental management systems (EMS) and the ISO 14001 standard. It describes the key elements of an effective EMS, including developing an environmental policy, identifying impacts, setting objectives and targets, implementing operational controls, conducting internal audits and management reviews to drive continual improvement. The ISO 14001 standard provides a framework for organizations to develop an EMS to manage their environmental responsibilities.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
106 views31 pages

EMS The Standard

This document provides an overview of environmental management systems (EMS) and the ISO 14001 standard. It describes the key elements of an effective EMS, including developing an environmental policy, identifying impacts, setting objectives and targets, implementing operational controls, conducting internal audits and management reviews to drive continual improvement. The ISO 14001 standard provides a framework for organizations to develop an EMS to manage their environmental responsibilities.

Uploaded by

api-26802090
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 31

An Overview of Environmental

Management Systems (EMS)

1
EMS and ISO 14001
• 14001 is one of the standards in the 14000
series
• Created by International Organization for
Standardization (Geneva, Switzerland)
• Each participating nation has a committee
that develops consensus and contributes
(one vote each, for US it is ANSI)

2
EMS and ISO 14001
• USTAG to TC207
• Finalized and issued in 1996, revised every
five years
• Market sector created and driven;
governments participate but it is not
legislative or regulatory
• Process standard, not performance

3
An Effective EMS is:
 Flexible;
 Transparent;
 Useful to the “practitioner”;
 In harmony with mission focus;
 Focused on continual improvement.

4
WHAT IS AN ENVIRONMENTAL
MANAGEMENT SYSTEM?
The ISO 14001 Definition
• “The overall management system that includes
organizational structure, planning activities,
responsibilities, practices, procedures, processes
and resources for developing, implementing,
achieving, reviewing and maintaining the
environmental policy.”

5
Plan Do Check Act
Continual Improvement

Management Environmental
Review Policy

Checking & Corrective Planning


Action
Implementation &
Control

6
Policy
• Statement of an organization’s intentions
and principals in relation to its overall
environmental performance
• Provides a framework for the EMS
objectives and targets
• Must be documented, communicated and
implemented

7
Policy
• Reflects nature and scale of organization
• Includes commitment to continual
improvement and pollution prevention
• Includes commitment to regulatory and
other requirements
• Communicated internally and externally

8
Planning
Identif
Environmental Determine
y Priority
Aspects and Develop
Identify Environmental Establish
Impacts Environmental
Activities, Aspects Objectives
Management
Products and
Program
and Targets
Services Determine Legal and Other
Requirements

9
Activities, Products and
Services

• This is where you describe what you do at


your facility – mostly “activities” for Feds
– Consider mission – what ‘facility’ is designed
to do - e.g. visitor center
– Consider activities that support the mission –
e.g. vehicle maintenance
– Consider actions that are both regulated and not
regulated e.g. commuting to work

10
Asp ects and I mp acts
• Identify environmental aspects of activities
products and services that you “can control
and over which you can be expected to have
an influence”
• Aspects include air emissions, water
discharges, soil contamination, use raw
materials, use natural resources

11
Determine Significant
Aspects
• Determined by YOU! What is important in
your situation.
– Considers likelihood, severity, frequency,
duration, boundaries, stakeholder concerns
– Consider normal, unique, and emergency
conditions
• Where do opportunities exist?

12
Legal and Other
Requirements
• Identify legal requirements that apply to
your facility’s activities – use audit guides
or protocols
• Identify other requirements that apply
including Executive Orders, agency/bureau
policies or facility initiatives or voluntary
practices

13
Objectives and Targets
• Consider “legal and other requirements”
• Consider significant aspects
• Reflect Federal and agency policies
• Reflect financial and technical limitations
• Reflect “interested parties”
• Reflect policy commitment and commitment to
pollution prevention
• Consider how you will measure progress
14
Develop Environmental
Program
• Environmental Management Programs
– Describes what is to be done, what will be
measured, and how you will know when you
are there regarding the objectives and targets

15
Implementation and Operation
Organization & Capabilities & Controls
Accountability Communications

EMS Documentation

Training,
Awareness and Document Control
Competence
Structure and
Responsibility Operational Control
Communication

Emergency
Preparedness and
Response
16
Structure and
Responsibility
• Roles and responsibilities are defined,
documented, communicated
• Management will provide resources for
implementation of the system
• Identifies Management Representative
– in charge of managing EMS implementation
– Reports to top management on EMS progress

17
Training Awareness and
Competence
• Ensure awareness training relevant to
– EMS - including policy
– relationship between employees’ activities and
environmental impacts
• Ensure competence training to
– regulatory requirements
– standard operating procedures

18
Communication
• Ensure internal communication – BOTH
WAYS!

• Provide process for responding to


external communication

19
Documentation and
Document Control
• Procedures for controlling documents
– can be located - are legible, dated and
maintained
– reviewed and revised as necessary and
approved
– current versions are available to practitioner
– obsolete documents are removed from use and
maintained if necessary
20
Operational Controls
• Procedures for addressing activities that
affect significant aspects
• In line with policy and objectives and
targets

21
Emergency
Preparedness and
Response
• Procedures to address accidents and
emergencies
– prevent and mitigate environmental impacts
– review and revise after emergency or accident
– test where appropriate

22
Checking and Corrective Action

Ongoing Non-conformance,
Monitoring and Corrective and
Measuring Preventive Action Records

Periodic Internal EMS Audits

23
Monitoring and
Measuring
• Procedures to monitor and measure
activities related to significant aspects
– Formally track performance, operational
control and objectives and targets
– Maintain and calibrate monitoring equipment
– Evaluate compliance with environmental
regulation

24
Non Conformance,
Corrective and
Preventive Action
• Define responsibility and authority to
address non-conformance with the standard
– Mitigate impacts
– Identify cause
– Develop corrective action and implement it
– Modify procedures if necessary to prevent
recurrance

25
Records
• Procedures for identification, maintenance
and disposition of environmental records
– Training and audits or other reviews
– Legible and traceable to the activity, product or
service involved

26
Internal EMS Audits
• Periodically audit to determine if the EMS
– 1) is being properly implemented and
maintained, and
– 2) conforms to the standard

• Provide audit information to management

27
Management Review Process
To Assess the
• suitability,
Take account of: • adequacy, and
• audit findings • effectiveness of the EMS
• progress records on objectives
changes to facilities
• changes in activities,
products or services In order to determine the need
• changes in technology for change and improvement to:
• concerns of interested parties • the environmental policy
• other relevant information • the objectives and targets
• other elements of the EMS

28
Plan Do Check Act
Continual Improvement

Management Environmental
Review Policy

Checking & Corrective Planning


Action
Implementation &
Control

29
Keep in mind…
• The EMS and related measurement tools are just
that- tools. Alone, they will not guarantee
success.
• The organization must use the tools, not just have
them.
• A useful EMS is “alive”; constantly measuring
performance, making adjustments, and looking for
continual improvement opportunities

30
Summary
• An EMS is a formal system for managing the
environmental footprint of your organization
• Most organizations already have several EMS
elements in place - the system relationship is
lacking
• An EMS must serve the mission of the
organization
• Success comes from being committed to continual
improvement for the long term

31

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