Environmental Awareness
Environmental Awareness
Environmental Awareness
System
Awareness Training
Environment
Interdependence of Earth’s Living and
Non-living Systems
Our planet consists of a great variety of living and non-living
systems related through the environmental changes.
Changing any part of the natural environment can cause dramatic
effects on other parts of the environment.
METAL
THEMANAGEMENT SYSTEM
NEED FOR THE ENVIRONMETAL
MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
Pollution
• Pollution is the concentration of any
material or energy form that is
ultimately harmful to humans.
• Pollution is classified as either;
• Ground pollution
• Air pollution
• Water pollution
Land Pollution
• Solid wastes include garbage, refuse, sludge
products from agriculture, forestry, and mining
that all can pollute the land.
• Most of these wastes are disposed by burying in
landfills.
• Hazardous wastes are those that are potentially
dangerous to humans.
• Soil erosion from overgrazing, deforestation,
irrigation and cultivation can disturb the balance
between living things and the soil.
Ground / soil contamination
Water Pollution
• Water pollution is anything that makes the
water unfit, harmful or undesirable for use.
• Types of pollutants:
• Organic pollution – sewage
• Inorganic pollution – biodegradable
• Thermal pollution - heat
• Radioactive substances –
• Abnormal concentration of organisms –
• Aerobic and anaerobic bacteria
• Eutrophication = increased phosphates and nitrates
provide nutrients for increased algae growth.
• Concentration of pollutants
Groundwater pollutants and their flow
paths into aquifers
Air pollution
• Release of harmful materials into the
atmosphere.
• Problems associated with air pollution
include:
• Health problems
• Acid rain
• Ozone depletion
• Global warming
• Pollutants are either gases or particulates
Some environmental issues
Chemical
ChemicalPollution
Pollution Reduction
ReductionininBiodiversity
Biodiversity
Climate
ClimateChange
Change
Air
AirPollution
Pollution Atmospheric
AtmosphericOzone
OzoneDepletion
Depletion
Erosion Noise
Erosionof
ofCoastal
CoastalDefences
Defences Noise Contaminated
ContaminatedLand
Land
Acidification
Acidificationof
ofwater
watersupply
supply Contamination
Contaminationof
ofDrinking
DrinkingWater
Water
Deforestation
Deforestation
Transport
Transport&&Congestion
Congestion Waste
WasteDisposal
Disposal
GM
GMCrops
Crops
Global
GlobalWarming
Warming Urban
UrbanAir
AirQuality
Quality
Fossil
FossilFuels
FuelsDepletion
Depletion
No Comments
Our actions today ….
Result tomorrow
Environmental Issues
C
Cl
Cl
O
O O O Cl O O
O
Ozone Depletion
Damages DNA
Skin cancer
Eye cataracts
• Cause Wellheadblowout
• Casualties 13 dead (11 killed on
Deepwater Horizon, 2 additional
oil-related deaths)
• 17 injured Operator Transocean
under contract for BP
• Spill characteristics Volume up to
4,900,000 barrels
(206,000,000 US gallons;
779,000 cubic meters)
Radioactive pollution
Release of radioactive substances or high-energy particles as
a result of human activity, either by accident or by design.
The sources:
• Nuclear weapon testing or detonation;
• Separation, and production of nuclear materials for use in
nuclear power plants or nuclear bombs;
• Accidental release of radioactive material from nuclear
power plants.
• Natural sources of radioactivity, such as radon gas
emitted from beneath the ground
Nuclear Fallout
The two best known examples
illustrating the effect of
fallout contamination are:
Industries
All of us
All responsible citizen
To protect the Environment and to
ensure sustainable development, a
systematic approach needs to be
defined.
Hence the
Environmental Management
System
comes into way.
What is Environmental
Management System?
Environmental Management
System (EMS)
Plan
Do
Check
Act
Improve
What we have done?
P – Prevent Pollution
R – Reduce waste
Environmental Aspects:
An activity of the organization which interact
with the environment.
Environmental Impacts:
Any change to the environment, whether
adverse or beneficial, resulting from the
activity of the organization.
Environmental Aspect & Impacts
Aspect Impact
Cause
Cause Effect
Effect
Environmental Aspects
Further
Assessment
Significance No
Stop
Assessment
Yes
Environmental Defines
Level-2
Who
Procedure What
Manual When
Department Specific
Level-3 SOP’s / Work Instruction Answer
Manual How
• Emergency Procedures
• Waste Management Practices
• Internal & External Communication
• Contractors, Supplier and Visitor
Requirements
Emergency Procedure
• Know your roles & responsibility
• If you are involved in the emergency respond to
accidents & emergencies appropriately.
• Know whom to inform and what actions to be taken
• Focus on prevention & mitigation of Environmental
Impacts.
Waste Management Practice
• Collect the waste in compatible
container.
• Place the container on the pallets.
• Fill-up the waste storage request form &
obtain waste sticker.
• Affix waste sticker on the waste
container.
• Close the waste container.
• Inform the Maintenance Dept. to transfer
the waste container to waste storage
area.
Internal &
External
Communications
Contractor / Supplier Requirement
• Provide necessary information to
contractors to ensure awareness of
EMS
• Contractor need to submit Method
Statements to Initiating Activity
prior to working on-site
• Contractor to conform to EMS
requirements, ensure staff
awareness & maintain records
Any One Can Make A
Difference?
• Anyone at our Company who has an
environmental concern or suggestion in
order to improve our Environmental
Management System can contact the
Environmental Engineer / Technician.
Incidents, Emergencies and
Crisis Communication
• Environmental Incidents:
– Release, leakage or spillage of chemical / lube oil.
– Release / leakage of HC
– Any emission or discharge in excess of Smokey
Flare.
Monitoring & Measurement
– Monitor the performance of activities that have an
environmental impacts
– Keep track of progress against the objectives &
targets.
– Compare the performance against the regulatory
requirements.
– Calibrate and maintain the environmentally critical
equipment.
Non conformance and Corrective
Preventive Action