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ISO 14001 was developed by the International
Standards Organization to define as environmental management system
similar to the 9000 quality systems. In its most basic form, ISO
means, "do what you say, say what you do."
The 14001 system has at its core a continual
improvement process of Policy, Plan, Do, Check, Review. Items paralleled
in both 14001 and 9000 are documentation, records control, internal
auditing, corrective action, training, operating procedures, management
responsibilities, monitoring and calibration, and management review.
Items unique to 14001 include aspect identification, regulation
identification, communication, setting objectives and targets, planning,
emergency response, and environmental auditing.
Basically the environmental management system
in 14001 is straightforward. An organization identifies its environmental
aspects that it has control over and have a significant environmental
impact. Then it develops controls for and monitors those aspects,
and documents the process. Objectives and targets for those aspects
are set according to the Environmental Policy and plans are made
to meet the objectives and target. Then the whole process in reviewed
and repeated!
Developing an EMS is cost effective even without
certification. There is less dependence on a one or two "environmental
guys", more consistency in operations, less long and short
term liability, and there are proven systems are in place to facilitate
money saving pollution prevention projects.
If you have any questions about 14001 in general
or specifically its implementation at JEP, feel free to contact
Mike Gray at (716) 664-5406.
For further information about 14001 certification
click here.
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