ISO 14001 For the Right Reason
The Bottom Line
By Vincent Zottola – TQS, Inc.
http://www.tsqs.com/
Many companies implement ISO 14001 out of genuine
concern for the environment. Nevertheless, for the vast majority of
companies, altruism goes only so far in the boardroom. What
companies really want to know is: Does ISO 14001 produce bottom line
results? The answer is yes if one utilizes ISO 14000 as a business
tool!
As in the case of ISO 9000 implementation, it is incumbent upon
companies to find opportunities to get payback from their
implementation investments. The same holds true of ISO 14001. It
takes some initiative to utilize ISO 14000 to reduce your
environmental costs. The standard can be a marvelous tool for doing
so if used properly. Savings can be accomplished through the
continuous improvement aspects of ISO 14001. They can also be
accomplished by broadening your understanding and approach in
identifying environmental aspects and impacts.
You should first attempt to baseline and capture all of your
environmental costs up front, preferably at the start of an ISO
14001 implementation when you are identifying your environmental
impacts and aspects. Once that’s accomplished, you can zero in on
the highest environmental cost areas. Establish targets and
objectives towards making improvements and reducing costs. Add a
continuous improvement philosophy, and you can actually look for
continued cost savings over time.
Design the ISO 14001 system with an eye toward encouraging employee
involvement, reducing environmental impacts and residual waste. ISO
14001 requires you to identify these aspects and impacts. However,
the standard doesn’t tell you that you should also be looking at
these as environmental costs that hold the potential for tremendous
savings.
Simply looking at natural resource consumption, for example,
provides an opportunity to influence energy costs – electric, gas,
these types of expenses. In the case of hazardous materials, your
ISO 14001 system can influence transportation costs, landfill costs,
and permitting fees.
You might want to consider a program for material substitution.
Substituting biodegradable materials for materials that go into
landfills or using solvents that have less of an environmental
impact, can produce big savings. Focus on the way materials are
packaged at your company. Alternative packaging methods may reduce
residual waste such as banding materials. Place an emphasis on
cheaper, more environmentally friendly materials.
If done right, ISO 14001 implementation should more than pay for
itself. It should drive a bottom-line return of at least three times
the initial investment. These savings can be immediate in the case
of new technologies or material substitution, or they might be
incremental as in the case of better employee involvement in
reviewing and controlling their practices and making suggestions for
process improvements.
Many companies recognize environmental costs as being final; it’s a
cost of doing business. Not so. You must first change your mindset
to look for opportunities to reduce environmental costs. ISO 14001
tells companies that they must be dedicated to continually improving
their environmental performance. The smart companies will take this
as a challenge to continually reduce associated environmental
expenses. We haven’t even touched on the potential savings from
fewer environmental incidents and fines. Obviously, these are
opportunities for improvement as well. You may be surprised to
identify new technologies and processes that are not environmentally
friendly but cheaper in the long run. Moreover, don’t forget to make
environmental savings part of the agenda for your management
reviews. You’ll be glad you did and so will your controller.
TQS has assisted several clients in the integration of their
environmental and quality systems into one management system for a
greater reduction in cost, procedures and paperwork. To find out how
TQS can assist your company in the implementation of ISO 14001 or
the integration with 9001:2000, please contact Vince Zottola at
(412) 968-9101.
Vincent Zottola is the Managing Partner of the environmental
division of TQS, Inc., a management system consulting firm
specializing in ISO 14001 implementation. He is the author of
the “ISO 14001 Toolkit” which was published by McGraw-Hill
Companies. He has assisted in numerous successful ISO 14001
registration efforts.
TQS, Inc.
1382 Old Freeport Road
Suite 2BR
Pittsburgh, PA 15238
PH: 412-968-9101 FAX: 412-968-9104
e-mail vzottola@tsqs.com.
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