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Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002 Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002 How An EMS Can Enhance Your P2 Program Presented by Mike Garcia

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002 How An EMS Can Enhance Your P2 Program Presented by Mike Garcia

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Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

How An EMS Can Enhance Your P2 Program

Presented by Mike Garcia

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

EMS – Environmental Management SystemWhat is an EMS?

A systematic approach to planning, controlling, measuring and improving an organization’s environmental performance.

It involves a continual process of planning, implementing, and reviewing the processes and procedures an organization uses to meet it’s environmental obligations.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

The Continual Cycle of EMS

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

EMS Key Concepts That Promote Pollution Prevention

Top Management Commitment

Total Quality Management

Continual Improvement

Employee Awareness and Involvement

Checking and Corrective actions

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Top Management Commitment

Establish an environmental policy that includes a commitment to pollution prevention and continuous improvement.

Integrate environmental considerations and business objectives and set clear environmental performance goals.

Insure that adequate environmental management resources are available.

Continuously monitor performance.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

P2 Impact of Management Commitment

The full participation of upper management in an EMS and the development of an environmental policy helps to institutionalize the concept of pollution prevention within an organization. It also insures that adequate resources will be made available. Finally, when upper management is involved in setting environmental goals and monitoring performance the entire organization is held accountable for achieving results and maintaining an effective EMS.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Teams familiar with the organization’s operations conduct a systematic analysis to identify and characterize those activities (aspects) that impact the environment.

The evaluation should include a review of the resources consumed and the environmental impacts associated with the operation (e.g. pollution of air, water or soil).

Assessment tools are used to identify and evaluate activities that have a significant impact on the environment.

Total Quality Management

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Once an environmental aspects and impacts analysis has been completed programs and procedures are developed to minimize any significant environmental impacts.

The process is ongoing and is designed to drive continuous improvement.

Periodic reassessment are needed to insure that changes have not occurred that substantially affect the environmental impacts of your operations.

Total Quality Management (Continued)

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

P2 Impact of Total Quality Management

The TQM process forces an organization to systematically assess the environmental impacts of all aspects of their operation. By carefully evaluating what is happening, how it happens, and what the impacts are, an organization can develop programs to reduce or eliminate any significant environmental impacts. This in-depth analysis technique frequently leads to the identification of pollution prevention opportunities that may have otherwise gone unnoticed.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Continual Improvement

Establishing a philosophy of continual improvement encourages members of your organization to strive for ever better environmental performance.

Requires that monitoring and measurement systems be developed to track environmental performance and provide a basis for future comparison.

Small but continuing improvements in environmental performance can have a large cumulative effect.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

P2 Impact of Continual Improvement

The philosophy of continual improvement discourages organizations from becoming complacent with existing pollution prevention programs (regardless of their success) by challenging them to do more. This often leads to innovative and revolutionary pollution prevention programs. The philosophy also encourages organizations to begin doing what they can (to reduce or prevent pollution) when they can.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Insure that employees understand their roles and responsibilities under the environmental management system. It’s a team effort and everyone’s participation is necessary for success.

Ensure that your employees are provided with the training needed to carry out their environmental responsibilities.

Establish procedures for internal and external communications of environmental management issues.

Employee Awareness and Involvement

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

P2 Impact of Employee Awareness and Involvement

Front line employees are typically the most familiar with the day to day operations of a facility and are often the first to recognize pollution prevention opportunities. Soliciting employee participation and training them in the principles of P2 and waste minimization can lead to the development of significant pollution prevention projects. It is also important the everyone within the organization is aware of and complying with established P2 programs.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Checking and Corrective Action

An EMS includes provisions for periodic audits.

Audits are conducted to evaluate the success of the system and insure that procedures are being followed.

Any deficiencies that are found are documented and a corrective action plan developed to insure the situation is corrected.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

P2 Impact of Checking and Corrective Action

Periodic audits help insure that you are properly implementing the programs and procedures outlined in your EMS. Audits help you to identify and correct system deficiencies that may be short-circuiting your pollution prevention efforts.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

EMS and Pollution PreventionA Case Study

Motorola’s EMS required that all wastes be identified, characterized, and quantified as well as all waste minimization activities. This was done in an order to identify pollution prevention opportunities.

A cross-functional team was formed to review packaging use and management.

The team found a system that was poorly regulated and resulted in excessive waste.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Pack the product into new trays & carton - ship to

customer

Front/ Back Housings & Holsters (High Impact Polystyrene)

Inefficient reuse system•No accountability•No part numbers on trays

Product Packaging(HDPE)

Parts Assembled into New Pagers

Customer recycles or disposes of trays (no reuse)

Empty Trays Returned to Supplier

Misdirected trays sent for disposal:

Packaging for 100 pagers (parts & finished product)

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

The team realized the dimensions of our finished product were the same as the incoming parts (housings).

A multi-use tray was developed that would be used to ship parts into the factory and then reused to ship the finished product to our customers. This eliminated the need for separate product packaging.

A database was created to track tray usage and a system developed for customers to return empty trays for reuse at no cost to them.

An audit process was developed to track the performance of the system and correct deficiencies.

Pollution Prevention Breakthroughs

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Assembly

Parts from supplier

Product tocustomer

Reusable Tray - 100% Post Consumer HDPE

All trays were issued part numbers and a database was developed to track tray movements and inventory.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Front housingtrays

Back housing trays

Holstertrays

Revised Packaging for 100 Pagers (parts & finished product)

Pack the product into carton and

ship

Packaging reused to ship product to customers

Combined with holster trays

Trays returned to supplier to be reloaded with parts.

Trays reused to shipFinished product.

System developed for customers to return trays for reuse at no cost.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Pollution Prevention Results

Reuse of housing trays to ship product eliminated the need for separate product packaging.

Eliminated (prevented) over 100 tons of waste annually.

Encouraged recycling by switching packaging from poorly recycled HIPS to HDPE.

The closed loop system allowed customers to return tray for reuse.

Project recognized as a Waste Wi$e Innovation of the Month by EPA.

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

The project was ultimately successful because it incorporated the following EMS concepts

Top Management Commitment

Total Quality Management

Continual Improvement

Employee Awareness and Involvement

Checking and Corrective actions

EMS P2 Concepts Demonstrated

Pollution Prevention and Environmental Essentials Conference – 2002

Conclusions

The implementation of an Environmental Management System can led to the discovery of significant pollution prevention opportunities and the development of effective pollution prevention systems.