Environmental Management Siarhei Zenchanka Minsk Branch of the Moscow State University of Economics, Statistics and Informatics The Republic of Belarus E-mail: [email protected]
Management definitions The organization and coordination
of the activities of an enterprise in accordance with certain policies and in achievement of defined objectives.
(BusinessDictionary.com) The initiation and maintenance of
an investment portfolio. (InvestorWorld.com)
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Management definitions The act or art of managing : the
conducting or supervising of something (as a business)
(MerriamWebster.com) Management is doing things right;
leadership is doing the right things. (Peter Drucker)
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Environmental management definitions Administrative functions that
develop, implement, and monitor the environmental policy of an organization.
(BusinessDictionary.com) An attempt to control human
impact on and interaction with the environment in order to preserve natural resources
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Environmental management definitions
"Conservation is a state of
harmony between men and land." Environmental management is the practice of creating this harmony. It involves management of both the living and non-living components--all the components of nature.
conservationist Aldo Leopol (http://www.ehow.com)
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Environmental management definitions A systematic approach to minimizing the
damage created by an organization to the environment in which it operates Environmental management involves reducing pollution, waste, and the consumption of natural resources by implementing an environmental action plan. This plan brings together the key elements of environmental management, including an organization's environmental policy statement, an environmental audit, environmental management system, and external standards. (www.qfinance.com/dictionary/environmental-
management)
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Environmental management definitions The idea of humans interacting with
the environment in a responsible and ethically sound way, without sacrificing productivity
(AgricultureDictionary.com) A planned approach to minimizing
an organizations impact on the environment
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Environmental management definitions A set of tools to deal with any
activity, tools for managing, reducing and preventing environmental impact.
(Rydn, L., Migula, P. and Andersson, M., Environmental Science. The
Baltic University Press, Uppsala, 2003)
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Environmental problems Oil ejection in Saint Barbara Channel
in 1969, USA Explosion at Chemical plant in
Sovezo, 1976, Italy Leakage of deadly gas at pesticide
plant in Bhopal, 1984, India Explosion of Chernobyl reactor, 1986,
USSR Leakage of oil in Gulf of Mexico, 2010,
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Model of environmental management
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Environmental problem
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EnvironmentalKnowledge
Environmental SituationProblem
Environmental Monitoring
Environmental Monitoring Environmental monitoring is a system
of observing, estimation and forecasting of environmental state that permits to pick out the changing of biosphere state over a natural background as a result of human activity
Yuri Israel, Former head of Hydro meteorological
Committee of the USSA
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Environmental monitoring Methods: on-site, distant or remote
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Environmental monitoring
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Environmental monitoring Remote sensing is the science of
obtaining and interpreting information from a distance, using sensors that are not in physical contact with the object being observed.
www.microimage .com
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Environmental monitoring Type of remote sensing: Passive, Active.
Processes of interaction between EM energy and matter: Transmission Absorption, Emission, Specular Reflection, Scattering.
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Environmental monitoring Remote sensing: Remotely sensed images can be used in
many applications, for example: mineral exploration monitoring ocean currents land use planning monitoring the condition of forest and
agricultural areas
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Environmental monitoring Remote sensing The information from remotely sensed images can be used in a number of ways for a number of purposes. It is usually combined with information from other data sources and on-the-ground observations, called `ground truth', to get a more complete picture of what is happening and to check suspected features or changes. (http://www.csiro.au/resources/EMMRemoteSensing.html) (www.microimage.com)
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http://www.csiro.au/resources/EMMRemoteSensing.htmlhttp://www.csiro.au/resources/EMMRemoteSensing.html
Environmental monitoring
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Environmental monitoring 137Cs distribution by layer depth
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Environmental monitoring
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Environmental monitoring Environmental Monitoring in Russia Common State System of Environmental Monitoring
was abolished in 2002 Now there are several separate systems of
environmental monitoring in Russia: - soil pollution with pesticides and heavy metals; - pollution of land surface water and seas; - transboundary transport of pollutants; - complex observation for nature pollution and green state; - chemical composition and acidity of precipitation and snow cover; - air background pollution; - radioactive pollution of nature.
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Environmental Modeling Description and forecasting of the
ecological systems behavior using models based on two interrelated ideas that relate to all systems:
black box principle; white box principle; Occam's razor: Of two equivalent theories or explanations, all other things being equal, the simpler one is to be preferred.
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Cs-137 contamination of Belarus territory in 2004 (http://www.checherskrtmo.gomel.by/Radiation.html)
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Prognostic map of Cs-137 contamination in 2016 (http://www.checherskrtmo.gomel.by/Radiation.html)
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Prognostic map of Cs-137 contamination in 2046 (http://www.checherskrtmo.gomel.by/Radiation.html
)
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Decision making 1. Identify the decision to be made
together with the goals it should achieve.
2. Get the facts. 3. Develop alternatives. 4. Rate each alternative. 5. Rate the risk of each alternative. 6. Make the decision.
(Harris, R. ,2009, Introduction to decision making)
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Environmental Management of Enterprises A planned approach to minimizing
and/or preventing an organizations impact on the environment
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Environmental Management of Enterprises BS 7750 BS7750 is a specification for an
environmental management system. The system is used to describe the company's environmental management system, evaluate its performance and to define policy, practices, objectives and targets; and provides a catalyst for continuous improvement. The standard was first published in June
1992 and reviewed to latest version in 1994.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises EMAS: EMAS (Eco-Management and Audit Scheme)
is a voluntary environmental management system (EMS), under which companies and other public organizations evaluate, manage and continuously improve their environmental performance. EMAS has been operative since 1995. The latest revision (EMAS III) came into effect on 11 January 2010 - Regulation (EC) No 1221/2009 (EMAS III)
(http://ec.europa.eu/environment/emas/ about/summary_en.htm)
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Environmental Management of Enterprises EMAS: Participation is voluntary and extends to public or
private organizations operating in the European Union and the European Economic Area (EEA) Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway. An increasing number of candidate countries are also implementing the scheme in preparation for their accession to the EU. EMAS III makes registration to the scheme also possible for organizations and sites located outside the EU and EEA. The Commission , in cooperation with the Forum of Competent Bodies will develop a guidance on registration outside the Community.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises To receive EMAS registration an organization must
comply with the following steps: 1.Adopt an environmental policy containing commitment both to comply with all relevant environmental legislation and to achieve continuous improvements in environmental performance. 2.Conduct an environmental review considering all environmental aspects of the organizations activities, products and services, methods to assess these, its legal and regulatory framework and existing environmental management practices and procedures.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises 3.In the light of the results of the review, establish an effective environmental management system aimed at achieving the organizations environmental policy defined by the top management. The management system needs to set responsibilities, objectives, means, operational procedures, training needs, monitoring and communication systems.
4.Carry out an environmental audit assessing in particular the management system in place and conformity with the organizations policy and programme as well as compliance with relevant environmental regulatory requirements.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises 5.Provide a statement of its environmental performance which lays down the results achieved against the environmental objectives and the future steps to be undertaken in order to continuously improve the organizations environmental performance.
6.The environmental review, EMS, audit procedure and the environmental statement must be approved by an accredited EMAS verifier, and the validated statement needs to be sent to the EMAS Competent Body for registration and made publicly available before an organization can use the EMAS logo.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises ISO 14001 An Environmental Management System meeting the
requirements of ISO 14001:2004 is a management tool enabling an organization of any size or type to:
identify and control the environmental impact of its activities, products or services, and to improve its environmental performance continually, and to implement a systematic approach to setting environmental objectives and targets, to achieving these and to demonstrating that they have been achieved.
(http://www.iso.org/iso/iso_14000_essentials)
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Environmental Management of Enterprises Basis elements of EMS: Developing an environmental policy Identifying environmental aspects and
impacts Planning how to fulfill the environmental
policy Implementing means to control and mitigate
environmental risk Checking effectiveness of the EMS and
making improvements Reviewing the EMS with top management
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Environmental Management of Enterprises We use standard ISO 14001:2004,
Second edition, 2004-11-15. (www.binodpandey.wordpress.com)
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
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Continual improvement
Implementation and operation
Environmental Management of Enterprises 4.2 Environmental policy Top management shall define the
organization's environmental policy and ensure that, within the defined scope of its environmental management system, it
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
4.3.1. Environmental aspects The organization shall establish, implement
and maintain a procedure(s) a) to identify the environmental aspects of its
activities, products and services within the defined scope of the environmental management , and
b) to determine those aspects that have or can have significant impact(s) on the environment (i.e. significant environmental aspects).
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
Department Process Env. aspect, volume
Env. impact Legislative act
Faculty of Life Science
Chemical Laboratory Physical Laboratory Office
Waste Gas emission Radioactive Radiation Solid waste (paper, plastic)
Water Pollution Air Pollution Radioactive Pollution of Environment Soil pollution Land using for polygons
European Water Framework Directive ? ? ?
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
4.3.2 Legal and other requirements The organization shall establish,
implement and maintain a procedure(s) a) to identify and have access to the
applicable legal requirements and other requirements
b) to determine how these requirements apply to its environmental aspects.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
4.3.3 Objectives, targets and programme(s) The organization shall establish, implement and
maintain documented environmental objectives and targets, at relevant functions and levels within the organization.
The organization shall establish, implement and maintain a programme(s) for achieving its objectives and targets. Programme(s) shall include
a) designation of responsibility for achieving objectives and targets at relevant functions and levels of the organization, and
b) the means and time-frame by which they are to be achieved.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
Aim Task Responsibility Time Resource Decrease air pollution on 10 % to 2015
Reconstruction of emission system
Head of laboratory
31/12/12
XXXXX euro
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Environmental Management of Enterprises 4.4.1 Resources, roles, responsibility and authority Management shall ensure the availability of resources
Roles, responsibilities and authorities shall be defined,
documented and communicated in order to facilitate effective environmental management.
The organization's top management shall appoint a specific management representative(s)
a) ensuring that an environmental management system is established, implemented and maintained in accordance with the requirements of this International Standard,
b) reporting to top management on the performance of the environmental management system for review, including recommendations for improvement.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
4.2 4.3.1 4.3.2 4.3.3 Rector Sign Sign Specific management representative
Develop policy
Sing a list of aspects
Sign a register
Prepare project of programmee
Pro-rector on science
Agree a policy project
Organizes data collection
Agree a project
Head of legal department
Agree a policy project
Defines legal acts
Prepare a register of legal acts
Agree a project
Dean Agree a policy project
Presents data
Agree a register
Agree a project
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
4.4.2 Competence, training and awareness The organization shall establish, implement and maintain
a procedure(s) to make persons working for it or on its behalf aware of
a) the importance of conformity with the environmental policy and procedures and with the requirements of the environmental management system,
b) the significant environmental aspects and related actual or potential impacts associated with their work, and the environmental benefits of improved personal performance,
c) their roles and responsibilities in achieving conformity with the requirements of the environmental management system, and
d) the potential consequences of departure from specified procedures.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises Who heed in training: specific management representative; internal environmental auditors; employers
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Environmental Management of Enterprises 4.4.3 Communication With regard to its environmental aspects
and environmental management system, the organization shall establish, implement and maintain a procedure(s) for
a) internal communication among the various levels and functions of the organization,
b) receiving, documenting and responding to relevant communication from external interested parties.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises Type of internal communications: - conference, - meeting, - e-mail, - forum, and so on. Type of external communications: - post, - e-mail, - conference, and so on.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises 4.4.4 Documentation The environmental management system documentation
shall include a) the environmental policy, objectives and targets, b) description of the scope of the environmental
management system, c) description of the main elements of the
environmental management system and their interaction, and reference to related documents,
d) documents, including records, required by this International Standard, and
e) documents, including records, determined by the organization to be necessary to ensure the effective planning, operation and control of processes that relate to its significant environmental aspects.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises 4.4.5 Control of documents Documents required by the
environmental management system and by this International Standard shall be controlled. Records are a special type of document and shall be controlled in accordance with the requirements given in 4.5.4.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
4.4.6 Operational control The organization shall identify and plan those
operations that are associated with the identified significant environmental aspects
a) establishing, implementing and maintaining a documented procedure(s) to control situations where their absence could lead to deviation from the environmental policy, objectives and targets, and
b) stipulating the operating criteria in the procedure(s), and
c) establishing, implementing and maintaining procedures related to the identified significant environmental aspects
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
Department Process Env. aspect, volume
Env. impact Procedure
Faculty of Life Science
Chemical Laboratory Physical Laboratory Office
Waste Radioactive Radiation Solid waste (paper, plastic)
Water Pollution Radioactive Pollution of Environment Soil pollution
Rules on waste management in laboratory Rules on radioactive source using Rules on radioactive waste management Waste management procedure
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Environmental Management of Enterprises 4.4.7 Emergency preparedness and
response The organization shall establish,
implement and maintain a procedure(s) to identify potential emergency situations and potential accidents that can have an impact(s) on the environment and how it will respond to them.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
4.5.1 Monitoring and measurement The organization shall establish, implement
and maintain a procedure(s) to monitor and measure, on a regular basis, the key characteristics of its operations that can have a significant environmental impact. ..
The organization shall ensure that calibrated or verified monitoring and measurement equipment is used and maintained and shall retain associated records.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
4.5.2 Evaluation of compliance 4.5.2.1 Consistent with its commitment to
compliance, the organization shall establish, implement and maintain a procedure(s) for periodically evaluating compliance with applicable legal requirements.
4.5.2.2 The organization shall evaluate compliance with other requirements to which it subscribes. The organization may wish to combine this evaluation with the evaluation of legal compliance referred to in 4.5.2.1 or to establish a separate procedure(s).
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Environmental Management of Enterprises 4.5.3 Nonconformity, corrective
action and preventive action The organization shall establish,
implement and maintain a procedure(s) for dealing with actual and potential nonconformity(ies) and for taking corrective action and preventive action.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises
Nonconformity - non-fulfilment of a
requirement . Preventive action - action to eliminate
the cause of a potential nonconformity.
Corrective action - action to eliminate the cause of a detected nonconformity
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Environmental Management of Enterprises 4.5.4 Control of records The organization shall establish and maintain
records as necessary to demonstrate conformity to the requirements of its environmental management system and of this International Standard, and the results achieved.
The organization shall establish, implement and maintain a procedure(s) for the identification, storage, protection, retrieval, retention and disposal of records.
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Environmental Management of Enterprises 4.6 Management review Top management shall review the
organization's environmental management system, at planned intervals, to ensure its continuing suitability, adequacy and effectiveness. Reviews shall include assessing opportunities for improvement and the need for changes to the environmental management system, including the environmental policy and environmental objectives and targets. Records of the management reviews shall be retained.
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Steps to estimation of aspect significance 1 Estimation of reason for arising of impact
on environment 2 Regularity of impact 3 Estimation of hazard class of substance 4 Correspondence to law demands 5 Aspect ranking 6 Aspect significance 7 Decision-making
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Step 1. Estimation of reason for arising of impact on environment
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Reason of impact Mark 1 Process 1 2 Adjustment of technological equipment 3 3 Tuning accessories 3 4 Plan damage control 5 5 Damage control connected with elimination of damage
consequences 7
6 Reconstruction 7 7 Building of new buildings, constructions, production lines 7 8 Inner accident situation 10 9 Externel accident situation 10
Step 2. Estimation of regularity of impact on environment
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Regularity of impact Mark 1 Temporal 1 2 Periodical 3 3 Constant 7 4 Emergent 10
Step 3. Estimation of hazard class of substance
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Hazard class Mark
1 Without Hazard class 1 2 4th Hazard class 3 3 3rd Hazard class 5 4 2nd Hazard class 7 5 1st Hazard class 10
Step 4. Correspondence to law demands
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Level of impact Coefficient 1 Lower than demand 0,5 2 Closely to demand 1 3 N time more than demand N+1
Step 5. Aspect ranking Step 6. Aspect significance Marks from Steps 1-3 are summarized
and their sum multiplies on coefficient from Step 4.
Low significance: Sum lies between 1.5
and 15 Middle significance: Sum lies between
16 and 30 High significance: Sum is more than 31
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Step 7. Decision-making
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Possibility for decreasing of impact level 1 Possible as a result of arrangement 2 Possible as a result of damage control 3 Possible as a result of reconstruction 4 Possible but economically not advisable 5 Impossible due normative and technological demands
The ISO 14031 Standard. Environmental performance indicators Categories of indicator: Operational performance indicators (OPIs) Management performance indicators (MPIs) Environmental condition indicators (ECIs)
Types of indicator: Direct (integral and differential) Relative Normalised/indexed Aggregated Weighted
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The ISO 14031 Standard. Environmental performance indicators
Types of indicator: Emissions; Waste; Energy consumption; Water consumption; Materials; And so on.
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Case study 1. Example of differential indicators
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Case study 2. Example of integral indicators
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Case study 2. Example of integral indicators
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Case study 2. Example of integral indicators
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Case study 3. Analysis of temporal raw electricity power consumption, thousand
kW*hours
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Case study 3. Analysis of temporal raw electricity power consumption per month,
thousand kW*hours/m
Scatterplot (2000-2~1.STA 7v*36c)
y=43,822-0,027*x+eps
MONTH
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ISO 14000 series Published documents and ongoing work of ISO/TC 207
address the following areas : Environmental management systems Environmental auditing and related environmental
investigations Environmental performance evaluation Environmental labelling Life cycle assessment Environmental communication Environmental aspects of product designand development Environmental aspects in product standards Terms and definitions Greenhouse gas management and related activities Measuring the carbon footprint of products.
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Environmental management systems ISO 14001:2004 Environmental management systems Requirements with guidance for
use ISO 14004:2004 Environmental management
systems General guidelines on principles, systems and support techniques
ISO/DIS 14005 Environmental management systems Guidelines for the phased implementation of an environmental management system, including the use of environmental performance evaluation
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Environmental auditing and related environmental investigations ISO 14015:2001 Environmental
management Environmental assessment of sites and organizations (EASO)
ISO 19011:2002 Guidelines for quality and/or environmental management systems auditing
ISO/CD 14051 Environmental management Material flow cost accounting General principles and framework
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Environmental performance evaluation ISO 14031:1999 Environmental
management Environmental performance evaluation Guidelines
ISO/WD 14045 Eco-efficiency assessment Principles and requirements
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Environmental labelling
ISO 14020:2000 Environmental labels and declarations General principles
ISO 14021:1999 Environmental labels and declarations Self-declared environmental claims (Type II environmental labelling)
ISO 14024:1999 Environmental labels and declarations Type I environmental labelling Principles and procedures
ISO 14025:2006 Environmental labels and declarations Type III environmental declarations Principles and procedures
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Life cycle assessment ISO 14040:2006 Environmental management Life cycle
assessment Principles and framework ISO 14044:2006 Environmental management Life cycle
assessment Requirements and guidelines ISO/TR 14047:2003 Environmental management Life cycle
impact assessment Examples of application of ISO 14042 ISO/TS 14048:2002 Environmental management Life cycle
assessment Data documentation format ISO/TR 14049:2000 Environmental management Life cycle
assessment Examples of application of ISO 14041 to goal and scope definition and inventory analysis
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Environmental communication
ISO/AWI 14033 Environmental management Quantitative environmental information Guidelines and examples
ISO 14063:2006 Environmental management Environmental communication Guidelines and examples
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Environmental aspects of product design and development
ISO/TR 14062:2002 Environmental management Integrating environmental aspects into product design and development
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Environmental aspects in product standards ISO Guide 64:2008 Guide for
addressing environmental issues in product standards
ISO/CD 14006 Environmental management systems Guidelines on ecodesign
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Terms and definitions ISO 14050:2009 Environmental
management Vocabulary
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Greenhouse gas management and related activities ISO 14064-1:2006 Greenhouse gases Part 1: Specification
with guidance at the organization level for quantification and reporting of greenhouse gas emissions and removals
ISO 14064-2:2006 Greenhouse gases Part 2 : Specification with guidance at the project level for quantification, monitoring and reporting of greenhouse gas emission reductions or removal enhancements
ISO 14064-3:2006 Greenhouse gases Part 3 : Specification with guidance for the validation and verification of greenhouse gas assertions
ISO 14065:2007 Greenhouse gases Requirements for greenhouse gas validation and verification bodies for use in accreditation or other forms of recognition
ISO/CD 14066 Greenhouse gases Competency requirements for greenhouse gas validators and verifiers document
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Measuring the carbon footprint of products ISO/WD 14067-1 Carbon footprint of
products Part 1: Quantification ISO/WD 14067-2 Carbon footprint of
products Part 2: Communication ISO/AWI 14069 GHG Quantification
and reporting of GHG emissions for organizations (Carbon footprint of organization) Guidance for the application of ISO 14064-1
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Number of ISO 14001 certificates (http://www.iso.org/iso/survey2009.pdf )
Year 2007 2008 2009
Total 154572 188815 223149
Europe 65097 78118 89237
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Number of country (http://www.iso.org/iso/survey2009.pdf )
Year 2007 2008 2009
Total 148 155 159
Europe 46 48 48
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Top 10 countries for ISO 14001 certificates -2009 (http://www.iso.org/iso/survey2009.pdf)
1 China 55316 2 Japan 39556 3 Spain 16527 4 Italy 14542 5 United Kingdom 10912 6 Korea, Republic
of 7843
7 Romania 6863 8 Germany 5865 9 USA 5225 10 Czech Republic 4684
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Top 10 countries for ISO 14001 growth 2009 (http://www.iso.org/iso/survey2009.pdf )
1 China 16121 2 Japan 3983 3 Romania 2979 4 Italy 1620 5 United Kingdom 1457 6 Czech Republic 1366 7 France 1196 8 Thailand 930 9 Russian Federation 783 10 Korea, Republic of 710
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Environmental management
Thank you very much!
20.09.2011 - 24.09.2011 Summer School 2011, Hamburg 93
Environmental ManagementManagement definitionsManagement definitionsEnvironmental management definitionsEnvironmental management definitionsEnvironmental management definitionsEnvironmental management definitionsEnvironmental management definitionsEnvironmental problemsModel of environmental managementEnvironmental problemEnvironmental MonitoringEnvironmental monitoringEnvironmental monitoringEnvironmental monitoringEnvironmental monitoringEnvironmental monitoringEnvironmental monitoringEnvironmental monitoringEnvironmental monitoring137Cs distribution by layer depthEnvironmental monitoringEnvironmental monitoringEnvironmental ModelingCs-137 contamination of Belarus territory in 2004 (http://www.checherskrtmo.gomel.by/Radiation.html)Prognostic map of Cs-137 contamination in 2016 (http://www.checherskrtmo.gomel.by/Radiation.html)Prognostic map of Cs-137 contamination in 2046 (http://www.checherskrtmo.gomel.by/Radiation.html)Decision makingEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesEnvironmental Management of EnterprisesSteps to estimation of aspect significanceStep 1. Estimation of reason for arising of impact on environmentStep 2. Estimation of regularity of impact on environmentStep 3. Estimation of hazard class of substanceStep 4. Correspondence to law demandsStep 5. Aspect rankingStep 6. Aspect significanceStep 7. Decision-makingThe ISO 14031 Standard. Environmental performance indicators The ISO 14031 Standard. Environmental performance indicators Case study 1. Example of differential indicatorsCase study 2. Example of integral indicatorsCase study 2. Example of integral indicators Case study 2. Example of integral indicatorsCase study 3. Analysis of temporal rawCase study 3. Analysis of temporal rawISO 14000 seriesEnvironmental management systemsEnvironmental auditing and related environmental investigationsEnvironmental performance evaluationEnvironmental labellingLife cycle assessmentEnvironmental communicationEnvironmental aspects of product design and developmentEnvironmental aspects in product standardsTerms and definitionsGreenhouse gas management and related activitiesMeasuring the carbon footprint of productsNumber of ISO 14001 certificates (http://www.iso.org/iso/survey2009.pdf )Number of country (http://www.iso.org/iso/survey2009.pdf )Top 10 countries for ISO 14001 certificates -2009 (http://www.iso.org/iso/survey2009.pdf) Top 10 countries for ISO 14001 growth 2009 (http://www.iso.org/iso/survey2009.pdf )Environmental management