Tag: environmental aspects

Environmental Aspects (ISO 14001:2004, §4.3.1)

The requirement of §4.3.1 of ISO 14001 is to establish and maintain procedures 1) for identifying the environmental aspects of the organization’s activities, products, and services that it can control and those that it can influence and 2) for determining which of those aspects have or can have a significant impact on the environment. Understanding the requirement of this element of ISO 14001 is central to understanding the concept of an environmental management system.

A single manufacturing facility has potentially hundreds of environmental aspects. How far must it go in identifying its environmental aspects to satisfy the terms of the requirement? ISO 14001 specifies that the organization is to identify those aspects that it can control and those that it can influence and that it must also take into account planned or new developments and new or modified activities, products, and services. These stipulations in the requirements, without actually drawing boundaries on how far the organization must go in identifying environmental aspects, at least establish some categories of aspect that must be considered. Beyond this principle, each organization must identify its aspects comprehensively enough so as to not fail to identify a significant aspect or a legal requirement. An objection to comprehensive identification of aspects is that the organization may become so immersed in aspects identification that it loses sight of the end objective of the procedure, which is to determine significance.

“Significant impact” is not a stand-alone term in §4.3.1. It is accompanied by the phrase “impact on the environment” and “environment” is a defined term. Significant aspects, then, are those environmental aspects that have or can have significant impacts on air, water, land, natural resources, flora, fauna, and humans. The organization determines, using its own criteria, what magnitude of impact on these seven environmental receptors constitutes a significant impact. Whether an aspect is regulated is not intended to be a factor in determining significance.

Proper execution of the environmental aspects procedure is important, in part, because it lifts environmental management out of the regulatory compliance mode and into the mode of systematically consequences for the environment, irrespective of regulation. The organization that rigorously applies the environmental aspects procedure discovers many opportunities to improve environmental performance that regulation does not address, including:· Use of energy

· Consumption of materials

· Environmental impacts of employee activities

· Environmental impacts of products and by-products post-manufacture, including distribution, use, reuse, and disposal

· Environmental impacts of services

· Unregulated waste streams such as carbon dioxide

identifying environmental aspects and impacts and considering their


ISO 14001 ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS AND IMPACTS

ISO 14001 Environmental Aspects And Impacts

The fundamental purpose of the EMS is to control and reduce the environmental impacts of your facility’s processes and products. For this reason, a critical element of the EMS involves identifying and prioritizing the environmental aspects and impacts associated with your facility. An environmental aspect is an element of an organizations activities, products, or services that can interact with the environment. For example, chrome plating is a metal finishing activity and an associated aspect is chrome air emissions.
This aspect may have an impact on the environment in several ways, for example, ambient air quality degradation.
The environmental aspects and impacts of your metal finishing operations can be identified, prioritized, and documented in several ways. This Template includes two approaches, either of which can be used during EMS implementation. Use the approach that works best for your circumstances. This process is important because high-priority environmental aspects and impacts will be considered when environmental objectives and targets are established.

Aspects and Impacts Form A — The first approach uses the experience and judgment of
employees familiar with facility processes to identify the top five environmental issues
currently facing the facility. These issues and their specific aspects and impacts should
be summarized using Aspects and Impacts Form A.

Aspects and Impacts Form B — The second approach uses detailed, structured matrices
to list and prioritize environmental aspects and impacts according to the following
categories:
• Environmental Aspects and Impacts: Wastewater
• Environmental Aspects and Impacts: Air Emissions
• Environmental Aspects and Impacts: Hazardous and Solid Waste
• Environmental Aspects and Impacts: Raw Materials
• Environmental Aspects and Impacts: Water and Energy

The matrices that comprise Form B will help facility staff identify and document environmental aspects and impacts. The matrices also provide criteria for prioritizing environmental aspects and impacts; this process is important because high-priority environmental aspects and impacts will be considered when environmental objectives and targets are established. One possible way to prioritize environmental aspects and impacts using Form B is described as follows:
Step 1:
For each aspect and impact, score each prioritization criterion on a scale from 1 to 5, where 1 indicates the criterion is very important or relevant to that aspect (for example, the aspect is strictly regulated, is the subject of compliance violations, or is a waste generated in large uantities), and 5 indicates the criterion is relatively unimportant or irrelevant to that aspect (for example, the aspect is an unregulated waste, is generated infrequently, and is inexpensive to manage).
Step 2:
Add the scores of all criteria for each aspect and write the total in the right-most column of the form.
This number indicates the relative priority of the aspect compared to other aspects and impacts in the same category. The lower the total score, the higher the priority.
Purpose Of This procedure is used to identify, document, and update the environmental aspects and impacts of facility processes and operations.

Step 1 The environmental manager and other facility personnel selected by the environmental manager are responsible for identifying and prioritizing the environmental aspects and impacts of facility operations during EMS planning and development.
Environmental aspects are characteristics of facility processes and products that interact with the environment. Only environmental aspects the company can control or influence will be considered. Environmental impacts are the effects of an organization’s activitie , products or services on the environment.

Step 2 Environmental aspects and impacts will be documented and prioritized.
Environmental aspects and impacts will be associated with the following categories:
• Wastewater
• Air emissions
• Hazardous and solid waste
• Raw materials
• Water and energy
High-priority environmental aspects and impacts will be considered when environmental
objectives and targets are set.

Step 3 The environmental manager and other facility personnel will review and update
the environmental aspects and impacts documentation annually.

Step 4 Environmental aspects and impacts documentation will be retained at the facility
for at least 2 years.

Responsible Person: _____________________________________
Signature and Date: ______________________________________


  • Free Download

    Free Download Of ISO 9001 Standard Manual 

  • ISO 50001:2011 Energy Management

    Free Download - ISO 50001:2011 Energy Management System

  • Copyright © 1996-2010 ISO 9001 Standard / ISO 9001 Standards - ISO 9000 Standard / ISO 9000 Standards Certification & Implementation. All rights reserved.
    iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress