Plan – The first step to a successful environmental management system
When it’s not required, doing the right thing for the environment is often an afterthought. Employers face significant challenges in environmental stewardship due to a lack of time and resources. While taking the first step is always the hardest, developing an environmental management system (EMS) makes achieving environmental goals not only possible but revered.
Planning – The first step
Building an EMS should start with a plan, which includes identifying environmental aspects and establishing goals. This helps to make a seemingly overwhelming task turn into a reasonable job that employers can tackle.
Within the planning phase, organizations must use their resources wisely. To figure out what needs to be done, how to do it, and who should be involved, there are steps within this first phase that should be met, including:
- Exploring the scope of the organization: Understanding why one should pursue an EMS is key to meeting the needs, interests, and goals of an organization. It involves asking questions to various stakeholders to determine their expectations, which will ultimately define the scope of its EMS.
- Securing leadership commitment: A critical step, leadership must recognize how the organization will benefit from an EMS as well as what it will take to put one in place. You must explain to them how the organization’s current strengths and weaknesses affect not only your environmental performance but the bottom line. It is the role of leadership to communicate their commitment to the rest of the organization in order for EMS goals to be clear and consistent.
- Establishing an environmental policy: Identifying goals and values helps establish the organization’s formal commitment to reducing its environmental impact and achieving continual improvement.
- Determining roles and responsibilities of the EMS team: To ensure the EMS is implemented and maintained, an organization must select an EMS Champion to spearhead its development. This Champion is supported by key organizational members to ensure balanced and diverse input is received and effective.
- Holding a kick-off meeting: A key to making sure everyone is on board with implementing the EMS is to hold a kick-off meeting with leadership. This step is important to making sure roles and responsibilities are understood. Communication is key and should be stressed during this time.
- Determining environmental aspects and impacts: During regular operations or a foreseeable emergency, think about what activities could have an impact on the environment, such as:
- Air emissions,
- Releases to land or water,
- Use of natural resources or energy, and/or
- Waste generation.
- Identifying compliance obligations: The EMS should include processes for identifying the compliance obligations that apply to its activities, products, and services. This may include laws and regulations, voluntary commitments with industry standards, or contractual agreements.
- Preparing budgets and securing resources: In developing the project plan and budget, the EMS team should consider the needs associated with initial EMS implementation as well as continued maintenance. Leadership should review and approve the initial plan and budget to maintain buy-in.
- Setting environmental objectives and action planning: Organizations need clear environmental objectives to establish a vision of what they hope to accomplish. They should be consistent with the organization’s environmental policy, compliance obligations, and environmental aspects and impacts, as well as the views of interested parties. An action plan should be created based on the objectives to outline a strategy of achievement.
- Identifying operational controls and monitoring and measurement needs: The EMS team should identify what policies, plans, and procedures to implement in order to help control aspects and impacts. They must also determine what monitoring and measurement activities should be conducted based on the aspects, impacts, and objectives of the EMS (e.g., daily energy consumption, frequency of water usage, monthly air emissions, etc.).
- Define roles and responsibilities for specific environmental tasks: The EMS team should communicate clearly with those who have a key role in implementing specific environmental objectives and ensure they understand their responsibilities. Be sure to document these responsibilities.
- Establish other system-level procedures: To ensure everything runs smoothly, procedures should be established to prepare for potential emergencies, as well as the development of system-level procedures to address:
- Training,
- Communication,
- Recordkeeping,
- Auditing,
- Implementing corrective actions, and
- Reporting to leadership.
Key to remember: An EMS is a framework that assists an organization in achieving its environmental goals through regular review, evaluation, and advancement of its environmental performance. The first step begins with a plan.