Mark Hammar
March 23, 2015
How can you improve your chances of successfully implementing ISO 14001? During the implementation you will face challenges to keeping your project on track, and by controlling these challenges you can help maintain your progress toward the goal of ISO 14001 implementation. By putting the following five elements in place, you will ready for any challenges that may come up.
Implementation of an environmental management system (EMS) according to the requirements of ISO 14001 will differ from company to company, so there is no one place to start. In order to be successful once implemented, the EMS needs to be company specific, addressing the processes and environmental interactions that are unique to your company. Getting a cookie cutter set of policies and procedures that can’t be edited just won’t work.
For this reason, it is best to start with some sort of gap analysis that compares your current environmental management practices with the requirements of ISO 14001, which will let you know what else needs to be done to be fully compliant. From this list of missing elements you can develop a reasonable timeframe and budget required to put the processes in place to fill the gap. From here you are on a firm foundation to start your implementation of ISO 14001 without surprises that could have been expected and avoided.
To see how close your current environmental management system is to meeting the requirements of ISO 14001, check out this online ISO 14001 Gap Analysis Tool.
Can you achieve ISO registration without management buy-In? While it may be possible to do this with minimal management support (you will need some sort of management review, for instance), maintaining the environmental management system without ongoing support from management will be difficult – if not impossible. Without management support, your implementation of an EMS is almost certain to fail. Management needs to be on board to make sure that adequate resources (e.g., money and human resources) are available and any roadblocks can be overcome.
There are four basic elements of a good environmental management system that should be put in place first, because a lot of the other parts of the EMS build on these four steps:
While these are the first documents to do, there are others. For more information on what needs to be documented in an EMS, see this whitepaper on Checklist of Mandatory Documentation Required by ISO 14001:2015.
Having a member of top management who is responsible for the environmental management system is not only a requirement of ISO 14001 – it is also a good idea. This person is the conduit for top management to find out about how the EMS is running, what resources are needed, and what improvements need to be made. By choosing the right person for this job you can build upon the management support that you have already laid as the foundation of your EMS, but having an ineffective person in this role can cause delays and trouble.
To find out more about the management representative, see this blog post on ISO 14001: What is the Role of the Management Representative?
If this is the first time you have implemented ISO 14001, which is the case with most companies, they you will have to find a way to gather the knowledge you need to successfully implement your EMS. There are basically three options:
Having these five elements in place first will help you to identify any problems early, which will make your implementation run more smoothly with minimal delays. Plan well, and your implementation will run more smoothly.
Download this free Clause-by-clause explanation of ISO 14001:2015 to learn how to meet each requirement of the standard.