John Nolan
February 20, 2017
One of the fundamental changes in the ISO 14001:2015 standard is the requirement for organizations to take a “lifecycle” perspective of the products it produces or manufactures, which is significantly more prescriptive than the ISO 14001:2004 standard that organizations were certified against immediately before. But, what does “lifecycle” really mean in an environmental context, and what steps will your organization have to take to ensure that it complies fully with the standard itself?
The ISO 14001:2015 standard states that an organization should control the way that its services or products are designed, made, consumed, distributed, and disposed of in such a way that environmental impacts are not ignored, or unintentionally moved elsewhere in the cycle of any product’s life. In other words, an organization should be fully aware of possible environmental impacts in each and every stage of a product’s life, and now must take responsibility for ensuring that the impact within each and every part of that lifecycle is as small as possible. No longer can an organization produce a product, market and sell it, and then assume that all environmental responsibility for that product from that point onwards belongs to the purchaser; the manufacturer must make provisions for all environmental aspects during that whole lifecycle, including end of life. So, given the above, what examples can we consider to ensure we can help our own organization align and comply with this critical part of the ISO 14001:2015 standard?
A critical part of the operation of any EMS (Environmental Management System) is the identification and action taken on environmental impacts. In a previous article, 6 ways to deal with significant environmental aspects in your EMS, we considered the preferable methods of tackling and mitigating aspects, and while these methodologies are still relevant, extra consideration of the lifecycle perspective will now need to be applied. Let us imagine that our organization produces modern electronic goods, whether televisions, cell phones, or computers – items that are used in almost every home and workplace. What would this “lifecycle perspective” consideration mean for such an organization? Let’s consider this step by step:
We can now see how vital it is for your organization to plan and manage the lifecycle of its product to ensure you have responsibility for the whole lifecycle, and not only when the product is actually in your hands. Hopefully, it has also become more evident that astute planning in the early stages of product development can lessen environmental impact at later stages of the product’s lifecycle. Ensure that you plan diligently, and you can help make sure that your product plays its part in leaving the planet’s resources unspoiled for future generations.
Why not use our free online training ISO 14001:2015 Foundations course to learn about the lifecycle perspective in the ISO 14001?