Well, you did it. It took five years, but you finally convinced your
company's senior managers that getting third-party certification to one
of the ISO 9000 quality management system standards was the right thing
to do.
While you may not be able to prove that the certification directly reflected
your company's ability to procure contracts and/or customers, you and your
senior managers are fairly certain that the internal benefits greatly exceed
the price of having a yearly audit.
Armed with this information, you head into the executive corridor to obtain
senior-level commitment for third-party certification to the newly developed
environmental management standard-ISO 14001. But you can count on the following
challenges to your proposal.
Why should we seek certification?
What benefits can our organization
expect from certification?
How much will certification cost?
Who will do the work?
How do we go about obtaining certification?
For the past six issues, we've provided you with practical implementation
advice, such as auditing tips, integration strategies, legal pitfalls and
environmental-aspects identification techniques that we've collected from
publishing ISO 14000 products. Now we'll finish that series with an article
on the pinnacle of implementation-certification.
Regarding ISO management standards, the term certification is synonymous
with registration in the United States. Registrars are also certification
bodies. Because certification has legal connotations in the United States
that are associated with products, the term registration prevails here.
But it might be worthwhile to use certification because it is the term most
accepted worldwide, where you may be conducting business.
Who's becoming certified and why?
You know that certification is becoming an important issue when companies
such as IBM, 3M, Ford Motor, Sony, Canon, SGS-Thomson MicroElectronics and
Philips Components acknowledge the benefits related to certification. These
companies are among some 400 companies and sites around the world to become
certified to ISO 14001, BS 7750-the British EMS standard-and/or the European
Eco-Management and Audit Scheme-an ISO 14001 lookalike.
While it's too early in the process to determine what benefits a certified
company will reap, it's fair to say that the potential is unlimited. An
Apple Computer environmental health & safety division conducted a survey
of 99 companies the latter part of 1995, revealing several key drivers of
EMS implementation and certification. Respondents included representatives
from the electronics, manufacturing, pharmaceutical and engineering/consulting
fields. Many companies are now adopting an environmental management system
for the following reasons:
Ease of trade-International
standards obviate the need for and proliferation of national and regional
standards likely to hinder trade by erecting barriers, bureaucratic complexity
and redundancy.
Improve compliance with legislative
and regulatory requirements-This includes requirements that make public
certain information relating to environmental performance.
Credibility-Third-party
certification ensures a company's credibility and commitment to regulatory
compliance and its continuous, institutional focus on environmental protection.
Reduce liability/risk.
Regulatory incentives-Organizations
can take advantage of incentives that reward companies showing environmental
leadership through certified compliance with an EMS.
Sentencing mitigation-It
is likely that federal and state sentencing guidelines will accept a corporate
EMS as a way to levy individual and corporate fines.
Prevent pollution and reduce
waste.
Profit-Customers-from consumers
to governments-are preferring to purchase "green" products, but
want assurances they are green.
Improved internal management
methods-and the improvements in efficiency and savings that result.
Pressure from shareholder groups-They
are more likely than ever to look for environmental responsibility in investments
and financial reports.
Pressure from environmentalists
(and stockholders)-They bring a raft of legal precedents to bear on
companies they consider poor environmental players.
Community goodwill.
A high-quality work force-They
seek empowerment and involvement in addition to healthy and safe working
conditions.
Insurance-Insurance companies
are less willing to issue coverage for incidents of pollution unless the
firm requesting coverage has a proven environmental management system in
place.
Sustainable development-Management
standards will become a steppingstone for less-developed countries to begin
achieving an equivalent level of environmental protection found in neighboring
countries. Because management standards require considerably fewer resources
to implement, less-developed countries can reap the benefits of more focused
and organized environmental protection activities. Over time, as their economies
grow in concert with environmental regulations, they can acquire appropriate
technologies to maximize environmental protection.
Preference in bank loans-Some
institutions, such as the World Bank, may view ISO 14000 as a test of a
country's sincerity in its promotion of environmental protection and sustainable
development.
Certification scope
Many organizations that implemented the ISO 9001 quality management system
specification standard at the departmental and sometimes individual process
levels are rethinking this approach when it comes to ISO 14001 certification,
according to Joseph Cascio, vice president of EMS for the Global Environment
and Technology Foundation and former program director for Environment, Health
and Safety Standardization at IBM. He says the ISO 9000 certification approach
caused a proliferation of expensive and disruptive certifications brought
on by multiple certifications at one site-which were fueled by multiple
registrars performing individual audits. He vows that ISO 14001 certification
is different.
Registration to ISO 14001 should be more refined because organizations learned
their lesson and don't want to repeat their mistakes, explains Cascio, who
is also chairman of the U.S. Technical Advisory Group to ISO TC 207, which
developed the standard. Most organizations considering ISO 14001 certification
are doing so at the "highest subunit level that fits the logical and
physical realities of their firms," he notes.
"ISO 14001 allows total freedom in defining the 'organizational' unit
seeking certification," explains Cascio. "As specified in ISO
14001, virtually any organized business activity, such as companies, departments,
plants, divisions, construction sites, refineries, mines, branch offices,
administration centers, schools, banks, restaurants, fire houses and mills,
can be considered 'organizations' capable of implementing an environmental
management system."
Experts agree that many considerations must be weighed in choosing the proper
unit for certification, but most agree the logical option for larger companies
should be an individual location.
However, the majority of small and medium-sized companies will want to pursue
certification at the company level. A single company registration may make
sense for multinational companies, but only if they are committed "to
bringing all operations into line with the environmental ethic and to involve
the corporate office in management reviews," says Cascio. "Individual
processes and operations within a location will seldom qualify as organizational
entities because environmental protection must normally be assured at a
location basis for regulatory authorities."
Certification process
Elizabeth Potts, president of ABS Evaluations, an ISO 9000/ISO 14000 registration
organization, explains that the five basic steps to registration include:
Application or contract.
Initial or preliminary assessment/document
review.
Certification assessment.
Certification.
Certification maintenance.
Each step depends on the success of the others. She says most certification
bodies will require that an application or contract be completed. This document
contains the rights and obligations of the certification body and audited
organization.
"Although the organization's compliance management will be one of many
subjects the audit will address, the certification body is not there to
assess your compliance with individual regulatory documents and requirements,"
explains Potts. "The certification body will assess how your organization
ensures that all applicable regulatory requirements are identified and incorporated
into the EMS and how well the EMS is functioning."
The compliance-related segment of the audit focuses on the system and how
it functions to satisfy the compliance commitment of its policy and compliance
objectives and targets of your organization.
The compliance segment of the audit won't focus on whether each regulatory
requirement complies fully. Any compliance issues noted during the audit
will be brought to your organization's attention as part of the assessment.
Regulatory compliance auditing responsibility remains with the organization
being audited.
Initial or preliminary assessment
The next step in the certification process is the initial or preliminary
assessment and document review. Most certification bodies will wish to conduct
this phase of the certification process on-site, according to Potts.
The following documents are typically reviewed during this phase of the
process:
The EMS manual (if your organization
has chosen to develop one).
Analysis of environmental aspects
and impacts.
Applicable regulatory requirements.
Audit reports.
Organization charts.
Training programs.
Management review minutes.
Your organization's continual improvement
plans.
While this part of the certification process evaluates your organization's
readiness to continue with a formal audit, it also helps the certification
body plan the audit. In contrast to internal or second-party audits, the
certification body cannot (and should not) provide substantive guidance
on how to achieve conformity with ISO 14001.
"In other words, the certification body cannot be both a consultant
and a certification body, as this clearly constitutes a conflict of interest,"
stresses Potts. "The certification body can and should, however, provide
your organization with interpretive guidance by openly engaging in discussions
about these concerns."
A certification assessment normally follows a successful initial assessment/document
review. Usually, the primary difference between this assessment and internal
audits is the "formality" of the assessment. "Your organization
should expect the same independence, competence and professionalism of the
lead auditor and audit team during a certification assessment as during
an internal audit," notes Potts.
"To assess whether an EMS is in conformity with ISO 14001 and has been
fully implemented and documented in manuals, supporting procedures and other
records, all levels of personnel will be interviewed," explains Potts.
"Your organization must be able to demonstrate that the EMS is designed
(and implemented) to satisfy its policy commitments and the various ISO
14001 criteria. Most certification bodies conduct a daily debriefing with
your organization to keep key individuals informed of progress and any apparent
deficiencies noted."
A major difference between third-party ISO 14001 certification and internal
EMS audits appears in the final phase of certification-surveillance. Teams
from the certification body will return at prescribed intervals, usually
every six or 12 months, to assess the continued conformity of your organization's
EMS with ISO 14001.
"Corrections of deficiencies identified by previous assessments or
surveillances will be verified, and selected elements of the standard will
be re-evaluated," notes Potts. "During the surveillance phase,
emphasis is typically placed on internal EMS audits, management reviews,
corrective/preventive action systems and continual improvement efforts."
No shortage of registrars
Finding a registrar to assess your organization shouldn't be difficult.
In fact, it's possible to use the same registrar for both ISO 9000 and ISO
14001 services. What you should be more concerned with is how much registration
will cost and how you can cut costs.
Some experts estimate that certification costs could range from $30,000
to $100,000 per site, depending on the organization's size and nature. Registration
costs are expected to be similar to those associated with ISO 9000, with
some monetary credit given to companies with certified quality management
systems already in place. Steven Bold, manager of the environmental compliance
group for Continental Circuits Corp., says his medium-sized company expects
to initially invest close to $100,000 in the certification process-approximately
$40,000 in software and $60,000 in labor costs associated with implementation
and preassessments.
"We employ about 12,000 employees and have close to $120 million in
annual sales, and are fortunate that we have both the financial and human
resources to commit to our ISO 14001 certification process," explains
Bold. "For the majority of electronic circuit manufacturers, the decision
to become ISO 14001-certified is considerably more difficult.
"The growing pressure to become ISO 14001-certified threatens their
bottom line, and some feel that it threatens their very existence. Some
companies have stated that they may have to hire additional employees just
to manage the ISO certification process."
For most small companies, the stacking of additional layers of environmental
control on top of current regulatory requirements is seen as burdensome,
according to Bold. "Once certified, organizations may be forced to
pass certification costs on to customers, which may result in customers
turning elsewhere, possibly overseas, to purchase their electronic interconnectors,"
he warns.
Cascio disagrees with Bold and says certification costs should be reasonable,
noting that in March and April 1996, two IBM facilities in Germany and the
United Kingdom received certification to ISO 14001 and EMAS at an estimated
cost of $30,000 per facility.
SGS-Thomson experience
In early January 1996, SGS-Thomson MicroElectronics Inc., located in San
Diego, became the first U.S. site registered to the most recent draft of
ISO 14001. The certification cost was $100,000, give or take 10 to 20 percent.
While obtaining its ISO 14001 registration, the company also contracted
to have the site assessed against the requirements of the EMAS regulation.
As part of a corporatewide mandate, all 16 SGS-Thomson facilities located
in the United States, Europe, Southeast Asia and Northern Africa will be
validated for EMAS and/or certified to ISO 14001 by the end of 1997. Several
SGS-Thomson facilities also are certified to ISO 9000 quality management
systems and receive both corporate and third-party assessment regularly.
The facility's ISO 14001 certificate to the DIS will expire on the date
the International Organization for Standardization prints ISO 14001 as an
official ISO standard, which is expected to happen in late 1996. If no substantive
changes are made to the ISO 14001 international standard, the facility's
certificate will be updated automatically. However, if significant changes
are made, the organization could be subject to another assessment.
Patrick Hoy, the site environmental manager for SGS-Thomson's Rancho Bernardo
facility, was responsible for preparing the facility for the EMAS verification
and ISO 14001 certification audits. Hoy used experience gained from the
company's ISO 9001 quality management system to develop an implementation
plan for both EMAS and ISO 14001.
"The key to any environmental management system is the mechanism employed
for identifying aspects and impacts associated with a company's processes,
products and services," explains Hoy. To prepare for the EMAS formal
assessment, the Rancho Bernardo facility followed the failure-mode-and-effect
analysis corporate standard developed for assessing the potential significance
of each environmental effect identified.
As part of the corporate standard, Hoy and his team reviewed regulations
that applied to the facility, pending environmental legislation, corporate
requirements and media-specific permitting conditions.
"We examined potential impacts associated with water, air, hazardous
waste, solid waste, soil and groundwater, energy, chemical management, external
noise, raw materials, new product processes, product planning and emergency
response planning," he reports.
Hoy ranked each impact according to its significance and where it appeared
on the corporate list of overall environmental effects. He notes that the
facility compiles a list or register of potential environmental impacts
and makes it available to the public through its annual environmental statement.
What does the future hold?
As the official publication date of the ISO 14001 standard draws closer,
with some predicting middle to late October 1996, more facilities will "get
off the fence" and seek certification. Lucent Technologies, Akzo Nobel
and Toyota are among those expected to join the registration movement, certifying
multiple sites around the world. Clearly, multinational companies will lead
the ISO 14001-certification movement, with small and medium-sized companies
following closely behind.
What next? We'll all just have to take a seat and see what happens with
the market. It's possible, but highly unlikely, that ISO 14001 will simply
be implemented as an internal tool. Most likely, state and federal regulators
will begin using the certification process in regulatory incentives for
companies tired of the command-and-control process.
Presently, key regulatory bodies in some two-dozen states, including Pennsylvania,
California, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Massachusetts, are taking steps to
use the ISO 14001-certification process to increase environmental protection.
While we could not predict all of your ISO 14001 implementation and certification
questions, in this series we strove to anticipate key concerns. Now, the
decision to pursue this subject is yours-we provided you with what we hope
is a useful source of information to move forward. Armed with this information,
you can feel confident that, when you turn that knob to the vice president's
office, you won't be alone. Good luck.
About the authors
Caroline G. Hemenway is publisher of CEEM Information Services in
Fairfax, Virginia. Gregory J. Hale is associate editor of International
Environmental Systems Update, a monthly newsletter on ISO 14000 developments
and implications.
CEEM publishes IESU and several other ISO 14000 and management systems products.
For more information, contact CEEM at (800) 745-5565 or (703) 250-5900;
fax (703) 250-4117.