Environmental Management: Principles and practice
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5 2020 03 04!03 12 11 PM
Eco-auditing
Eco-auditing (corporate environmental auditing or environmental management systems auditing) may be defined as a systematic multidisciplinary methodology used periodically and objectively to assess the environmental performance of a company, public authority or, in some instances, a region. Eco-audits can be done in-house, by a government team, or by an independent, accredited specialist or team. So far, it has been mainly a voluntary process (in relation to finance and company matters, ‘auditing’ implies involuntary) that seeks to increase public awareness and aid the quest for sustainable development. Sometimes eco-audits are not voluntary: there have been cases where shareholders have demanded eco-audits at public meetings (The Times, 11 April 1997:25), and aid agencies increasingly demand them before granting funding. Impact assessment deals with potential effects of proposed developments; eco- auditing focuses on actual effects of established activities. Both impact assessment and eco-audit can be valuable tools for environmental management provided that management is committed to adequate action on the findings. Eco-audit evolved as a management tool in the USA in the 1980s as companies were held more responsible for the damage they caused and realized the need for a green image (EPA, 1988; Shillito, 1994; Buckley, 1995; Gilpin, 1995). It has been promoted in Europe by the International Chamber of Commerce and by some multinational corporations as a means of getting effective environmental management (International Chamber of Commerce, 1989; 1991). A significant step forward has been the development of eco-audit standards/environmental management and audit systems, the world’s first being offered by the British Standards Institution (BS 7750) in 1992. This moved beyond assessment of environmental effects to ensure that bodies made commitments to continual environmental improvement. Eco-audit handbooks and guidebooks began to appear in the mid-1980s (Harrison, 1984; Blakeslee and Grabowski, 1985; Grayson, 1992; Local Government Management Board, 1991; 1992; Thompson and Therivel, 1991; Spedding et al., 1993; McKenna & Co., 1993; Richards and Biddick, 1994). In 1986 the US Environmental Protection Agency issued an Environmental Auditing Policy Statement, designed to encourage the use of eco-audits by US companies, and laid down guidelines. Eco-audit is increasingly practised in the USA, Europe, Australia and other developed countries, further impetus being given by the publication of Agenda 21, and by the European Commission’s Fifth Environmental Action Programme (1992). The latter seeks to promote ‘shared responsibility’ (by people, commerce and government) for the environment, popular green awareness, and a move towards sustainable development, and it supports eco-audit (see Figure 4.1). In 1992 18 of the UK’s top companies undertook eco-audits; by 1996 roughly half the country’s firms had eco-audited—a rapid, voluntary spread. Eco-auditing is part of a growing shift from mere compliance with regulations to developing forward-looking environmental management strategies (Willig, 1994; Sunderland, 1996), so it supports the principle of prudence. There has been less progress in developing countries, STANDARDS AND MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS 67 although India has modified its Companies Act to include a requirement for eco- audits, and Indonesia has required companies to conduct eco-audits since 1995. Eco-audits offer some or all of the following benefits: ♦ they generate valuable data for regional or national state-of-the-environment reports; ♦ they are a means for ensuring the continual improvement of environmental management; ♦ they may be a valuable way of monitoring; ♦ they can help establish an effective environmental protection scheme, which may reduce insurance premiums (Finsinger and Marx, 1996); ♦ they can assist efforts for sustainable development; ♦ they can inform the public about the body’s environmental performance, which is good PR; ♦ they can help involve the public in environmental management; ♦ they help identify cost recovery through recycling, opportunities for sale of by-products, etc; ♦ they reduce risks of being accused of negligence and losing court cases; ♦ they may reduce the need for government inspections; ♦ they can ensure that often complex regulations are known about and followed and licences are obtained; ♦ they offer management more peace of mind. There may also be risks associated with eco-audits: ♦ they may spot a problem that is costly to cure, which might otherwise have been overlooked without too much harm; FIGURE 4.1 European Union Eco-Management and Audit Scheme (EMAS) eco-audit award logo Note: This can be used on a company’s brochures, letterhead, reports and advertisements, but must make no reference to specific products or services, and may not be used on product pacakages. CHAPTER FOUR 68 ♦ they can be expensive; ♦ a body may fear trade secrets will be exposed to competitors; ♦ smaller companies cannot do eco-auditing in-house and must use specialists from outside (costly, with a risk of loss of trade secrets). There are two broad categories of eco-audit: (a) industrial—private sector corporate eco-audits, (b) local authority or higher-level government eco-audits (sometimes called ‘green charters’) —these are more standardized than industrial (private sector) corporate eco-audits, and are commissioned by local authorities to show local environmental quality (Levett, 1993; Barrett, 1995; Leu et al., 1995) (Box 4.1). Some local authorities produce state-of-the-environment reports which are not the same as audits carried out as part of an environmental management system approach (see later in this chapter). Download 6.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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