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Environmental Management and Accounting
The Relevance of Environmental Management
Systems
The historical basis of sustainable business
management and CSR is environmental management. In order to
develop efficient solutions to manage CSR, it is worth considering
the experiences made so far in environmental management, its
management systems (EMASISO 14001, sector and SME approaches)
and its environmental accounting instruments (EMA, e.g. environmental
cost accounting, environmental performance indicators, check
lists etc.).
Since the mid-1990s numerous research projects
and company practice have made a considerable contribution
to the knowledge available on corporate environmental management.
Loew and Clausen (2003) carried out a presumably
unique 6 year longitudinal analysis on the long-term effects
of environmental management systems in companies. The analysis
clearly shows how and why the initial euphoria of many companies
has notably reduced.
In the meantime, many companies have switched
from EMAS to the international standard ISO 14001 or have
even given up maintaining external auditing systems. The main
reasons for leaving EMAS are (Loew 2003):
- costs (expenditure and internal workload)
for the environmental statement,
- European limitedness of EMAS,
- cost of external auditing,
- increased internal workload,
- lack of marketing advantages.
The decline in EMAS registrations should not,
however, be understood as a complete failure. On the one hand,
due to competition with EMAS, ISO 14001 has clearly improved
and become more challenging. On the other hand, a lot of improvements
in environmental performance and the management system have
been achieved within the companies which are still beneficial.
However, the question remains how EMAS and ISO will be treated
in future especially at the political level.
Accounting Instruments for Environmental
Performance
Appropriate accounting instruments for controlling
are essential for the continuous improvement of corporate
environmental performance. The research began as early as
the mid-1980s when the corporate input-output balance and
the life cycle assessment were first developed as environmental
management accounting instruments.
In the 1990s further instruments were developed
including environmental performance indicators (EPI), different
approaches to environmental cost accounting and various methods
for calculating ecological impact (e.g. ecological footprint,
MIPS - Material Impact Per Service Unit, impact equivalents
- best known for measuring CO2 emissions) (e.g. Hallay and
Pfriem 1989, Schaltegger and Sturm 1994, BMU and UBA 2001).
A more in-depth analysis on how these instruments
can be combined efficiently for environmental management and
how they can be supported by software systems was carried
out in the research project INTUS (Lang et al. 2004).
Sources
The sources quoted are available
at
Loew T, Beucker S, Jürgens G (2002) Vergleichende
Analyse der Umweltcontrollinginstrumente Umweltbilanz, Umweltkennzahlen
und Flusskostenrechnung <Comparitive
Analysis on the Environmental Accounting Instruments Input-Output
Balances, Environmental Performance Indicators and Flow Cost
Accounting> Download
Loew T, Clausen J (2005)
Wie weiter mit EMAS? Ergebnisse eines Monitorings von 1979
bis 2002 <What Next with
EMAS? Results of a Monitoring from 1997 until 2002>
Discussionpaper 4 Sustainability (with English abstract) Berlin
Download
Further Information
Umweltgutachterausschuss
(UGA) www.umweltgutachterausschuss.de
Fraunhofer Institut für Arbeit und Organisation
(IAO) http://www.bum.iao.fraunhofer.de
Borderstep - Institut für Innovations-
und Nachhaltigkeitsforschung www.borderstep.de
Further
information on environmental management / CSR-Management:
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