Wednesday, November 9, 2011

General Description of ISO14001 Standards

General Description of ISO14001 Standards
ISO14001 Standards requires an Environmental Policy to be in existence within the organisation, fully supported by senior management, and outlining the policies of the company, not only to the staff but to the public. The policy needs to clarify compliance with Environmental Legislation that may effect the organization and stress a commitment to continuous improvement. Emphasis has been placed on policy as this provides the direction for the remainder of the Management System.
Those companies who have witnessed ISO9000 Assessments will know that the policy is frequently discussed during the assessment, many staff are asked if they understand or are aware of the policy, and any problems associated with the policy are seldom serious. The Environmental Policy is different, this provides the initial foundation and direction for the Management System and will be more stringently reviewed than a similar ISO9000 policy. The statement must be publicised in non-technical language so that it can be understood by the majority of readers. It should relate to the sites within the organisation encompassed by the Management System, it should provide an overview of the company’s activities on the site and a description of those activities. A clear picture of the company’s operations.
The preparatory review and definition of the organization’s environmental effects is not part of a ISO14001 Assessment, however examination of this data will provide an external audit with a wealth of information on the methods adopted by the company. The preparatory review itself should be comprehensive in consideration of input processes and output at the site. This review should be designed to identify all relevant environmental aspects that may arise from existence on the site. These may relate to current operations, they may relate to future, perhaps even unplanned future activities, and they will certainly relate to the activities performed on site in
the past (i.e. contamination of land).
The initial or preparatory review will also include a wide-ranging consideration of the legislation which may effect the site, whether it is currently being complied with, and perhaps even whether copies of the legislation are available. Many of the environmental assessments undertaken already have highlighted that companies are often unaware of ALL of the legislation that affects them, and being unaware, are often not meeting the requirements of that legislation.
The company will declare its primary environmental objectives, those that can have most environmental impact. In order to gain most benefit these will become the primary areas of consideration within the improvement process, and the company’s environmental program. The program will be the plan to achieve specific goals or targets along the route to a specific goal and describe the means to reach those objectives such that they are real and achievable. The Environmental Management System provides further detail on the environmental program. The EMS establishes procedures, work instructions and controls to ensure that implementation of the policy and achievement of the targets can become a reality. Communication is a vital factor, enabling people in the organisation to be aware of their responsibilities, aware of the objectives of the scheme, and able to contribute to its success.
As with ISO 9000 the Environmental Management System requires a planned comprehensive periodic audit of the Environmental Management System to ensure that it is effective in operation, is meeting specified goals, and the system continues to perform in accordance with relevant regulations and standards. The audits are designed to provide additional information in order to exercise effective management of the system, providing information on practices which differ to the current procedures or offer an opportunity for improvement.
In addition to audit, there is a requirement for Management Review of the system to ensure that it is suitable (for the organization and the objectives) and effective in operation. The management review is the ideal forum to make decisions on howe to improve for the future.

ISO 9001 Standards Check List

ISO 9001:2008 include these checklists as follows:

1. ISO 9001 General Requirements

Has the organization established, documented, implemented and maintained a quality management system in accordance with the requirements of ISO 9001?

2. General Documentation Requirements
Does the quality management system documentation include documented procedures and records required ensuring effective operation and control of its processes?

3. Quality Manual
Has a quality manual been established and maintained that includes:

4. Control of Documents
Are documents required for the quality management system controlled?

5. Control of Records
Have records been established and maintained to provide evidence of conformity to requirements and of the effective operation of the quality management system?

6. Management Commitment
How has top management demonstrated commitment to the development and improvement of the quality management system?

7. Quality Policy
Organization has top management ensured that the quality policy:

8. System Planning
1. Quality Objectives
a. What are the quality objectives that have been established at relevant functions and levels within the organization?

9. Responsibility, authority and Communication
Responsibility, authority and Communication Audit Checklist
1. Responsibility and authority

10. Resource Management
Resource Management Audit Checklist

1. Provision of resources

11. Planning of Product/Service Realization
Planning of Product/Service Realization Audit Checklist
Is planning of the realization processes consistent with the other requirements of the organization’s quality management system?

12. Management Review
Management Review Audit Checklist
1. General checklist
a) Does the top management review the quality management system, at planned intervals, to ensure its continuing suitability, adequacy and effectiveness?

13. Product review
Determination of Requirements Related to the Product (7.2.1)

14. Design and Development Planning and Design and Development Inputs
What is the design and development planning methodology described in the design procedure?

15. Design and Development Outputs Audit
Are the outputs of the design and/or development process documented in a manner that enables verification against the design and/or development inputs?

16. Design and Development Review Audit
Are systematic reviews of design and/or development conducted at suitable stages?

17. Design and/or Development Verification
Is design and/or development verification performed to ensure the output meets the design and/or development inputs?

18. Design and/or Development Validation
Is design and/or development validation performed to confirm that resulting product is capable of meeting the requirements for the intended use?

19. Control of Design and Development Changes
Are design and/or development changes identified, documented, and controlled?

20. Purchasing Process
Does the organization control its purchasing processes to ensure purchased product conforms to requirements?

21. Purchasing Information
Do purchasing documents contain information describing the product to be purchased?

22. Verification of Purchased Product
Have the inspection or other activities necessary for ensuring that purchased product meets specified purchase requirements been established and implemented?

23. Control of Production and Service
Are the production and service provision planned and carried out under controlled conditions including:

24. Validation of Processes for Production and Service Provision
Have processes where deficiencies may become apparent only after the product is in use or the service has been delivered been validated?

25. Identification and Traceability
Is the product identified by suitable means throughout product realization?

26. Customer Property
How does the organization exercise care with customer property while it is under the
organization’s control or being used by the organization?

27. Preservation of Product
Is conformity of product preserved during internal processing and delivery to the intended destination?

28. Audit Checklist of Control of Measuring and Monitoring Devices
Has the organization determined the monitoring and measurement to be undertaken and the monitoring and measurement devices needed to provide evidence of conformity of product to determined requirements?

29. Customer Satisfaction
Are measurement and monitoring activities needed to assure conformity and achieve improvement been identified and included in the product quality plan?

30. Internal Audit Checklist
Are periodic internal quality audits conducted to determine whether the quality management system has been effectively implemented and maintained?

31. Monitoring and Measurement of Processes
Are suitable methods applied for monitoring and where applicable, measurement of the quality management system processes necessary to meet customer requirements?

32. Monitoring and Measurement of Product
Are product characteristics monitored and measured to verify that product requirements are met?

33. Control of Nonconforming Product Checklist
Is nonconforming product identified and controlled to prevent unintended use or delivery?

34. Analysis of Data
Is appropriate data determined, collected and analyzed to demonstrate the suitability and effectiveness of the quality management system and to evaluate where continual improvement of the effectiveness of the quality management system can
be made?

35. Corrective Action
How is corrective action taken to eliminate the cause of nonconformities in order to prevent recurrence?

36 Continual Improvement
Are processes necessary for the continual Improvement of the quality management system planned and managed?

37. Preventive Action
Has the organization determined actions to eliminate the causes of potential nonconformities in order to prevent occurrence?

These checklists also called ISO 9000 audit checklist.

Implementing ISO 9000 Quality Management System

Implementation of ISO 9000 affects the entire organization right from the start. If pursued with total dedication, it results in 'cultural transition' to an atmosphere of continuous improvement.
The process of implementing ISO 9000 depends on:
􀂃 a. The sophistication of your existing quality program,
􀂃 b. The size of your organization, and
􀂃 c. The complexity of your process.

The 14 essential steps, briefly described below, are to be followed through in order to implement ISO 9000 quality management system successfully.
Step 1: Top management commitment
Step 2: Establish implementation team
Step 3. Start ISO 9000 awareness programs
Step 4: Provide Training
Step 5. Conduct initial status survey
Step 6: Create a documented implementation plan
Step 7. Develop quality management system documentation
Step 8: Document control
Step 9. Implementation
Step 10. Internal quality audit
Step 11. Management review
Step 12. Pre-assessment audit
Step 13. Certification and registration
Step 14: Continual Improvement