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ISO 14030-2:2021 ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE EVALUATION — GREEN DEBT INSTRUMENTS — PART 2: PROCESS FOR GREEN LOANS
This document establishes principles, specifies requirements and gives guidelines: for designating as “green” loans which finance eligible projects, assets and supporting expenditures; for managing and reporting on the use of proceeds; for defining, monitoring and reporting on the environmental impacts; for reporting to interested parties; for validation and verification. This document is applicable to any borrower seeking financing by way of a green loan for eligible green projects, assets and supporting expenditures. It is also applicable to lenders."
QUALITY, SAFETY, AND ENVIRONMENT (EBOOK). SYNERGY IN THE 21ST CENTURY
For the first time, an author has demonstrated that safety and environment are influential factors within the quality arena. Pascal Dennis explains how applying quality management principles to safety and environmental issues can result in growth for an organization where safety and environment endeavors are concerned. This is the only book demonstrating that problems stemming from quality, safety and environment share the same root cause and respond to the identical remedies offered by a modern quality management system.Extremely well-written, Quality, Safety, and Environment: Synergy in the 21st Century includes chapters focusing on the histroy of the quality revolution, behavior-based safety, and the vital issues facing today's safety manager. The goals, methods, and principles of total safety and environmental management are introduced as well as statistical process control and other quality tools made applicable to safety and environmental situations. Benefits:Increase profits by integrating your organization's management systems. Apply cutting-edge technologies in environmental management. Administer proven methods of measuring environmental performance. Contents:Introduction Entropy--The QSE link Generic Management Systems--A Primer Quality Management Systems Safety Management Systems Environmental Management Systems Q, S, and E Management Systems--Synergies Implications for Management Includes 32 illustrations
ISO/TR 14047:2012: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT - LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT. - ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES ON HOW TO APPLY ISO 14044 TO IMPACT ASSESSMENT SITUATIONS
The purpose of ISO/TR 14047:2012 is to provide examples to illustrate current practice of life cycle impact assessment according to ISO 14044:2006. These examples are only a sample of all possible examples that could satisfy the provisions of ISO 14044. They offer "a way" or "ways" rather than the "unique way" of applying ISO 14044. They reflect the key elements of the life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) phase of the LCA. The examples presented in ISO/TR 14047:2012 are not exclusive and other examples exist to illustrate the methodological issues described.
ISO/TR 14049:2012: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT - LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT. - ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES ON HOW TO APPLY ISO 14044 TO GOAL AND SCOPE DEFINITION AND INVENTORY ANALYSIS
ISO/TR 14049:2012 provides examples about practices in carrying out a life cycle inventory analysis (LCI) as a means of satisfying certain provisions of ISO 14044:2006. These examples are only a sample of the possible cases satisfying the provisions of ISO 14044. They offer "a way" or "ways" rather than the "unique way" for the application of ISO 14044. These examples reflect only portions of a complete LCI study.
ISO/TS 14071:2014: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT - LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT - CRITICAL REVIEW PROCESSES AND REVIEWER COMPETENCIES: ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS AND GUIDELINES TO ISO 14044:2006 (E-STANDARD)
ISO/TS 14071:2014 provides additional specifications to ISO 14040:2006 and ISO 14044:2006. It provides requirements and guidelines for conducting a critical review of any type of LCA study and the competencies required for the review. ISO/TS 14071:2014 provides: details of a critical review process, including clarification with regard to ISO 14044:2006; guidelines to deliver the required critical review process, linked to the goal of the life cycle assessment (LCA) and its intended use; content and deliverables of the critical review process; guidelines to improve the consistency, transparency, efficiency and credibility of the critical review process; the required competencies for the reviewer(s) (internal, external and panel member); the required competencies to be represented by the panel as a whole. ISO/TS 14071:2014 does not cover the applications of LCA.
ISO 14055-1:2017: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT — GUIDELINES FOR ESTABLISHING GOOD PRACTICES FOR COMBATTING LAND DEGRADATION AND DESERTIFICATION — PART 1: GOOD PRACTICES FRAMEWORK (E-STANDARD)
ISO 14055-1:2017 provides guidelines for establishing good practices in land management to prevent or minimize land degradation and desertification. It does not include management of coastal wetlands. ISO 14055-1:2017 defines a framework for identifying good practices in land management, based on assessment of the drivers of land degradation and risks associated with current and past practices. Guidance on monitoring and reporting implementation of good practices is also provided. ISO 14055-1:2017 is intended for use by private and public sector organizations with responsibility for land management and will allow an organization to communicate implementation of good practices.
ISO TR 14055-2:2022 ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT - GUIDELINES FOR ESTABLISHING GOOD PRACTICES FOR COMBATTING LAND DEGRADATION AND DESERTIFICATION - PART 2: REGIONAL CASE STUDIES
This document provides regional case studies of good practices in land management to prevent or minimize land degradation and desertification in support of ISO 14055-1:2017. The case studies are presented to facilitate the application of ISO 14055-1 across a wide of range of geographical and local conditions. NOTE: The cases studies are presented as different ways of applying good practice and do not preclude alternative ways of applying good practices in accordance with ISO 14055-1.
ASQ/ANSI/ISO 14040:2006: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT - LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT - PRINCIPLES AND FRAMEWORK
ASQ/ANSI/ISO 14040:2006 describes the principles and framework for life cycle assessment (LCA) including: definition of the goal and scope of the LCA, the life cycle inventory analysis (LCI) phase, the life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) phase, the life cycle interpretation phase, reporting and critical review of the LCA, limitations of the LCA, the relationship between the LCA phases, and conditions for use of value choices and optional elements. ASQ/ANSI/ISO 14040:2006 covers life cycle assessment (LCA) studies and life cycle inventory (LCI) studies. It does not describe the LCA technique in detail, nor does it specify methodologies for the individual phases of the LCA. The intended application of LCA or LCI results is considered during definition of the goal and scope, but the application itself is outside the scope of this International Standard.
ASQ/ANSI/ISO 14044:2006: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT — LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT — REQUIREMENTS
Looking to purchase a Site License to post on your company’s Intranet? Request information at sales@asq.org. There is a free amendment available for this standard. Please contact us to request it. ASQ/ANSI/ISO 14044:2006 specifies requirements and provides guidelines for life cycle assessment (LCA) including: definition of the goal and scope of the LCA, the life cycle inventory analysis (LCI) phase, the life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) phase, the life cycle interpretation phase, reporting and critical review of the LCA, limitations of the LCA, relationship between the LCA phases, and conditions for use of value choices and optional elements.ASQ/ANSI/ISO 14044:2006 covers life cycle assessment (LCA) studies and life cycle inventory (LCI) studies.
ISO 14030-4:2021 ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE EVALUATION — GREEN DEBT INSTRUMENTS — PART 4: VERIFICATION PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS
This document specifies requirements for verification bodies performing verification of claims of conformity to ISO 14030-1 or ISO 14030-2 and to ISO 14030-3 or a suitable substitute taxonomy. Conformity to the requirements of this document is mandatory for the verification of statements made by green debt issuers, borrowers and lenders that claim that their products conform to the ISO 14030 series. This document specifies requirements for the validation of claims of eligibility made in conformity to ISO 14030-1:2021, 5.4, ISO 14030-2:2021, 6.3, and ISO 14030-2:2021, 7.3. This document also establishes requirements for the optional use of third-party marks of conformity.
ISO 14026:2017: ENVIRONMENTAL LABELS AND DECLARATIONS — PRINCIPLES, REQUIREMENTS AND GUIDELINES FOR COMMUNICATION OF FOOTPRINT INFORMATION (E-STANDARD)
ISO 14026:2017 provides principles, requirements and guidelines for footprint communications for products addressing areas of concern relating to the environment. ISO 14026:2017 also provides requirements and guidelines for footprint communication programmes, as well as requirements for verification procedures. ISO 14026:2017 does not address the quantification of a footprint, nor does it address the communication of footprints that are not related to the environment, e.g. footprints addressing social or economic issues. In particular, footprint communications relating to the economic and social dimensions of sustainable development are outside the scope of ISO 14026:2017. Footprint communications relating to organizations are also outside the scope of ISO 14026:2017.
A PRACTICAL FIELD GUIDE FOR ISO 14001:2015 (EBOOK)
The field guide depicts step by step what must occur for organizations to create an effective environmental management system (EMS) in conformance with ISO 14001:2015, whether “from scratch” or by transitioning from ISO 14001:2004. In keeping with ISO 9000:2015’s definition of environmental as the “degree to which a set of inherent characteristics fulfills requirements,” the authors have identified the requirements and inherent characteristics (distinguishing features) for this field guide. Within the guide, each sub-clause containing requirements is the focus of a two-page spread that consistently presents features that fulfill ISO 14001’s requirements. What separates this field guide from most other books on ISO 14001:2015 and its implementation are flowcharts showing the steps to be taken in implementing an EMS to meet a sub-clause’s requirements. This field guide has been created to foster an inner reliance between senior management, middle management, functional teams, and the individual. Users of the field guide will find within it practical tools, tips, and techniques useful for not only implementing an environmental management system (EMS) but also maintaining one. The revised ISO 14001:2015 standard is both useful to the organization and here to stay. May this logistical field guide serve you and your organization well!
ASQ/ANSI/ISO 9000, 9001, AND 14001 BUNDLE
This bundle includes the three American National Standards published in 2015, which are identical to their international counterparts: ASQ/ANSI/ISO 9000:2015: Quality management systems - Fundamentals and vocabulary ASQ/ANSI/ISO 9001:2015: Quality management systems - Requirements ASQ/ANSI/ISO 14001:2015: Environmental management systems - Requirements with guidance for use Purchase the softcover print bundle instead.
ISO14030-3:2022 ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE EVALUATION - GREEN DEBT INSTRUMENTS - PART 3: TAXONOMY
This document defines a taxonomy of eligible investment categories for designation as green debt instruments, including bonds and loans. This document categorizes economic sectors and establishes criteria for determining the eligibility of projects, assets
ISO 14052:2017: ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT - MATERIAL FLOW COST ACCOUNTING - GUIDANCE FOR PRACTICAL IMPLEMENTATION IN A SUPPLY CHAIN (E-STANDARD)
ISO 14052:2017 provides guidance for the practical implementation of material flow cost accounting (MFCA) in a supply chain. MFCA fundamentally traces the flows and stocks of materials within an organization, quantifies these material flows in physical units (e.g. mass, volume) and evaluates the costs associated with material flows and energy uses. MFCA is applicable to any organization that uses materials and energy, regardless of its products, services, size, structure, location, and existing management and accounting systems. In principle, MFCA can be applied as an environmental management accounting tool in the supply chain, both upstream and downstream, and can help to develop an integrated approach for improving material and energy efficiency in the supply chain. ISO 14052:2017 is based on the principles and general framework for MFCA described in ISO 14051. The MFCA framework presented in this document includes scenarios for improving material and energy efficiency in a supply chain, principles for successful application of MFCA in a supply chain, information sharing, and practical steps for the implementation of MFCA in a supply chain.
ISO 14071:2024
ISO 14071:2024 Environmental management-Life cycle assessment-Critical review processes and reviewer competencies This document specifies requirements and gives guidance for conducting a critical review of any type of life cycle assessment (LCA) study and the competencies required for the review. It provides additional requirements and guidance to ISO 14040 and ISO 14044.
ISO 14072:2024
ISO 14072:2024 Environmental management-Life cycle assessment-Requirements and guidance for organizational life cycle assessment This document specifies additional requirements and gives guidance for an effective application of ISO 14040:2006 and ISO 14044:2006 to organizations.
ISO 10013:2021 QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS — GUIDANCE FOR DOCUMENTED INFORMATION (E-STANDARD)
This document gives guidance for the development and maintenance of the documented information necessary to support an effective quality management system, tailored to the specific needs of the organization. This document can also be used to support other management systems, e.g. environmental or occupational health and safety management systems.
ISO 14009:2020 ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS — GUIDELINES FOR INCORPORATING MATERIAL CIRCULATION IN DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT (E-STANDARD)
This document gives guidelines for assisting organizations in establishing, documenting, implementing, maintaining and continually improving material circulation in their design and development in a systematic manner, using an environmental management system (EMS) framework. These guidelines are intended to be used by those organizations that implement an EMS in accordance with ISO 14001. The guidelines can also help in integrating material circulation strategies in design and development when using other management systems. The guidelines can be applied to any organization regardless of its size or activity. This document provides guidelines for design strategies on material circulation to achieve the material efficiency objectives of an organization, by focusing on the following aspects: type and quantity of materials in products; product lifetime extension; recovery of products, parts and materials. In design and development, many aspects are considered, such as safety, energy efficiency, performance and cost. Although important, they are not addressed in this document.
ISO 14001:2015 AMD1-2024
This document is the amendment to ISO 14001:2015 Environmental management systems - Requirements for guidance with use.
ISO 59014:2024
ISO 59014:2024 Environmental management and circular economy-Sustainability and traceability of the recovery of secondary materials-Principles, requirements and guidance This document provides principles, requirements and guidance for organizations in fostering the sustainability and traceability of activities and processes for the recovery of secondary materials.
ISO 14075:2024
ISO 14075:2024 Environmental management-Principles and framework for social life cycle assessment This document provides requirements and guidance for practitioners from industries, government, universities and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in the efficient and credible development and implementation of practices for assessing social impacts.
ISO14017:2022 ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT - REQUIREMENTS WITH GUIDANCE FOR VERIFICATION AND VALIDATION OF WATER STATEMENTS
This document specifies principles, requirements and guidelines for the verification and validation of water statements. It is applicable to organizational, product and project water statement verification and validation, and can also be used to provide co
ISO TS 14074:2022 ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT - LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT - PRINCIPLES, REQUIREMENTS AND GUIDELINES FOR NORMALIZATION, WEIGHTING AND INTERPRETATION
This document specifies principles, requirements and guidelines for normalization, weighting and life cycle interpretation, in addition to those given in ISO 14040 and ISO 14044. The document is applicable to any life cycle assessment (LCA) and footprint quantification study. In particular, this document addresses: • the use of normalization and its limitations; • the use of weighting and its limitations; • the selection or development of weighting factors; • the generation of single scores; • requirements that relate to documentation and reporting. For the interpretation phase, it provides, in addition to ISO 14044, procedures and guidance for: • performing completeness, sensitivity and consistency checks; • addressing uncertainties and limitations; • documenting conclusions and recommendations. This document does not specify the composition of panels for weighting nor does it specify multi-criteria decision analysis. This document does not intend to recommend or require a specific weighting approach or method or any priority of one weighting approach or method over another as they are based on value choices. Organizations have the flexibility to implement LCA in accordance with the intended application and the requirements of the organization.
ISO 14067:2018: GREENHOUSE GASES — CARBON FOOTPRINT OF PRODUCTS
This document specifies principles, requirements and guidelines for the quantification and reporting of the carbon footprint of a product (CFP), in a manner consistent with International Standards on life cycle assessment (LCA) (ISO 14040 and ISO 14044). Requirements and guidelines for the quantification of a partial CFP are also specified. This document is applicable to CFP studies, the results of which provide the basis for different applications (see Clause 4). This document addresses only a single impact category: climate change. Carbon offsetting and communication of CFP or partial CFP information are outside the scope of this document. This document does not assess any social or economic aspects or impacts, or any other environmental aspects and related impacts potentially arising from the life cycle of a product.
THE INTERNAL AUDITING POCKET GUIDE, SECOND EDITION (EBOOK). PREPARING, PERFORMING, REPORTING AND FOLLOW-UP
This best-seller prepares auditors to conduct internal audits against quality, environmental, safety, and other audit criteria. This handy pocket guide covers all the steps necessary to complete an internal audit, from assignment to follow-up. New and updated chapters reflect new techniques to address vague requirements, more illustrations and examples, ISO 19011 thinking, and verification of auditee follow-up actions. This condensed, easy-to-read book is a valuable resource and great tool for training others on how to perform an internal audit. It is appropriate for those who have no prior knowledge of audit principles or techniques. Also available worldwide from the following e-book retailers: Amazon Kindle, Apple iBooks, Barnes & Noble Nook, and Google Play.
AN INTRODUCTION TO GREEN PROCESS MANAGEMENT (EBOOK)
The intent of this book is to give interested parties an overview of green and its impact on business, without spending countless hours researching the subject. It provides information in a manner that can be used to help businesses determine the role green will play in their futures. The book is not intended as a detailed implementation guide, but as an aid in understanding the current thinking on what green really is and what an organization can do. The book is presented in three major sections. The first section is intended to give an overall understanding of what is meant by green, a brief history of the environmental movement as it relates to business, trends in carbon measuring and reporting, and definitions of green. The second section discusses standards, certifications, and measurements that relate to green and environmental management. The final section presents methods that may be used to implement and manage green processes within an organization, along with tools and a road map that may be used by those companies seeking to become green. The road map utilizes process improvement tools that will be familiar to many organizations.
INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS (EBOOK). QMS, EMS, OHSMS, FSMS INCLUDING AEROSPACE, SERVICE, SEMICONDUCTOR/ELECTRONICS, AUTOMOTIVE, AND FOOD
Updated to the latest standard changes including ISO 9001:2015, ISO 14001:2015, and ISO 45001. Includes guidance on integrating Corporate Responsibility and Sustainability. Organizations today are implementing stand-alone systems for their Quality Management Systems (ISO 9001, ISO/TS 16949, or AS9100), Environmental Management System (ISO 14001), Occupational Health & Safety (ISO 18001), and Food Safety Management Systems (FSSC 22000). Stand-alone systems refer to the use of isolated document management structures resulting in the duplication of processes within one site for each of the management standards—QMS, EMS, OHSAS, and FSMS. In other words, the stand-alone systems duplicate training processes, document control, and internal audit processes for each standard within the company. While the confusion and lack of efficiency resulting from this decision may not be readily apparent to the uninitiated, this book will show the reader that there is a tremendous loss of value associated with stand-alone management systems within an organization. This book expands the understanding of an integrated management system (IMS) globally. It not only saves money, but more importantly it contributes to the maintenance and efficiency of business processes and conformance standards such as ISO 9001, AS9100, ISO/TS 16949, ISO 14001, OHSAS 18001 / ISO 45001, FSSC 22000, or other GFSI Standards.
SMART CITIES (E-BOOK). REIMAGINING THE URBAN EXPERIENCE
In a post-pandemic world, amid environmental crises, and advances in technology, the dynamics of what the average city looks like have called for change, leaving governments and policymakers to reimagine urban planning and development. In Smart Cities: Reimagining the Urban Experience, Paul Doherty shares his organization’s “secret sauce” recipe to marry information technology infrastructure—design thinking—with sustainable development goals (SDGs) for building smart cities. Paul dives into strategies, master plans, work templates, and real-world examples. This book will disrupt existing paradigms to offer practitioners, urban developers, and policymakers some solutions to creating greater social responsibility in a human-centric, data-driven world. Paul Doherty, RA, CDT, CSI, is CEO of The Digit Group, Inc. (TDG), a smart city real estate development and solutions company. Paul is an award-winning architect, a Senior Fellow of the Design Futures Council (DFC), and a Fellow of the International Facility Management Association (IFMA).
ASQ/ANSI/ISO 9001:2015 (E-STANDARD)
Looking to purchase a Site License to post on your company’s Intranet? Request information at sales@asq.org. This American National Standard (ANS) is an identical adoption of ISO 9001:2015. The text of this ANS does not differ in any way from ISO 9001:2015. Organizations certified to the ISO 9001:2008 standard will have a three-year period to transition to ISO 9001:2015. When the transition period ends in September 2018, ISO 9001:2008 certificates will no longer be valid. This International Standard specifies requirements for a quality management system when an organization: a) needs to demonstrate its ability to consistently provide products and services that meet customer and applicable statutory and regulatory requirements, and b) aims to enhance customer satisfaction through the effective application of the system, including processes for improvement of the system and the assurance of conformity to customer and applicable statutory and regulatory requirements. All the requirements of this International Standard are generic and are intended to be applicable to any organization, regardless of its type or size, or the products and services it provides. Amended by: ISO 9001:2015 Amd1-2024. Follow the link to get complimentary access to the Amendment. Buy a print copy instead. ISO 9000:2015: Quality management systems — Fundamentals and vocabulary is indispensable for the application of ISO 9001, and it is therefore recommended they be used in conjunction. You may also be interested in ASQ/ANSI/ISO 14001:2015: Environmental management systems - Requirements with guidance for use. ASQ/ANSI/ISO 9000:2015, ASQ/ANSI/ISO 9001:2015, and ASQ/ANSI/ISO 14001:2015 are available together in a bundle.
EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION OF AN ISO 50001 ENERGY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (ENMS) (EBOOK)
You may wonder, “Why do we need ISO 50001 EnMS when we have already implemented ISO 14001 Environmental Management (EMS)?” Energy is part of an EMS. Energy is an aspect that is nonrenewable and a must for every organization to have. In ISO 14001 EMS, it is easy to focus on hazardous materials and aspects that have considerable risk in the workplace. Energy use can be easily overlooked, and even when it is considered for an objective and target (O&T), important questions such as what are the significant energy users (SEUs), what can we do to reduce their impact, and what are the variables that affect energy use are not answered. An ISO 50001 Energy Management System (EnMS) allows an organization to focus on reducing energy consumption through establishing a compelling energy policy, establishing legal and other requirements and ensuring that they are being met, and conducting a comprehensive energy review that identifies energy efficiencies, energy conservation efforts implemented, and O&Ts with energy action plans that, when achieved, moves the organization toward meeting its energy policy. For manufacturing companies, energy costs impact both the cost to produce the product and the product price. For government organizations, energy reduction is mandated by executive orders. Everyone benefits from reducing energy consumption, from the environment to the economic health of companies. ISO 50001 EnMS can be implemented by itself or with other ISO standards such as 9001, and 14001 or with OHSMS 18000. The choice is yours—–let’s make this a better place to live and work and with less cost.
ISO 45001:2018: OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS - REQUIREMENTS WITH GUIDANCE FOR USE (E-STANDARD)
ISO 45001:2018 specifies requirements for an occupational health and safety (OH b) fulfilment of legal requirements and other requirements; c) achievement of OH&S objectives. ISO 45001:2018 is applicable to any organization regardless of its size, type and activities. It is applicable to the OH&S risks under the organization's control, taking into account factors such as the context in which the organization operates and the needs and expectations of its workers and other interested parties. ISO 45001:2018 does not state specific criteria for OH&S performance, nor is it prescriptive about the design of an OH&S management system. ISO 45001:2018 enables an organization, through its OH&S management system, to integrate other aspects of health and safety, such as worker wellness/wellbeing. ISO 45001:2018 does not address issues such as product safety, property damage or environmental impacts, beyond the risks to workers and other relevant interested parties. ISO 45001:2018 can be used in whole or in part to systematically improve occupational health and safety management. However, claims of conformity to this document are not acceptable unless all its requirements are incorporated into an organization's OH&S management system and fulfilled without exclusion.
ASQ TR2:2018 (E-STANDARD)
This Technical Report was prepared to address the need for guidance on Cost of Quality for development, implementation and monitoring to improve quality and overall organizational performance. This guidance is either in the context of an established management system (e.g., quality, environmental, occupational health and safety, etc.) or as an independent management activity. In either case, this document provides expectations for the processes and activities associated with the products and services an organization produces or provides to the extent realization processes have been deemed necessary. The Cost of Quality process employed should be compatible with other associated financial analysis activities used by the organization to ensure continuity and commonality of purpose. Among the benefits of establishing a Cost of Quality are: a. increased visibility of the value of activities performed; b. greater insight into opportunities for improvement; c. reduced wastes or the impact of problems; d. improved organizational competitiveness; e. amplified engagement of leadership in improvement activities. This Technical Report follows the high-level structure for management systems that is provided in Annex SL of the ISO directives. This document provides guidance for implementation of a Cost of Quality process for organizations of any type, size and complexity. A Cost of Quality process integrated within the organization’s Quality management system(s) helps the organization realize more effective bottom line benefits. Appendices added to this document provide guidance in using costs existing within the business for a Cost of Quality process by asking a series of fundamental questions. A sample worksheet is also provided for guidance to help start the analysis.
ISO TS 23471:2022 EXPERIMENTAL DESIGNS FOR EVALUATION OF UNCERTAINTY - USE OF FACTORIAL DESIGNS FOR DETERMINING UNCERTAINTY FUNCTIONS
This document specifies experimental procedures and statistical analysis for the determination of measurement uncertainty in situations where the following conditions are fulfilled: Condition 1: The level of the measurand is non-negative, e.g. concentration level of a contaminant in a sample. Condition 2: Measurement error consists of two independent components: for one of these components the relative standard deviation is constant (that is, the absolute deviation is proportional to the level of the measurand), whereas for the other component the absolute standard deviation is constant (that is, independent of the level of the measurand). Condition 3: Samples for different levels of the measurand can be made available; if the level of the measurand is the concentration of a chemical substance, samples could be obtained e.g. by fortifying (spiking) blank samples. Conditions 1 and 2 are met for most applications of instrumental chemical analyses. Condition 3 can be met for chemical analyses if blank samples are available. This document can also be used to determine precision data for a particular laboratory for different technicians, different environmental conditions, the same or similar test items, with the same level of the measurand, over a certain period of time.
2023-2024 BALDRIGE EXCELLENCE FRAMEWORK / BUSINESS/NONPROFIT (E-VERSION). INCLUDES THE 2023-2024 CRITERIA FOR PERFORMANCE EXCELLENCE
2023-2024 Baldrige Excellence Framework (Health Care) available now. 2023-2024 Baldrige Excellence Framework (Education) available now. For more than 30 years, the Baldrige Excellence Framework has empowered organizations to accomplish their missions, improve results, and become more competitive. This leadership and performance management framework includes the world-renowned Criteria for Performance Excellence, core values and concepts, and guidelines for evaluating your processes and results. The 2023–2024 Baldrige framework features a renewed focus on organizational agility, innovation, and transformation risk management and supply-chain resilience societal contributions and environmental sustainability the changing nature of work and workforce needs diversity, equity, and inclusion This is the official 2023-2024 Baldrige Excellence Framework for business, nonprofit, and government organizations. Print copies of the Baldrige Excellence Framework (Business/Nonprofit) are available to be purchased. Free booklet content and other valuable information are available on the Baldrige Program’s website. Related Products 2023-2024 Baldrige Excellence Framework
2023-2024 BALDRIGE EXCELLENCE FRAMEWORK (HEALTH CARE) E-VERSION. INCLUDES THE 2023-2024 CRITERIA FOR PERFORMANCE EXCELLENCE
2023-2024 Baldrige Excellence Framework (Business/Nonprofit) available now. 2023-2024 Baldrige Excellence Framework (Education) available now. For more than 30 years, the Baldrige Excellence Framework has empowered organizations to accomplish their missions, improve results, and become more competitive. This leadership and performance management framework includes the world-renowned Criteria for Performance Excellence, core values and concepts, and guidelines for evaluating your processes and results. The 2023–2024 Baldrige framework features a renewed focus on organizational agility, innovation, and transformation risk management and supply-chain resilience societal contributions and environmental sustainability the changing nature of work and workforce needs diversity, equity, and inclusion This is the official 2023-2024 Baldrige Excellence Framework for health care organizations. Print copies of the Baldrige Excellence Framework (Health Care) are available to be purchased. Free booklet content and other valuable information are available on the Baldrige Program’s website. Related Products 2023-2024 Baldrige Excellence Framework