160 likes | 350 Views
Role of the Environmental Manager in US and Canadian SMEs. Professor Scott B. Wolcott, PE Rochester Institute of Technology Bocconi University June 8 and 9, 2009. Bocconi. Workshop Overview. US and Canadian definitions of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SME)
E N D
Role of the Environmental Manager in US and Canadian SMEs Professor Scott B. Wolcott, PE Rochester Institute of Technology Bocconi University June 8 and 9, 2009 Bocconi
Workshop Overview • US and Canadian definitions of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SME) • Who is the Environmental Manager around here? • Options for the SME Environmental Manager in North America • Strategic options for Italian SMEs Bocconi
SME = SB (US) = SME (Canada) • United States - Small Business (SB): • < 500 employees for manufacturing facilities • < $7M annual receipts for non-manufacturing facilities • 99.7% of all employer jobs • Many exceptions: e.g. Florida SB < 100 employees • 98% of businesses in Florida are SB • Private, non-farm SB contribute to 50% of US Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Bocconi
US continued: 16 Small Business Sectors% contribution of Small Business towards Sector GDP (2002) • 20% Information • 23% Utilities • 33% Mining and manufacturing • 40% Finance and insurance • 41% Transportation and warehousing • 44% Holding companies • 49% Trade • 49% Waste management services • 50% Education services • 56% Health services • 58% Accommodation and food services • 70% Professional and technical services • 75% Arts and entertainment • 79% real estate and Leasing • 85% Construction • 85% Other Services Bocconi
SME = SB (US) = SME (Canada) • Canada - SME • SME is an organization with < 500 employees • Small business < 100 employees • Medium business is between 100 and 499 employees • 99.8% of Canadian companies are SMEs • SMEs account for 45% of Canadian GDP • Small businesses with < 50 employees account for 26% of Canadian GDP Bocconi
SME = SB (US) = SME (Canada) • Individual economic and environmental impact is tiny • Collectively, SMEs are contribute ~50% of US and Canadian GDP • Collectively, SMEs are estimated to be responsible for: • 60% of all carbon dioxide emissions and • 70% of all pollution • 73% of Canadian SMEs have not heard of ISO 14001 Bocconi
Who is the Environmental Manager? • No one! • Everyone? • The activities performed by an environmental manager in a large organization are performed by one or more people at an SME. • Owner, general manager, facility manager, production manager, line employees, etc… Bocconi
Roles for the “Environmental Managers” • Purchasing • Develop controls for materials purchases • Human Resources • Employee training, rewards • Maintenance • Preventive maintenance programs, ID environmental aspects • Accounting • Track environmental costs, budgets, economic feasibility • Engineering • ID pollution prevention opportunities, consider environmental impacts of products & processes • Top Management • Communicate importance of activities, provide resources, review progress • Line workers • Provide 1st hand knowledge of environmental aspects, mentor new employees Bocconi
Role of the “Environmental Manager” • Strategic choices in the environmental context • External pressures • Governmental agencies • Federal, state, and municipal • Competitors • Community Associations Bocconi
Strategic choicesfor the SME “Environmental Manager” Proactive Reactive or resistant Actions Maintain status quo Solo protective measures Reactive Risk Management • Actions • Cooptation • NBAA (Northwest Baltimore Automotive Association) • Resource Sharing • Laundry service • Environmental Enacting Bocconi
Strategic choicesfor the SME “Environmental Manager” Proactive Reactive or resistant Outcomes Sustained external threats Forced closings • Outcomes • Greater eco-literacy • Enhanced environmental performance • Better financial performance Bocconi
Options for the Proactive “Environmental Manager” • Environmental Initiatives (i.e. Low hanging fruit) • Environmental Management Plan • Actions of an organization with regard to environment, regulatory compliance, establishing and meeting goals and targets • Environmental Management System • Incorporates quality improvement principles • “Plan-Do-Check-Act” • Does not have to include ISO 14001 certification Bocconi
Incentives and Barriers facing the“Environmental Manager” Incentives/Advantages Barriers/Disadvantages Lack of resources (e.g. time) Delays development Maintain plan Lack of resources (e.g. staff) Implementation review Promotion of environmental activities to employees Starting fresh (w/o previous exp. ISO 9001) • Enhanced compliance • Improved documentation • Competitive advantage • Cost savings • SME employees multi-task • SME Less complex hierarchy • Starting fresh (no EM plan to replace) Bocconi
Summary of the Italian SMEs “Environmental Manager” • Current Business Structure of SMEs • Very small, < 50 employees • Family owned and generational succession • Not always a straightforward succession • Unlikely to learn about innovative ideas w/o economic driver • Often connected to each other • Part of the same supply chain • Districts Bocconi
Summary of the Italian SMEs “Environmental Manager” • Current Regulatory Environment of SMEs • Lots of regulation • Inconsistent enforcement of regulations • Culture of interpreting laws and regulations at all levels • Little neighborhood influence on SMEs • Slow judicial system • Large bureaucracy system Bocconi
Strategic Options of the Italian SME “Environmental Manager” • What to do? • Reactive: Address external threats as SME group • Initially for economic reasons • Later, environmental compliance • Strategic, proactive initiatives • Lobbying financial sector • Environmental competitive advantage Bocconi