Inclusive Company

Balanced Business

Sustainable Growth

 

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Conservation of Resources and Waste Reduction

 

Lean Production

3 Types of Waste

7 Wastes

  

 

 "Only when I saw the Earth from space, in all its ineffable beauty and fragility, did I realize that humankind's most urgent task is to cherish and preserve it for future generations." ~ Sigmund Jahn

One of the most influential areas of government environmental policy has been the development and gradual implementation of extended producer responsibility (EPR).

The objective of EPR is to promote the conservation of resources, reduce the use and generation of toxic and hazardous materials and energy, and reduce the quantity of wastes for final disposal.

Many multinational companies have launched comprehensive and innovative environmental programs on their own, not just for themselves but for their suppliers as well, most of whom are SMEs.

 

New Corporate Approaches to Environmental Issues

Alibaba (China)

Cleaner Production

Features

Strategies

Measuring CP

ESTs

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lao Tzu advice quotes teachings

To achieve more, stop manipulating the natural way and be in accord with reality.

Lao Tzu

Konosuke Matsushita advice quotes

A natural response to a natural phenomenon is the secret of success in business and management.

Konosuke Matsushita

Panasonic

 

 

 

"EPR is a logical extension of the "polluter-pays principle. It rests on an argument that the environmental impacts of resource depletion, waste and pollution are a function of the system of production and consumption of goods and services. Those impacts are substantially determined at the point of production, which is when key choices are made – on materials, on processing and finishing technology, on product function and durability, on systems of distribution and marketing  and so on. If that system is to evolve in a way that reduces environmental impacts, then there is a need for policies that create appropriate feedback mechanisms for producers that will direct producers' investment towards continuous environmental improvement,"

~ Helen Lewis and John Gertsakis, authors of Design + Environment

 

Design for Environment

Brief Outline

Design for Waste Minimization

Design for Waste Recycling

Environmentally Sustainable Business

EQMS

 

 

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In many countries, EPR is considered an effective policy mechanism to promote the integration of the life-cycle environmental costs associated with products into the market price for the product. Various approaches to EPR policy are being watched specifically because they appear to stimulate innovation and business success as well as reduce overall life-cycle environmental impacts.

 

Life-cycle Assessment (LCA)

EMS

Probiotics vs. Chemicals

 

 

 

Environment-friendly

Healthbiotics startup success story
by
Innompic Games
Miss Innovation World
award winner