natureNowadays, customers, consumers, and investors are demanding more and more products and services that are friendly to the environment. Thus, it is almost essential for those who want success in the business world to adopt an internationally recognized environmental management standard.
An EMS (Environmental Management System) is a tool by which a company controls products, activities, and processes that have – or could have – a negative impact on the environment and thus learn how to mitigate properly.

One of the regulatory and legal areas involving business management is the Environmental Policy.
Environmental Policy is the set of political efforts to conserve the natural foundations of human life and achieve sustainable development. It has become an autonomous political sector more and more important both nationally and internationally.

The definition of an environmental policy at company level is the requirement of environmental management systems certified as ISO 14001 or EMAS.

Principles of Environmental Policy

Although there is not a general agreement on the principles of environmental policy, there are some generally accepted bases:

Environmental Policy Tools
Legal tools: The set of rules and laws regarding the environment at local, regional, national, and international levels.
Administrative tools: Evaluations, controls, authorizations, and regulations. Examples include environmental impact assessments and environmental audits.
Technical tools: The promotion and application of the best available technologies for both preventive and corrective actions.
Economic and fiscal tools: Subsidies, taxes, fees, and charges. To internalize environmental costs, the idea is to reward some of the costs of positive actions and penalize those who damage the environment.
Social tools: The key points of these tools are information and participation. They try to raise public awareness through environmental education, public information, and integration in environmental projects.