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12 -1

Environment Cost
Management
12 -2

Objectives
Objectives
1. Discuss the importance
After of measuring
After studying this
studying this
environmentchapter,
costs. you should
chapter, you should
2. Explain how environmental
be able to: costs are
be able to:
assigned to products and processes.
3. Describe the life-cycle cost assessment
model.
4. Compare and contrast activity- and strategic-
based environmental control.
12 -3

The Benefits of Ecoefficiency

Ecoefficiency essentially
maintains that organizations
can produce more useful
goods and services while
simultaneously reducing
negative environmental
impacts, resource
consumption, and costs.
12 -4

Incentives and causes for increased


efficiency:
1) Customers are
demanding products
that are
environmental
friendly
12 -5

Incentives and causes for increased


efficiency:
1) Customers are
demanding products
that are
environmental
friendly
2) Employees prefer to
work for
environmentally
respective firms
12 -6

Causes
Causes and
and
Incentives
Incentives for
for
Ecoefficiency
Ecoefficiency
Customer Demand 12 -7
For Cleaner Products

Cost Reduction and Better Employees


Competitive and Greater
Advantage Productivity

ECOEFFICENCY

Lower Cost of
Innovations and
Capital and Lower
New Opportunities
Insurance

Significant Special Benefits


Leading to Improved Image
12 -8

Environmental Quality
Cost Model
Environmental costs are costs that are incurred
because poor environmental quality exists or may
exist.
Environmental
Environmental costs
costs can
can be
be classified
classified in
in four
four
categories:
categories: prevention
prevention costs,
costs, detection
detection costs,
costs, internal
internal
failure
failure costs,
costs, and
and external
external failure
failure costs.
costs.
12 -9

Classification of Environmental
Costs by Activity
Prevention Activities
Evaluating and selecting suppliers
Evaluating and selecting pollution control equipment
Designing processes
Designing products
Carrying out environmental studies
Auditing environmental risks
Developing environmental management systems
Recycling products
Obtaining ISO 14001 certification
12 -10

Classification of Environmental
Costs by Activity
Detection Activities
Auditing environmental activities
Inspecting products and processes
Developing environmental performance measures
Testing for contamination
Verifying supplier environmental performance
Measuring contamination levels
12 -11

Classification of Environmental
Costs by Activity
Internal Failure Activities
Operating pollution control equipment
Treating and disposing of toxic waste
Maintaining pollution equipment
Licensing facilities for producing contaminants
Recycle scrap
12 -12

Classification of Environmental
Costs by Activity
External Failure Activities
Cleaning up a polluted lake
Cleaning up oil spills
Cleaning up contaminated soil
Settling personal injury claims (environmentally related)
Restoring land to natural state
Losing sales due to poor environmental reputation
Using materials and energy inefficiently
Receiving medical care due to polluted air (S)
Losing employment because of contamination (S)
12 -13

Numade Corporation
Environmental Cost Report
For the Year Ended December 31, 2004
Percentage of
Environmental Costs Operating Costs
Prevention costs:
Training employees $ 60,000
Designing products 180,000
Selecting equipment 40,000 $280,000 1.40%
Detection costs:
Inspecting processes $240,000
Developing measures 80,000 320,000 1.60

Continued
Continued
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Percentage of
Environmental Costs Operating Costs
Internal failure costs:
Operating pollution
equipment $400,000
Maintaining pollution
equipment 200,000 $ 600,000 3.00%
External failure costs:
Cleaning up lake $900,000
Restoring land 500,000
Incurring property
damage claim 400,000 1,800,000 9.00
Totals $3,000,000 15.00%
12 -15

Numade Corporation
Environmental Financial Statement
For the Year Ended December 31, 2004
Environmental benefits:
Cost reductions, contaminants $ 300,000
Cost reductions, hazardous waste disposal 400,000
Recycling income 200,000
Energy conservation cost savings 100,000
Packaging cost reductions 150,000
Total environmental benefits $1,150,000

Continued
Continued
12 -16

Numade Corporation
Environmental Financial Statement
For the Year Ended December 31, 2004
Environmental costs:
Prevention costs $ 280,000
Detection costs 320,000
Internal failure costs 600,000
External failure costs 100,000
Packaging cost reductions 1,800,000
Total environmental costs $1,150,000
12 -17

Environment Product Costs


The environmental costs of
processes that produce,
market, and deliver products
and the environmental
postpurchase costs caused by
the use and disposal of the
products are examples of
environmental product costs.
12 -18

Full
Full environmental
environmental
costing
costing isis the
the
assignment
assignment of of all
all
environmental
environmental costs,
costs,
both
both private
private andand
societal,
societal, to
to products.
products.
12 -19

Full
Full private
private
costing
costing isis the
the
assignment
assignment of of
only
only private
private cost
cost
to
to individual
individual
products.
products.

Private costing is probably a good starting point


for many firms.
Private costs can be assigned using data created
inside the firm.
12 -20

ABC
ABC Environmental
Environmental Costing
Costing
Activities Cleanser A Cleanser B
Evaluate and select suppliers $0.20$ 0.05
Design processes (to reduce pollution) 0.100.10
Inspect processes (for pollution problems) 0.250.15
Capture and treat chlorofluorocarbons 0.051.00
Maintain environmental equipment 0.000.50
Toxic waste disposal 0.101.75
Excessive materials usage 0.08 0.25
Environmental cost per unit $0.78$ 3.80
Other manufacturing costs (nonenvironmental) 9.02 16.20
Unit cost $9.80$20.00

Units produced 100,000100,000


12 -21

Product stewardship is the


practice of designing,
manufacturing,
maintaining, and
recycling products to
minimize adverse
environmental impacts.
12 -22

Life-cycle assessment
identifies the
environmental
consequences of a product
through its entire life
cycle, and then searches
for opportunities to obtain
environmental
improvements.
12 -23

Life-cycle cost assessment


assigns costs and benefits
to the environmental
consequences and
improvements.
12 -24
Product-Life
Product-Life
Cycle Raw
Cycle Stages
Stages Controlled
Materials by
Supplier

Production
Controlled by
Manufacturer

Packaging

Product
Recycling Use and Disposal
Maintenance

Controlled by Customer
12 -25

Assessment Stages
Inventory analysis

Impact analysis

Improvement
analysis
12 -26

Inventory Analysis
Inventory analysis
specifies the types and
quantities of materials
and energy inputs
needed and the resulting
environmental releases
in the form of solid,
liquid, and gaseous
residues.
12 -27

PAPER CUP POLYFORM CUP


Materials usage per cup:
Wood and bark (g) 33.00.0
Petroleum (g) 4.13.2
Finished weight (g) 10.011.5
Utilities per mg of material:
Steam (kg) 9,000-12,0005,000
Power (GJ) 3.50.4-0.6
Cooling water (m3) 50154
Water effluent per mg of material:
Volume (m3) 50-1900.5-2.0
Suspended solids (kg) 35-60trace
BOD (kg) 30-500.07
Organochlorides (kg) 5-70
Metal salts (kg) 1-2020
12 -28

PAPER CUP POLYFORM CUP


Air Emissions per mg of material:
Chlorine (kg) 0.50
Sulfides (kg) 2.00
Particulates (kg) 5-150.1
Pentane (kg) 035-50
Recycle potential:
Primary user PossibleEasy
After use LowHigh
Ultimate disposal:
Heat recovery (Mj/kg) 2040
Mass to landfill (g) 10.111.5
Biodegradable YesNo
12 -29

PAPER CUP POLYFORM CUP


Material usage $0.010 $0.004
Utilities 0.012 0.003
Contaminant-related
resources 0.008 0.005
Total private costs $0.030 $0.012
Recycling benefits
(societal) -0.001 -0.004
Environmental cost
per unit $0.029 $0.008
12 -30

Impact Analysis

Impact analysis assesses


the environmental effects
of competing designs and
provides a relative
ranking of those effects.
12 -31

Improvement Analysis
Improvement analysis has
the objective of reducing
the environmental impacts
revealed by the inventory
and impact steps.
12 -32

Environmental
Environmental Perspective
Perspective
Five core objectives for the environmental perspectives:
Minimize the use of raw or virgin materials
Minimize the use of hazardous materials
Minimize energy requirements for production and use of
the product
Minimize the release of solid, liquid, and gaseous
residues
Maximize opportunities to recycle
12 -33

NONVALUE-ADDED YEAR
ENVIRONMENTAL ACTIVITY 2004 2003

Inspecting processes $ 200,000 $ 240,000


Operating pollution equipment 350,000 400,000
Maintaining pollution equipment 200,000 200,000
Cleaning up water pollution 700,000 900,000
Property damage claim 300,000 400,000
Totals $1,750,000 $2,140,000
12 -34
Environmental Cost Trend Graph
Environmental
Costs/Sales

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Periods
12 -35
Bar Graph for Trend Analysis
CFC Emissions
100

80

60

40

20

0
2001 2002 2003 2004

Pounds emitted
12 -36
Hazardous Waste Pie Chart
Treated 15.0%
Incinerated 35.0%
Recycled 5.0%

Landfilled 25.0%

Deep-well injected
Incinerated 20.0%
Treated
Recycled
Landfilled
Deep-well injected
12 -37

The
The End
End
12 -38

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