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- "Implementing an Environmental Audit: How to Gain a Competitive Advantage
- Using Quality and Environmental Responsibility", by Grant Ledgerwood,
- Elizabeth Street, and Riki Therivel, published by IRWIN Professional
- Publishing (1333 Burr Ridge Parkway Burr Ridge, IL 60521), 1994, 212 pp, $45
- list
-
- A Book Review by Norman C. Frank, PE, CQE, CQA
- CER Corporation, Washington, DC
-
- "Implementing an Environmental Audit" doesn't. If you expect to learn what
- an environmental audit is and how to perform one, you will be sorely
- disappointed in this book. It's main focus is on motivating management to
- become "deep green" by focusing on a corporate environmental program. The
- book has the proper "alarmist tone" and follows the classic format for
- environmental books and articles of (1) sound the alarm, (2) explain how the
- authors' way is the only proper way to eliminate the problem, and (3) end
- with the exhortation that if you do what we say, your company will be
- liberated and paradise will be yours.
-
- The authors try to use Total Quality Management (TQM) as the method of
- introducing the environmental strategy into the corporation and include the
- statement, "In general, senior management must learn to ask more from their
- managers and operatives." This coupled with the moralizing, stick it to the
- rich, and semi-disguised socialist opinions of the authors makes the book
- useable only to those who are already heavily into the emotional side of the
- environmental movement, not the action side. Opinionated adjectives and
- adverbs dot the text and make it a minefield of "snarl" words (e.g., plastics
- are referred to as "polluting plastics" while green pressure groups
- "articulately suggest"). The authors make many statements about the
- customer, yet have no reference to support the statements. The authors
- state, "Environmental auditing is closely linked to Total Quality Management
- in its emphasis on the management structures and processes by which
- environmental outcomes are achieved." Some people might take exception to
- this.
-
- The authors have nothing but praise for "The Body Shop" throughout the book,
- yet repeat dubious rumors concerning other companies and use old data to
- imply that other companies are not living up to their standards. The British
- Standard BS7750 is used as the basis for how to approach an environmental
- audit, yet the authors promulgate the error that ISO stands for
- "International Standards Organization" (it doesn't).
-
- The good points about the book are that if you can get through the hype and
- separate the wheat from the chaff, you can learn about the need for a
- corporate environmental program and gain some insight on how to approach
- developing one for your company.
-
- Only recommended for CEOs and top managers.
-