Responsible Care - 14001:2013 and RCMS:2013 Standard Revisions
RC-14001
and RCMS Standards, the chemical industry’s environmental, health,
safety, and security performance initiative (originally released in
2002) recently underwent a revision to a 2013 re-release. The revision
incorporates changes based upon issues identified by members, partners,
registrars, and board recommendations on waste and energy efficiency.
Additionally, the task force working on the revision ensured that any
changes would provide value and would align with the American Chemistry
Council’s Process Safety Codes. The program revisions address the
principle to enhance the performance and credibility of the chemical
industry through Responsible Care.
What follows is a brief summary of changes to the RCMS and RC-14001 Standard.
RCMS® Responsible Care Management System
Element 1.1 now includes a requirement for the policy to be made available to the public.
Element 1.1 now includes a requirement for the policy to be made available to the public.
Element 2.1, which initially required the site to
identify hazards and prioritize risks, now requires organizations to
consider NEW items – including activities associated with its
operational energy efficiency and waste minimization, reuse and
recycling. Sites are not necessarily required to have energy or waste
prioritized risk aspects; they just have to show they considered them.
Element 3.4 adds the requirement that sites verify
competency for persons performing tasks directly related to the
organizations prioritized EHSS risks.
Element 3.5.2 states that – in addition to having a
process for making product stewardship information publicly available –
process shall now include product safety information.
Element 4.2 now requires the organization to
periodically evaluate its compliance with relevant health, safety,
security and environmental legislation and regulations, as well as
conformance with other Responsible Care®-related requirements to which
it subscribes.
Element 4.3 adds the requirement that an
organization conduct internal audits on the effectiveness of its
Responsible Care management system to determine whether it has been
properly established, implemented and maintained. Additionally, audits
shall occur at planned intervals with audit frequency commensurate with
risks associated with the operations, results of previous audits, and
changes to the management system.
Element 4.4 states that (commensurate with risk)
the organization shall have a process to use (as appropriate) that
reviews and assesses: customers, suppliers, contract manufacturers,
carriers, distributors, contractors, and third-party logistics providers
based on Responsible Care or other health, safety, security and
environmental performance criteria established by the organization.
Element 4.6 previously required root cause analysis
of incidents, accidents. and non-conformities within Management System
and now is modified and split into two sub-elements:
- 4.6.1 – Identify, investigate and assign significance
- 4.6.2 - Based on the determined level of significance…
- Identify root causes
- Address and mitigate any adverse impacts
- Initiate and complete corrective and preventive actions
- Share key findings and associated corrective and preventive actions with relevant internal and external stakeholders, and
- Review efficacy of corrective and preventive actions taken
Element
5.1 adds the new requirement: outputs from the management review shall
include any decisions and actions related to possible changes to the
policy, goals, objectives and targets, and other elements of the
Responsible Care management system.
Other modifications include an updated glossary and
terms appendix, a listing of current ACC member/partner company
requirements, and updated web links for ACC documents.
RC-14001 – Responsible Care Management System plus ISO-14001: 2007
Section 4.3.1 Aspects and Impacts identification
now includes some additional wording that requires the organization to
consider operational energy efficiency, waste minimization, as well as
reuse and recycling when identifying its aspects and impacts.
Section 4.4.6 Operational Control includes a
wording change to sub-element “h” to ensure that an organization has a
process to use, as appropriate, that reviews and assesses the following:
customers, suppliers, contract manufacturers, carriers, distributors,
contractors, and third-party logistics providers based on Responsible
Care or other health, safety, security and environmental performance
criteria established by the organization.
Section 4.5.3 Non-conformity, corrective,
preventive action changes the language of incident and accident
investigation to ensure that the organization has “A process to
identify, investigate cause(s) and assign significance to incidents and
accidents. Appropriate corrective and/or preventive action(s) shall be
taken to avoid recurrence.”
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