As with all management functions, effective management tools, standards, and systems are required. An environmental management standard or system or
protocol attempts to reduce
environmental impact as measured by some objective criteria. The
ISO 14001 standard is the most widely used standard for environmental
risk management and is closely aligned to the European
Eco-Management and Audit Scheme (EMAS). As a common auditing standard, the
ISO 19011 standard explains how to combine this with
quality management. Other
environmental management systems (EMS) tend to be based on the ISO 14001 standard and many extend it in various ways: • The Green Dragon Environmental Management Standard is a five-level EMS designed for smaller organisations for whom ISO 14001 may be too onerous and for larger organisations who wish to implement ISO 14001 in a more manageable step-by-step approach, • BS 8555 is a phased standard that can help smaller companies move to ISO 14001 in six manageable steps, •
The Natural Step focuses on basic
sustainability criteria and helps focus
engineering on reducing use of materials or energy use that is unsustainable in the long term, •
Natural Capitalism advises using
accounting reform and a general
biomimicry and
industrial ecology approach to do the same thing, •
US Environmental Protection Agency has many further terms and standards that it defines as appropriate to large-scale EMS, • The
UN and
World Bank has encouraged adopting a "
natural capital" measurement and management framework. Other strategies exist that rely on making simple distinctions rather than building top-down management "systems" using
performance audits and
full cost accounting. For instance, Ecological Intelligent Design divides products into
consumables,
service products or durables and
unsaleables – toxic products that no one should buy, or in many cases, do not realize they are buying. By eliminating the unsaleables from the
comprehensive outcome of any purchase, better environmental resource management is achieved without
systems. Another example that diverges from top-down management is the implementation of community based co-management systems of governance. An example of this is community based subsistence fishing areas, such as is implemented in Ha'ena, Hawaii. Community based systems of governance allow for the communities who most directly interact with the resource and who are most deeply impacted by the
overexploitation of said resource to make the decisions regarding its management, thus empowering local communities and more effectively managing resources. Recent successful cases have put forward the notion of
integrated management. It shares a wider approach and stresses out the importance of interdisciplinary assessment. It is an interesting notion that might not be adaptable to all cases.
Case Study: Kissidougou, Guinea (Fairhead, Leach) Kissidougou, Guinea's dry season brings about fires in the open grass fires which defoliate the few trees in the savanna. There are villages within this savanna surrounded by "islands" of forests, allowing for forts, hiding, rituals, protection from wind and fire, and shade for crops. According to scholars and researchers in the region during the late-19th and 20th centuries, there was a steady decline in tree cover. This led to colonial Guinea's implementation of policies, including the switch of upland to swamp farming; bush-fire control; protection of certain species and land; and tree planting in villages. These policies were carried out in the form of permits, fines, and military repression. But, Kissidougou villagers claim their ancestors' established these islands. Many maps and letters evidence France's occupation of Guinea, as well as Kissidougou's past landscape. During the 1780s to 1860s "the whole country [was] prairie." James Fairhead and Melissa Leach, both environmental anthropologists at the University of Sussex, claim the state's environmental analyses "casts into question the relationships between society, demography, and environment." With this, they reformed the state's narratives: Local land use can be both vegetation enriching and degrading; combined effect on resource management is greater than the sum of their parts; there is evidence of increased population correlating to an increase in forest cover. Fairhead and Leach support the enabling of policy and socioeconomic conditions in which local resource management conglomerates can act effectively. In Kissidougou, there is evidence that local powers and community efforts shaped the island forests that shape the savanna's landscape. ==See also==