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Best Practices For Chemical
Management
For cost savings, regulatory compliance,
and environmental responsibility
By Tony Diamantidis 
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Challenges of Chemical Management
If you ask industrial and laboratory operations managers
about their biggest challenges, the answers you'll hear most
often relate to environmental regulations and the management
of chemicals. And the concern permeates the whole
organization as well -- according to Accenture and the
Conference Board, over one third of 500 top US CEO's named
chemical-related Environmental Health and Safety issues
among the biggest concerns in their businesses and
industries, placing it in the top five on the list of
responses. Cost, process, regulatory and safety issues
converge around chemical management, making it a critical,
complex and cumbersome activity.
The true cost of a chemical as it completes its lifecycle is
much more than the purchase price alone. Additional costs
include compliance, inventory management, safety,
facilities, and disposal. Management costs can range from
$1.00 to $10.00 for every dollar of chemicals purchased.
Best practices that address the various aspects of chemical
management can significantly reduce the extra costs in a
chemical's lifecycle.
Environmental health and safety is often viewed as 'outside'
the business process, and given less attention than other
practices. For example, companies often treat procurement of
chemicals or hazardous materials the same as they handle any
other purchases, without planning for the unique storage,
reporting, and eventual disposal requirements. Although
financial data is specifically and meticulously analyzed,
the impact of chemical management choices is often
neglected. These choices have far reaching effects and can
sometimes be catastrophic for an organization. Viewing EH&S
as a critical part of the business process and integrating
it with other activities can raise efficiency of chemical
management and provide a significant advantage in terms of
cost savings, safety, risk management and competition.
Implementing Best Practices helps this integration of EH&S
with the organization's processes, and supports the
strategic or business goals of saving money and growing the
business. On the day-to-day level, these operations affect
the tactical or management goals of increased safety and
decreased legal and regulatory risk. Reviewing the impact,
cost savings and benefits become clear.
Best Practices for Chemical Management
 | Purchase only the chemicals and amounts required
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 | Reduce inventories and store only what is almost
immediately needed |
 | Improve inter-facility and intra-facility delivery
of chemicals |
 | Reduce infrastructure costs
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 | Increase environmental regulatory compliance and
decrease legal liability |
 | Facilitate data interchange to and from EHS systems
and ERP/MRP systems |
 | Increase operational safety for workers and the
community |
 | Streamline environmental compliance and reporting
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 | Enhance a corporate image of responsibility and
safety |
 | Minimize hazardous waste disposal
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 | Automate repetitive and low-value tasks
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 | Conserve human resources for more value-added tasks
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Best Practices
Capture data available at critical junctures of the
supply chain. Companies must integrate Environmental
Health and Safety into their process. Data is collected,
generated, and modified in purchasing/ERP systems or
vendor systems. This data can and should be
automatically captured and transferred to an EMIS
(environmental management information system). There may
be some effort needed to collect and manage the
appropriate data, but the payoff by far outweighs this
effort.
When EH&S information is managed by integrated systems,
underlying other departments' data and programs, it
supports best practices in other processes - purchasing,
delivery, receipt, inventory management. Improved data
will increase compliance efficiency for audits,
inspections, permits and reporting.
Having data readily available makes inspections and
audits less intrusive, less threatening and less likely
to result in a negative outcome. Using an EMIS to manage
critical chemical information and Right-to-Know data
ensures that information is available and accurate, and
it complies with OSHA and ISO 14000 mandates.
With improved computer technology, data transfer and
compatibility between systems is readily available.
Chemical managers can select from a full range of user
interfaces, from a simple web browser on the production
floor, to sophisticated inter-system reporting tools,
all accessing the same data. Although organizational
needs vary, with some research and analysis, chemical
managers can now find viable solutions within their
budget to meet EH&S information management needs.
Beware, however: ERP/MRP systems such as those
offered by SAP, Oracle, J.D. Edwards and Baan, among
others, remain deficient in their environmental
management offerings. This is primarily due to the
complex, diverse and evolving nature of environmental
regulations and the reporting requirements of local,
state, federal and international jurisdictions.
Organizations that have opted for environmental
solutions that have been rolled into ERP/MRP
implementations have regularly reported disappointing
results. Dedicated environmental management information
systems should be used in conjunction with ERP systems.
Further, be sure to carefully evaluate the buy-vs-build
question. A comprehensive system is complex to develop
and difficult to maintain. Studies have shown that a
company will break even within one year when using an
off-the-shelf, automated solution versus a manual
homegrown system.
Develop preferred vendor relationships. This is
the surest way to standardize product, ensure delivery
and negotiate best prices. Vendors will ensure product
flow and preferred price in exchange for the increased
efficiency of a "committed" business relationship.
Advantages of preferred vendor relationships reach
beyond cost savings, as finding and evaluating materials
is simplified, electronic payments decrease
administrative overhead and vendors become better
resources for information. Significantly to chemical
management, preferred vendors are often more willing
accommodate information exchange in each direction in
order to maintain good relationships with dedicated
customers. Organizations that have created exclusive or
preferred vendor relationships have often negotiated
very favorable agreements with chemical suppliers.
Use online purchasing systems, exchanges, or vendor
sites. On-line procurement decreases the time and
cost of purchasing paperwork. On-line purchasing and
management allows approval and monitoring of purchases
by line managers, and provides purchasing guideline
compliance and information interchange. More steps of
the purchasing process can be automated, significantly
reducing effort. A fortuitous by-product of automated
purchasing is the availability of data. All on-line
purchasing systems produce data that, sometimes with
considerable effort can be downloaded, transferred, and
used by a chemical inventory system or EMIS.
Track chemicals efficiently. Many plants find
that using a supply chain management system to closely
track incoming material shipments allows them to time
and plan delivery more accurately, reducing inventory
levels, ensuring smooth operations and supporting
environmental compliance goals. Supply chain management
can also help optimize shipment methods, routes and
vendors for overall cost and time efficiencies.
Centralized receiving supports tracking and management
of chemicals within the facility, keeping information on
inventory levels accurate and up to date. It also
simplifies the use of in-house barcoding of materials
for tracking within the facility. Barcode labels are one
of the best support tools for inventory control, waste
minimization and environmental compliance and reporting.
This data shared by an EMIS creates a powerful and
efficient tool for EH&S operations.
Manage inventory well. The best way to accurately
and efficiently maintain chemical inventory information
is to use focused inventory management software or an
online application. The best of these systems will
interface with purchasing systems, vendors or online
suppliers to maintain dynamic inventory data. Because
chemical inventories have special requirements for
information and availability, it is best to gather this
information electronically from the originating source
as often as possible. This requires the cooperation of
several distinct groups: the vendor, the purchasing
department, the IT system provider, the IT department
and the EH&S department.
Good inventory management lowers inventory, which
requires less space for storage, lower carrying costs
and less capital tied up in stored materials.
Understanding when, where and how materials are used
gives an organization the tools to determine where in
the process usage can be reduced, when alternative
materials can be introduced and/or which processes/units
are good candidates for sharing chemicals.
An effective inventory management system can improve the
sharing or redistribution of chemicals. Often, line
managers purchase a chemical because they simply had no
way of knowing someone else in the facility had excess
product available. This decreases inventory, storage,
and potential for waste disposal because of "expired
shelf life".
Manage and reduce hazardous waste. The obvious
first step to cost-savings in waste disposal is to
minimize the waste. Chemical waste disposal is the most
expensive cost associated with a chemical, and sometimes
it is greater than the cost to purchase that chemical!
Process evaluation with an understanding of the costs
associated with disposal of hazardous waste or regulated
materials will uncover savings opportunities in this
area. Efficient inventory of hazardous materials
necessarily decreases the amount of waste disposed.
When hazardous waste must be disposed, there are still
ways to save money. Electronic transfer of data and
documents streamlines the process and supports the
verification process, ensuring all aspects of
generating, storing, shipping and destroying hazardous
waste receive proper attention and the company's
responsibilities are covered in the event of inspection,
audit or emergency.
A good relationship with a TSDF or waste disposal
company can improve operations as well. Many waste
disposal companies now offer online approval of waste
streams, automated scheduling for pick-up, and
regulatory data transfer. There are not many players in
this industry, and some are much better at this than
others, so careful selection of a vendor is very
important.
Recycling, whenever possible, is another great way of
saving money, limiting waste and contributing in a
positive way to the environment and the community.
Calculate and re-engineer operations. Process
engineering supported by ongoing information streams can
further enhance efficiency of chemical use. Calculating
the total costs associated with chemical management and
evaluating the products themselves in lean-engineering
or waste-minimization terms may suggest better processes
or less hazardous substitutes. This can affect the
efficiency of many areas of chemical management and
environmental compliance by dealing with associated
costs and issues before they arise.
An evolving market in chemical management is the
outsourcing of this operation to ¡®Chemical Management
Services' (CMS's). Chemical suppliers' roles expand from
simple sale and delivery of chemicals to full evaluation
and management of their customers' on-site products.
Chemicals are stored in quantity at the vendor until the
customer needs a chemical for a specific task. CMS's
completely take over responsibility for their clients'
chemical inventories, MSDS's, safety, and hazardous
waste, and generate required regulatory and management
reports. These providers recognize the absolute
necessity of a comprehensive information infrastructure
supporting their materials management operations.
Invest in information management systems.
Companies' chemical managers and the EH&S community
recognize that the most important investment in the next
decade will be technology for information management.
The good news for chemical managers is that technology
innovation is offering data interfaces and reporting
capabilities previously impossible. It has never been
easier or efficient to exchange data with external
sources such as vendors or with internal sources, such
as ERP/MRP or purchasing systems. User-friendly
reporting tools can access data from a number of sources
and fulfill regulatory reporting and support business
analysis. Web interfaces for line personnel offer easy
access to critical real-time and accurate information.
One important consideration as you embark, or re-embark
into information management solutions is determining who
will be responsible for the integration and support of
the information that needs to be managed. IN-house IT
departments traditionally frowned upon outside vendors
taking away responsibility from them; with the
opportunities and pressures of new technologies,
however, and especially with the emergence of the web,
outsourcing EH&S implementation projects has become a
preferred option. Select an EH&S vendor who has "domain
experience", or, in simpler terms, a clear understanding
of the environmental needs and benefits that
organizations have and who will be willing to partner
with you as your requirements and expectations change.
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
The costs of managing chemicals are far more than just
the product price, but the life-cycle management of
chemicals can be optimized to cut these peripheral
costs. By adopting best practices, the chemical
management process is more integrated into the business
process, becoming a strategic advantage to the
organization, raising efficiency on a number of fronts,
decreasing legal liability and risk and improving
plant/laboratory safety, as well as offering bottom line
cost savings. Improved information management systems
are becoming more functional and less costly, making
these process improvements possible. Such systems are
still an investment, and costs of re-engineering
operations and changing current processes must be
considered, but the savings of a concerted, focused
effort to improve chemical management are significant,
and the ROI quickly justifies the costs.
Tony Diamantidis is the CEO of Chemical Safety
Corporation (www.chemicalsafety.com)
and has been in the software and Environmental
Information Management industry for over 25 years. He
can be reached at
tonyd@chemicalsafety.com.

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