Georg Fischer Corporation: Environmental Report 2002/2003. 62 pages.
Content
Situation
- The industrial corporation at a glance (p. 2)
- Our products' contribution to environmental protection (p. 3)
- Greatest environmental impact in the corporation: foundries (p. 4)
- Environmental impact of the foundries (p. 5)
Environmental Management System
- Road map to environmental management (p. 6)
- System Honors and recognition (p. 7)
- Environmental management (p. 8)
- Georg Fischer's environmental policies (p. 9)
- Development of environmental management system at Georg Fischer (p. 10)
- Corporate Environmental Information System-BUIS (p. 11)
- Corporate Environmental Information System-BUIS: system limit (p. 12)
Environmental Goals
- Georg Fischer's environmental goals (p. 13)
- Corporate environmental goals 2001/2002 (p. 14)
- Environmental goals for 2001 in automotive castings (p. 15)
- Environmental goals for 2002 in automotive castings (p. 16)
- Environmental goals for 2003 in automotive castings (p. 17)
- Environmental goals for 2001 in plastics (p. 18)
- Environmental goals for 2002 in plastics (p. 19)
- Environmental goals for 2003 in plastics (p. 20)
- Environmental goals for 2001 in mechanical engineering (p. 21)
- Environmental goals for 2002 in mechanical engineering (p. 22)
- Environmental goals for 2003 in mechanical engineering (p. 23)
"Success Stories"
- Savings achieved with cast iron: less water on the fire (p. 24)
- Energy diet for Electric Discharge Machines’ generators (EDM) (p. 25)
- Made-to-measure for precision machinery (p. 26)
- “Aluminium casting doesn’t smell (any more)” (p. 27)
- Magnesium casting: Oil distilled out (p. 28)
- Pressure die-casting in China: better air with wax (p. 29)
- Production engineering: mechanical engineering “light” (p. 30)
- Natural Gas replaces oil - protecting our climate (p. 31)
Data
- Environmental indicators over time (p. 32)
Energy
- Energy (p. 33)
- Types of energy (p. 34)
- Process energy consumption increases as group of consolidated corporate subsidiaries expands (p. 35)
- Slight increase in building energy consumption as group of consolidated corporate subsidiaries expands (p. 36)
Water
- Water - fresh water (p. 37)
- Drinking water from the public water supply system: efficiency increased and consumption reduced (p. 38)
- Water from private water supply systems - consumption stable (p. 39)
- Wastewater - further reduction (p. 40)
Air
- Air (p. 41)
- Air - emission: effects (p. 42)
- Emissions from energy consumption (p. 43)
- Emissions from energy consumption - CO2 (p. 44)
- Emissions from energy consumption - SO2, NOx, CH4, VOC (p. 45)
- Emissions from production processes - particulates, VOCs (p. 46)
Waste
- Waste (p. 47)
- Waste disposal (p. 48)
- Recycled wastes - increase in recyclable wastes (p. 49)
- Industrial and office wastes deposited in landfills or incinerated - reduction (p. 50)
- Hazardous wastes - slight increase in 2002/2003 (p. 51)
Environmental Expenses
- Environmental expenses: costs and capital investment (p. 52)
- Environmental expenses: costs (p. 53)
- Environmental expenses: Investments (p. 54)
Illustration of units
CO2-Problem
Circulatory Economy
- Future trends: Developing recycling in production (p. 57)
- Recycling in foundries: Scrap as exclusive raw material (p. 58)
- Circulatory economy in plastics processing: Small- and large-scale recycling (p. 59)
- Recycling in mechanical engineering: When machines exchange ideas (p. 60)
Validation by SQS
- Validation of Environmental Report 2002/2003 (p. 61)
Contact
- Environmental management contacts - feedback (p. 62)
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