We Design & Implement Energy Management Systems to meet
the Requirements of ISO 50001
Energy efficiency is the most promising means to
reduce greenhouse gases in the short term, according
many scientist and conservationist. Many academics
believe this is the beginning of new era – the “Energy
Climate Era”. Energy conservation technology, equipment
and facilities are only part of the approach to improve
energy efficiency.
Thomas L. Friedman, the foreign affairs columnist for The
New York Times and a three-time Pulitzer Prize winner in his
no. 1 bestseller “Hot, Flat, and Crowded” stated “We cannot
continue the business as usual path. We need a green
revolution and we need to focus on Energy Technology , based
on renewable energy production and energy efficiency.”
Systematic management and the behavior approach have
become the core efforts to improve energy efficiency today.
The purpose of ISO 50001:2011, the Energy Management System
standards, is to enable organizations to establish the
systems and processes necessary to improve energy
performance.
They
are based on the continual improvement and Plan-Do-Check-Act
approaches utilized in the:
These management systems standards to provide
compatibility and integration opportunities. Implementing
these Standards should lead to reductions in energy cost,
greenhouse gas emissions and minimise the negative impact on
the environment.
Worldwide application of this International Standard
contributes to more efficient use of available energy
sources, to enhanced competitiveness and to reducing
greenhouse gas emissions and other related environmental
impacts. This International Standard is applicable
irrespective of the types of energy used. This International
Standard can be used for certification, registration and
self-declaration of an organization’s EnMS. It does not
establish absolute requirements for energy performance
beyond the commitments in the energy policy of the
organization and its obligation to comply with applicable
legal requirements and other requirements. Thus, two
organizations carrying out similar operations, but having
different energy performance, can both conform to its
requirements.
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