GE EHS Summary
GE EHS Summary
GE EHS Summary
INTRODUCTION
MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
GEs EHS management system provides consistent
guidance to our diverse operations and regions. These
frameworks, in topic areas such as environmental
compliance, waste management and auditing, provide
clear expectations to our employees. They also foster
a spirit of teamwork and best-practice sharing across
the Company.
SAFETY WORKS
Our employees health and safety are of utmost
importance as we tackle some of the worlds toughest
challenges. GEs 2012 Recordable Incident Rate was
0.95%, with a Days Away From Work Incident Rate
of 0.37% (both values as of January 2013). We also
foster open, two-way communication by responding
strongly to reported employee concerns and annual
EHS perception surveys. Finally, our health and safety
management system comprises multiple programs
aimed at addressing risk management and leading
indicatorsincluding building our portfolio of facilities
with either OSHA VPP recognition or our own Global
Star certication, and the introduction of Human and
Organizational Performance (HOP) practices within
our businesses.
BUSINESS ACCOUNTABILITY
All GE operating managers must own EHS. They are
expected to ensure that their activities are conducted
in a safe and environmentally responsible manner.
These managers are trained in GEs expectations and
must report annually to corporate EHS leaders through
a review process called Session E. Establishing this
level of ownership is critical both to our overall EHS
performance and to our Company culture.
2
PROTECT
Our Expectations,
Our Performance
Sustaining and improving EHS performance requires
commitment at all levels of the Company; execution and
measurement of performance expectations; and rigorous
cross-business accountability processes. Our aim is to
continue to develop EHS as a core competency of the
Company, which requires program innovation as we grow
our presence in markets around the world.
How do we do it? Through operational ownership.
At GE we have instilled a culture in which EHS is part of everyones
job, with ultimate responsibility for performance residing with
business leaders, plant managers and service operations leaders.
Our Session E forums require each operating leader of a facility,
service team or other GE entity to report on performance,
challenges and paths forward to his or her business leadership
and to GEs corporate EHS leaders. Over time, this process has
driven a deep understanding ofand responsibility forEHS
excellence on the part of the decision-makers who fund, approve,
and set the tone and culture for our operations.
Anonymous EHS
perception survey
Session E review
Quarterly reports
to chairman
FEEDBACK
AND DATA
ANALYSIS
COMMON
GOALS AND
EXPECTATIONS
Global
Operational
Excellence
COMPLIANCE
ASSURANCE
500 facility and 3,300
supplier audits (2012)
100% of all ndings
required closed in
180 days
Detailed
frameworks and
tools for plant
managers
600 training classes
in 24 languages
WORLD-CLASS
MANAGEMENT
PROGRAMS
METRICS
FOOTPRINT GOALS
At GE, ecomagination footprint-reduction goals are set, owned and operationalized by the EHS team. These goals continue to drive signicant internal progress,
including overall reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 29%, freshwater use
by 35% and energy intensity by 32% as of 2011. Companywide goals include:
50%
25%
25%
ENERGY
ABSOLUTE
FRESHWATER
INTENSITY
GHG EMISSIONS
LESS
LESS
LESS
CONSUMPTION
BY 2015
BY 2015
BY 2015
(2004 BASELINE)
(2004 BASELINE)
(2006 BASELINE)
PROTECT
Support People,
Communities, Assets
Our success in health and safety relies on effective crossbusiness management systems that establish performance
requirements at all levels, clear operational accountability,
best-in-class measurement and decision-making tools,
and training. The promotion of strong health and safety
performance across the Company extends beyond compliance
into excellence programs that create a culture of safety
and awareness.
At present, we have more than 110 OSHA VPP facilities and over 100 Global
Star sites. GE is the largest private-sector participant in OSHAs VPP.
At GE, our corporate EHS team oversees and supports HOP goals
with training, tools and cross-business forums. The team also
oversees required long-term plans for HOP integration developed
by individual GE businesses using risk-based prioritization.
Participation by operational leaders and employees has been
critical to achieving early successes and discovering new
synergies with disciplines such as LEAN manufacturing.
12
100
10
80
60
40
20
95*
96
97
VPP Merit
GE Global RIR*
98
99
00
01
02
03
04
Mexico VPP
05
06
07
08
GE Global Star
09
10
11
OSHA VPP
12
A comparison of Recordable Incident Rates (RIR) and Days Away From Work Incident Rates (DAFWIR) with the introduction of global excellence programs (as of January 2013)
DEFEND
BROWNFIELDS REDEVELOPMENT
GE is committed to addressing environmental liabilities associated
with legacy operations and acquisitions. This includes helping
communities redevelop former industrial sites, so-called
brownelds. A prime example is the effort currently under way
at GEs 76-acre Bridgeport Works property in Connecticut. Used
for industrial purposes for 90 years, manufacturing ceased at
the site in 2007. After a detailed real estate evaluation found that
the facilitys massive buildings were functionally obsolete and
unlikely to be reused, GE deconstructed the structures to clear
the site for future development. In the process, our team carefully
isolated each material stream for targeted management,
reclaiming 13,400 tons of metal and reusing 2,500 truckloads of
clean brick and concrete as site backll. This approach reduced
the volume of material transported off-site for disposal by more
than 40%. Along with deconstruction, the team extensively
Barriers
Hazard
Incident
Mitigants
Consequence
DEFEND
GE works closely with contractors and communities to ensure safe operations at the Hudson River waterway
LEAD
Wind Turbines
2.09
34.4
51.4
LCM IN PRACTICE
GOLD SEAL REMANUFACTURING: Thanks to customized research,
GE Healthcares Gold Seal program gained new understanding
of the value of materials across the life-cycles of their products
in order to capture old equipment for remanufacturing products
for new markets. This led decision-makers to invest in specialized
recycling services and new business opportunities related to
refurbishing; to develop a new customer segment; and to pursue
cost-effective mechanisms for providing access to leading-edge
healthcare technology.
RAW
MATERIALS
MATERIALS
PROCESSING
MANUFACTURING
USE
SERVICE
END OF LIFE
35
FRESHWATER USE
REDUCTION
(2006 BASELINE)
DROP IN
COMPANY GHG
83 29
INJURY AND ILLNESS RATE*
(FROM 1996 TO 2012)
REDUCTION
(2006 BASELINE)
$200M SAVED
72
DECREASE
IN LOST-TIME CASES*
(FROM 1996 TO 2012)
$10B
TO BE SPENT ON
ECOMAGINATION
PRODUCT R&D
(FROM 2010 TO 2015)
16
,300
GE SUPPLIER
ASSESSMENTS
CONDUCTED
(SINCE 2003)
236
GE
FACILITIES
RECOGNIZED BY OSHA VPP AND
*