Here is the link to the P2 Pathways landing page: http://www.greenbiz.com/business/engage/enterprise-blogs/p2-pathways
But something was missing.
In 1980, Philip Crosby published, “Quality is Free — The Art of Making Quality Certain.” Quality tools could be used as a means of improving processes to lower the costs of the products and services. In 1985, Michael Porter published, “Competitive Advantage: Creating and Sustaining Superior Performance.” The concept of value chains was presented as a means of disaggregating a company into “activities” as the discrete functions or processes that represent the building blocks of competitive advantage.
I was so inspired by these books that in 1987 I published a paper in the Journal of the American Institute of Plant Engineers. The article detailed the use of quality tools to improve operations as a means for minimizing waste. A year later, though, the U.S. EPA published a guide (titled the “Waste Minimization Opportunity Assessment Manual”) with over 30 pages of prescriptive checklists. This was a huge hit and all of the work of managing processes put aside.
So what about the measurement? P2 practitioners focused on results. Results are merely the outcome of the performance and do not measure performance directly.
Please continue reading: http://www.greenbiz.com/blog/2013/01/08/why-pollution-prevention-free
As a kick-off article for January 2013, Robert B. Pojasek, Ph.D., sustainability practice leader at Capaccio Environmental Engineering and an internationally recognized expert on the topic of business sustainability and process improvement, shares why a company has to be careful of what it measures.
Read article: http://www.greenbiz.com/blog/2013/01/08/why-pollution-prevention-free?page=full