What measures to implement and monitor for improving company performance?
In the final step of the planning phase, the TEST Team presents the savings catalogue to the top management and subsequently, the company decides which of the proposed actions are to be implemented based on internal priorities and resources. In some cases, the management requests that certain measures are subjected to further study of their technical-financial aspects before they take a final decision. The TEST Team is encouraged to record all feasible measures in the savings catalogue, including those that have been rejected by top management, as they could be relevant for implementation at a later stage.
At the end of the internal review and consultation process, the TEST Team will formalize the TEST action plan. This will allocate responsibilities, and define timelines and budgets for the approved measures. Opportunities to access external financing or incentive schemes for measures requiring high investment may be investigated at this stage.
As part of the TEST action plan, the TEST Team should establish a monitoring plan to measure the real savings from implementation. For instance, for each RECP measure in the action plan, the TEST Team should define indicators and set up a cost-effective monitoring system for both consumption and driving factors. This is the final element of the overall information system for resource efficiency that has been developed step by step throughout the TEST methodology.
Many companies only have the mandatory minimum financial accounting system. For better data monitoring, a stock management system and eventually a cost accounting and production planning system may be needed. Companies set up their information systems to monitor resource efficiency and environmental performance in many different ways. At the beginning some only have information on key consumers at the process level. Some companies have energy sub-meters to monitor consumption by key consumers, which register consumption data at regular intervals. Few companies analyze data on energy and raw material consumption and correlate them with the relevant consumption-driving factors to calculate relative indicators in order to measure resource efficiency.
However, a proper information system for RECP is essential and can provide the following benefits: