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The Lean and Green SummitThis video captures the Lean and Green Summit and addresses the business case for Lean and Green.
Lean Ecology: a perfect pairColumbia Paint and Coatings, a Sherwin-Williams company, used Lean to reduce their environmental impact and increase their productivity—at the same time!
Tools
| The Kaizen Workshop: How to play an active, influential role
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Take a fresh look at your operations. Use this worksheet to find opportunities to reduce your environmental impact and improve productivity.
Offers practical strategies and techniques to improve Lean results—waste elimination, quality enhancement, and delivery of value to customers—while achieving environmental performance goals. (From the EPA.)
Guides users in reducing energy use, cost, and risk—while improving Lean results. (From the EPA.)
From the Washington State Department of Ecology.
Check out the final report of the Washington Lean and Environment Project. The long-range improvements are even better than reported in the Lean Ecology video, which was released prior to the final report.
Lean Ecology on DVD
$49 (Free shipping)
Lean Ecology is built on these 3 principles:
Kaizen – continuous improvement by erradicating waste
Sustainability in manufacturing and service processes
Respect for life
Taiichi Ohno, the "father" of the Toyota Production System (also known as Lean), said that "the basis of [Lean] is the absolute elimination of waste." This aggressive reduction of waste gives companies breakthrough productivity gains.
The "absolute elimination of waste" aligns with the goals of those who care about pollution prevention and reducing environmental impact. Lean provides a proven method to make those reductions a reality.
Lean Ecology brings the two viewpoints to the same side of the table.
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