Tokuyama Corp 2002 SR

The report highlights Tokuyama Corporation's environmental and safety performance for fiscal 2001, focusing on its Environmental Management strategy and Responsible Care activities. Key achievements include recycling 1.82 million tons of waste and byproducts at its cement plant and achieving an 11% reduction in unit energy consumption compared to 1990 levels. The company also emphasizes its commitment to zero accidents, reporting no workplace fatalities or disasters in fiscal 2001. Furthermore, the report details the implementation of ISO 14001 and ISO 9001 standards across its major factories and the introduction of environmental accounting to assess conservation costs and benefits.

Company: Tokuyama Corp

Sector: Materials

Country: Japan

Year: 2002

Type: SR

Pages: 11

Back to company

Tokuyama Corp

Tokuyama Corp 2002 Environmental Report

Environmental Report

The report highlights Tokuyama Corporation's environmental and safety performance for fiscal 2001, focusing on its Environmental Management strategy and Responsible Care activities. Key achievements include recycling 1.82 million tons of waste and byproducts at its cement plant and achieving an 11% reduction in unit energy consumption compared to 1990 levels. The company also emphasizes its commitment to zero accidents, reporting no workplace fatalities or disasters in fiscal 2001. Furthermore, the report details the implementation of ISO 14001 and ISO 9001 standards across its major factories and the introduction of environmental accounting to assess conservation costs and benefits.

Sign in for free to access detailed sustainability data, reporting standards, and ESG metrics.

Document Details

Report Year

2002

Reporting Period

Apr 1, 2001 - Mar 31, 2002

Fiscal Year

2001

Published

Aug 1, 2002

Type

Sustainability Report

Language

English

Pages

 

File Size

 

Standards & Assurance

Materiality Assessment

Other Standards

ESG Data?Experimental — AI-extracted data, may contain inaccuracies

Emissions

Scope 1:

Total Waste

Workplace Fatalities

Employees