Assessment Of Factors Affecting Adoption Of Environmental Management Systems (Iso 14001). A Case Study Of Parastatals Under The Ministry Of Environment And Forestry, Kenya
Abstract
The rising need for both private and public institutions to enhance environmental
conservation has led to development of various environmental related management tools such
as EMS based on the ISO 14001 standard. The main objective of this study was to assess the
factors affecting adoption of ISO 14001-EMS in the public sector with particular respect to 5
parastatals within the Ministry of Environment and Forestry (MoE&F). The study used a
mixed research methodology to draw 102 responses from a purposive sample of 132
individuals from which primary data were collected by use of a semi-structured
questionnaire. The study captured secondary data from ISO database, parastatal records and
publications from related studies. The study applied both Environmental impact theory and
Institutional theory.
With a 77.3% response rate, the study found out that 3 agencies were certified to either ISO
14001-EMS or ISO 9001-QMS while 2 were not yet certified but were in the process of
seeking certification particularly for ISO 9001. A principal factor analysis was conducted to
test hypothesis. Key factors that influenced adoption were: Resources adequacy, leadership
commitment and perceived implementation benefits while the most significant perception
attributes were: experience/skills gained from longer duration of implementation, staff
involvement, staff training, awareness and perceived additional workload. Consequently, the
researcher rejected the two hypotheses on the conclusion that there was enough evidence
projecting how various factors and perception attributes influenced individual agency
decisions to adopt varying ISO systems management decisions.
In conclusion, political influence was found to be very insignificant at the implementation
stage but it was the key driver at the inception stage. As a result, lack of clear guidance on the
final expected output greatly influenced adoption of ISO 9001-QMS to boost internal
performance at the expense of the agencies environmentally related core mandates. The study
recommended further research on why firms do not consider self-declaration option or
independent third-party certifications which are less hypotheses, how the new normal (Post-
COVID-19) will impact EMS uptake as well what aspects determine EMS adoption in other
government ministries.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Subject
Environmental Management SystemsRights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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