Environmental Policy
Project work is approached with practical waste reduction, careful handling of materials and consumables, and respect for customer environmental requirements at the worksite.
Environmental expectations can vary by facility, so IKODB reviews relevant customer requirements before work that may involve materials, packaging, fluids, removed components, or shop-floor cleanup.
Scope
This policy applies to project activity that may create waste, involve removed parts, use packaging or consumables, disturb machine materials, or require work inside a customer facility with environmental procedures.
Worksite practices
IKODB aims to keep work areas orderly, reduce unnecessary waste, handle consumables responsibly, and coordinate disposal expectations with the customer when materials are generated by project activity.
- Keep removed packaging, scrap, obsolete components, and consumables organized during work.
- Use customer-approved disposal or recycling paths when working at a customer facility.
- Avoid unnecessary material waste during wiring, cabinet work, machine setup, and test cuts.
- Leave the work area in a practical condition for customer operations and follow-up service.
Material handling
Removed components, wiring, packaging, filters, containers, lubricants, coolants, and other materials should be handled according to the customer's facility requirements. IKODB coordinates with the customer before disposing of customer-owned parts or materials.
Spill prevention and response
If project work involves fluids, cleaning products, containers, or machine maintenance areas, spill-prevention expectations should be reviewed before work begins. Any spill or environmental concern should be reported promptly to the customer site contact.
Customer requirements
Site-specific environmental controls, reporting steps, and handling rules should be shared during onboarding so they can be reflected in project planning and commissioning work.
Customers should identify restricted areas, waste-handling rules, recycling procedures, spill-response contacts, material storage requirements, and any documentation needed for removed or replaced components.
Continuous improvement
IKODB looks for practical ways to reduce rework, unnecessary site visits, wasted material, and avoidable scrap by clarifying requirements early, documenting changes, and planning work around serviceable long-term use.