Home / News / What’s the role of the EHS department? Brian Maeck – Head of Global EHS at Sims Limited – explains Sims Metal’s data-driven approach  

What’s the role of the EHS department? Brian Maeck – Head of Global EHS at Sims Limited – explains Sims Metal’s data-driven approach  


Brian Maeck – Head of Global EHS

But how exactly does the EHS function work?

“In the EHS function, we are very data-driven. We have a streamlined EHS management system built to drive improvement to protect the end-user (our field workers) who are at the most risk of injury. Each component of the EHS Management System is designed to support the next; for instance, our EHS Standard requirements set control measure specifications and expectations, while our control verification inspections collect proactive data determining whether these control measures are effective, which in turn drives continuous improvement. Associated awareness training is specific to drive control measure adoption, while our global communications celebrate that adoption.”

Incident prevention is imperative for a company like Sims. Most of our improvement initiatives come from proactive critical control verification data, which comes directly from our subject matter experts in the field, rather than relying solely on reactive incident data. “EHS is constantly gathering information on control measure effectiveness to drive improvements before an incident occurs.”

What are the biggest challenges that the EHS function has to face?

“The biggest challenge for us is determining what the best control measures are, then globally implementing them. As a global business, we pull a lot of data to determine where in the business we have the best solution. We then go through a data analysis process to present operations leaders’ business cases demonstrating how these improvements will positively affect the business and reduce incidents. We gain support and work to implement control measure improvements throughout the business. The great thing about our program is that these innovations have been implemented and adopted successfully elsewhere in the world. That’s where the benefit of having a globally aligned EHS function shines; we are not trying to solve problems in isolation; we leverage everybody’s experience around the company to drive positive change. Sims has recently created an EHS Partner Committee where all EHS management comes together to evaluate best-in-class control measures based on the control verification data and operational experience.”

Once controls are proven effective and adoption is achieved, the next important step is in positive reinforcement through recognition; either formally through our EHS Excellence Recognition program or informally one-to-one, it is crucial to celebrate positive EHS changes. We at Sims publish a monthly global EHS Focus [the publication name] communication highlighting personnel demonstrating EHS excellence.

Our culture is an essential element of our EHS strategy, and we at Sims continue to learn and grow.

Failures do and will happen, so we proactively prepare.