Status

OwnerStefanie Schwartz
StakeholdersThe persons consulted or otherwise involved in making this decision. Type @ to mention people by name

Issue

Succinctly describe the issue or problem statement that this Decision addresses. Why is a decision required? What business or technical problem does it address?

Waste is currently managed offline at site level, which adversely impacts data management, data integrity and reporting in relation to waste management in Syensqo.  The tools and processes used for different sites and countries vary.  The exception is the Paulinia site in Brazil, where a simplified SAP subcontracting process has been implemented since 2015.  

A decision needs to be made on which waste management solution should be implemented as part of the ERP Rebuild project.


Recommendation

Summarise the recommendation being made for the reader, leaving the pro/con evaluation and exact decision-making process to the subsequent sections.

The recommendation is for Waste Management to be harmonised at group level for SAP related processes as a foundation for additional local requirements.

Site or country specific waste related process to support local requirements will benefit from a harmonised process for improved transparency, data integrity, data management, reporting and compliance.


Background & Context

Explain the context in which the decision is being made.


AS IS

Syensqo has the responsibility to manage the generation, storage, transportation and disposing of materials deemed to be waste relevant.  Currently there are HSE environment experts in each zone e.g. Asia and Europe, who follow relevant local regulations, which are managed according to permits and local regulations.


In Brazil the SBS Service Center Curitiba takes the Rhodia Poliamida e Especialidades Ltda transactions operations for the “Wastes Management” on the “Provisioning and Accounts Payable process''.  The follow-up with vendors is managed by SBS Service Center. There are 11 Vendors for this process.   All other sites/countries use individual non-SAP tools and processes to manage waste.  Regulations for waste management vary by country.

The procurement strategy is to have one single supplier per site for non-hazardous waste treatment and limited number of suppliers for hazardous waste.  Waste treatment includes incineration, water processing incl waste water. 

The waste disposal vendor currently mostly organises the transport.  Otherwise transport managed internally by outbound logistics via authorised company, which ships the waste product to an authorised waste disposal facility. 


The Syensqo Operational Best Practices (playbook) stipulates that during contract implementation:
'- Orders must be placed before the service is provided. Regularizations of Orders after work are exceptional and validated by hierarchy.
- To be invoiced, any waste management work has to be accepted based on performance indicators (weight measurements, # of truck loads, personnel timesheets, …) defined in the contract.
- For each waste managed by a given supplier, follow and register the data about volume , quality and spent according to the specification sheet in the contract.
- Define clear rules to manage any out-of-spec event (communication, actions to be carried and cost impact).'






The SAP solution for Waste Management includes the following process steps:

Waste related master data in SAP is located in SAP EHS Environment Management:

  1. Waste product - hazardous and non-hazardous, includes waste codes required for the creation of waste disposal documents.
    1. Types of commercial waste include: 
      1. liquid
      2. solid
      3. products/by-products
      4. organic
      5. inorganic waste.  
  2. Business partners - e.g. waste transporters or waste disposers.  
    1. Waste related suppliers must be qualified. Syensqo has to know who is in charge of the final treatment of the waste and where. 
    2. Third parties e.g. CHMWEG in US to secure qualified business partners on Syensqo's behalf.  
    3. In EU HSE teams check operating permits of our suppliers.  There is not such obligation to hire qualification operators in Europe.
    4. 'Critical contractors' as classified by HSE group requirements:
      1. Working in hazardous chemical usage areas like chemical storage, waste
        treatment, waste storage, hazardous material clean up, chemical labs
      2. Working with tools, machines, or systems that contain process chemicals or
        chemical wastes
  3. Waste streams - define the relationship between a waste product, waste generator, storage location and the points of generation.
  4. Disposal channels - define the relationship between a waste stream, transporters and disposers. 
    1. Waste treatment can be done internally (incinerator) or externally.
    2. Types of waste treatment can include landfill, recycling, recovery for energy and incineration.
  5. Waste transportation documents including permits.  Permits currently checked locally.


Waste analytics enables reporting using waste related master data per site/country/region.





SAP Road Map

  1. Integration of waste management and purchasing and sales processes (cloud): Integration of waste management processes with other logistics processes like supply chain management and procure to pay.  Help environment managers to:
    • Procure waste disposal services
    • Pay invoices in a timely manner
    • Manage on-site waste storage and plan timely shipment of waste
  2. Waste management: integration with extended warehouse management (cloud)
    1. Further integration into extended warehouse management, enabling the user to track the inventory of stored waste
    2. Obtain deeper insights into the amounts and locations of stored waste
  3. Management of waste cost allocation and payments (cloud):  Manage allocation of costs associated with the transportation and disposal of waste
    1. View costs associated with the transportation and disposal of waste
    2. Allocate waste transportation and disposal costs to appropriate cost centers


Assumptions

Clearly describe the underlying assumptions which informed or limited the choices available, or impacted the decision: cost, schedule, regulatory requirements, business drivers, country footprint, technology, etc. Include links as necessary. This section is important because a future change in circumstances might invalidate some key assumptions, which then prompts a decision to be revisited. 

The solution scope is for commercial waste only.

Constraints

Capture any constraints or limitations inherent to the recommended option. This could be aspects which, if changed or removed in future, could cause the decision to be revisited or invalidated. For example, a constraint might be that a new product has significant gaps in important functionality, which caused an older alternative to be recommended. If those gaps are closed in future, this might cause the decision to be invalidated.

Local regulations/requirements.

Domestic waste is not in scope.

Impacts

Describe the impact of the decision on other aspects such as other processes, infrastructure, other SAP modules or systems, data cleansing and migration, developments, automations, interfaces, in-flight projects, etc.

Group process stakeholders/ownership.


Business Rules

The decision may translate into business rules which enforce the decision and will require configuration. List these business rules here. For example, "An Outline Agreement cannot be created via the RFQ process. An awarded RFQ can only result in a Purchase Order". 


Options considered

List the options (viable options or alternatives) you considered. These often require a longer explanation with diagrams, or references to other documents (links are best, but attachments are also possible). Use enough detail to adequately explain what you considered so that a project or business stakeholder reviewing this decision will not come back and ask "did you think about...?"; this leads to loss of credibility and questioning of other decisions. This section also helps ensure that you considered enough suitable alternatives rather than just copy/pasting SAP's recommendations.

Option A:  Local Process only - Continuation of AS IS

Decribe the option in sufficient detail for a reader familiar with the subject matter to understand it properly

Variety of local processes specific to country or site.

Largely relying on use of local applications for data collection and reporting purposes.

No harmonisation,

Low levels of transparency and  data integrity.

Option B: Waste Management Solution in SAP

Decribe the option in sufficient detail for a reader familiar with the subject matter to understand it properly

Waste Management in EHS for SAP S/4HANA Cloud, private edition, you can handle the management of waste generated by an organization. It is designed to help companies comply with environmental regulations and ensure proper handling, disposal, and reporting of waste materials.
The features provide functionalities to track and manage waste throughout its lifecycle, from generation to disposal. It enables organizations to record waste generation data, classify waste types, track waste storage locations, and manage waste transportation and disposal processes.


Group Process in S/4 HANA.

Maximum harmonisation supporting transparency and data integrity.

A waste management solution in SAP enables the company to establish a transparent operation that ensure and demonstrate a compliant waste management process within the entire organisation.

Capabilities:

Central repository for all waste management related 
compliance requirements 
• Streamlined processes for master data and onsite 
management, planning of shipment and transportation up  
waste disposal and reporting
 • Deeply integrated into SAP S/4HANA business data and 
processes
 • Intuitive user interface with guided procedures to support 
occasional user

Benefits:

  • Reduced risk of non-compliance and penalties
  • Ensure continuity of license to operate
  • Reduced effort to manage waste disposal process
  • Improved data accuracy and reporting transparency
  • Integration to
    • Inventory Management recording goods movements (goods receipt and goods issue).
    • Transportation with dangerous goods information and transportation documents
  • One global repository of transport documents for waste e.g. permits.
  • Transparency of disposal channels (incl. point of generation, waste generator, disposer, disposal facility) for different waste materials.
  • Global repository for waste disposers and transporters by location/area.
  • Waste management compliance.  Fines tbc?
  • Reporting via Waste Management Analytics.
  • Alignment Waste Management with Procurement and Logistics best practices.

SAP Waste Management Process:

Option C:  Group Process with Local Variations

Decribe the option in sufficient detail for a reader familiar with the subject matter to understand it properly


Evaluation

Outline why you selected a position. The best format could be a pro/con table (sample below), but is up to you as the author. You must consider complexity, feasibility, cost/effort to implement, but also ongoing operational impact and cost. You must consider the program principles and explain any deviations in detail. This is probably as important as the decision itself.



Option A

Option B
Option C
Option D
Criterion 1

(plus)Pro

(minus)Con

(plus)Pro

(plus)Pro

(plus)Pro

(minus)Con

(plus)Pro

(minus)Con

Criterion 2

(plus)Pro

(minus)Con

(minus)Con

(plus)Pro

(plus)Pro

(minus)Con

(minus)Con

Criterion 3(plus)Pro(minus)Con(minus)Con(plus)Pro

See also

Insert links and references to other documents which are relevant when trying to understand this decision and its implications. Other decisions are often impacted, so it's good to list them here with links. Attachments are also possible but dangerous as they are static documents and not updated by their authors.


Change log

Workflow history