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Sustainability

Sustainability is defined through the following interconnected domains or pillars: Environment,


Economic and Social.
Sustainability is the process of maintaining change in a balanced environment, in which the
exploitation of resources, the direction of investments, the orientation of technological
development and institutional change are all in harmony and enhance both current and future
potential to meet human needs and aspirations.
Sustainability is defined through the following interconnected domains or pillars: Environment,
Economic and Social.
Sustainability is the conscious and proactive use of methods that do not harm people, planet
or profit while also leaving a positive impact.
The processes used to achieve sustainability must be reliable, replicable and measurable;
outcomes must be confirmable, especially by outside scrutiny.
Sustainability covers all three time frames: rectifying past mistakes; reducing or eliminating
current problems; building legacies for future generations.
It is a human-driven process. Machines don’t run companies or processes, people do;
sustainability maximizes human talent by harnessing attention towards optimization and
process excellence.
In process sustainability, we do study on sustainability measures and its impacts. We perform
study that how sustainability can be achieved in our current processes and how they are
impacting on the pillars of sustainability.
Measuring environmental, social and economic impacts is important in assessing sustainability.
There are five phases and seven processes inherent to sustainability:
Phases:
1. Safety
1. Growth
2. Abundance
3. Progression
4. Inheritance
Processes:
1. Transparency
2. Waste Reduction
3. Materials Reuse
4. Positive Impact
5. Quality Control
6. Value Creation
7. Evolution

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