ISO 14001 is in fact a series of international  standards on environmental management. It provides a framework for the  development of an environmental management system[/url] and the supporting audit  programme.
The ISO 14001 series emerged primarily as a result of the  Uruguay round of the GATT negotiations and the Rio Summit on the Environment  held in 1992. While GATT concentrates on the need to reduce non-tariff barriers  to trade, the Rio Summit generated a commitment to protection of the environment  across the world.
After the rapid acceptance of ISO 9000, and the increase of environmental standards around the world, the International Standards Organisation (ISO) assessed the need for international environmental management standards. They formed the Strategic Advisory Group on the Environment (SAGE) in 1991, to consider whether such standards could serve to:
Promote a common approach to environmental management similar to quality  management;
Enhance organizations ability to attain and measure improvements  in environmental performance; and
Facilitate trade and remove trade  barriers.
In 1992, SAGEs recommendations created a new committee, TC 207, for  international environmental management standards. This committee and its  sub-committees included representatives from industry, standards organizations,  government and environmental organizations from many countries. What developed  was a series of ISO14001 standards designed to cover:
-environmental management  systems
-environmental auditing
-environmental performance  evaluation
-environmental labelling
-life-cycle  assessment
-environmental aspects in product standards
ISO 14001 was first published as a standard in 1996 and it specifies the actual requirements for an environmental management system. It applies to those environmental aspects over which an organization has control and where it can be expected to have an influence.
ISO 14001 is often seen as the corner-stone standard of the ISO 14000 series. It specifies a framework of control for an Environmental Management System and is the only ISO 14000 standard against which it is currently possible to be certified by an external certification body. However, it does not in itself state specific environmental performance criteria.
