Manufacturing engineers are often close to the details that decide how safe a plant really is. They know how equipment behaves after years of use, how production changes affect the floor, and where a process looks fine on paper but becomes harder to control during a full shift. That practical view is valuable in any environmental, health, and safety program.
The problem is that safety audits can become too slow for the pace of modern manufacturing. A paper checklist may capture a condition during one walkthrough, yet the plant keeps changing after the form is filed. EHS regulatory compliance software helps close that gap by giving teams a better way to record findings, assign corrective action, and keep evidence ready for review.
Automation does not make compliance effortless. It makes t ...