| Literature DB >> 24523652 |
S Maryam Masoumik1, Salwa Hanim Abdul-Rashid1, Ezutah Udoncy Olugu1, Raja Ariffin Raja Ghazilla1.
Abstract
Designing the right supply chain that meets the requirements of sustainable development is a significant challenge. Although there are a considerable number of studies on issues relating to sustainable supply chain design (SSCD) in terms of designing the practices, processes, and structures, they have rarely demonstrated how these components can be aligned to form an effective sustainable supply chain (SSC). Considering this gap in the literature, this study adopts the configurational approach to develop a conceptual framework that could configure the components of a SSC. In this respect, a process-oriented approach is utilized to classify and harmonize the design components. A natural-resource-based view (NRBV) is adopted to determine the central theme to align the design components around. The proposed framework presents three types of SSC, namely, efficient SSC, innovative SSC, and reputed SSC. The study culminates with recommendations concerning the direction for future research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24523652 PMCID: PMC3913522 DOI: 10.1155/2014/897121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
The list of previous studies in sustainable supply chain practices, processes, and structures.
| Area | References |
|---|---|
| Sustainable supply chain practices, drivers, and performances | [ |
| Optimizing planning processes | [ |
| Network design | [ |
The distribution of articles in various journals over the last 18 years.
| Journal | Numbers of articles |
|---|---|
| International Journal of Production Research | 17 |
| Journal of Cleaner Production | 13 |
| European Journal of Operational Research | 10 |
| International Journal of Production Economics | 7 |
| Computers and Operations Research | 6 |
| Supply Chain Management-an international journal | 6 |
| Resources Conservation and Recycling | 5 |
| Computers and Industrial Engineering | 4 |
| Journal of Operations Management | 4 |
| Harvard Business Review | 3 |
| International Journal of Environmental Science and Technology | 3 |
| International Journal of Operations and Production Management | 3 |
| California Management Review | 2 |
| International Journal of Advanced Manufacturing Technology | 2 |
| International Journal of Physical Distribution and Logistics Management | 2 |
| Journal of Business Logistics | 2 |
| Journal of Environmental Management | 2 |
| Omega-International Journal of Management Science | 2 |
| Production and operations management | 2 |
| Production planning and control | 2 |
| Transportation Research Part E-Logistics and Transportation Review | 2 |
| Academy of Management Journal | 1 |
| Academy of management review | 1 |
| Benchmarking: an international journal | 1 |
| Business Strategy and the Environment | 1 |
| Computers in Industry | 1 |
| Environmental Health Perspectives | 1 |
| Industrial Management and Data Systems | 1 |
| Interfaces | 1 |
| International Journal of Logistics Management | 1 |
| International Journal of Management Reviews | 1 |
| Journal of Management Studies | 1 |
| Journal of Mechanical Design | 1 |
| Journal of the Operational Research Society | 1 |
| Logistics Information Management | 1 |
| M and Som-Manufacturing and Service Operations Management | 1 |
| Management Science | 1 |
| Mathematical and Computer Modelling | 1 |
| Strategic Management Journal | 1 |
| Technovation | 1 |
| The Academy of Management Executive (1993–2005) | 1 |
| The International Journal of Logistics Management | 1 |
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Figure 1Sustainable supply chain processes: main categorization (adapted from SCOR model [29]).
Sustainable supply chain processes and their definitions.
| SSC Process | Definition | Related literature |
|---|---|---|
| Plan | ||
| Inventory control and management | Processes that manage inventory regarding the high variability and uncertainty in time, quality and quantity of returns, and demand for recovered materials. | [ |
| Production and capacity management | Processes that plan production and manage the capacities of manufacturers and recovery centres to achieve a balance between demand and returns considering the high degree of uncertainty and complexity in recovery management systems. | [ |
| Green supplier management | Processes that select and evaluate suppliers considering environmental issues; cooperate with them to enhance environmental performance and promote the initiatives and practices for greening the suppliers. | [ |
| Green marketing | Processes that promote a green image and persuade customers that the green and environmentally friendly products meet their requirements. | [ |
| Source | Processes that procure materials and components that have a lower impact on the environment and also consider recovered products as a valuable source of materials and components. | [ |
| Make | Processes that produce products that have a lower impact on the environment. | [ |
| Deliver | Processes that provide both original and recovered products to meet the uncertain demand, including order management, environmentally friendly packaging, and sustainable transportation systems. | [ |
| Return | ||
| Collect | Processes that involve the collection operations of returned products, inspection, and separation of recoverable products from disposal and delivering the recoverable products to related places. | [ |
| Recover | Processes that transform returned and used products to reusable products, typically including repairing, refurbishing, remanufacturing, cannibalizing, and recycling. | [ |
| Dispose | Processes that include land filling or incinerating products that are rejected at the “Collect” process. | [ |
Figure 2A typical structure for sustainable supply chain (adapted from Fleischmann et al. [34], Mutha and Pokharel [36], Olugu et al. [37], and Sheu et al. [35]).
Figure 3IDEF0 and IDEF3 notations [31] used in this paper.
Figure 4A process-oriented approach for categorizing sustainable supply chain practices.
Sustainable supply chain practices presented in the literature.
| A: internal environmental management | |
| (2) Support for GSCM from mid-level managers [ | |
| (3) Cross-functional cooperation for environmental improvements [ | |
| (4) Total quality environmental management [ | |
| (5) ISO 14000 certification [ | |
| (6) Environmental compliance and auditing programmes [ | |
| (7) Environmental management systems exist [ | |
| B: green supply and supplier management | |
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| (8) Use of used products as a valuable source of components and materials [ | |
| (9) Use of environmentally friendly raw materials [ | |
| (10) Substitution of polluting and hazardous materials/parts [ | |
| (11) Use of the company waste of others [ | |
| (12) Providing design specification to suppliers that include environmental requirements for purchased item [ | |
| (13) Supplier selection involving environmental criteria [ | |
| (14) Urging suppliers to establish environmental management systems [ | |
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| (15) Providing suppliers with educational, technical, and financial support to establish and implement their own environmental programme [ | |
| (16) Holding awareness seminars for suppliers on environmentally conscious actions and their benefits [ | |
| (17) Facilitating sharing knowledge and lessons learned relating to environmental issues between different suppliers [ | |
| (18) Collaboration with suppliers to provide materials, equipment, parts, and services that support environmental goals [ | |
| (19) Involving component suppliers in product design [ | |
| (20) Environmental audit of suppliers' internal management [ | |
| (21) Second-tier supplier environmentally friendly practice evaluation [ | |
| C: green manufacturing | |
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| (22) Design of products for reduced consumption of material and energy [ | |
| (23) Design of products to reduce or avoid pollution and waste generation in product usage and/or in their manufacturing process [ | |
| (24) Design of products to avoid or reduce the use of hazardous materials in products/or their manufacturing process [ | |
| (25) Design of products for reuse, recycling, recovery of materials, components, and parts [ | |
| (26) Design of products for remanufacturing, repair, rework, and refurbishing activities [ | |
| (27) Product design considering product life cycle costs [ | |
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| (28) Optimization of production planning and manufacturing processes to reduce waste and optimize material exploitation [ | |
| (29) Optimization of manufacturing processes to reduce energy and natural resource consumption [ | |
| (30) Optimization of manufacturing processes to reduce solid and water waste, and air emissions [ | |
| (31) Optimization of manufacturing processes to reduce noise pollution [ | |
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| (32) Use of clean technology to make savings [ | |
| (33) Use of clean sources of energy [ | |
| D: green deliver | |
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| (34) Use of more environmentally friendly transportation method [ | |
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| (35) Use of recyclable or reusable packaging/containers in logistics [ | |
| (36) Use of ecological materials for primary packaging [ | |
| E: green consumption and customer management | |
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| (37) Eco-labelling of products [ | |
| (38) Green marketing and managing customer's perception of quality to promote green image [ | |
| (39) Environmental pricing to promote extended product responsibility [ | |
| (40) Providing consumers with information on environmental friendly products and/or production methods [ | |
| (41) Providing instructions for environmentally friendly use of products [ | |
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| (42) Cooperation with customer for eco-design [ | |
| (43) Cooperation with customer for cleaner production [ | |
| (44) Cooperation with customer for green packaging [ | |
| F: collection management | |
| (45) To collect used products in an effective way (directly from customers or from used products broker, directly by companies or by a retailer/third service provider) in order to facilitate collection activities and to increase the amount of used products' return [ | |
| (46) To take back products by law or by contract [ | |
| (47) Buyback pricing with regard to the targeted amount for collecting and the price of competitors [ | |
| G: recovery management | |
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| (48) Internal recycling of materials within production phase [ | |
| (49) Taking back packaging [ | |
| (50) Labelling material packages for retrieval purposes [ | |
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| (51) Recovery of the company's end-of-life products [ | |
| (52) Recover products whenever possible and choose the product recovery and disposition options based on product characteristics and technical feasibility, supply of components and materials, demand for recovered products and economical and environmental impacts [ | |
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| (53) Sale of excess inventories/materials [ | |
| (54) Sale of scrap and used materials [ | |
| (55) Sale of excess capital equipment [ | |
| H: waste disposal | |
| (56) Disposal of hazardous materials/chemicals/equipment [ | |
| (57) Cooperation with waste-management companies [ | |
| I: influential stakeholder management | |
| (58) Publicizing environmental efforts, promoting industry cooperative efforts and collaboration [ | |
| (59) To manage the competitors by imposing a set of private regulations or by shaping the governmental rules [ |
A harmonized categorization of sustainable supply chain practice, processes, and structures.
| Practices | Processes | Structures |
|---|---|---|
| Internal environmental management | Mechanisms and systems for implementing processes | |
| Green supply and purchasing | Source | Forward supply chain |
| Supplier environmental collaboration | Source | Forward supply chain |
| Product eco-design | Make | Forward supply chain |
| Green process design | Make | Forward supply chain |
| Use of clean energy and technology | Make | Forward supply chain |
| Green distribution and transportation | Deliver | Forward supply chain |
| Green packaging | Deliver | Forward supply chain |
| Green consumption management | Use | Forward supply chain |
| Customer environmental collaboration | Use | Forward supply chain |
| Collection management | Collect | Collection networks |
| Material recovery | Recover | Recycling networks |
| Product recovery | Recover | Reprocessing networks |
| Investment recovery | Recover | Collection networks |
| Waste disposal | Disposal | Waste disposal networks |
| Influential stakeholder management | Managing the external drivers/regulations that control the processes | |
Figure 5A conceptual framework for designing a sustainable supply chain.
Different configurations of a sustainable supply chain.
| Efficient SSC | Innovative SSC | Reputed SSC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Central theme | Cost and risk reduction [ | Innovation and repositioning [ | Reputation & legitimacy [ |
| Dominant environmental strategy | Pollution prevention [ | Clean technology [ | Product stewardship [ |
| Philosophy | Minimize waste and emissions from operations [ | Develop the sustainable competencies of the future [ | Integrate stakeholders views into business process [ |
| Core practices | (i) Green supply and purchasing | (i) Product eco-design | (i) Supplier environmental collaboration |
| Processes | Standard and procedural | Innovative and fast response | Collaborative |
| Networks | Centralized [ | Decentralized [ | Joint venture or alliance with reputed networks in industry [ |