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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Background  



1.1  Environmental impact  





1.2  Social impact  





1.3  Governance impact  





1.4  Stakeholders  







2 Three Tiers of Sustainability  



2.1  Tier 1: Getting the basics right  





2.2  Tier 2: Learning to think sustainably  





2.3  Tier 3: The science of sustainability  







3 Application of supply chain sustainability  



3.1  Software  





3.2  On-site audits  







4 See also  





5 References  














Supply chain sustainability: Difference between revisions






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'''Supply-chain sustainability''' is a business issue affecting an organization’s [[supply chain]] or '''logistics network'''interms of environmental, risk, and waste costs. There is a growing need for integrating environmentally sound choices into supply-chain management. Sustainability in the supply chainisincreasingly seen among high-level executives as essential to deliver profitability and has replaced monetary cost, value, and speed as the dominant topic of discussion among purchasing and supply professionals. A sustainable supply chain seizes value creation opportunities and offers significant competitive advantages for early adopters and process innovators.

'''Supply-chain sustainability''' is the impact a company’s [[supply chain]] can makeinpromoting human rights, fair labor practices, environmental progress and anti-corruption policies<ref>{{Cite web|title=Supply Chain Sustainability {{!}} UN Global Compact|url=https://www.unglobalcompact.org/what-is-gc/our-work/supply-chain|access-date=2021-06-04|website=www.unglobalcompact.org}}</ref>. There is a growing need for integrating sustainable choices into [[Supply chain management|supply-chain management]]. An increasing concern for sustainabilityistransforming how companies approach business. Whether motivated by their customers, corporate values or business opportunity, traditional priorities such as quality, efficiency and cost regularly compete for attention with concerns such as working conditions and environmental impact.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Sustainability: The missing link|url=https://perspectives.eiu.com/sustainability/sustainability-missing-link|access-date=2021-06-04|website=Perspectives from The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU)|language=en}}</ref> A sustainable supply chain seizes [[value chain]] opportunities and offers significant competitive advantages for early adopters and process innovators.



==Background==

==Background==


Revision as of 20:19, 4 June 2021

Supply-chain sustainability is the impact a company’s supply chain can make in promoting human rights, fair labor practices, environmental progress and anti-corruption policies[1]. There is a growing need for integrating sustainable choices into supply-chain management. An increasing concern for sustainability is transforming how companies approach business. Whether motivated by their customers, corporate values or business opportunity, traditional priorities such as quality, efficiency and cost regularly compete for attention with concerns such as working conditions and environmental impact.[2] A sustainable supply chain seizes value chain opportunities and offers significant competitive advantages for early adopters and process innovators.

Background

Supply chains are critical links that connect an organization’s inputs to its outputs. Traditional challenges have included lowering costs, ensuring just-in-time delivery, and shrinking transportation times to allow better reaction to business challenges. However, the increasing environmental, social and economic costs of these networks and growing consumer pressure for eco-friendly products has led many organizations to look at supply chain sustainability as a new measure of profitable logistics management.[3] This shift is reflected by an understanding that sustainable supply chains frequently mean profitable supply chains.[4]

Many companies are limited to measuring the sustainability of their own business operations and are unable to extend this evaluation to their suppliers and customers. This makes determining their true environmental, social and costs highly challenging. However much progress has been made in defining supply chain sustainability and benchmarking tools are now available that enable sustainability action plans to be developed and implemented.[5]

Environmental impact

Climate change poses a new risk to supply chains and a need to increase their resilience. Food and beverage companies are particularly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change as changing weather patterns can disrupt agricultural production. Measuring supply chain resilience on factors such as natural resource availability, infrastructure, financial resources, and social safety networks among others, can help them respond to challenges and create better supply chains in the process. [6]

Social impact

Besides sustainability and resilience, an ethical supply chain is imperative to ensure corporate social responsibility and adhere to the moral code of conduct. The work environment for the workers should be congenial and must not violate the basic human rights. For instance, companies like Nike and Apple, which outsource manufacturing of their products to other countries like China, have been under the scanner for workplace conditions and wages of their workers.[7] Consumers increasingly demand transparency and traceability in supply chains, especially where disturbing social breakdowns occur, such as with forced and child labor for globally traded goods.[8] [9]

Governance impact

Stakeholders

One of the key requirements of successful sustainable supply chains is collaboration. The practice of collaboration — such as sharing distribution to reduce waste by ensuring that half-empty vehicles do not get sent out and that deliveries to the same address are on the same truck — is not widespread because many companies fear a loss of commercial control by working with others. Investment in alternative modes of transportation — such as use of canals and airships — can play an important role in helping companies reduce the cost and environmental impact of their deliveries.[10]

Three Tiers of Sustainability

In 2008, The Future Laboratory produced a ranking system for the different levels of sustainability being achieved by organization. This was called the Three Tiers of Sustainability:

Tier 1: Getting the basics right

This is the base level and is the stage in which the majority of organizations are at. Companies employ simple measures such as switching lights and PCs off when left idle, recycling paper, and using greener forms of travel with the purpose of reducing the day-to-day carbon footprint. Some companies also employ self-service technologies such as centralized procurement and teleconferencing.

Tier 2: Learning to think sustainably

This is the second level, where companies begin to realize the need to embed sustainability into supply chain operations. Companies tend to achieve this level when they assess their impact across a local range of operations. In terms of the supply chain, this could involve supplier management, product design, manufacturing rationalization, and distribution optimization.

Shortening supply chains can be part of a sustainable supply chain strategy. Some of the benefits include building direct relationships with producers, promoting regionally specific production, increasing profits for producers that would otherwise be split among intermediaries, and adding value to the products by sharing information about the quality, context and uniqueness of each source. For example, single origin coffee beans are part of a niche market that benefits producers who can earn a higher wage for high quality products. In some cases, single origin producers can earn three times as much as producers who are part of the conventional global coffee market, where there are more participants in the chain who are not necessarily adding value that would benefit the producer. [11]

Tier 3: The science of sustainability

The third tier of supply chain sustainability uses auditing and benchmarks to provide a framework for governing sustainable supply chain operations. This gives clarity around the environmental impact of adjustments to supply chain agility, flexibility, and cost in the supply chain network.[12] Moving towards this level means being driven by the current climate (in which companies recognize cost savings through green operations as being significant) as well as pushing emerging regulations and standards at both an industry and governmental level.

In some sectors there are many Voluntary Sustainability Standards that indicate sustainable practices, however the impact of these practices is not always determined or in alignment with the initial sustainable supply chain goals. Using consistent metrics to manage and understand supply chain sustainability would add validity to Voluntary Sustainability Standards and allow for more transparent comparison across different ecolabels. Sustainability measurement which can be replicated across sectors and throughout different locations improves knowledge and accountability within supply chain management. [13]

Application of supply chain sustainability

Companies looking to implement sustainable strategies down its supply chain should also look upstream. To elaborate, if a company is able to choose between various suppliers, it can for example use its purchasing power to get its suppliers in compliance with its green supply chain standards. In managing suppliers, companies must measure that inputs from suppliers are of high quality, and the usage of water and energy is minimised leading to less pollution, defects and over production. They also must audit their supplier base and make sure that they are improving the supply chain metrics[14]

When measuring sustainability in supply chains, consistent measurements which can be replicated and compared are crucial to encourage consumer trust. Environmental and social change often takes time to measure and must be considered by private companies or governments over a long term period to accurately assess the results.[15] Some companies utilize supplier scorecards to determine suppliers’ sustainability performance.  This can be accomplished by conducting life-cycle assessments or surveys to help determine their sustainability practices. Another strategy is to award suppliers for their improvement on their sustainability performance, for instance, by developing new materials sourced from waste or by making operations more energy efficient.[16]

Software

Digital technology has increased companies’ capability to collaborate with large numbers of suppliers.[17] As supply-chain sustainability becomes a more critical business issue, the need for reliable and robust data from suppliers increases[18] Whilst some existing business systems can collect some sustainability data,[citation needed] most large businesses will look to dedicated software providers for more specific sustainability functionality.[citation needed]

In order for businesses to determine the degree of sustainability impact of their business model, they must have the data to support it. Harvard Business School created the Impact-Weighted Accounts Initiative (IWAI)[19] to assess the degree of impact that many large companies have on social, environmental, and economic areas. Impact data comes from long term research on specific, measurable topics that can be applied to future changes within a company or system. Impact data is often more sparse or inaccessible than it should be, which allows institutions such as HBS to hold companies accountable in their supply chains and encourage greater transparency. Transparency in the supply chain influences how consumers view and support companies, so improving data driven sustainability efforts can positively affect supply chain business. A company’s negative impact on environmental or social areas may show in their stock market value, exposing their true values to investors. While impact data is probably one of the better ways of assessing a company’s long term impacts, it is important to note that data collection for impact assessment is a lengthy process and not all companies can spend long periods of time measuring their impact without making changes. Because of this, simple, credible alternatives to long term impact assessments are necessary for some businesses.

On-site audits

In addition to digital tools, on-site audits can be an effective tool to verify social and environmental compliance at supplier sites. On-site audits can certify a supplier’s compliance with an external standard, such as SA8000, ISO 14001, SMETA 4-Pillar, and others. Audits can also assess compliance with internal policies and guidelines set by a business partner, for example through a supplier code of conduct. Depending on the auditing standard, buyers might choose to audit their suppliers directly, or send auditors from a third-party auditing firm to supplier sites.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Supply Chain Sustainability | UN Global Compact". www.unglobalcompact.org. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  • ^ "Sustainability: The missing link". Perspectives from The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU). Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  • ^ Supply Chain Management
  • ^ The Sustainable Supply Chain Project
  • ^ Weir Total Supply Chain Sustainbility
  • ^ USAID, 2020. An Introduction To Assessing Climate Resilience In Smallholder Supply Chains. USAID Feed the Future Learning Community for Supply Chain Resilience.
  • ^ "Building Sustainable and Ethical Supply Chains". Forbes. March 9, 2012.
  • ^ "Child Labour". www.ilo.org. Retrieved 2020-07-28.
  • ^ Georges, Salwan; Dec. 30, Peter Whoriskey |; 2019. "The children who harvest cocoa - The Washington Post". Washington Post. Retrieved 2020-07-28. {{cite web}}: |last3= has numeric name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • ^ Airships float back to the futures
  • ^ Luis Fernando Samper, Daniele Giovannucci and Luciana Marques-Vieira. 2017. The Powerful Role of Intangibles in the Coffee Value Chain. WIPO Economic Research Working Paper No. 39. World Intellectual Property Organization. Geneva.
  • ^ The Science of Sustainability, pg 14
  • ^ Schmidt, Michael; Giovannucci, Daniele; Palekhov, Dmitry; Hansmann, Berthold, eds. (2019). "Sustainable Global Value Chains". Natural Resource Management in Transition. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-14877-9. ISSN 2198-9702.
  • ^ Kumar, Sameer; Teichman, Steve; Timpernagel, Tobias (2012). "A green supply chain is a requirement for profitability". International Journal of Production Research. 50 (5): 1278–1296. doi:10.1080/00207543.2011.571924.
  • ^ COSA. 2013. The COSA Measuring Sustainability Report: Coffee and Cocoa in 12 Countries. Philadelphia, PA: The Committee on Sustainability Assessment
  • ^ Goncalves, Andre (19 March 2019). "Supply Chains Cause 90% Of Companies' Environmental Impacts. How Can They Be Improved?". Retrieved 4 June 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  • ^ "Starting at the source: Sustainability in supply chains | McKinsey". www.mckinsey.com. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  • ^ Supply Chain Dive (15 November 2017). "How data can help build a sustainable supply chain". Retrieved 4 June 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  • ^ Cohen, Ronald. "How to Measure a Company's Real Impact". Harvard Business Review.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Supply_chain_sustainability&oldid=1026890307"

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    This page was last edited on 4 June 2021, at 20:19 (UTC).

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