1-a boundaries and flow perspective of green supply
Post on 05-Apr-2018
213 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
1/22
SUPPLY
CHAIN
MANAGEMENT
A Boundaries and FlowPerspective of Green
Supply ChainManagement (Joseph,2010)By:
Mohd Nazri bin Salim
M051110007
1
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
2/22
Nine major comprehensive, overlapping,boundaries were defined and research
and practice pertinent to theseboundaries were identified.
As part of the systemic perspective, fivemajor and inter-related flows that green
supply chains need to manage within theboundaries are identified.
Overview
2
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
3/22
IntroductionWhat is greensupply chain
the process ofusing environmentally
friendly inputs and transforming theseinputs into outputs that can be
reclaimed and re-used at the end oftheir lifecycle thus, creating a
sustainable supply chain (Patrick,2007)
3
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
4/22
What is sustainable?
Meeting the current needs without
hindering the future needs in termsof economic, environmental &
social challenges (EPA, 2005)
4
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
5/22
Green Supply Chain Overview
A green supply chain diagram with stagesand relationships
5
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
6/22
Industrial Environmental Practices Related
To Green Supply Chain Management
6
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
7/22
Environmental ManagementSystems (EMS)
Environmental management system (EMS) refers to themanagement of an organization's environmental
programs in a comprehensive, systematic, plannedand documented manner.
EMS adopters are engaging their supply chains byinstituting procedures to assess theirsuppliersenvironmental influences, requiring suppliers to
minimize their environmental impacts, tracking wastein their operating systems, adopting their own EMS, andinforming buyers of ways to minimize theirenvironmental impact (Darnall et al., 2008; Gonzalezet al., 2008).
1
7
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
8/22
Industrial Ecology & Industrial
Symbiosis
Within industrial symbiosis the goal is tomake waste flows into value adding flows
of material, energy and other productiveresources.
2
8
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
9/22
Product Stewardship & ExtendedProduct Responsibility
Product stewardship is the management of aproduct throughout its life cycle including its
distribution, usage and disposal typicallyassociated with extended producerresponsibility (Yu et al., 2008).
Product stewardship requires that an
organization manage its products andinvolve members of its supply chain
3
9
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
10/22
Life Cycle Analysis
Is the improvement, relationships, andinformation related to the management
of products and materials and theirsources and impacts throughout aproducts life cycle (Linnanen, 1995).
4
10
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
11/22
Main Phases of physical life cycle andinteraction with ecosphere
11
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
12/22
Eco-design & Design for theEnvironment
DFE can be defined as a methodologydirected at the systematic reduction or
elimination of the environmental impactsimplicated in the whole life cycle of aproduct, from the extraction of rawmaterials to disposal.
This methodology is based on evaluatingthe potential impacts throughout the entirecourse of the design process.
5
12
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
13/22
The concept of DfE
13
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
14/22
Green supply chains: aboundaries perspective
Supply chains consist of and span manyboundaries. To effectively manage the
environmental aspects of supply chains,policy makers, organizations, andmanagers need to understand variousreaches of supply chains and their
environmental implications over theseboundaries.
14
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
15/22
Green supply chains: aboundaries perspective
15
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
16/22
9 Boundaries in Green SupplyChain
1. Organizational Boundaries
2. Proximal Boundaries
3. Political Boundaries4. Informational Boundaries
5. Temporal Boundaries
6. Legal Boundaries
7. Cultural Boundaries8. Economic Boundaries
9. Technological Boundaries
16
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
17/22
Green Supply Chain Flows
1. Material Flows
Parts, components, raw material & finished goods
2. Service Flows
Energy
3. Financial Flows
Capital/money
4. Information & Knowledge Flows
5. Waste Flows
17
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
18/22
Integration of Flows & Boundaries
18
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
19/22
1. Inter-Dependency
The interaction and effectiveness of green
supply chain management through the joint
adoption of other environmental practicessuch as environmental management systems
and eco-design will be influenced by the type
of boundaries that are limiting the scope of
these practices.Determine the scales of boundaries
identification is trivial/important.
19
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
20/22
Theory application anddevelopment
Ecological modernization theory (Bergeret al., 2001; Welford and Hills, 2003) which
arises from the policy literature, also canbe used to help identify various boundaryrelationships and the management offlows.
20
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
21/22
Green supply to greendemand
Emphasize more green demand by thecustomer instead of green supply.
21
-
7/31/2019 1-A Boundaries and Flow Perspective of Green Supply
22/22
Thank You For Your Time
22
top related