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Business and Climate
Change Efforts:
A Supply Chain Perspective
Mansour Hajbagheri
Erasmus Mundus Conference: Higher Education and Climate Change
Central European University, Budapest
26-27 Feb. 2009
Agenda
Introduction
Why Supply Chain?
What is a Sustainable Supply Chain Management (SSCM)?
Green Sourcing Principles and Values
Corporate Practices for Green Sourcing
Conclusion
Discussion
2
Drivers of Going Green
Legislations, regulations and standards for going Green
Ethical obligations and social responsibility
Financial incentives
3
Impediments to Going Green
Lowers economic profits
Imposes unequal costs among competitors
Costs of going green will eventually be shifted to the
stakeholders
Social issues are best solved by government. “Business of
business is business”.
4
Gap Between Knowledge and Action
Why Supply Chain?
Profitability:
potential
to
It
has
create
the
value
Is this a
Green car?
(profit) for the business.
Criticality: Firms cannot be
sustainable unless their supply
chains
become
sustainable
first.
6
Why Supply Chain? (Cont.)
Synergic nature: “Networked” vs. Individual effort
7
What is a Sustainable Supply Chain?
“Management of raw materials and services from suppliers to
manufacturer/service provider to customer and back with improvement
of the social and environmental impacts explicitly considered”.
Adapted from Sarkis [1]
8
Green Sourcing Principles & Values
Best efforts to mitigate all
kinds of pollution:
Air, water, land, noise,
etc.
Avoid creating waste
whenever possible:
Packaging – inbound and
outbound
Environmentally friendly
chemicals
Reduced disposal costs:
Recycling waste
Reusable packaging
Lower operational costs
Energy conservation
High density lighting
9
Corporate Practices for Green Sourcing
Make Green part of the RFI/RFP process and filter out non-green suppliers
– What % of their waste stream is recycled?
– What % of their raw materials are from recycling?
– What $’s have they invested in Green initiatives?
Require or encourage suppliers to undertake independent environmental
certification , e.g. ISO 14000
Build environmental criteria into supplier contract conditions
Supply base environmental performance management
Conduct life cycle analysis in cooperation with suppliers
Coordinate minimization of environmental impact in the extended supply chain
10
Corporate Practices for Green Sourcing (Cont.)
Cooperate with suppliers to deal with end-of-pipe environmental issues:
Reduce packaging waste at the customer/supplier interface
Reuse/recycle materials in cooperation with the supplier
Launch reuse initiatives (including buy backs and leasing)
Reverse logistics:
Give supplier an incentive to reduce the customer’s environmental load
Waste by-products reused by the raw material suppliers
Material ‘Life Cycle Management’
11
Conclusion
Supply Chain is the most important issue that a green business should
address in its environmental efforts.
Greening the supply chain can potentially reduce costs and provide profit
opportunities.
Bringing sustainable practices into supply chain is a certain trend in the
future. Thus, those who start from now gain a competitive advantage.
12
References
1. Sarkis J., Manufacturing strategy and environmental consciousness,
Technovation 1995,15(2),79–97.
2. Sarkis J., A strategic decision framework for green supply chain management,
Journal of Cleaner Production, 2003, 11, 397-409.
3. Institute for Supply Management (ISM) website: www.ism.ws
4. 2007 McKinsey survey of 2,192 executives on climate change:
http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Operations/Supply_Chain_Logistics/How_
companies_think_about_climate_change_A_McKinsey_Global_Survey_2099
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