Global Supply Chain Group Books

INNOVATE PROFIT THRIVE

It is generally accepted that environmental consciousness is now changing to environmental pro-activeness as organizations are discovering that it makes good commercial sense.

Boards are asking the management to review their policies related to environmental norms, not only to bolster their corporate social responsibility aims, but also because consumers are asking for it.

It is widely agreed that consumers will increasingly prefer to buy more and even pay more, for products or services provided in environmentally sound manner.

Our recent analysis has however revealed four key additional points:

Additional Point of Green is Your Supply Chain

1. Companies are still primarily focused on environmentally conscious internal production. Any company can become totally carbon neutral by outsourcing all its production.

Shifting the carbon producing activity up or down the supply chains does nothing more than hide the dirt under someone else’s carpet.

A holistic approach to carbon management is required, and this is provided by adoption of Green Supply Chain methodology.

2. Environmental pro-activism is generally assumed to come at an additional cost to the corporations. It is widely thought that going green is expensive.

On the contrary, our modeling indicates that adoption of Green supply Chain methodology should result in overall cost reduction providing this is done in a thorough and logical manner.

3. Most business models are focused on growing the volume of their current offerings of goods or services to increase profits.

A change in this focus towards providing customer end outcomes will not only reduce the impact on the environment, but also secure and/or increase market share whilst improving profitability.

4. Well beyond mainstream business thinking on environmental impact of technology, our discussions with Professor Ernst von Weizsacker (co-author of the book “Factor Four;

Doubling Wealth, Halving Resource Use” 1998, with Amory & Hunter Lovins) highlight a radical concept aimed at doubling wealth, whilst concurrently halving resource consumption through innovative technological push.

The implications for Green Supply Chains and for business performance more generally, are staggering. However, in the rest of this book, our conclusions are based on current technological limitations whilst noting that the

“Factor 4” thinking and its associated technological push would actually multiply the benefits significantly; if brought into practice.

So it is clear that a move to Green Supply Chains is not only necessary for sound environmental management, but it is also profitable and provides sound financial management.

How can companies start making the move? From our research and practical work in this area, we believe the following five fundamental questions really help to focus the discussion and crystallize action plans:

1. What are the tangible and intangible benefits of moving towards a Green Supply Chain?

In our experience these benefits are frequently neither fully explored, nor adequately quantified. Even where a robust analysis is carried out, analysts tend to either ignore some of the potential benefits,

or find it hard to analyze their full impact on the business.

As a result, the overall benefits do not get adequate attention at the board level and therefore do not generate enough interest to release the necessary finance to create the transformation.

In one company we know (a large global industrial and building products company with revenues in excess of $5 Billion) the task of exploring opportunities in Green Supply Chains was handed over a senior

executive as an additional job over and above his regular job, without any funding, clear direction or expectations. In a situation like this (which is very common),

all the potential benefits cannot be fully understood and agreed by the key stakeholders, resulting in understaffed projects, and poor implementation.

Our analysis has also found that without any new technologies being utilized, just a move to a Green Supply Chain can reduce costs by 5-20%.

The adoption of new technologies, however, can take cost reductions to a whole new level.

In addition, by raising their Green credentials amongst customers, employees, government authorities and other stakeholders, companies also move rapidly towards ensuring a sustainable and successful future.

2. What are the costs, both direct, and indirec in Green is Your Supply Chain?

This is the flip side of the question above. For the same reasons, while companies have vague ideas of the costs, these are rarely fully explored and analyzed.

In our experience, these are also frequently exaggerated because of uncertainty surrounding many of the costs. While all future costs have a certain amount of uncertainty,

and there is general tendency to allow a buffer; our analysis finds that costs of going green are generally more uncertain, but the buffers allowed are disproportionately higher.

The indirect costs are generally the source of most complications. It is really hard to estimate costs of process changes, disassembly lines planning and set up, waste collection and recycling modeling,

additional research and development, inventory reduction and green supply chain modeling etc.

Once each one of these systems are fully functional, the costs will follow a predictable experience or learning curve pattern, but it is difficult to predict the transitional costs,

and these make the analysis complicated and perhaps insurmountable for many project teams.

Our research indicates that direct and indirect costs associated with Green Supply Chains are substantial but can be fully funded and more than offset by the benefits they generate.

3. What influence do we have over our suppliers, their suppliers and our customers (especially the party with the most power in the supply chain) that would allow us to jointly work together and move the supply chain towards a green supply chain?

This question is easier to answer as most pragmatic managers have a good idea of the relative power balance in their customer supplier relationships.

While occasionally the influence is under estimated or over estimated, in general we found that just asking this question helps to focus action in the right direction.

While occasionally the influence is under estimated or over estimated, in general we found that just asking this question helps to focus action in the right direction.

Clearly, the organization which has the most influence over an end-to-end supply chain is best positioned to create the clarity and impetus towards the Green Supply Chains.

For example in the retail supply chains, most retailers such as Tesco (UK) or Wal-Mart (USA) are best positioned to exercise this type of influence.

However with the automobile supply chains, retailers have far less influence than the manufacturers.

In each supply chain, the entity which has the most influence needs to be encouraged to think holistically, in the interest of all parties that form part of that supply chain.

It is perhaps also clear why this crucial third question can only be answered after we answer the first two questions. Once the benefits, costs and influences are clearly expressed, defined and analyzed,

then it much easier to have an informed discussion with the party that ‘controls’ the supply chain.

A corollary to this discussion is then going to be just how to distribute the costs and benefits of movements towards Green Supply Chains.

Unless all the incentives are properly aligned, some parts of the supply chain may well end up sabotaging the overall Green Supply Chain project.

4. How will we communicate and measure our progress towards the green supply chain to the key stakeholders? How will we engage them?

A new road needs new milestones. Traditional supply chain or financial measurements will not suffice in this case.

We found several organizations who have started to make some progress towards vague environmental goals, have defined this in terms of carbon impact reduction but without any clear definition of 4 or 5 key

measurements that relate to supply chains at all levels. Not only were the measurements not clearly defined, but even the traditional KPI’s adapted for the purpose,

could not be uniformly and easily accessed by the key personnel who needed the information.

A typical Green Supply Chain project has far more stakeholders than any other transformational projects inside an organization. Besides internal staff, key suppliers, customers, and even the public;

media, regulators and government are also stakeholders in a green supply chain transformation.

Therefore, a well thought out stakeholder engagement strategy, diligently executed, that includes clear and regular communication; is essential to success.

5. What barriers to Green Supply Chains can be expected and how can these be overcome?

There several categories of barriers to Green Supply Chains and these include legislation conflicts, inadequate or misaligned stakeholder incentives,

lack of environmental norms and tools, lack of resources, and high costs of implementation and technology.

Within each of these categories, are several specific components making the total number of potential barriers quite formidable and daunting.

Like in any other change initiative, barriers can be overcome through a properly structured, comprehensive and phased migration strategy. A “Big-Bang” approach is not to be recommended.

Rather, each major project stream is dealt with by a series of phases that cover detailed analysis, design and implementation, and organization change management.

Time and care should be taken on the first phase to ensure its success and the ability to leverage subsequent phases.

In summary, all of the leading organizations that have started Green Supply Chain projects ask some fundamental questions.

The answers are then found to be illuminating their way towards innovation, profitability and sustainability. As is the case in all ground breaking endeavors, the first mover advantage is enormous, as are the challenges.

From: Green Supply Chains – An Action Manifesto, by Vivek Sood and Stuart Emmett

Unchain Your Corporation

It is generally accepted that environmental consciousness is now changing to environmental pro-activeness as organizations are discovering that it makes good commercial sense.

URL: https://unchainyourcorporation.com/

Author: Vivek Sood

Editor's Rating:
5

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

authors

Mr Supply Chain - Vivek Sood

Vivek Sood

Dr Wolfgang Partsch

DR WOLFGANG PARTSCH

Lin Giralt - Author

LIN (EMILIO) GIRALT

Follow Us On