As I mentioned in my last blog that an increasing
number of companies have gained the awareness of designing and planning a much
greener supply chain as concerns about fuel prices, long-term energy availability,
and climate changes, etc. Therefore, companies’ attention is finally turning
toward one of the most pervasive places where energy can be conserved: the
whole industrial supply chain network which encompasses the sourcing,
manufacturing, transportation, commercialization, distribution, consumption,
and disposal of goods, from the ore mine to the trash can.
I just found some examples to show how companies
actually implement their idea to create some more energy-efficient supply chain
and how to reduce energy consumption and carbon output in
procurement, production, and distribution.
On January 18, 2007, Tesco CEO Terry Leahy announced that the
retail chain would reduce the carbon footprint of all stores and distribution
centers by 50 percent over the next 15 years. That kind of target cannot be
realized by placing unilateral pressure on suppliers. It requires efforts that
build trust and transparency along the value chain. When suppliers and
customers understand one another’s contributions to carbon emissions, they can
identify ecological and economic waste that would otherwise be hard to see.
in 2006, the Carbon Trust, a United Kingdom–based research
and advisory group, discovered a “perverse incentive” in the sourcing of raw
potatoes for manufacturing snack foods. Charged with studying the carbon
footprint of potato chips, the Trust’s researchers found that because prices
are set by weight, farmers typically control humidification to produce moister
and therefore heavier potatoes. Even within the strictly limited specifications
of moisture content set by the food manufacturers, these few grams of extra
water are significant. The extra cooking needed to burn them off accounted for
an unexpectedly high percentage of the chips’ energy consumption.
An
obvious solution, wrote the Carbon Trust, would be to change the procurement
contract — to provide farmers with an incentive to produce potatoes with less
moisture. This would better position the manufacturers to take advantage of
carbon trading credits and other regulations for greenhouse gas reduction. And
it would set a precedent for further collaboration between food makers and
their agricultural suppliers.
Some of the
innovations of the next five years will focus on reducing this type of
inefficiency. Marks and Spencer, for example, has a specific initiative under
way to reduce “food miles,” sourcing its wares from nearby locales and working
with local farmers to increase the growing season. Other initiatives will
increase transportation efficiencies: A truck that once carried 150 items will
now carry 300, or carry the same volume of goods with less fuel. Other projects
will reduce and simplify packaging, closely track the joules consumed, or
switch to less carbon-intensive materials and energy sources (such as renewable
energy and more efficient lighting sources).
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