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6 Steps to Sustainable Supply Chain Reality

While your company undoubtedly has sustainability on its supply chain agenda, creating momentum can be tricky in what is after all, a fairly new way to approach performance improvement. As legislation focuses ever more heavily on environmental protection though, and consumers increasingly consider sustainability in their purchasing decisions, all supply chain organisations will need to find the way forward.

 

How to Develop a Sustainable Supply Chain

 

The good news is that there are multiple benefits attached to developing a sustainable supply chain. Since sustainability often involves consuming less and achieving greater efficiency, environmental performance improvements can often lead to cost savings and a more streamlined operation.

 

 


But how do you get started on sustainable supply chain development? The answer, as with most change efforts, is to be systematic and take small initial steps leading in the right direction.


 

 

Every supply chain is unique, so it’s hard to prescribe exactly how sustainability should be tackled. But without taking into account any specific characteristics of your company, the following actions, taken in sequence, should get you on the right path.

 

1. Supply Chain Mapping

 

 

 

 

As with any transformation, the first step to a more sustainable supply chain is to gain an intimate understanding of the current environment. You may have mapped your supply chain before, but this time you will need to do so with sustainability in mind.

 

 

 

 

By all means, dust off your old swim-lane diagrams if they are not too outdated, but be sure to review them all with a focus on resource consumption, waste, and efficiency. Then highlight any points where you see potential for improved sustainability.

 

Better still, invest in mapping software that will allow you to get a very detailed picture of every aspect of your supply chain. Various programmes allow you to:

 

 

 

 

  • Trace every product, from raw material to finished product
  • Identify all your suppliers, including those you didn’t know you had
  • Measure geopolitical risks
  • Connect audits and assessments to suppliers.

 

 

1987 Brundtland Report, which described it as ‘‘development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs’’.

Since then, at an exponential rate, companies have been focusing on ways to reduce harmful emissions, minimise waste, and make their facilities more energy-efficient. And they have found that not only does this help create a positive image of the company for its employees and the general public, but it also helps reduce costs.

 

 

relevant training/education programme will help to get your people fully involved and to comprehend why changes are necessary.


 

 

Furthermore, the people who keep your supply chain moving are the ones with visibility of the detail. When they know what to look for, they can add granularity to your search for environmental performance excellence.

 

6. Execute, Review and Adjust

 

Having established improvement priorities and engaged your managers, workforce and partners, it’s time to execute steps to meet the most pressing sustainability goals. As you begin to see results, you will need to evaluate them against your chosen metrics. Outcomes will not always be as expected and solutions will sometimes need to be tweaked. Occasionally you may even need to go back to the drawing board.

 

The Sustainable Supply Chain Cycle

 

 

 

 

If your company is serious about developing a sustainable supply chain, the six steps described here will need to become a continuous cycle. Benchmarks move, goals will need extending, metrics require adjustment, training will need to be updated occasionally, and fresh opportunities will appear as your people improve in vigilance and understanding of the issues.

Sustainability should not be considered as a “nice-to-have” for any company that plans to be around for a while. The world’s resources really are under pressure and supply chains in particular can often be singled out for their environmental impact, with good reason.

But as well as being a responsibility, sustainability improvement carries benefits which should serve as positive motivation, given that today’s markets are not only sensitive to resource depletion, but are also increasingly competitive.

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