Yellow arrows are equivalent to risk – loss of control of materials and exposureMULTIPLE LAYERS OF SUPPLY CHAIN UPSTREAM AND DOWN
Yellow arrows are equivalent to risk – loss of control of materials and exposureMULTIPLE LAYERS OF SUPPLY CHAIN UPSTREAM AND DOWN
Pollution preventionResource scarcities political issues conflict mineralsYour products are someone else’s inputs
Toxic materials management, haz waste, air & water permitsMistakes – fines, liabilitiesHarm to env or workers, customers
Green dominoes – need to keep up with competition greener than the next guyBrand and performance – investors and maybe consumer market. Certifications.
Supply Chain Environmentalism In the retailer community there is sound evidence that Supply Chain Environmentalism has become a reality and, perhaps, a market imperative. Supply chain environmentalism is defined as the enhancement of competitiveness of products through either cost reduction or product differentiation, or both, achieved by reduction of environmental impacts (e.g. greenhouse gas emissions, water consumption, etc.) in the supply chain. ENVIANCE
Suppliers viewed as biggest env impact – you meet Walmart goals for GHG reductionCarbon Disclosure Project (CDP)Greenhouse gas emissionSolid waste generatedWater useSustainability purchasing guidelines for your direct suppliers3rd party product certificationsLocation of ALL facilities that make your productsQuality pre-check suppliersManage “social compliance” for you and your suppliersCommunity development activities
Another: Kaiser http://www.greenbiz.com/news/2010/05/04/kaiser-applies-new-green-scorecard-medical-supply-chainP&G scorecard http://www.pg.com/en_US/news_views/blog_posts/2010/may/sustainability_scorecard.shtml
Sony “Road to Zero” program are based on four environmental perspectives: climate change, resource conservation, control of chemical substances and biodiversity and six product lifecycle stages: business operations, take back and recycling, Research and development, product planning and design, distribution and procurement. Develop and refine “3R” (Reduce,Reuse,Recycle) technologies that reduce the use of nonrenewable resources and water and the generation of waste throughout product life cycles
Coke, best Buy, aveda, Ford, GM, General Mills, nike, Dell
Green dominoes – need to keep up with competition greener than the next guy
Pacific Northwest Pollution Prevention Resource Center