4.7 Article

Managing uncertain inventories, washing, and transportation of reusable containers in food retailer supply chains

Journal

SUSTAINABLE PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION
Volume 31, Issue -, Pages 331-345

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.spc.2022.02.014

Keywords

Reusable containers; Inventory; Food retailer supply chain; Circular network; Washing; Uncertainty

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This paper explores the tactical operations of a circular containers network in the food supply chain, examining the interplay between uncertainty, service level, and transportation. Through a linear programming model and simulations, the study demonstrates the potential for improving the current solution and quantifies the impact of washing service levels and supplier travel distances on network solution and costs.
The food industry being pressured to reduce its environmental footprint, and replacing single-use packages with reusable containers would provide one such avenue for improving sustainability. The uncertainty of where and when containers are available for backhaul, insufficient washing service levels, and other barriers like intensive transportation have limited the widespread adoption of reusable containers. This paper models the tactical operations of a circular containers network with diverse actors, exploring the interdependence between uncertainty, service level, and transportation. A linear programming model is constructed where the packaging pooler's costs are minimized while meeting the demands and service needs of the food suppliers and the retailers. This model is applied to a real-world case study of a reusable container network in Italy involving the fresh food supply chain. The model is then augmented with simulations to estimate uncertain parameters and is resolved via robust optimization. We find that improving the pooler's current solution is possible, even with uncertainties of where and when containers are collected for backhaul. We quantify how improving washing service levels will change the network solution and raise costs. We likewise explore how reducing the distance suppliers must travel to collect containers impacts the pooler's operations and costs, as well as the overall distances and subsequent emissions associated with the transport of containers. While there is great potential to improve the current solution, future work is needed both to build better decision support tools and to understand of how to determine where on the Pareto frontier the solution will lie and perhaps influence it for the greater good. (c) 2022 Institution of Chemical Engineers. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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