4.6 Article

Fresh Food Dual-Channel Supply Chain Considering Consumers' Low-Carbon and Freshness Preferences

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13116445

Keywords

fresh food; consumer preference; dual-channel supply chain; supply chain decision; Stackelberg game

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71772106]
  2. Humanities and Social Sciences Foundation of the Ministry of Education of China [17YJCZH198]
  3. Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation, China [ZR2017MG012]

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This paper focuses on the optimal decision of carbon emission reduction and pricing in the dual-channel supply chain of fresh food through three different models. The results show that the sales price, carbon emission reduction, market demand, and profits of the supply chain under different levels of consumers' low-carbon preference coefficient and freshness level exhibit similar changes.
Due to growing concerns for environmental problems and food quality, consumers pay more attention to the carbon emission and freshness of fresh food. The booming e-commerce also accelerates the development of the dual-channel supply chain. In the dual-channel supply chain of fresh food, the carbon emission and freshness of fresh food are becoming important factors affecting consumers' purchase demand. This paper focuses on the optimal decision of carbon emission reduction and pricing, which is investigated by a Stackelberg game-theoretic approach in three dual-channel supply chain sales models (retailer dual channel, producer dual channel, and mixed dual channel). A two-stage fresh food supply chain system composed of a producer and a retailer is explored. The sensitivity analysis and the comparison of three dual-channel models are carried out. The results show the following: (1) the sales price, carbon emission reduction, market demand, producer's profit, retailer's profit, and supply chain's profit of fresh food under the three dual-channel supply chains show the same change on different levels of consumers' low-carbon preference coefficient and freshness level, respectively; (2) the optimal decision of carbon emission reduction and pricing, demand, and profit of the three dual-channel models need to be determined according to the value of consumers' purchasing preferences for the retailer's offline channel. The paper gives some enlightenment to the decision-making members in the fresh dual-channel supply chain.

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