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Why the circular economy must link up the whole supply chain

 


The long-discussed concept of the circular economy (CE) seems ready for takeoff. New information technologies like the internet of things (IoT), big data analytics or blockchain are the powerful means everybody is waiting for.

The real door-opener is still to be found in the analog world: It’s about trustful collaboration. But only when all actors along the product life cycle find profitable ways to take resource scarcity into account, and only if they share both costs and benefits, will CE be able to unfold its full potential.

So trustful collaboration is asking for a lot. It needs to convince decision-makers of the business opportunities they get once they trade their silo-oriented optimization rationale for a holistic-management approach that addresses the entire life cycle of the products and the materials involved.

Making use of circular economy to prosper and differentiate products and services is suitable for business-to-business heavyweights, too.

For example, ocean carrier Maersk created a digital twin of their latest container ships down to the smallest bolt. Through this, the company will ultimately know how much and what material is being used in their fleet. During routine overhauls or at the final disassembly, Maersk has a clear systemic view on which parts and materials can be reused, remanufactured, upcycled or continue to stay in the circular flow of shipbuilding.

Executing supply chain power

It’s not by chance that most CE case studies are when economically strong asset owners and service providers such as Caterpillar and Maersk are in the driving seat. The same applies to powerful vendors, for instance tech giants such as HP and Dell who have established highly efficient return systems for used products.

Why is it that CE pioneers are often found among these kind of companies? The two most obvious reasons: on one hand, these players have understood the value of the materials involved to such an extent that they decided to take on responsibility for them. On the other, they have the business acumen to guide and influence the use phase of a product.

Albeit, all of these cases studies are rather short value chains. CE examples covering entire chains are still yet to be found, which is no surprise at all – implementing comprehensive cradle-to-cradle scenarios is one of the biggest challenges facing supply chain managers.

The degree of difficulty can be seen in the chemicals industry. Here a lot of companies have already gained deep expertise in extending the reach of sustainability management to the production level; for example, the “Production Verbund” of BASF, a role model for efficient and inter-connected material and energy flow in chemical production.

However, compared to big asset owners, service providers or responsible vendors, the power of the process industry to convince value chain partners to participate joint CE strategies is much more limited.

Chemical companies work upstream as a tier-one value creator after the extractive industries. Since most partners are downstream, laying out a CE scenario is like pushing a rope.

However, both downstream and upstream, the headwind in favour of CE is blowing strong. Still, most companies optimise their operations and products within their own narrow sphere of influence. Even the current most progressive perspectives towards sustainability are not yet broad enough.

Operating within the planet’s limits

So what does this all mean with regards to CE? First of all, every constituent of a specific value chain needs to understand that the chain as a whole will lose, once an indispensable resource is gone. This can be in its own production, or in someone else´s.

Thus the chain, too, must take into account the planetary limitations. Like each and every one of its constituents, the supply chain needs to operate within economic, environmental and social thresholds. Supply chain managers have to develop metrics that take the sustainability context into account, as well as building relationships with players across the entire chain.

The concept only works if supply chain partners build up mutual trust in the sustainability information each partner is giving. Therefore, CE requires transparency about associated materials and financial flows of the product and its components during their entire life cycles. A bold example of this thinking was the environmental profit and loss analysis Puma published already in 2011.

The required transparency can easily be provided by the newest information technology of connected devices, big data analysis, cloud computing, or distributed ledger technology (aka blockchain). Coupled with IoT tracking and AI-enabled global data matching models, these are necessary ingredients to bridge the physical gap along individual processes in supply chains during a product’s use phase and at end-of-life.

Connecting the dots to the whole value chain

The crucial IT foundation is in place. Most companies run modern enterprise resource-planning systems to synchronize material and financial flows. This enables and supports decision-making and optimisation within an individual organisation.

The information is available, but the dots need still to be connected. Supply chain managers need to extend the focus of data analysis to the whole value chain. Only then they will get the right information to help both themselves and their supply chain partners harvesting the multiple benefits of a CE.

The business cases of a circular life cycle are dependent on finite resources and must consider all value creation from the production, use, end-of-use to the recycling phase.

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