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Explore the complexities and opportunities in green logistics, examining environmental efficiency, reverse logistics, and the paradoxes shaping the industry. Discover how the logistics sector can evolve sustainably and address environmental concerns while improving efficiency and reducing costs.
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The Paradoxes of Green Logistics Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Dept. of Economics & Geography Hofstra University, Hempstead, New York, USA. Brian Slack, Dept. of Geography, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Claude Comtois, Dept. of Geography, Universite de Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Green+Logistics or Green/Logistics? • Evocative concepts • Origins in the environmental movement • 1990s “the decade of the environment”. • New market opportunities • Recycling. • Transport of waste. • Possible convergence? Green Logistics • Environmentalefficiency • Recycling • Compliance • Distributional efficiency • Save time / money Convergence?
Reverse logistics • Management of reduction and disposal • Reverse distribution • Collection of damaged or unsold products. • Recycling of used products. • The manufacturer takes responsibility for delivery as well as take-back. • Two reverse channels • Recycling / reuse (back to the suppliers). • Disposal (shipment of non-recyclable waste). Suppliers Recycling / Reuse Supply Chain Disposal Customers
How ‘green’ is the logistics industry? • Most important issues • Reducing packaging and waste. • Hazardous waste disposal. • Solid waste disposal. • Internal costs. • Least important issues • Congestion. • Land use. • External costs. Transportation Land Use Most important Least important
THE PARADOXES OF LOGISTICS: costs • Driving down distribution costs • Benefits are realised by the users. • 1990-2000 (manufacturing sector, % GDP): • Distribution costs declined by around 13%. • Inventory costs declined by around 5%. • Environmental costs are externalized • The environment or society at large pay the indirect costs. • The logistics industry has largely escaped governmental attempts to charge for externalities. • Numerous subsidies. • Trucking is less regulated. • Some estimates put costs as twice the revenue generated by vehicle taxation.
Hub Feeder Environmental Pressure THE PARADOXES OF LOGISTICS: costs • Hubbing and the land take • Airports. • Seaports. • Distribution facilities. • Hubbing and local access • Road and rail connections. • Channel deepening. • High costs wholly or partially subsidized.
THE PARADOXES OF LOGISTICS: time/speed • Logistics has given rise to two fundamental features of the contemporary economy: • Just-in-Time (JIT). • Door-to-Door (DTD). • Cycle time requirements down by 25% between 1990 and 2000. • Both favour use of the least energy efficient modes: • Trucking. • Air.
THE PARADOXES OF LOGISTICS: reliability • Service reliability is at the heart of logistics • Delivery time. • Delivery on-time. • Breakage. • Modal reliability • Logistics systems use the modes perceived to be the most reliable: • Trucks and planes. • The most energy-efficient modes are perceived to be the least reliable: • Rail and ships.
LOGISTICS AND WAREHOUSING • Inventory reduction: • 1980: 50% of costs. • 1990: 44% of costs. • 1999: 36% of costs. • While the manufacturers may achieve economies: • Inventories are in transit. • More links are added to the production chain, with more traffic movements added overall. • A form of externality. Delivery units for parts Moving storage units Assembly and warehousing Delivery units for finished goods Moving storage units
Logistics Costs, United States, 1980-1999 (in billions of $)
LOGISTICS AND E-COMMERCE Supply chain • E-commerce and supply chain management • Traditional marketing involves consumers going to shopping centres for their purchases. • New systems require large distribution centres on the edge of cities from which small parcels are delivered to customers. • The system uses the most polluting modes. • Disaggregation of retailing can be expected to lead to more tons/km. • Higher use of packaging, with concomitant increase in waste generation. E-Retailer Warehousing Customers
Environmental Vicious Circle of Logistics Emphasis on trucking and air transportation Application of logistics More ton-km transported Activities less spatially constrained Energy consumption Pollutant Emissions Congestion Space consumption Pressure on marginal land
How will logistics become greener? • Top down government intervention • The industry claims that one of the fastest growing cost of warehousing is compliance with governmental regulations. • Labor and health regulations (training). • Environmental regulations, mainly concerning dangerous substances and fuels. • Congestion pricing, road pricing (US) ‘fair pricing’ (EU). • Recent trends show an attempt by governments to internalize cots. • Diesel fuel: Sulfur to be reduced from 500 ppm to 15 ppm. • Outcomes uncertain • Policies may impact differentially on the modes. • Contradictory policies between tiers.
How will logistics become greener? • Bottom-up, industry action • Technology will improve the situation (to a limit). • Fleet management, vehicle efficiencies. • Attitudes will change; greenness can become a marketing tool. • Composite solutions • Environmental management and audit systems (EMAS). • Will the logistics industry adopt ISO 14000? • Paradoxical situation • Problems occur at all spatial scales, from the local through to the global, so a political response is inevitable. • There are hopeful signs of greener attitudes in the industry.