Green logistics

Green logistics describes all attempts to measure and minimize the ecological impact of logistics activities. This includes all activities of the forward and reverse flows of products, information and services between the point of origin and the point of consumption. It is the aim to create a sustainable company value using a balance of economic and environmental efficiency. Green logistics have its origin in the mid 1980s and was a concept to characterize logistics systems and approaches that use advanced technology and equipment to minimize environmental damage during operations.[1]

Demand for action

Three main sections of green logistics

Organizations have to face changing circumstances for several years. In addition to increasing diversity and dynamics, environmental issues become more important. Social, political and economic demands for sustainable development force organizations to reduce the effect on the environment of their supply chains and to develop sustainable transport and supply chain strategies.[2]

There are strong interactions between logistics, environment and natural resources. In addition, the approach of logistics is interdisciplinary, holistic and cross-company[3] Realising environmental objectives can be done in synergy with other strategic and financial goals. This is the basis of the great potential of this new logistics problem and challenge.[4]

Ecological concern

The "ecological concern" in logistics determines how far the logistics or the supply chain of a company is faced with the issue of environmental protection and resource conservation. Basically, a supply chain is affected of various influencing factors in this context. The main influencing factors are the stakeholders of the organization and the rising costs of energy and commodity.[5]

Some of the key stakeholders in this context are:

There is also the pressure of lenders, investors, insurers and investors. Indications of this are new forms of investment in the capital market, such as the Dow Jones Sustainability Index, that tracks the stock performance of the world's leading companies in terms of economic, environmental and social criteria.[6]

The dimension of ecological concern of a company is the product of these complex and varying factors.

Approaches

Logistics has a whole range of measures to protect the environment and resources. Some are new, others long-known. These actions can be assigned to different levels  maturity, range, scope, capital expenditure and resource requirements.

Corresponding to the holistic approach of green logistics, logistics has five starting points to implement measures for environmental protection and resource conservation:

  1. customer, market and product
  2. structures and planning
  3. processes, control and measurement
  4. technologies and resources
  5. employees, suppliers and service providers

Examples:[7]

The first four levels form a hierarchy and influence each other sequentially. Decisions on one level define the scope for further decisions on the following levels. Decisions at higher levels reduce the freedom for the following levels. Example: The determination of the packing mass of a product on the Level one defines the volume and weight of a product and therefore the maximum number of items per carrier (e.g., container). Thus, the decision made on level one influences the maximum capacity of a container. The effects on the environment,  measured as carbon-dioxide (CO2) emissions per transported product  therefore, are strongly influenced by the decisions made on level one. Decisions made on levels two and three, such as route optimization, also affect carbon-dioxide emissions.[8]

See also

External links

References

  1. Thiell, M., Zuluaga, J., Montanez, J., van Hoof, B.: Green Logistics – Global Practices and their Implementation in Emerging Markets, p. 2, Colombia 2011.
  2. . Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  3. Hoessle, Ulrike: Sustainable Logistics. Best Lessons from the Global Compact (=WWS Series 2). Seattle 2013. ISBN 978-0-9898270-1-0, http://www.wwsworldwide.com.
  4. . Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  5. . Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  6. . Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  7. Johannes Kals: Betriebliches Energiemanagement  Eine Einführung, pp. 9598, Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2010, ISBN 978-3-17-021133-9.
  8. Straube, F., Cetinkaya, B: Umwelt und Logistik, pp. 6281 in Straube, F.; Pfohl, H.-Chr.: Trends und Strategien in der Logistik – Globale Netzwerke im Wandel, Deutscher Verkehrs-Verlag, Bremen 2008, ISBN 978-3-87154-388-3.
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