scholarly journals Assessing the Enablers and Barriers to Quality and Supply Chain Management Based Approach to Sustainable Operations in the Manufacturing Context

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Bastas ◽  
Kapila Liyanage

Sustainability is becoming the prominent concept of focus for manufacturing research and practice. Various research streams are endeavouring to facilitate its integration and implementation to manufacturing organisations including approaches that use quality management and supply chain management. Sustainability integration is a complex matter for the manufacturing industry, identification of associated enablers and barriers proving fruitful to catalyse the transition of manufacturing organisations into sustainable operations and management practices. This research investigated the enablers and barriers to quality and supply chain management based integration of sustainability in manufacturing organisations through a focussed action research study. The key factors were noted as; integration to existing management systems and processes, familiarity and awareness level of sustainability concepts and terminology, absence of a minimum starter package for Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) sustainability reporting standards, resource constraints, leverage over supply base, culture and human resource limitations, willingness to learn, commitment, support and engagement of leadership, management system maturity, change facilitation and championing, governmental subsidisation and support, and sustainability awareness of public and market.

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 131-137
Author(s):  
Ville Hinkka ◽  
Reetta Mäkinen ◽  
Jenni Eckhardt ◽  
Toni Lastusilta

The main objectives of the EU transport policy belongs the limitation of the negative environmental impact from ports. Similarly, companies are adopting sustainable supply chain management practices to response the policy makers’ and consumers’ demands for sustainable operations. This paper aims to discover how the largest European container ports communicate about their efforts to improve the sustainability of their operations to find out how the ports themselves see their position as a part of transition towards more sustainable supply chain operations. Based on the study, different large European container ports consider environmental issues variously. The risk is that some ports may get competitive advantages by slipping in the environmental questions. Alternatively, if the port does not take sustainability questions seriously and it gets a bad reputation, the risk is that the customers and consumers do not accept the behavior of the port and shipping companies start to avoid that port. Doi: 10.28991/HIJ-2021-02-02-06 Full Text: PDF


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