Bi-objective design of fresh food supply chain networks with reusable and disposable packaging containers

Packaging is crucial in protecting and handling products through the stages of their logistic networks. Actually, both disposable and reusable packaging containers are used. The former ends its life at the last stage of the distribution chain, the latter requires reverse flows to collect, reconditio...

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Main Authors: Bortolini, M., Galizia, F., Mora, C., Botti, L., Rosano, Michele
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/67063
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author Bortolini, M.
Galizia, F.
Mora, C.
Botti, L.
Rosano, Michele
author_facet Bortolini, M.
Galizia, F.
Mora, C.
Botti, L.
Rosano, Michele
author_sort Bortolini, M.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Packaging is crucial in protecting and handling products through the stages of their logistic networks. Actually, both disposable and reusable packaging containers are used. The former ends its life at the last stage of the distribution chain, the latter requires reverse flows to collect, recondition and, then, reuse it. Costs and emissions associated to the two types of packaging containers are different in nature, i.e. raw materials and landfill cost and emissions vs. reverse logistic costs and emissions, so that their choice is not univocal. Furthermore, such choice heavily affects the supply chain network structure and management. This paper addresses this topic aiming at designing a supply chain network including the packaging container best selection, storage/handling node location and flow allocation. An original bi-objective mixed integer linear programming model supports the decisional process. Despite the approach is general, a deep focus is on fresh fruit and vegetable distribution chain because of disposable and reusable packaging containers coexist in practice. The model looks at the cost and environmental impact minimisation over the whole network getting the Pareto frontier and supporting the logistic managers, industrial practitioners and policy makers in the network design and management. A real instance from Emilia-Romagna region, Italy, showcases the model application getting the economic and environmental optima together with best-balance configurations. Results stress the convenience of mixing reusable and disposable packaging containers to reach a global optimum. 47.1% reusable and 52.9% disposable is a possible good balance configuration reducing emissions while containing the cost increase.
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format Journal Article
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:32:06Z
publishDate 2018
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-670632018-12-03T05:41:16Z Bi-objective design of fresh food supply chain networks with reusable and disposable packaging containers Bortolini, M. Galizia, F. Mora, C. Botti, L. Rosano, Michele Packaging is crucial in protecting and handling products through the stages of their logistic networks. Actually, both disposable and reusable packaging containers are used. The former ends its life at the last stage of the distribution chain, the latter requires reverse flows to collect, recondition and, then, reuse it. Costs and emissions associated to the two types of packaging containers are different in nature, i.e. raw materials and landfill cost and emissions vs. reverse logistic costs and emissions, so that their choice is not univocal. Furthermore, such choice heavily affects the supply chain network structure and management. This paper addresses this topic aiming at designing a supply chain network including the packaging container best selection, storage/handling node location and flow allocation. An original bi-objective mixed integer linear programming model supports the decisional process. Despite the approach is general, a deep focus is on fresh fruit and vegetable distribution chain because of disposable and reusable packaging containers coexist in practice. The model looks at the cost and environmental impact minimisation over the whole network getting the Pareto frontier and supporting the logistic managers, industrial practitioners and policy makers in the network design and management. A real instance from Emilia-Romagna region, Italy, showcases the model application getting the economic and environmental optima together with best-balance configurations. Results stress the convenience of mixing reusable and disposable packaging containers to reach a global optimum. 47.1% reusable and 52.9% disposable is a possible good balance configuration reducing emissions while containing the cost increase. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/67063 10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.02.231 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Bortolini, M.
Galizia, F.
Mora, C.
Botti, L.
Rosano, Michele
Bi-objective design of fresh food supply chain networks with reusable and disposable packaging containers
title Bi-objective design of fresh food supply chain networks with reusable and disposable packaging containers
title_full Bi-objective design of fresh food supply chain networks with reusable and disposable packaging containers
title_fullStr Bi-objective design of fresh food supply chain networks with reusable and disposable packaging containers
title_full_unstemmed Bi-objective design of fresh food supply chain networks with reusable and disposable packaging containers
title_short Bi-objective design of fresh food supply chain networks with reusable and disposable packaging containers
title_sort bi-objective design of fresh food supply chain networks with reusable and disposable packaging containers
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/67063