Title: Economic
1Analytical framework Environmental vs. Economic
dimension
Economic value
Environmentalimpact
- Use phase has a negative value added
- Product value at end-of-life can be positive if
product can be reused/recycled
2Steel section life cycle
Use of buildings and other structures
BF Section production 350 / ton 28.5GJ / ton
Fabrication of sections 350 / ton 4.8GJ / ton
Use of sections in construction 250 / ton 2.0GJ
/ ton
EAF Section production 300 / ton 10.8GJ / ton
Re-fabrication of sections 350 / ton 4.8GJ / ton
Section recovery via deconstruction 100 /
ton 0.4GJ / ton
Section recovery via demolition 50 / ton 0.4GJ /
ton
Landfill of sections 50 / ton 1.3GJ / ton
3Result for steel section life cycle
4Question Why is there not more section reuse?
Shift from recycling to reuse, total recovery
rate held constant at 99
Benchmark scenario Worst case - no recycling ,
no reuse 1050 / 37GJ per ton of steel section
over whole life cycle
5Assignment for Wednesday, 15 April Q Why is
there not more section reuse? Answer in less than
100 words. Email answer to geyer_at_bren.ucsb.edu
(Subject Section reuse) before Wed, 15
April. There is no wrong or right answer, only
strong or weak arguments.
Reading for Wednesday, April 15 Geyer R,
Jackson T (2004) Supply Loops and their
Constraints The Industrial Ecology of Recycling
and Reuse, California Management Review 46(2),
55-73 Posted on course website as Geyer
Jackson 2004.
6Reiskin 2000 Servicizing the Chemical Supply Chain
Q What is servicizing?
A Manufacturing enterprises shifting from a
product-focus to a service-focus.
Q How does servicizing decrease environmental
impact?
A Has the potential to dematerialize the supply
chain.
Q What are the two necessary preconditions for
servicizing?
A Function-to-volume ratio not fixed, shift from
selling products to services possible.
Q How large is the ratio of chemical management
costs to purchase costs?
A Can range ranges from 11 to 101.
Q Why are chemical management costs so high?
A Specialized transport, storage, EHS,
liability, handling, and waste management.
Q What are the two ways of reducing chemical
management costs?
A Manage chemicals more efficiently, reduce the
volume of chemicals used.
Q Why are chemicals not managed well?
A Not management focus, no internal expertise,
conflicting buyer/supplier incentives
Q What is the linchpin of CMS?
A Compensation of suppliers is not related to
volume sold.
7Strategy to reduce environmental impact Increase
input productivity
y amount of output x amount of input
Input
Process
Output
8Strategy to reduce environmental impact Increase
input productivity
Input
Process
Output
Problem Supplier has economic disincentive to
increase customers input productivity
9Supplier Customer Relationship Industrial
Ecology Perspective
Production process
Direct materials
Economic output
Indirect materials
Wastes emissions
Low-entropy energy
High-entropy energy
Supplier
Customer
10Supplier contracts and input productivity
Producer of yConsumer of x
Output quantity y
Input quantity x
(e.g. of doors)
(e.g. gallon of paint)
Input productivity
- Supplier contract
- Specifies how consumer of x (customer) pays
producer of x (supplier). - Contracts can be based on a variety of criteria
- Volume unit price of paint x volume of paint
- Service unit service fee x amount of service
- Volume and service (mixed contract) unit
service fee x amount of service unit paint
fee x volume of paint
11- Reiskin et al (2000) Reducing chemical
throughput through servicizing - 2 key preconditions
- Function-to-volume ratio (productivity) of
material is not constant - Supplier able to change business model from
selling material into selling service
- Motivation for supplier
- Building stronger relationship with customer
- Knowledge about the needs of the customer gives
competitive advantage
- Motivation for customer
- Cost of chemical use typically far exceeds
purchase cost (large savings potential) - Direct access to expertise of the chemical
producer - Less resources diverted from core competencies
12Volume-based contract and constant input
productivity
Input quantity x
Output quantity y
(e.g. of doors)
(e.g. gallons of paint)
Input productivity
Supplier profits
Customer profits
Sell more
Incentives aligned!
Economic driver regarding input x
Use more
13Volume-based contract and constant input
productivity
- Paint/door example
- Supplier is paid per gallon of paint
- Input productivity fixed (constant amount of
paint per door) - The economic incentives of supplier and customer
are aligned - Customer Sell more doors, i.e. use more paint
- Supplier Sell more paint
- Other examples
- Manufacturer and wholesaler
- Wholesaler and retailer
14Volume-based contract and variable input
productivity
Input quantity x
Output quantity y
(e.g. doors)
(e.g. paint)
y is not a fixed function of x
Supplier profits
Customer profits
Sell more
Conflicting incentives!
Economic driver regarding input x
Use less
15Volume-based contract and variable input
productivity
- Paint/door example
- Supplier is paid per gallon of paint
- Productivity of paint can be increased
- The economic incentives of supplier and customer
are conflicting - Customer Sell more doors using less paint
- Supplier Sell more paint
- Other examples
- Direct materials Manufacturing yield of
materials (prompt scrap) - Indirect materials Solvents, lubricants,
cleaning agents, packaging - This is the standard situation for direct and
indirect material suppliers
16Service-based contract and variable input
productivity
Input quantity x
Output quantity y
(e.g. doors)
(e.g. paint)
y is not a fixed function of x
Supplier profits
Customer profits
Use less
Incentives stillnot aligned!
Economic driver regarding input x
Indifferent
17Service-based contract and variable input
productivity
- Paint/door example
- Supplier is paid per of painted doors
- Productivity of paint can be increased
- The economic incentives of supplier and customer
are not aligned - Customer Sell more doors, ignore amount of
paint used - Supplier Use less paint per door
- Potential issues
- Customer may be wasteful with the paint, since
not part of his costs - Customer may not be interested in increasing the
paint productivity - Supplier needs to know how many doors where
painted
18Mixed contract and variable input productivity
Input quantity x
Output quantity y
(e.g. doors)
(e.g. paint)
y is not a fixed function of x
Supplier profits
Customer profits
Use less
Economic driver regarding input x
Incentives aligned!
Use less
19Service-based contract and variable input
productivity
- Paint/door example
- Supplier paid per painted door only
- The economic incentives of supplier and customer
are not quite aligned - Customer Customer is indifferent with respect
to paint use - Supplier Use less paint per painted door
Mixed contract and variable input productivity
- Paint/door example
- Supplier paid per painted door and gallon of
paint - The economic incentives of supplier and customer
are now aligned - Customer Use less paint per painted door
- Supplier Use less paint per painted door
- Paint fee needs to be ,
to leave supplier incentive in place - Pain fee needs to be large enough to be working
as customer incentive
20- Reiskin et al (2000) Reducing chemical
throughput through servicizing - Challenges
- Difficulty of transferring such a complex task
as chemicals management to a supplier - Individual and organizational resistance to
change - Increase in interdependency between supplier and
customer - May be regarded as outsourcing (including job
losses etc.)
Summary
- Goal of servicizing Increase productivity of
input materials (direct or indirect) - Obstacle Volume-based contracts gives suppliers
incentive to sell more - Response Contracts based on service rather than
volume - Danger Customer could now loose incentive to
reduce material inputs - Solution Find contracts and business models
that align supplier and customer
incentives in the best possible way