Circular economy implementation in operations & supply chain management: Building a pathway to business transformation
Zils, M; Howard, M; Hopkinson, P
Date: 2023
Article
Journal
Production Planning and Control
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Abstract
Our aim is to understand the circular economy (CE) transformation challenge and the synergies with
operations & supply chain management (OSCM). CE represents a major industry transformation from
linear production to circular value creation where products, components and resources are maintained
at the highest value for the longest ...
Our aim is to understand the circular economy (CE) transformation challenge and the synergies with
operations & supply chain management (OSCM). CE represents a major industry transformation from
linear production to circular value creation where products, components and resources are maintained
at the highest value for the longest period. Yet despite OSCM’s long association with reverse logistics,
the practical means of CE implementation is lacking where business transformation means systemic
innovation not incremental change. Our method is to adopt a longitudinal approach where rich data
from over 1000 senior practitioners on interactive events identifies 3 stages comprising of
identification, initiation, and implementation, and reveals why some companies move between the
stages and others become stuck. We illustrate these stages and the successful pathways used in 5
industry cases: Philips, Schweizer Bundesbahn, Renault, Ricoh, and Steelcase. Rather than develop
new tools, we present a framework for implementing CE using business elements which are grounded
in everyday practice and part of a taxonomic process that is continuously tested over time. We find
successful CE implementation requires attention to product design, underlying business models,
reverse flow management and enabling conditions (e.g. policy, finance), unlocking new sources of
circular value creation and capture. There is no one-size-fits-all model for successful initiation and
implementation of CE, but rather a continuous process of identifying value leakage and creation
opportunities, progressive initiation of pilots, evaluation of business outcomes, and ability to manage
risks associated with complexity and scaling. Our contribution views the challenge as a complex
pathway consisting of configuring CE building blocks whose business transformation hallmarks are
reflected in architectural change and systemic innovation.
Management
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2023. This version is made available under the CC-BY-NC 4.0 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/