This site depends on JavaScript to run. Please enable it or upgrade to a modern browser that supports it.

Our site is currently undergoing maintenance but will be back shortly. Thank you for your patience.

 

ASCM Insights

Toward a Circular Supply Chain: Shifts in SCOR Supply Chain Habits

title

Note: This blog post is part of a five-part series called “Toward a Circular Supply Chain: Shifts in SCOR Supply Chain Habits.” Keep an eye out for future posts.

Today’s global wealth has been built with the power of a linear economy, which is supported by linear supply chains around the world. These supply chains move materials from extraction to refining and processing operations; to a series of manufacturing plants; through ports, warehouses and cross-docks; and finally to the point of use. Most of this movement happens in a one-way flow.

Economy shifts from linear to circular

A circular economy offers a different strategy to achieve an organization’s goal — through fully exploiting material and resource value and truly squeezing out every bit of value. Instead of materials flowing in a line for one-time use in a linear economy, materials instead loop through many life cycles indefinitely in a circular economy. This is a dramatic shift.

These materials can loop within the same company, among different companies and across multiple industries. These loops produce value for both buyers and sellers. They connect the waste and by-product outputs from the seller’s processes to the buyer’s raw material needs as process inputs, creating a loop.

Imagine: All waste and process by-products in the world will become the raw materials and inputs needed by all the processes in the world. As a result, the maintenance, refurbishment and remanufacturing industries will dramatically increase in size and value. These circular business models will collectively add $4.5 trillion to the global economy by 2030.

Supply chain shifts from linear to circular

To realize this value, effective supply chains across the global economy are required. Supply chain habits used in today’s linear economy will shift in many ways. Some shifts will be small; others will be dramatic. This blog series explores a few of the supply chain habits that will shift as our global economy accelerates the worldwide shift from linear to circular.

The supply chain habits that make up our ways of working have already shifted throughout the four industrial revolutions in the last 250 years, and new economic models have emerged from them. Today’s supply chain habits are captured in the continuously updating Supply Chain Operations Reference (SCOR) model, which has led the global supply chain community since 1996. This resource pulls together a practitioner’s reference model that covers performance, processes, practices and people.

SCOR shifts from linear to circular

The process steps of the SCOR model describe a linear model: flow of information, money and goods up and down a linear supply chain. Imagine if the information, money and goods instead flowed throughout endlessly looping supply networks and industrial ecosystems in an omnidirectional value exchange.

During the transition to a circular economy, supply chains will be impacted and will need to shift their habits and capabilities. These shifts will eventually be reflected in the SCOR model to anchor discussions across the global supply chain community. This series explores a few examples of potential impacts to the SCOR model, including shifts in existing habits and shifts in additional habits. 

As resources circulate among networks and ecosystems, supply chains around the world will be challenged to shift their habits to support new business models. This will unlock the next major economic revolution which already is unfolding globally with Industry 4.0. The increased complexity that will be managed by global supply chains will be represented by future SCOR model versions.

Join the circular supply chain community

  • Find out about the latest news and events about circular supply chains around the world by following this LinkedIn page.
  • Join a dedicated space to discuss how supply chain can accelerate the transition to a circular economy in this LinkedIn group.

About the Author

Deborah Dull Vice President of Supply Chain Sustainability, Genpact

Deborah Dull is ASCM’s global influencer for circular supply chains. She provides thought leadership regarding using circular strategies to achieve supply chain goals, focusing on building relevant digital industrial supply chain products that pave the way to a circular economy. Dull is also vice president of supply chain sustainability at Genpact.

Use of Cookies

We use cookies to personalize our website’s content and ads, to provide social media features and to analyze our traffic. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media, advertising and analytics partners who may combine it with other information that you’ve provided to them or that they’ve collected from your use of their services. You consent to our cookies if you continue to use our website.