Title: The Impact of Oil Price on Supply Chain Strategies
1The Impact of Oil Price on Supply Chain Strategies
- David Simchi-Levi
- E-mail dslevi_at_mit.edu
Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Chief Science Officer ILOG
2Traditional Business Strategies
- Lean Manufacturing
- Outsourcing and offshoring
- JIT
- Quick and frequent deliveries
- These strategies are based on assumptions of
- Cheap oil price
- Low labor cost in developing countries
3Increase in Logistics Costs
15 increase
- Rising energy prices
- Rail capacity pressure
- Truck driver shortage
- Security requirements
4Total US Logistics Costs 1984 to 2007 ( Billions)
Total Cost
52
47
Transportation
Inventory
62
Admin
Source 19th Annual Logistics Report
5Impact of Oil Price on
- Transportation Costs
- Network Strategies
- Transportation Strategies
- Supply Chain Strategies
6US Diesel and Crude Oil Prices over time
7Relationship between Crude Oil price and Diesel
Fuel Price
Trend Line Model Diesel Retail Price(Cents per
Gallon) 2.38515Crude Oil Price(/barrel)
132.292
8Implications on crude oil price to transportation
rates
- Given the relationship in the previous slide, we
see that a 10/barrel increase in crude oil will
result in 0.24/gallon increase in diesel fuel - Standard fuel surcharge methodology is to
increase surcharge 0.01/mile for every 0.06
increase in diesel fuel - We conclude that for every 10 increase per
barrel of crude oil price, we have an additional
0.04/mile increase in transportation rates.
9Impact of Oil Price on
- Transportation Costs
- Network Strategies
- Transportation Strategies
- Supply Chain Strategies
10Impact of Oil Price on Network Strategy
- Trading off oil price for
- Inventory costs
- Facility costs
- Manufacturing costs
11Case Study 1 Oil Prices and the Logistics Network
- Manufacturer of consumer packaged goods
- Manufacturing is possible in three locations
- Philadelphia- Highest production cost
- Omaha-
- Juarez, Mexico- Lowest production cost
- 60 potential DC locations
- 888 aggregated customers
- Inbound transportation uses commercial TL
carriers - TL averages 40,000 lbs/shipment
- Outbound transportation uses a private fleet
- Private fleet averages 20,000 lbs/shipment
12Case Study - Objectives
- Determine the best number and location of
distribution centers, as well assignment of
customers to DCs. - Determine the best allocation of production to
their manufacturing locations. - Understand how the optimal network would change
as oil prices fluctuate - Roughly 25 of the supply chain costs are in
transportation
13Network Visualization
14Discussion of Tradeoffs
- As crude oil price increases, transportation
costs become more important relative to
production, inventory and facility fixed costs. - Oil price vs. inventory carrying and facility
costs - Additional DCs are more attractive
- As outbound transportation becomes more
expensive, it becomes increasing important to
minimize the distance of the final leg. - Oil price vs. production costs
- Production moves nearer to demand
- Cheaper manufacturing in Mexico is offset by
higher transportation costs.
15Oil price vs. inventory carrying and facility
costs
The Tipping Point
Moving from 125/ barrel to 150/ barrel changes
the optimal number of DCs from 5 to 7. In
particular, you can think of Las Vegas being
replaced by Los Angeles, Albuquerque, and
Portland.
75/ barrel
200/ barrel
16Oil price vs. production costs
75/ barrel
200/ barrel
17Total Cost Comparison
3 increase in total cost as the price of a
barrel increases from 100 to 150
18Impact of Oil Price on
- Transportation Costs
- Network Strategies
- Transportation Strategies
- Supply Chain Strategies
19Changes in Transportation Strategy
- From JIT delivery to better utilization of
transportation capacity - Larger lot sizes shipped less frequently
- Efficient packaging to improve truck utilization
- From quick delivery to cheaper and sometimes
slower transportation modes - From air to ground
- From trucking to rail
- From dedicated to shared resources
- 3rd party carriers
- Consolidated warehouses
20Changes in transportation strategy Examples
- In 2007, S.C. Johnson truck utilization project
saved the firm 1.6 million and cut fuel use by
168,000 gallons. - The firm found that mixing loads of Winded glass
cleaner and Ziploc bag, which used to be packed
in separate loads, better utilizes truck capacity - Multiple manufacturers store their products in
ES3 giant warehouse located in York Pennsylvania
where truck loads are built and shipped to
retailers distribution centers. - An important benefit of the consolidated
warehouse is reduction in transportation costs
21Impact of Oil Price on
- Transportation Costs
- Network Strategies
- Transportation Strategies
- Supply Chain Strategies
22Changes in Supply Chain Strategy
- More Inventory
- Due to EOS and more DCs
- Emphasize on better service
- To reduce expediting costs
- Less offshoring
- To reduce total landed costs
23Sharp moves from offshoring to nearshoring
- TV manufacturer Sharp has recently started moving
manufacturing facilities from Asia to Mexico to
serve customers in North and South America. - This is driven by the need to keep shipping costs
low and time to market short. - Indeed, price of flat TV typically falls fast and
thus reducing shipping time from about 40 days,
when flat TVs were produced in Asia, to seven
days makes a big impact on bottom line.
24When to Move from Offshoring to Inshoring? --
Product Characteristics
Cost of Moving Infrastructure
H L
I
III
Inshoring Manufacturing or Assembly (TV,
Refrigerators, Appliances, Car Parts, Furniture)
Offshoring (Mobile Phone, PC)
Inshoring (Footwear, Toys)
II
L H
Transportation Impact
25Toy manufacturer is moving plants near demand
- Steiff, a privately owned German manufacturing
company of toys was part of the global
outsourcing trend when it moved around 20 of
production to low cost countries. - The objective was to cut cost and compete on
price. - Recently, this toy manufacturer started moving
production back to Germany, Portugal and Tunisia. - The reasons quality problems together with high
transportation costs associated with
manufacturing far from the key markets
26Drivers of Moving from Offshoring to Inshoring
- Oil Price
- Labor Cost
- The value of the dollar
The Average Annual Wage Increase between 2003 and
2008 in different Countries
27When to Move from Offshoring to Inshoring
Slope per pound
I
Asia
Mexico
Slope per pound
C
US
A
II
B
28Case Study 2 Sourcing Strategies
- A large floor covering manufacturer
- Hardwood, Ceramic Tile,
- Carpet, Laminate
- Challenge
- Understand how increasing labor and
transportation costs across the globe are causing
previous sourcing decisions to be altered
29Sourcing Parameters
- 37,000 SKUs
- Large range of Production Costs
- 0.01 to 300 per unit if production is in the US
- Large Range of Weights
- 0.01 to 5,000 pounds per unit
- Manufacturing options
- US Atlanta Mexico Monterey China- Shanghai
- Combination of transport modes
- Ocean Rail Truck Load
30Sourcing Analysis - 2008
China
Mexico
US
31Costs increase between 2003 2008
- Labor Costs
- US ? 15
- Mexico ? 23
- China ? 144
- Transportation Costs
- Ocean Freight ? 100
- TL/Rail ? 25
- Good estimate of the increase in rail and TL
costs - Conservative estimate of the increase in ocean
costs
32Sourcing Strategies 2003 and 2008
33Your Turn!
How to contact me David Simchi-Levidslevi_at_mit.ed
u