Title: Greening the Supply Chain
1Greening the Supply ChainPollution Prevention
for Product SystemsJohn O. SparksU.S.
Environmental Protection AgencyDesign for the
Environment Program
2Material Flows Life Cycle Concepts
Unsustainable Product Life Cycle
Stuff
Extraction conversion
Dispose
Manufacturing
Use
Discharges to air, land, water in all stages
3 OEM Supply Chains ExampleAuto Assembly
Impact
- 12,000,000 new cars/light trucks made annually
- about 20,000 parts per unit and most are
out-sourced - Total finished product is 24,000,000 tons
- Estimate about 3 lbs. non-product output per lb.
of finished product - cleaners, lubricants, scrap, process sludges,
etc. - could be much higher if process waters included
- Non-product output approximately 72,000,000 tons
- Most in the suppliers facilities
- auto company public ultimately pays for waste.
4Material Flows Life Cycle Concepts
GSC Vision Sustainable Product Life Cycle
Use Servicing Repair
Assembly Manufacturing
Inputs
Dispose
Re-manufacturing Recycling
End-of-life Disassembly
Fewer discharges to air, land, water in all stages
5Environmental Impact Potential 4 Workshops
- Reduced Electricity Demand
- 1, 880,000 1,915,000 kWh annually
- Reduced CO2 Emissions
- Transport related reductions
- 149,800 150,200 lbs. annually
- Reduced Transport Fuel Use
- 21,990 22,080 gallons annually
- Reduced Solid Waste Disposal
- 278,000 319,000 lbs. Annually
- Additional environmental opportunities
- Paint disposal reduction
- Steel scrap reduction