Lakeshia L. Smith
TLMT 441 I001 Win 15
American Public University
Professor Carmen Mousel
February 21, 2015
Week 13
Question 1.
Going green is an important approach for companies within the supply chain, emerging regulation and standards for cost reduction. Repackaging materials, reducing fuel usage and carbon dioxide, and recycling are great ways to contribute towards going green. The concept of greening the supply chain is reducing the carbon footprint. The carbon foot- print is greenhouse emission or carbon dioxide amounts produced from individuals, organizations, or used in manufacturing of products. “Green Supply Chin Management refers to the alignment of sourcing manufacturing, distribution, transportation, and remanufacturing/recycling process with the goal of reducing a company’s carbon footprint (Blanchard, 2010, Pg.211).” For a greener supply chain, carbon diagnostics and assessments help identify gaps to determine greener performance indicators. Carbon asset management offers immediate opportunities to reduce carbon emissions and provide energy savings. Functional optimization, internal horizontal integration, and collaborative end-to-end-optimization are important factors to help reduce greenhouse gas emission (GHG) with coordinating carbon reduction efforts and allow supply chain partners to participate in green initiatives.
Green designs and environmentally friendly strategies are also adopted in the supply chain. Within warehouses and distribution centers, energy conservation strategies to help targets reducing energy consumption. Low voltage lighting, and conduct regular facility inspections to indentify environmental gaps, optimizing routes to reduce loads and fewer trips would also contribute towards a greener supply chain. Greener transportation could use opportunities to reduce carbon emission with less fuel consumption and transportation idle time. Launching green initiatives to reduce