Reducing the environmental impact of food products logistics systems
Doctoral thesis, 2016

This thesis addresses how to reduce two types of environmental impact generated in logistics systems: transport’s impact on climate and food waste. In mitigating both these types of environmental impact, actors in food supply chains (FSC)—producers, wholesalers, and retailers—play important roles, for both causes of environmental impacts and improvement actions to moderate them emerge within their logistics systems. Therefore, the purpose of this research is to explore how actors in FSCs can reduce the environmental impact of their logistics systems in terms of both transport’s impact on climate and food waste. The research focuses on two aspects of FSCs that can affect those impacts and hinder the implementation of improvement actions to reduce them: FSC characteristics (e.g., shelf life and temperature regime), which create conditions for food logistics systems, and performance variables (e.g., requirements regarding lead times and flexibility), which can conflict with actors’ capacity to reduce environmental impacts in their logistics systems. The thesis is a compilation of five studies: (1) a review of how food logistics literature has addressed food products and actors in FSCs in logistics research; (2) a study of primary and industrial producers that identifies FSC characteristics that can be used to describe logistics systems; (3) a study of a wholesaler’s logistics system that proposes a framework for reducing transport’s impact on climate in light of flow characteristics including FSC characteristics; (4) a study of an industrial producer’s logistics system that proposes another framework, namely one for comparing improvement actions that can reduce transport’s impact on climate; and (5) a study of industrial producers, wholesalers, and retailers that identifies improvement actions that can reduce the amount of food waste. Empirical data collection for the thesis was performed with case studies. The results highlight eight FSC characteristics, regarding both supply chain flow and products, which can be used to describe actors’ food products logistics systems. The results further clarify how those FSC characteristics and logistics performance variables influence the two types of environmental impact. To explain how actors in FSCs can reduce transport’s impact on climate, two frameworks are developed: one for evaluating shipments’ potential to lower transport’s impact on climate, and the other for selecting improvement actions that can efficiently mitigate that impact. By extension, the thesis next identifies, describes, and analyses nine improvement actions to reduce food waste. Lastly, the thesis compares the two types of environmental impact, first in terms of how the FSC characteristics influence them, and second how they can be reduced by different improvement actions. The thesis contributes to the fields of green logistics and food logistics by explaining how FSC characteristics influence both types of environmental impact, as well as by analysing and comparing improvement actions in food logistics systems. Its contributions to management include frameworks that can help actors in FSCs to identify, evaluate, and create suitable conditions for improvement actions in their logistics systems.

food waste

food logistics

green logistics

food logistics systems

food supply chains

Transport’s impact on climate

Vasa C, Vera Sandbergs allé 8
Opponent: Professor David Grant, University of Hull

Author

Kristina Liljestrand

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Service Management and Logistics

Using a transport portfolio framework to reduce carbon footprint

International Journal of Logistics Management,;Vol. 26(2015)p. 296-312

Journal article

Capturing food logistics: a literature review and research agenda

International Journal of Logistics Research and Applications,;Vol. 18(2015)p. 16-34

Journal article

Improvement actions for reducing transport’s impact on climate: A shipper’s perspective

Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment,;Vol. 48(2016)p. 393-407

Journal article

Liljestrand, K. (2016), “Logistics solutions for reducing food waste”

Liljestrand, K. and Halldórsson, Á. (2015), “Characteristics of food supply chains: The case of seafood producers”

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Transport

Subject Categories

Transport Systems and Logistics

ISBN

978-91-7597-489-7

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 4170

Publisher

Chalmers

Vasa C, Vera Sandbergs allé 8

Opponent: Professor David Grant, University of Hull

More information

Created

10/12/2016