Additive manufacturing and sustainability: an exploratory study of the advantages and challenges
Journal article, 2016

The emergence of advanced manufacturing technologies, coupled with consumer demands for more customised products and services, are causing shifts in the scale and distribution of manufacturing. In this paper, consideration is given to the role of one such advanced manufacturing process technology: additive manufacturing. The consequences of adopting this novel production technology on industrial sustainability are not well understood and this exploratory study draws on publically available data to provide insights into the impacts of additive manufacturing on sustainability. Benefits are found to exist across the product and material life cycles through product and process redesign, improvements to material input processing, make-to-order component and product manufacturing, and closing the loop. As an immature technology, there are substantial challenges to these benefits being realised at each stage of the life cycle. This paper summarises these advantages and challenges, and discusses the implications of additive manufacturing on sustainability in terms of the sources of innovation, business models, and the configuration of value chains.

Resource efficiency

Product life cycle

3D printing

Additive manufacturing

Value chain reconfiguration

Industrial sustainability

Author

Simon J. Ford

University of Cambridge

Mélanie Despeisse

University of Cambridge

Journal of Cleaner Production

0959-6526 (ISSN)

Vol. 137 1573-1587

Subject Categories

Mechanical Engineering

Environmental Engineering

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Areas of Advance

Production

DOI

10.1016/j.jclepro.2016.04.150

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4/8/2021 6