Green Supply Chain Formation Through By-Product Synergies
Status
Faculty
School
School of Economics and Business Administration
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2017
Publication / Conference / Sponsorship
IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
Description/Abstract
Many firms across the world are discovering and benefiting from the ability to identify, recover, and reuse industrial by-products from other firms in traditionally unrelated industries. We examine how the formation of a by-product synergy between two firms, in different industries, and its environmental impact, are influenced by factors such as the by-product trading price, the fixed costs of synergy formation (e.g., innovation cost), and the distinct characteristics of the two markets in which potential partners operate. We show that an incentive compatible region, which ensures a profit increase for both firms, can be characterized by an interior region of the by-product trading price, and the incentive compatible region may enlarge or shrink with the firms share of the fixed cost. Second, we find that when the firms are willing to share the synergy formation cost, higher volatility of either market could better incentivize the formation of the by-product synergy. Third, we find conditions when there exists a set of prices that are both incentive compatible and environmentally efficient.
Keywords
sustainability, Environmental issues in manufacturing, greening, manufacturing supply chain
Lasallian research
yes
Scholarly
yes
Peer Reviewed
1
DOI
10.1109/TEM.2016.2640758
Volume
64
Issue
1
First Page
70
Last Page
82
Disciplines
Business | Economics
Original Citation
Sun, J., Sabbaghi, N., & Ashton, W. (2017). Green Supply Chain Formation Through By-Product Synergies. IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management, 64(1), 70-82. doi:10.1109/TEM.2016.2640758
Repository Citation
Sun, Jiong; Sabbaghi, Navid; and Ashton, Weslynne. Green Supply Chain Formation Through By-Product Synergies (2017). IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management. 64 (1), 70-82. 10.1109/TEM.2016.2640758 [article]. https://digitalcommons.stmarys-ca.edu/school-economics-business-faculty-works/101