How operationalizing supply chain sustainability drives business
Operationalizing sustainability is critical as most carbon emissions in companies are found within the supply chain. As new pressures emerge to reduce environmental impacts, supply chain practitioners are eager to know how their organizations plan to address these issues. Deborah Dull, Vice President and Global Supply Chain Sustainability Leader at Genpact, and Josué Velázquez Martínez, Director, Sustainable Supply Chain & LIFT research Labs at MIT, join Polly Mitchell-Guthrie, VP of Industry Outreach and Thought Leadership at Kinaxis, to discuss how making sustainability operational provides critical data to inform business and supply chain decisions that fuel growth while making a positive impact on the planet.
- Deborah is currently working on introducing carbon data into planning and operational systems to build carbon knowledge (also known as carbon intuition) into a supply chain professionals’ day-to-day life. This will give them a better idea of their supply chain’s current environmental impacts. She says, “We often know what the cogs are of something or how long it takes a container ship from China to the Port of LA, but we don't know the carbon emissions of that lane.” [9:02]
- Josué says a major challenge for companies looking to solve sustainability by following aggregate methods to estimate emissions may not be making the best decisions based on that information. He says it’s important to look at the big picture to provide strategic solutions involving accurate metrics and transparency. [11:44]
- When looking towards the future of sustainability both Deborah and Josué are optimistic. Deborah says achieving sustainability within the supply chain is possible because the tools exist to do it and supply chain practitioners are experts at problem solving. Josué says sustainability isn’t just a simple problem that needs to be solved now – it’s an issue that we need to resolve for the future. He encourages supply chain practitioners to keep their eyes open for vulnerabilities within their supply chains that may make it unsustainable. [19:10]
Explore more about the work Deborah is doing at Genpact by following her on LinkedIn.
Discover more about Josué’s work at MIT by following him on LinkedIn and Twitter
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