16 research outputs found

    Logistics in the Circular Economy: Challenges and Opportunities

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    Circular economy (CE) is a concept that has gained considerable attentionin recent years, particularly in the domain of Industrial Ecology. CE requiresproducts to be easily repaired, refurbished, remanufactured, and eventually recycled.The transition to a CE creates distinct material flows that have to be managed in an efficient and sustainable manner. Existing studies on CE tend to focus on product design, material use, and the market potential of CE products with little attention paid to the logistics challenges associated with such developments. From a logistics perspective, CE can be seen as the integrated management of forward and reverse flows of products in a supply chain. In the operations and supply chain management literature, a large body of knowledge on how to operationalize closed-loop supply chains (CLSCs) already exists and is a starting point for understanding logistics in the CE context. As with traditional forward supply chain network design, CLSC and CE supply chains also require decisions on the role of facilities, their location, their capacity allocation, and their demand and supply allocation. The CE concept does however introduce new challenges especially as circular business innovations converge to increased servitization and to more collaborative and open business models.The transition towards circular business models requires businesses to positionthemselves according to three key strategic decision-making problems, namely,(1) the extent to which the logistics network is centralized, (2) the extent to which the product is servitized, and (3) the extent to which logistics services are coordinated. This chapter presents a theoretical overview of the three trade-offs and what their potential implications are

    Studying the Evolution of the ‘Circular Economy’ Concept using Topic Modelling

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    Circular Economy has gained immense popularity for its perceived capacity to operationalise sustainable development. However, a comprehensive long-term understanding of the concept, characterising its evolution in academic literature, has not yet been provided. As a first step, we apply unsupervised topic models on academic articles to identify patterns in concept evolution. We generate topics using LDA, and investigate topic prevalence over time. We determine the optimal number of topics for the model (k) through coherence scorings and evaluate the topic model results by expert judgement. Specifying k as 20, we find topics in the literature focussing on resources, business models, process modelling, conceptual research and policies. We identify a shift in the research focus of contemporary literature, moving away from the Chinese predominance to a European perspective, along with a shift towards micro level interventions, e.g., circular design, business models, around 2014-2015.</p
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