Modeling a green inventory routing problem for perishable products with horizontal collaboration. Soysal, M., Bloemhof-Ruwaard, J. M., Haijema, R., & van der Vorst, J. Computers and Operations Research, 89:168–182, 2017.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
Increasing concerns on energy use, emissions and food waste require advanced models for food logistics management. Our interest in this study is to analyse the benefits of horizontal collaboration related to perishability, energy use (CO2 emissions) from transportation operations and logistics costs in the Inventory Routing Problem (IRP) with multiple suppliers and customers by developing a decision support model that can address these concerns. The proposed model allows to analyse the benefits of horizontal collaboration in the IRP with respect to several Key Performance Indicators, i.e., emissions, driving time, total cost comprised of routing (fuel and wage cost), inventory and waste cost given an uncertain demand. A case study on the distribution operations of two suppliers, where the first supplier produces figs and the second supplier produces cherries, shows the applicability of the model to a real-life problem. The results show that horizontal collaboration among the suppliers contributes to the decrease of aggregated total cost and emissions in the logistics system. The obtained gains are sensitive to the changes in parameters such as supplier size or maximum product shelf life. According to experiments, the aggregated total cost benefit from cooperation varies in a range of about 4–24% and the aggregated total emission benefit varies in a range of about 8–33% compared to the case where horizontal collaboration does not exist.
@article{soysal_modeling_2017,
	title = {Modeling a green inventory routing problem for perishable products with horizontal collaboration},
	volume = {89},
	issn = {0305-0548},
	doi = {10.1016/j.cor.2016.02.003},
	abstract = {Increasing concerns on energy use, emissions and food waste require advanced models for food logistics management. Our interest in this study is to analyse the benefits of horizontal collaboration related to perishability, energy use (CO2 emissions) from transportation operations and logistics costs in the Inventory Routing Problem (IRP) with multiple suppliers and customers by developing a decision support model that can address these concerns. The proposed model allows to analyse the benefits of horizontal collaboration in the IRP with respect to several Key Performance Indicators, i.e., emissions, driving time, total cost comprised of routing (fuel and wage cost), inventory and waste cost given an uncertain demand. A case study on the distribution operations of two suppliers, where the first supplier produces figs and the second supplier produces cherries, shows the applicability of the model to a real-life problem. The results show that horizontal collaboration among the suppliers contributes to the decrease of aggregated total cost and emissions in the logistics system. The obtained gains are sensitive to the changes in parameters such as supplier size or maximum product shelf life. According to experiments, the aggregated total cost benefit from cooperation varies in a range of about 4–24\% and the aggregated total emission benefit varies in a range of about 8–33\% compared to the case where horizontal collaboration does not exist.},
	language = {English},
	journal = {Computers and Operations Research},
	author = {Soysal, M. and Bloemhof-Ruwaard, J. M. and Haijema, R. and van der Vorst, J.G.A.J.},
	year = {2017},
	pages = {168--182}
}

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