Abstract

Many supply chains have taken action to consider the principles of sustainability in their business over the past two decades. However, addressing sustainability is still a challenge due to imposing some restrictions. This could be more challenging in a food supply chain because of consuming a large amount of natural resources and its connection to public health. Regarding this significance, this research develops a mechanism to integrate all the primary functions of a meat supply chain given three pillars of sustainability: (i) cost, (ii) social aspect, and (iii) environmental aspect. To this end, we develop a three-objective mathematical formulation to integrate supplier selection, production planning, and product distribution in a meat supply chain. This study also identifies criteria representing suppliers’ impact on the environment and utilizes a Stochastic Analytic Hierarchy Process (SAHP) and TOPSIS (Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution) methods to gauge that impact and evaluate suppliers’ scores. Furthermore, a solution method is designed based on the Normalized Normal Constraint method to generate Pareto-optimal solutions. Lastly, we apply the developed mathematical formulation and the solution methodology using a numerical study inspired by a real case in Ontario, Canada. The results demonstrate that the developed solution methodology can generate diverse and practical Pareto-optimal solutions in which social and environmental aspects could be improved significantly by incurring a minor extra cost.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call