Abstract

Parts obsolescence has an important impact on the product life cycle, the manufacturing system and the environment leading to operational, logistical, reliability and cost implications. While current resolution models are cost-oriented, multiple studies have revealed that technological obsolescence is strongly involved in the electronic waste problem. In this study, based on academic literature and expert opinions, a sustainable decision framework for obsolescence resolution strategy (ORS) selection is proposed. It consists of economic, environmental, social and technological dimensions, integrating a total of fifteen criteria. Multicriteria decision-making (MCDM) methods are suggested to select the most sustainable solution. A case study was performed where the criteria weights and the alternatives performance were judged by five experts from the fields of environment, economy, human resources and obsolescence and operations management. Results from different MCDM methods were compared to the actual decision to evaluate their effectiveness. Using the suggested framework improved the decision process as integrating sustainability had a drastic impact on the selected strategy and consequently on the company’s performance. In addition to its managerial insights, this paper provides a new research perspective to sustainable and robust obsolescence management to effectively handle the increasing number and severity of obsolete components.

Highlights

  • Component obsolescence is a significant problem in our modern highly technological market

  • We develop a multicriteria decision-making framework for obsolescence resolution strategy (ORS) selection that supports the problem’s nature and complexity

  • This paper describes a sustainable multicriteria decision framework to manage obsolescence

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Summary

Introduction

Component obsolescence is a significant problem in our modern highly technological market. It is a result of the rapid evolution of technology by introducing new components with higher performance and additional features. The conflict concerns sustainment-dominated systems, which take many years to design and manufacture and are typically maintained for decades such as aircraft and submarines, as well as nowadays technological products such as computers or mobile phones. They are usually composed of “commercial off-the-shelf (COTS)” components that are highly dependent on market tendencies and technological changes. As of 2006, QTEC Solutions (an international leader in components obsolescence management) estimated that around

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