Complex resource supply chains display higher resilience to simulated climate shocks
Date
Authors
Lim-Camacho, Lilly
Plagányi, Éva E.
Crimp, Steven
Hodgkinson, Jane H.
Hobday, A.J.
Howden, Mark
Loechel, Barton
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Global resource supply chains deliver products such as fish, rice and minerals from producers to consumers around the world, linking disparate regions and economies. These supply chains are increasingly exposed to the impacts of a changing climate, yet receive little attention relative to the study of the production phase. Too often, business learns from experience if and how their supply chains can withstand and recover from climate shocks with little insight on proactively developing climate resilient supply chains. We use a network-based simulation
approach to estimate the resilience of supply chains, particularly to disruption experienced during climaterelated
extreme events. We consider supply chain examples from three Australian resource industries – fisheries,
agriculture and mining – that have experienced climate shocks in recent years. We derive four supply chain
indices – evenness, resilience, continuity of supply and climate resilience – to estimate the performance of simple
and complex supply chains in each industry. As with ecological systems, we show that complex supply chains
with a large number of nodes and links are more resilient to disruption. Critically, all chains, regardless of their
complexity, will have diminished resilience as climate disruptions become more frequent. This highlights the
importance of considering the broader economic benefits of diversified chains, leading to risk reduction and
improved design post-disruption. It also reinforces the importance of a systems approach to risk management in
supply chains, particularly in considering adaptation options for addressing direct and indirect impacts on the
chain as well as the global challenge of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Description
Citation
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Source
Global Environmental Change - Human and Policy Dimensions
Type
Book Title
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Access Statement
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Restricted until
2099-12-31