Operational and tactical levers to reduce carbon emissions in temperature-sensitive freight transportation for pharmaceuticals

Carbon emissions are surging worldwide, with mounting political targets and shareholder pressure driving decarbonization efforts across all sectors. The temperature-sensitive pharmaceutical industry is particularly carbon-intensive, partly due to its reliance on carbon-intensive air transport. As...

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Main Authors: Lehmann, Jonas, Winkenbach, Matthias, Janjevic, Milena
Format: Technical Report
Language:en_US
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/151744
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author Lehmann, Jonas
Winkenbach, Matthias
Janjevic, Milena
author_facet Lehmann, Jonas
Winkenbach, Matthias
Janjevic, Milena
author_sort Lehmann, Jonas
collection MIT
description Carbon emissions are surging worldwide, with mounting political targets and shareholder pressure driving decarbonization efforts across all sectors. The temperature-sensitive pharmaceutical industry is particularly carbon-intensive, partly due to its reliance on carbon-intensive air transport. As pharmaceutical companies predominantly outsource transportation services, they have become increasingly interested in understanding how to minimize emissions from shipping their goods. Consequently, we introduce a carbon estimation and allocation tool tailored to cold-chain logistics for pharmaceuticals, addressing several unique aspects not considered in previous studies, such as incorporating network-level emissions for cooling container provision and a more granular approach for estimating transportation emissions. Applying the tool to a series of case studies, we discover that cooling containers with a lower weight and a higher ratio of usable interior volume to outer container volume have a low r carbon footprint, primarily due to reduced emissions from airfreight. In addition, the optimal container choice depends on the shipment size to maximize the container fill rate. Moreover, the provisioning of cooling containers to alleviate network imbalances via maritime or airfreight should be thoroughly assessed, as it may significantly increase a shipment’s carbon emissions.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1517442023-08-09T03:44:40Z Operational and tactical levers to reduce carbon emissions in temperature-sensitive freight transportation for pharmaceuticals Lehmann, Jonas Winkenbach, Matthias Janjevic, Milena supply chain management logistics emissions reduction cold chain pharmaceutical sustainability freight transportation supply chain Carbon emissions are surging worldwide, with mounting political targets and shareholder pressure driving decarbonization efforts across all sectors. The temperature-sensitive pharmaceutical industry is particularly carbon-intensive, partly due to its reliance on carbon-intensive air transport. As pharmaceutical companies predominantly outsource transportation services, they have become increasingly interested in understanding how to minimize emissions from shipping their goods. Consequently, we introduce a carbon estimation and allocation tool tailored to cold-chain logistics for pharmaceuticals, addressing several unique aspects not considered in previous studies, such as incorporating network-level emissions for cooling container provision and a more granular approach for estimating transportation emissions. Applying the tool to a series of case studies, we discover that cooling containers with a lower weight and a higher ratio of usable interior volume to outer container volume have a low r carbon footprint, primarily due to reduced emissions from airfreight. In addition, the optimal container choice depends on the shipment size to maximize the container fill rate. Moreover, the provisioning of cooling containers to alleviate network imbalances via maritime or airfreight should be thoroughly assessed, as it may significantly increase a shipment’s carbon emissions. SkyCell AG 2023-08-08T17:42:23Z 2023-08-08T17:42:23Z 2023-08-08 Technical Report https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/151744 en_US application/pdf
spellingShingle supply chain management
logistics
emissions reduction
cold chain
pharmaceutical
sustainability
freight
transportation
supply chain
Lehmann, Jonas
Winkenbach, Matthias
Janjevic, Milena
Operational and tactical levers to reduce carbon emissions in temperature-sensitive freight transportation for pharmaceuticals
title Operational and tactical levers to reduce carbon emissions in temperature-sensitive freight transportation for pharmaceuticals
title_full Operational and tactical levers to reduce carbon emissions in temperature-sensitive freight transportation for pharmaceuticals
title_fullStr Operational and tactical levers to reduce carbon emissions in temperature-sensitive freight transportation for pharmaceuticals
title_full_unstemmed Operational and tactical levers to reduce carbon emissions in temperature-sensitive freight transportation for pharmaceuticals
title_short Operational and tactical levers to reduce carbon emissions in temperature-sensitive freight transportation for pharmaceuticals
title_sort operational and tactical levers to reduce carbon emissions in temperature sensitive freight transportation for pharmaceuticals
topic supply chain management
logistics
emissions reduction
cold chain
pharmaceutical
sustainability
freight
transportation
supply chain
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/151744
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AT janjevicmilena operationalandtacticalleverstoreducecarbonemissionsintemperaturesensitivefreighttransportationforpharmaceuticals