Materials Availability and the Supply Chain: Risks, Effects, and Responses

Supply chain stakeholders should be aware of the stresses that supply chains place on materials use and the vulnerability of the supply base for that material to change. The question of materials availability is an issue that has been addressed many times over the past 200 years by scientists, engi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alonso, Elisa, Field, Frank, Gregory, Jeremy, Kirchain, Randolph
Format: Working Paper
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/35728
_version_ 1811071580593192960
author Alonso, Elisa
Field, Frank
Gregory, Jeremy
Kirchain, Randolph
author_facet Alonso, Elisa
Field, Frank
Gregory, Jeremy
Kirchain, Randolph
author_sort Alonso, Elisa
collection MIT
description Supply chain stakeholders should be aware of the stresses that supply chains place on materials use and the vulnerability of the supply base for that material to change. The question of materials availability is an issue that has been addressed many times over the past 200 years by scientists, engineers and economists, and it is an issue with many levels of complexity. This document examines the question of materials vulnerability, or conversely materials availability, from the perspective of a supply chain decision-maker. Specifically, it addresses four elements of this question: (1) Outcomes: What types of changes can be observed in supply chains as a result of limited materials availability? (2) Mechanisms: What can cause supply chains to face limited raw materials availability? (3) Metrics: How can supply chain decision-makers screen for materials availability vulnerability? (4) Strategies: How can supply chains adapt to become more resilient to potential limited materials availability? This paper, through the use of detailed case analyses, suggests that there are specific outcomes – technological, operational, and geographic – which can be expected within supply chains when limitations on materials emerge and that at least two mechanisms can drive limited access to materials. These results are complemented with an examination of metrics to diagnose vulnerability and a preliminary discussion of preventative prescriptions for the supply chain.
first_indexed 2024-09-23T08:53:24Z
format Working Paper
id mit-1721.1/35728
institution Massachusetts Institute of Technology
last_indexed 2024-09-23T08:53:24Z
publishDate 2007
record_format dspace
spelling mit-1721.1/357282019-04-10T09:58:35Z Materials Availability and the Supply Chain: Risks, Effects, and Responses Alonso, Elisa Field, Frank Gregory, Jeremy Kirchain, Randolph resource scarcity supply chain metrics case studies cobalt copper Supply chain stakeholders should be aware of the stresses that supply chains place on materials use and the vulnerability of the supply base for that material to change. The question of materials availability is an issue that has been addressed many times over the past 200 years by scientists, engineers and economists, and it is an issue with many levels of complexity. This document examines the question of materials vulnerability, or conversely materials availability, from the perspective of a supply chain decision-maker. Specifically, it addresses four elements of this question: (1) Outcomes: What types of changes can be observed in supply chains as a result of limited materials availability? (2) Mechanisms: What can cause supply chains to face limited raw materials availability? (3) Metrics: How can supply chain decision-makers screen for materials availability vulnerability? (4) Strategies: How can supply chains adapt to become more resilient to potential limited materials availability? This paper, through the use of detailed case analyses, suggests that there are specific outcomes – technological, operational, and geographic – which can be expected within supply chains when limitations on materials emerge and that at least two mechanisms can drive limited access to materials. These results are complemented with an examination of metrics to diagnose vulnerability and a preliminary discussion of preventative prescriptions for the supply chain. 2007-01-17T13:44:03Z 2007-01-17T13:44:03Z 2007-01-17T13:44:03Z Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/35728 839554 bytes application/pdf application/pdf
spellingShingle resource scarcity
supply chain
metrics
case studies
cobalt
copper
Alonso, Elisa
Field, Frank
Gregory, Jeremy
Kirchain, Randolph
Materials Availability and the Supply Chain: Risks, Effects, and Responses
title Materials Availability and the Supply Chain: Risks, Effects, and Responses
title_full Materials Availability and the Supply Chain: Risks, Effects, and Responses
title_fullStr Materials Availability and the Supply Chain: Risks, Effects, and Responses
title_full_unstemmed Materials Availability and the Supply Chain: Risks, Effects, and Responses
title_short Materials Availability and the Supply Chain: Risks, Effects, and Responses
title_sort materials availability and the supply chain risks effects and responses
topic resource scarcity
supply chain
metrics
case studies
cobalt
copper
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/35728
work_keys_str_mv AT alonsoelisa materialsavailabilityandthesupplychainriskseffectsandresponses
AT fieldfrank materialsavailabilityandthesupplychainriskseffectsandresponses
AT gregoryjeremy materialsavailabilityandthesupplychainriskseffectsandresponses
AT kirchainrandolph materialsavailabilityandthesupplychainriskseffectsandresponses