2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(471d) A Quantitative Framework Towards Managing Risks and Disruptions in Energy and Manufacturing Supply Chains
Authors
To this end, we present an first effort towards a quantitative decision-aiding framework to identify trade-offs and leverage synergies among economic, resilience, and sustainability objectives for energy and manufacturing supply chains. The framework encompasses: (1) partial and complete failure of network components; (2) consequences of cascading disruptions on network performance and planning; and (3) dynamic modeling to gauge the evolution of network performance over multiple time horizons. The capabilities of the proposed methodology are demonstrated by examining the performance of a distribution network under demand and capacity disruptions [3]. A multi-objective optimization problem is formulated to capture trade-offs among economic (transportation and holding costs), resilience (stored inventories), and service level (fulfilled demand) objectives. Furthermore, a sensitivity analysis is presented to determine the effect of specified service levels on economic and resilience performance. (250 words)
References
[1]. El-Halwagi, M. M., Sengupta, D., Pistikopoulos, E. N., Sammons, J., Eljack, F., & Kazi, M.-K. (2020). Disaster-Resilient Design of Manufacturing Facilities Through Process Integration: Principal Strategies, Perspectives, and Research Challenges. Frontiers in Sustainability, 1.
[2]. Iakovou, E., & White, C. (2020). How to build more secure, resilient, next-gen US supply chains. Brookings Institute TechStream; https://www.brookings.edu/techstream/how-to-build-more-secure-resilient-next-gen-u-s-supply-chains/ .
[3]. Ivanov, D., Pavlov, A., & Sokolov, B. (2014). Optimal distribution (re)planning in a centralized multi-stage supply network under conditions of the ripple effect and structure dynamics. European Journal of Operational Research, 237(2), 758â770.