The ratio compares sustainable resources to total resources required ('taken in') to operate a supply chain and resources required for related overhead. All processes in a supply chain may require resources. For example: energy resources are required to ship finished goods through the distribution network and to climate control warehouses. Packaging materials are required to ship to end-customers, etcetera.
Intake resources include, but are not limited to:
Materials | Energy | Services |
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The sustainability ratio of services acquired may need to be provided by individual service providers. Consider including this data requirement in (future revisions of) service contracts.
Intake Sustainability Ratio | |||
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Any supply chain requires resources to operate. A higher ratio of sustainable resources indicates that a supply chain utilizes a higher portion of renewable resources, thus reducing the risk of resource depletion.
ID | Name | Level | x |
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G4 | Manage Sustainability | 2 | G4 |
G406 | Report and Communicate | 3 | G406 |
S0 | Strategic Sourcing | 2 | S0 |
S004 | Identify Supply Sources | 3 | S004 |
S006 | Negotiate | 3 | S006 |
S1 | Source-to-Replenish | 2 | S1 |
S2 | Source-to-Order | 2 | S2 |
S3 | Source-to-Engineering-Order | 2 | S3 |
M1 | Make-to-Stock | 2 | M1 |
M2 | Make-to-Order | 2 | M2 |
M3 | Make-To-Engineering-Order | 2 | M3 |
M4 | Re-Make | 2 | M4 |
D1 | Deliver-From-Stock | 2 | D1 |
D2 | Deliver-to-Order | 2 | D2 |
D3 | Deliver-To-Engineering-Order | 2 | D3 |
D4 | Deliver Returns | 2 | D4 |