Mitigating disruptions in a multi-echelon supply chain using adaptive ordering

被引:86
|
作者
Schmitt, Thomas G. [1 ]
Kumar, Sanjay [2 ]
Stecke, Kathryn E. [3 ]
Glover, Fred W. [4 ]
Ehlen, Mark A. [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Valparaiso Univ, Coll Business, 1909 Chapel Dr, Valparaiso, IN 46383 USA
[3] Univ Texas Dallas, Sch Management, SM 40,800 West Campbell Rd, Richardson, TX 75080 USA
[4] OptTek Syst Inc, 2241 17th St, Boulder, CO 80302 USA
[5] Sandia Natl Labs, POB 5800, Albuquerque, NM 87185 USA
关键词
Risk; Supply chain disruptions; Expediting; Inventory control; LOST-SALES; INVENTORY MANAGEMENT; LEAD-TIME; BULLWHIP; RISK; STRATEGIES; GLITCHES; BEHAVIOR; SEARCH; MODELS;
D O I
10.1016/j.omega.2016.07.004
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
Supply chains often experience significant economic losses from disruptions such as facility breakdowns, transportation mishaps, natural calamities, and intentional attacks. To help respond and recover from a disruption, we investigate adjustments in order activity across four echelons including assembly. Simulation experiments reveal that the impact of a disruption depends on its location, with costlier and longer lasting impacts occurring from disruptions at echelons close to ultimate consumption. Cost functions based on system inventory and service can be quite ill-behaved in these complex problem settings. Expediting, an adaptive ordering approach often used to mitigate disruptions, can trigger unintended bullwhip effects, and hurt rather than help overall performance. As an alternative to expediting interventions, dynamic order-up-to policies show promise as an adaptive mitigation tool. We also find benefits in the dynamic policies from incorporating a metaheuristic parameter search over multiple echelons, yielding significantly better solution quality than embedded unimodal search. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:185 / 198
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A quantitative analysis of simultaneous supply and demand disruptions on a multi-echelon supply chain
    Kost A.R.
    Vergara H.A.
    Porter J.D.
    International Journal of Industrial and Systems Engineering, 2024, 46 (04) : 556 - 583
  • [2] MULTI-ECHELON SUPPLY CHAIN SIMULATION USING METAMODEL
    Song, Laigang
    Li, Xueping
    Garcia-Diaz, Alberto
    2008 WINTER SIMULATION CONFERENCE, VOLS 1-5, 2008, : 2691 - 2699
  • [3] Decision support system for managing multi-echelon supply chain networks against disruptions using adaptive fractional order control algorithm
    Cuong, Truong Ngoc
    Kim, Hwan-Seong
    Long, Le Ngoc Bao
    You, Sam-Sang
    RAIRO-OPERATIONS RESEARCH, 2023, 57 (02) : 787 - 815
  • [4] Optimal Ordering Policies for Multi-Echelon Supply Networks
    Caiza, Jose I.
    Walter, Ian
    Panchal, Jitesh H.
    Qin, Junjie
    Pare, Philip E.
    2022 IEEE 61ST CONFERENCE ON DECISION AND CONTROL (CDC), 2022, : 4539 - 4544
  • [5] REVENUE AND PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT IN A MULTI-ECHELON SUPPLY CHAIN
    Kabirian, Alireza
    Sarfaraz, Ahmad
    Rajai, Mark
    2013 WINTER SIMULATION CONFERENCE (WSC), 2013, : 3330 - 3339
  • [6] Price competition and coordination in a multi-echelon supply chain
    Huang, Yun
    Huang, George Q.
    Engineering Letters, 2011, 18 (04)
  • [7] Price Competition and Coordination in a Multi-echelon Supply Chain
    Huang, Yun
    Huang, George Q.
    ENGINEERING LETTERS, 2010, 18 (04)
  • [8] Modeling and analysis of the multi-echelon inventory in supply Chain
    Ma, Le, 1600, Binary Information Press (10):
  • [9] Sustainability and robust decision-support strategy for multi-echelon supply chain system against disruptions
    Long, Le Ngoc Bao
    Cuong, Truong Ngoc
    Kim, Hwan-Seong
    You, Sam-Sang
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LOGISTICS-RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS, 2023,
  • [10] INFORMATION BLACKOUTS IN A MULTI-ECHELON SUPPLY CHAIN SIMULATION
    Rasnick, Elizabeth
    Chatfield, Dean C.
    2017 WINTER SIMULATION CONFERENCE (WSC), 2017, : 3440 - 3446