Managing Circular Material Choices in Practice Trade-offs, Constraints, and Supply Chain Design Impacts
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Publicerad
Författare
Typ
Examensarbete för masterexamen
Master's Thesis
Master's Thesis
Modellbyggare
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Sammanfattning
Despite growing regulatory pressure and corporate sustainability commitments, circular
material adoption in industry remains constrained by operational realities that existing
research rarely examines in depth. The transition to a circular economy requires firms to
substitute virgin materials with recycled, bio-based, or locally sourced alternatives, yet this
transition is not merely a technical or environmental decision. It is a constrained
organizational process embedded within existing supply chain structures, cost pressures, and
operational requirements. The research investigates how businesses make circular material
selection decisions, what trade-offs emerge in the process, and how these decisions influence
supply chain design.
Using a qualitative, exploratory research design, semi-structured interviews were conducted
with professionals from eleven organizations across diverse industrial sectors, including
automotive, steel, MedTech, defense, fashion, and energy. Data were analyzed through
thematic analysis using an abductive approach, iteratively linking empirical findings to
theoretical frameworks from sustainable supply chain management, circular economy theory,
decision-making theory, and the resource-based view.
The findings demonstrate that circular material selection follows a structured, multi-stage
decision process in which technical feasibility, safety, and regulatory compliance function as
primary gatekeepers, with sustainability considerations entering the evaluation only after
operational thresholds are met. Rather than competing equally with other criteria,
environmental objectives are integrated conditionally within an already constrained decision
space. Significant trade-offs emerge between circularity and cost efficiency, customer
requirements, performance reliability, and supply chain risk, managed through cross
functional collaboration, pilot-based implementation, and supplier co-development. Material
choices were further found to carry substantial downstream consequences for supply chain
structure, driving shifts in supplier networks, reverse logistics integration, geographic
sourcing, and traceability requirements.
Taken together, these results reframe circular material selection not as a sustainability
decision constrained by operations, but as a fundamentally operational and supply chain
design decision within which sustainability must find its place.
Beskrivning
Ämne/nyckelord
Circular economy, Circular material selection, Sustainable supply chain management, Supply chain design, Reverse logistics, Sustainability trade-offs
