Traditional Supply Chains’ Radical Transformation

By 2025 this study thinks that supply chains will radically transform themselves.  The survey by Deloitte and MHI is summarized in the graphic below from the article.  Increased use of emerging technologies will be a prime investment area.

I am delighted to see that inventory planning and optimization is again in ascendancy.  That’s my field of course!

MHI & Deloitte Study: Traditional Supply Chains to Undergo Radical Transformation By 2025 – Supply Chain 24/7.

You can download the study free by signing up for it at Supply Chain 24/7.

Or here:  MHI_industry_report_2015

Download the 2015 MHI Annual Industry Report

Slow Steaming “can damage containers” –

http://www.marinelink.com/news/containers-steaming388227.aspx
Who knows where risk is hiding?

Disruptive Innovation in the Energy Supply Chain?

Here’s an interesting article from the MIT  supply chain blog.  Are large simple batteries a solution to the problem of energy storage for peak periods?

A Disruptive Innovation in the Energy Supply Chain | Supply Chain @ MIT.

 

Well, who knows? I don’t see any calculations here.  For instance, how many of these shipping container sized battery packs would it take to hold enough power for my apartment community (100 homes) for a rainy day when our solar panels (assuming we had them) would not work?   One apartment’s worth? Two? A dozen?

For instance at the US Cold warehouse in Wilmington IL, we need to have power 100% of the time for refrigerated products that constantly arrive, are stored, and move out to retailers.  How big a parking lot would we need for the containers full of batteries, in addition to the space we have for our inbound and outbound trucks?   I can see how a power company might use some to support their solar or wind power efforts, perhaps securing a few sections in the Arizona desert to place the batteries next to the giant solar farm or wind farm deployed there.

It’s certainly a good idea to make batteries out of materials that are not too hazardous.  And I think we are in a materials revolution right now that will change how we think about lots of problems.