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Value Chain Analysis of Jackfruit Chips in Green Supply Chain Management Perspective Using the Value Chain Operations Reference Method
Author(s) -
Wike Agustin Prima Dania,
Edria Anniar Nurfitriani,
Riska Septifani
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
industria
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2549-3892
pISSN - 2252-7877
DOI - 10.21776/ub.industria.2021.010.02.4
Subject(s) - carbon footprint , supply chain , chain (unit) , carbon chain , firewood , value (mathematics) , business , value chain , greenhouse gas , environmental science , agricultural science , environmental economics , mathematics , waste management , engineering , economics , statistics , marketing , chemistry , ecology , physics , organic chemistry , astronomy , biology
A green supply chain is a concept that integrates environmental aspects in the supply chain system. This study aims to identify the value chain stages affecting the environment and to determine the level of economic impact on the jackfruit chips value chain at CV XYZ. This research used Value Chain Operations Reference (VCOR) method to analyze value chain activities. Carbon emissions and total costs were calculated at the build, acquire, and fulfill stages from suppliers and enterprises. The analysis results showed that the highest environmental impact was at the build stage which produces carbon emissions of 133,314.8 kg CO2. The frying process contributed the highest carbon emission, which was 117,600 kg CO2. CV XYZ was in the intolerable region condition in the Global Impact matrix. The resulting carbon footprint is 16.84 kg CO2/kg with a unit cost of 0.32 €/kg. The recommendation strategy was substituting firewood with liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) to lower carbon emissions by up to 40%.

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