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Research Article

A discrete event simulation model assessing the impact of using new packaging in an agri-food supply chain

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Article: 2305816 | Received 08 Jul 2023, Accepted 11 Jan 2024, Published online: 24 Jan 2024
 

Abstract

Fresh product loss is a global issue having negative impact on both the economy and the environment. The perishability of fruits and vegetables can lead to post-harvest losses in the supply chain as well as at consumer’s homes. Packaging plays an important role in preventing such losses. This paper focuses on the impact of new packaging on reducing product waste and other logistics costs. The objective is to evaluate the performance of an inventory control policy that uses new packaging to extend the shelf life of strawberries while maintaining their quality. We have developed a discrete event simulation model, that represents store inventory, by considering random consumer demand and random product shelf life, to assess various packaging types leading to different post-harvest lives of strawberries. We then use a simulation-optimisation approach to determine optimal inventory control parameters and conduct extensive numerical experimentations to evaluate the impact of the new packaging, under three distribution strategies (FIFO, FEFO, and LEFO). Results indicate that the new packaging has a significant impact: extending the shelf life of strawberries can reduce the total logistics cost by 0.66% (when using LEFO strategy) to 6.37% (FIFO strategy) and improve sales by 0.67% (FEFO) to 10.07% (FIFO).

Acknowledgment

The financial support from the French National Research Agency (ANR) is gratefully acknowledged. The authors thank all partner research units on this ANR collaborative project (Eco-Fresh-Chain ANR-20-CE21-007-01).

Data availability statement

The authors confirm that the data supporting the findings of this study are available within the article.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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