Thursday, April 1, 2010

Lean vs Green

It occurred to me quite suddenly the other day while reading an article on “Green” warehousing, that we must always be aware that there is a total cost and value picture which transcends the focus of looking at inventory from a pure ordering and carrying cost basis. In addition, our attention must now also be on the likes of carbon footprints and other ecological issues.
To give this idea some tangibility, I dreamed up a scenario to demonstrate my point. Let’s assume we run Manufacturing Company X and one of our main raw materials is available a mere 20 miles from our plant. We have no quality issues with the supplier and our demand is totally stable. The rate of usage is ten units a day (no waste or scrap), and the company operates five days a week (If you find such a place, I want to work there). Additionally, we release material from a blanket order and pay against a monthly statement. The material costs $10/unit and our carrying cost is 20% of our average inventory. We pick up the raw material with our truck which costs us $.50/ mile to operate. I have summarized this data in the table below. Out big decision is how much and how frequently do we pick up this material? Let’s compare a weekly pickup to a daily pickup as shown below.


Cost Factors Five Trips/wk vs One trip/wk

Transport Cost. 5X 20 miles X $.50/mi = $50.00/wk vs 1X 20 miles X.50/mi = $10.00/wk

Inventory Cost 5=avg inv X $10/unit X 20% = $10 vs 25 =avg inv X $10/unit X 20%= $50

Total Cost $60.00 in both cases

Of course, I have left out the flexibility and visibility of a lower inventory and a few other possible qualitative factors, that would support the daily pickup suggested by Lean, but I counter that my daily delivery truck may introduce serious carbon footprint issues over time. I for one have had my “evaluation horizon’ expanded by the article on greening the warehouse. I just wanted to pass these thoughts along to you.
Sincerely,
Ron Althaus

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