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Disruption in Circularity? Impact analysis of COVID-19 on ship recycling using Weibull tonnage estimation and scenario analysis method

Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
Auteur
RAHMAN, S.M. Mizanur
259761 Université de Bordeaux [UB]
KIM, Junbeum
402727 Centre de Recherches et d'Etudes Interdisciplinaires sur le Développement Durable [CREIDD]
ccLARATTE, Bertrand
555877 APESA [Pau]
1002421 Institut de Mécanique et d'Ingénierie [I2M]

URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10985/19236
DOI
10.1016/j.resconrec.2020.105139
Date
2021
Journal
Resources, Conservation and Recycling

Résumé

The sustainability of the ship recycling industry strongly linked with the global shipping market and international commodity flows. More than 80% of the End of Life (EoL) ships are dismantled in South Asian countries, namely Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan. Due to measures taken to minimize the propagation of the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19), an international supply chain is broken to a historic low, except for certain medical-related urgencies. Due to the disruption of global supply chains, the industry may submerge into uncertainty due to, perhaps, lack of adequate labor force to dismantle increased EoL ships and due to disturbances of vessel transportation to the recycling nations amid strong precautionary measures. Our estimate suggests that about 300 million Gross Tonnage (GT) available for demolition in the next five years and the inability to get them recycled would cost about 20 billion dollars. More importantly, South Asian recycling nations would suffer from economic losses and employment opportunities. In this study, we also apply a scenario analysis technique to understand the impact range of COVID-19 in the short term and in the long term. The disruption is viewed through a circular economy framework, identifying a critical lack of ‘global scale’ acknowledgment in the circular economy framework. This article suggests that a formalized global scale, paralleled with favorable policies, may reduce supply chain disruption and improve sustainable development in the receiving nations.

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Nom:
I2M_RCR_2021_LARATTE.pdf
Taille:
1.151Mo
Format:
PDF
Fin d'embargo:
2021-07-01
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  • Institut de Mécanique et d’Ingénierie de Bordeaux (I2M)

Documents liés

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  • End-of-Life in industry 4.0: Ignored as before? 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    RAHMAN, S.M. Mizanur; ccPERRY, Nicolas; MÜLLER, Julian M.; KIM, Junbeum; ccLARATTE, Bertrand (Elsevier, 2020)
    Industry 4.0, indicating a fourth industrial revolution, is based on three basic forms of integration through digital technologies: Horizontal interconnection across the supply chain, vertical interconnection across ...
  • Shipbreaking literature and sustainability framework 
    Communication avec acte
    RAHMAN, S.M. Mizanur; ccLARATTE, Bertrand (2019)
    Shipbreaking literature and sustainability framework
  • A review of LED lamp recycling process from the 10 R strategy perspective 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    RAHMAN, S.M. Mizanur; POMPIDOU, Stéphane; ccALIX, Thecle; ccLARATTE, Bertrand (Elsevier BV, 2021)
    Recycling LED lamp technology requires a change from the traditional bulk material-based recovery process. Unlike preceding lighting technology, LED lamps cannot be recycled to meet the regulatory minimum recycling rate ...
  • Decision Support Methodology for Designing Sustainable Recycling Process Based on ETV Standards 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    GRIMAUD, Guilhem; ccPERRY, Nicolas; ccLARATTE, Bertrand (Elsevier, 2017)
    The rarefaction of resources and the increasing of waste encourage solutions deployed through circular economy strategy. Recycling is mostly used as the key vector to reduce the environmental impact. Nevertheless, for a ...
  • Development of an Evaluation Tool for Engineering Sustainable Recycling Pathways 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    GRIMAUD, Guilhem; PERRY, Nicolas; LARATTE, Bertrand (ELSEVIER, 2018)
    As the product end of life is becoming more and more complex, the recycling systems encountered many difficulties in valuing all the materials contained in the products. This involves not only recovering many materials but ...

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