Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
480007 European Journal of Operational Research 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

As perishable food supply networks become more complex, incidents of contamination in these supply networks have become fairly common. Added to this complexity is the fact that there have been long delays in identifying the contamination source in several such incidents. Even when the contamination source was identified, there have been cases where the ultimate destination of all contaminated products were not known with complete certainty due, in part, to dispersion in these supply networks. We study the recall dynamics in a three-stage perishable food supply network through three different visibility levels in the presence of contamination. Specifically, we consider allocation of liability among the different players in the perishable supply network based on the accuracy with which the contamination source is identified. We illustrate the significance of finer levels of granularity both upstream and downstream as well as determine appropriate visibility levels and recall policies.

► Considered a three-stage perishable food supply network. ► Determined the relative importance of finer vs. coarser levels of granularity. ► Determined the marginal difference in recall costs for different visibility levels. ► Identified when recalls should occur based on when contamination occurs.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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