Sustainability challenges of last-mile logistics and transition to online grocery retailing in sparsely populated areas
Industrial Management & Data Systems
ISSN: 0263-5577
Article publication date: 2 September 2024
Issue publication date: 10 December 2024
Abstract
Purpose
This paper focuses on the last-mile logistics (LML) operations in fulfilling online grocery orders and the related sustainability considerations in sparsely populated areas like Australia. It aims to examine how online groceries in sparsely populated areas can benefit from online business. Specifically, this study seeks to investigate whether a centralized order fulfillment approach is better than the existing approach which fulfills online orders from local grocery stores.
Design/methodology/approach
A multi-method approach is employed to conduct a high level of cost and emission analysis between the existing and the proposed approaches to illustrate the ratios between the two approaches in terms of cost and carbon emissions. Mathematical models are developed with support from the literature. The model is empirically validated with a case study of grocery distribution in the city of Gold Coast, Australia.
Findings
It finds that the centralized order fulfillment approach in sparsely populated areas can achieve LML sustainability with low cost, high efficiency and less double handling. Meanwhile, the separation of in-store and online retailing processes improves the in-store shopping experience and online shopping visibility, jointly improves customer satisfaction, and consequently achieves a positive effect on long-term sustainability. Additionally, the possibility of automating order picking and dispatching at a central place can make the processes more efficient and help build more sustainable grocery retailing supply chains by using more environmentally friendly systems.
Originality/value
This paper offers analytical and empirical insights into the sustainability of multi-channel grocery retailing supply chains. The high-level model developed first incorporates the concept of online shopping adoption rates and can serve as a decision-making tool for practitioners to improve supply chain sustainability in LML.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
We have declared that there is no potential conflict of interest in the research. There is no support from a third party in the research.
We confirm that the manuscript has been created by the author(s) and not an AI tool/Large Language Model (LLM).
Citation
Wu, Y., Wang, B. and Huo, B. (2024), "Sustainability challenges of last-mile logistics and transition to online grocery retailing in sparsely populated areas", Industrial Management & Data Systems, Vol. 124 No. 12, pp. 3197-3217. https://doi.org/10.1108/IMDS-02-2024-0131
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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