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Unlocking potential for a circular bioeconomy transition through digital innovation, lean manufacturing and green practices: a review

Sarina Abdul Halim-Lim (Faculty of Food Science and Technology, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Serdang, Malaysia)
Adi Ainurzaman Jamaludin (Faculty of Science, Environmental Science and Management Programme, Institute of Biological Sciences, Universiti Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)
A.S.M. Touhidul Islam (Faculty of Industrial Management, Universiti Malaysia Pahang Al-Sultan Abdullah (UMP SA), Kuantan, Malaysia)
Samanthi Weerabahu (School of Business, Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia)
Anjar Priyono (Department of Management, Universitas Islam Indonesia, Yogyakarta, Indonesia)

Management of Environmental Quality

ISSN: 1477-7835

Article publication date: 12 September 2024

67

Abstract

Purpose

Today’s businesses are looking for a circular bioeconomy (CBE) to develop a sustainable manufacturing process as industrial operations result in significant amounts of waste materials and the depletion of natural sources. The industry commonly applies techniques such as lean manufacturing (LM), digital innovations (DI) and green practices (GP) for operational and quality improvement. However, publications explaining how these technologies enable the CBE transition are scarce. This study examines CBE components, common practices of each technology facilitating the CBE transition, problems of solitary technology deployment as well as coupling technologies for the CBE transition.

Design/methodology/approach

A scoping review was conducted to analyse previous studies in this new field. The data collection is in a quantitative manner, but the data synthesis process follows a similar method of synthesising data in the grounded theory method, which includes familiarisation with the data, open-coding and finalisation of the themes.

Findings

Critical components of CBE were identified as biobased goods, industry symbiosis, material resource efficiency, renewable energy, product lifecycle and sharing economy. GP is the most prominent in moderating the CBE transition. We identify each technology has coupled relationships (Lean-4.0, Green-Lean and Green-4.0) technologies facilitated by the circularity concept, which form the core pillars of enablers and advance the CBE paradigm.

Research limitations/implications

This study demonstrates that combining lean principles with green technology and digital technologies can effectively decrease waste and resource usage in biobased manufacturing processes, therefore endorsing the concept of resource efficiency in circular bioeconomy models.

Practical implications

The results allow entrepreneurs to strategically incorporate different existing technologies to meet CBE fundamental objectives by initiating it with dual technologies and facilitate industry professionals and regulators to support the improvement of environmental sustainability performance in the manufacturing industry. The management will be able to focus on the common practices across the technologies, which have a dual benefit for both operational and environmental performance.

Originality/value

The paper makes the first attempt to present the synergic impact of the three quality management technologies on a new concept of sustainability, CBE.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Funding: This work was funded by the Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia through Universiti Putra Malaysia under the research grant Fundamental Research Grant Scheme FRGS/1/2022/SS02/UPM/02/1.

Citation

Halim-Lim, S.A., Jamaludin, A.A., Islam, A.S.M.T., Weerabahu, S. and Priyono, A. (2024), "Unlocking potential for a circular bioeconomy transition through digital innovation, lean manufacturing and green practices: a review", Management of Environmental Quality, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/MEQ-11-2023-0386

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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