LITERATURE REVIEW
Circular economy and supply chain: a literature
review
Renan Pereira1, Edivan Alexandre Ferreira1, Josivan Leite Alves2, Jeniffer de Nadae1,
Graziela Darla Araujo Galvão3
1
Department of Business Administration, Federal University of Cariri, Juazeiro do Norte, Ceará, Brazil.
2
Department of Civil Engineering, Federal University of Cariri, Juazeiro do Norte, Ceará, Brazil.
3
Production Engineering of Polytechnic School (University of São Paulo) São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
How to cite: Pereira, R., Ferreira, E.A., Alves, J.L. et al. (2020), “Circular economy and supply chain: a literature
review”, Brazilian Journal of Operations & Production Management, Vol. 17, No. 04, 20201042.
https://doi.org/10.14488/BJOPM.2020.048
ABSTRACT
Goal: To analyze the publications on circular economy and supply chain using a systematic review
of the literature and bibliometric analysis, the study was designed to answer the question: How is
the international scientific production about Circular Economy and Supply Chain characterized?
For such an answer it was found that the first published article was on the subject date from 2006
and 2013 there was a steady increase in the number of publications. Many publications mentioned
the use of CE in the supply chain through the management of the green supply chain. The country
with more publications about the area in the United Kingdom with 19,1% of papers. Moreover,
publications are generally about IT product and service supply chains.
Design/Methodology/Approach: Systematic literature review based on bibliometric theory and
social network analysis, linking Circular Economy and Supply Chain.
Results: The articles do not point to studies on a specific supply chain, but only stress the importance
of applying Circular Economy to the supply chain to mitigate the environmental impact of materials
and products along with the flow from the production process to end consumers.
Limitations of the investigation: This paper contributes by analysing the international literature
about the selected topics. In a future research agenda, this study could be applied to survey-based
research to answer the research propositions suggested.
Practical implications: The research helps scholars to identify the main hot topics about Circular Economy
and Supply Chain, main authors and papers. Also, can help managers to develop Circular Economy business
models to improve and mitigate the environmental impacts on the production and supply chain.
Originality / Value: This research sheds light on controversies, discussed in the literature,
concerning the effects linking Circular Economy and Supply Chain.
Keywords: Circular Economy; Supply Chain; Literature Review; Bibliometric Approach.
INTRODUCTION
In cases where development is sensitive to environmental issues, there is a
recognition, to some extent, that there is a mismatch between what nature supports
offering and what has been consumed by people (Iizuka and Peçanha, 2014). The
concept of Sustainability is growing stronger in public policies, as well as in academia
and the industry (Geissdoerfer et al., 2017; Geissdoerfer et al., 2020).
Financial support: This work was supported by the National Counsel of Technological and Scientific Development (CNPq) and Cearense Foundation to
Support Scientific and Technological Development (FUNCAP).
Conflict of interest: The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.
Corresponding author:
[email protected]
Received: 15 July 2020
Accepted: 09 October 2020
Editor: Osvaldo L. G. Quelhas
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use,
distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Circular economy and supply chain: a literature review
It became increasingly important from debates on global warming and environmental
concerns under increased human and industrial consumption, which led to the need of
discussing alternatives to reduce environmental impacts. For Murray et al., (2017) a
sustainable activity then is one that can be maintained for a long period without exhaustion,
despite unforeseen events that may occur.
Global production of manufactured goods and services is based on a linear production
model, characterized by a unidirectional flow in which raw materials are turned into end
products and then discarded, which generates waste (Elia et al., 2017) and causes
environmental impacts. Degradation of nature caused by the changes associated to this mode
of production is intensified by the growth of the world population—the Ellen MacArthur
Foundation (2013) estimates it will reach nine billion by 2050. Thus, concerns around
sustainability arise from the need to undertake actions and efforts towards environmental
preservation.
“We must understand that organizations, including companies, governments and nongovernmental organizations (NGO) will have to work in partnership so that there is this shift
in paradigm, being that this is the business organizations biggest challenge” (Silva and
Cândido, 2014), besides that integration between the social, economic, and environmental
spheres has brought about a new approach: meeting the needs of current generations
without compromising the future ones, and sustainability aims at reaching these three
spheres simultaneously (Prugh and Assadourian, 2003). Seeking substantial improvement of
the use of resources all around the economy, businesses began to look for ways to reuse
products or their components and recycle materials and inputs to minimize environmental
impact and produce more with less, whereas taking into account sustainability-related
concerns (Bonciu and Bâlgăr, 2016; Ünal et al., 2019).
This gave rise to the Circular Economy (CE), an economic model opposed to the linear
production model of take-make-waste, which generates significant amounts of waste. In this
way, the circular economy model can help the deployment of sustainable strategies and the
maximization of organizations (Geissdoerfer et al., 2017). This new way of managing the
production chain arises as a strategy that aims at tackling the challenges of resource scarcity
and waste management—a win-win approach from the economic value perspective (Bey et al.,
2013; Homrich et al., 2018).
The CE model proposes economic growth dissociated from the consumption of resources
and emission of pollutants. At the end of their life cycle, materials and products are conceived
as resources, and not as waste. Thus, raw material cycles are closed, and waste, as well as
demand for raw materials, is reduced (Elia et al., 2017). For Ellen MacArthur Foundation (2013),
the CE is an approach involving gradual decoupling of economic activity from the consumption
of finite resources, taking waste out of the system—thus, redesigning the whole process so
that waste is minimal, and all materials are reused. Therefore, a linear system is converted
into a circular system when the connection is made between the use of resources and that of
waste (Bilitewski, 2012).
The transition from a linear economic model to a CE benefits both the environment and
the supply chain as a whole. In present conditions, production of goods in a supply chain
wastes significant amounts of materials between the obtaining raw materials and the end of
product manufacture, while in a CE, waste is mitigated (Bocken et al., 2016; Murray et al., 2017;
Merli et al., 2018). To make the change from linear production to the circular mode possible,
the supply chain must be adapted (Centobelli, et al., 2020).
Progress from a linear to a circular supply chain requires improved industrial design and
efficient use of materials, reducing the flow of materials in manufacturing by using them in
cascade—i.e. taking advantage of products and materials in ways different from those
originally proposed, or turning them into resources for other industries (Schwab, 2014).
According to Torres Junior and Parini (2017, p. 5)
“In the last decades, in parallel with the spread of CE concepts, green and sustainable
practices of Supply Chain Management have been developed. They aim at integrating
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organizations’ environmental concerns with practices aimed at minimizing the involuntary
negative consequences of production and consumption processes”.
Broadly speaking, a supply chain comprises activities related to the flow and
transformation of products—from the extraction of raw material to the arrival at the hands of
the consumer—as well as to the respective information flows (Ballou, 2006). Thus, the supply
chain encompasses all movement involved in the manufacture of a product, from obtaining
raw materials, storing and transformation into the end product, to its transportation and
distribution, in addition to the informational flow.
For Christopher (1997), however, the supply chain is a network of interconnected and
interdependent organizations working in cooperation to control, manage, and improve the
flow of materials and information from suppliers to final users. The author states that the
word “chain” should be replaced by the term “network”, due to the great number of suppliers
and customers involved in the process.
Aiming at a more in-depth study of CE, this paper endeavors to identify international
publications on circular economy and supply chain to understand how the subject is
approached by researchers in the field, as well as to contribute disseminating the concepts in
this field of study, a relatively new one, particularly for scholars in Brazil.
In the context of this discussion, the study was designed to answer the following question:
How is the international scientific production about Circular Economy and Supply Chain
characterized? Therefore, the objective of this paper is to analyze the publications on circular
economy and supply chain using a systematic review of the literature and bibliometric
analysis.
To meet this objective, this paper is divided into five sections. The first contextualizes the
subject and presents the research problem and objective. Section 2 is a brief presentation of
concepts and the research method. The stages of the search in the Scopus database, software,
and analysis networks are presented in section 3. Section 4 comprises results and discussion
of the theme, and section 5, the conclusions.
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
Circular Economy and Supply Chain
The concept of Circular Economy (CE) was developed in 1990, initially by British authors
Pearce and Turne. Their 1990 article “Economics of natural resources and the environment”
was the first to approach the subject systematically. According to Geng and Doberstein (2008),
the concept of CE is based on the idea that the economy and the environment can have a
healthy coexistence. According to Abadia et al. (2016), this concept is still very recent and not
consolidated.
The Ellen MacArthur Foundation (2015) lists some of the features of circular economy and
the problems it aims at mitigating:
The industry becomes restorative;
It intends to use renewable energy;
It minimizes, tracks down, and eliminates the use of toxic chemicals; and
It designs out waste.
Corroborating with this idea, for Ribeiro and Kruglianskas (2014), “CE proposes that
materials be utilized in such a way as to maximize their value, reducing waste and creating
economic benefits along with environmental benefits.” Both authors expound on the added
value products may have if, instead of single use, they maximize their effects and benefits
through collective use. The main focus of EC for Sehnem and Pereira (2019) is the intelligent
use of resources that are already in use in the production process so that economic growth is
not exclusively dependent on the growing consumption of new resources.
Thus, CE stands by the need for a “functional service” model in which manufacturers or
retailers increasingly preserve the property of their products and, whenever possible, act as
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service renderers—selling the use of products and not their unidirectional consumption (Ellen
MacArthur Foundation, 2015). If an economy of unitary and personal consumption is no longer
used, the property of an item is unique, whereas it can be used by several individuals who
contribute to the generation of new businesses, providing the basis for collective consumption
(Botsman and Rogers, 2009; Bonciu and Bâlgăr, 2016).
Great advances have been made in comparison with the linear economy model, based
especially on the reduction of costs in large industries. However, efforts are still not sufficient
to end waste and vary by the mode of operation, whether or not it is ecological and meets
basic CE principles. For the Ellen MacArthur Foundation (2015), any system based on
consumption and not in the restorative use of resources implies significant losses along the
entire value chain. The end of wastage is one of the chief features of CE. According to the
(Bocken, 2015), in the production of goods, significant amounts of materials are usually lost in
the chain between mining and final manufacture.
Still, according to (Niero et al., 2016), this economic paradigm is opposed to the current
take-make-dispose-source linear model, which generates a significant amount of waste. For the
implementation and use of CE, efforts at several levels—micro, medium, and macro—are
required. At the micro-level, in the area of production, factories and agricultural products are
encouraged or forced to adopt a cleaner production and an ecological project (Su et al., 2013).
Implementation at the micro-level allows products to be useful again in the supply chain, as
corroborated by (Nasir et al., 2017) regarding the implementation of circular economy
practices that foster the design of circular or reverse supply chains, allowing products at the
end of their life cycle to re-enter the supply chain as a production input through recycling,
reuse or remanufacture.
The efforts at the medium, or regional, level aim at the development of more sustainable
agriculture and environments. According to Su et al., (2013), practices include the
development of eco-industrial parks and an eco-agricultural system. At the macro-level, this
work is concerned with cities, regions, and countries. According to Su et al., (2013), at the
macro level (city or regional scale), more complex and extensive cooperative networks
between industries and industrial parks of the primary, secondary, and tertiary sectors
emerge in the production area.
Besides contributing to environmental preservation, the adoption of CE brings about
benefits to the supply chain. Advantages for the economy are the reduced use of materials
and energy, better mitigation of volatility and supply risks and higher multipliers, due to lower
sectorial changes and externalities. Businesses will create new profit and competitive
advantage groups, improving their resilience against some of the present strategic challenges
and expanding, based on their respective initial situations. Finally, advantages to consumers
include the availability of more options, fewer problems related to premature obsolescence
and higher quality of service and secondary benefits (Bonciu and Bâlgăr, 2016).
Ballou (2006) defines supply chain as a set of functional activities (transportation,
inventory control, etc.) that are repeated numerous times along the channel through which
raw materials are converted into finished products with added value for the consumer. It is
represented by the entire journey of raw materials until they are converted into end products
and their consequent arrival at the hands of the consumer, in addition to all the information
created and distributed along with this flow. The supply chain comprises all stages directly or
indirectly involved in supplying the demand of a customer, such as suppliers, manufacturers,
transporters, warehouses, distributors, retailers and the customer himself, besides renderers
of technical assistance or any other agent representing stages of the goods and services
production and commercialization process (Chopra and Meindl, 2003).
Thus, by supply chain management (SCM), we mean the activities aiming at
interconnecting these stages to reach desired goals (Barbieri et al., 2014). For Lambert et al.,
(1998), SCM is
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“The integration of business processes from final users to the original suppliers who
provide products, services, and information that add value for consumers” (Lambert et al.,
1998, p. 504).
Besides creating greater economic for industries, this integration helps to reduce
environmental impact, as
“The increasing influence of sustainability in the management of the supply chain and in
operational practices can also be attributed to the fact that, besides the growing demands for
strong economic performance, organizations are now tasked with an environmental and social
performance by the main actors, stakeholders” (Torres Junior and Parini, 2017, p. 5).
Thus, due to systematic environmental concerns in the supply chain management, the
area concerned with the environmental aspect of the supply chain is given a new name, Green
Supply Chain Management (GSCM) (Barbieri et al., 2014). The GSCM integrates environmental
thinking and conventional SCM, such as product design, selection of materials and suppliers,
production processes, delivery of end products to consumers and management of the end of
products’ useful life (Srivastava, 2007). The concepts of Green Supply Chain Management or
Sustainable Supply Chain Management were developed in parallel with the CE rationale, so
the integration of CE principles within sustainable supply chain management offers clear
advantages from the environmental perspective (Genovese et al., 2017).
Thus, aligning supply chain strategies with CE principles has become important for
environmental sustainability (Mcdonough and Braungart, 2010; Pauli, 2010). The principles of
CE reveal a desire to extend the limits of sustainable supply chain practices based on the
paradigm of continuous resource circulation within a closed system, thus reducing the need
for new raw material inputs into production systems (Genovese et al., 2017). This model has
encouraged companies operating in the same supply chain to participate in sustainable
activities (Torres Junior and Parini, 2017). This encouragement presupposes understanding CE
benefits for supply chain management, using the latter to achieve its main objective—to
increase the profits for organizations and becomes an efficient and promising means of
reaching its goal without environmental damage.
METHOD
Given the aim of this study, a systematic review of the literature (SRL) was conducted to help
answer the research question: How is the international scientific production about Circular Economy
and Supply Chain characterized? To obtain an overview of the literature on the topic, the Scopus
database was consulted. It is considered the largest database of abstracts and citations of peerreviewed literature: scientific journals, books and congress proceedings (Scopus, 2018).
The procedures were organized according to the stages of the Littell et al., (2008)
research protocol, following three stages: data collection, data analysis, and synthesis.
(Tranfield et al., 2003).
Data collection was conducted in May 2018, and the search terms used were: “circular
economy” AND “supply chain”. The database then selected the titles, abstracts, and keywords
containing these terms, which resulted in 185 articles. The final base, selecting only articles in
Portuguese and English, comprises 90 articles (Table 1).
Table 1 – Database search criteria
Selected topics
Title, Abstract and keywords
Type of document
Language
Stages
“circular economy”AND “supply chain”
Article
English and Portuguese
Final base
#
185
177
90
90
Source: Authors
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After selection of the articles, the data were analyzed aggregating bibliometric analysis
and a systematic review of the literature.
The network analysis was conducted using the VosViewer software, used for construction
and visualization of bibliometric networks. These data are generated through databanks, of
which Scopus is an example, which relates and couples bibliographical and thematic citations
about a given subject (Vosviewer, 2019).
Using the databank, a descriptive analysis was carried out, generating graphics—using
Excel and Minitab software—of countries with more publications on the topic, evolution of
research over the years, main journals publishing on the topic, most quoted authors, and
outliers with total citations per author.
Analysis of keywords is useful to evince the concepts associated with the research
question, adding consistency to the conceptual discussion of sustainable development and
performance indicators associated to this subject. After that, content analysis was carried out
based on reading of the abstract and of the last session of each article, how discussions,
conclusions and results (Locke and Golden-Biddle, 1997).
Finally, the bibliometric synthesis was done. According to Crossan and Apaydin (2010), it
is in this step that the greatest value is added to bibliometric analysis, since at this stage new
knowledge is created based on complete and exhaustive analysis of data.
RESULTS
The publications included in the Scopus database using the keywords “Circular Economy” and
“Supply Chain” returned 90 publications over a period of 13 years. The first publications came out in
2006: “Sustainable Supply Chain Networks - A New Approach for Effective Waste Management” and
”Strategic Green Supply Chain Based on Circular Economy - A New View for Sustainable
Manufacturing in China”, published in the Wuhan Ligong Daxue Xuebao/Journal of Wuhan University
of Technology and WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment magazines respectively.
The two texts deal with the strategies provided by China for the development and review of the
literature with empirical research about the movement toward sustainability, concluding that this is
only possible by means of actions integrating economic and ecological movements.
Only in 2016 did this number increase considerably and kept on growing. An interesting
fact is that, in the first half of 2018, the year in which this research was carried out, the number
of publications on the circular economy had already surpassed by more than 50% of those
published in 2017, as shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1 – Publications per year
Source: Authors
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Still talking about the development of the theme, a search in the same database with the
same parameters, it is possible to realize that interest in the circular economy is increasing,
while related studies related to supply chain until 2012, is not precise. After 2013 the theme
comes an increase in the interest of the academy. This number is shown in Figure 2.
Figure 2 – Publications per theme
Source: Authors
Starting from the discussion of strategies for CE implementation in the Supply Chain,
created by China for development, articles from 2006 to 2013 describe an ascending curve
of knowledge about CE in its various aspects. The authors created studies reviewing the
literature about movements towards sustainability, in addition to identifying direct and
indirect impacts of environmental regulations.
Besides the aforementioned Chinese strategies, other contributions to this reality were
programs adopted by the European Union from 2014 onwards under the title “Towards a
Circular Economy – A Zero Waste Programme for Europe”, and by China itself, with its Circular
Economy Promotion Bill, approved in 2009.
Proceeding with the analysis, in 2010, the authors dealt with the balance between economic
growth and environmental management, using Chinese enterprises as a focus for these studies and
analyzing how the country’s companies collaborate with environmental protection using CE.
The year of 2011 was marked by texts describing CE concepts to build a closed production
model, examining the role of CE practices and the influences of implementing these practices
on these companies’ improved performance. In 2012, there were no publications on the
subject analyzed; however, 2013 begins a period of increase in publications.
The conceptualization of a CE and a rating system marks the studies conducted in 2013
about the unification of ideas that permeate the trend towards supply chain management
from the standpoint of the industrial production chain links.
From 2013, an increased growth is observed in the number of studies, whereas 2017 is
outstanding, with 36%, as well as 2018, when up to the month of May 28% of publications dealt with
the subject. From 2014 to 2016, publications dealt with supply chain management via CE, particularly
contemplating information management technologies aiming at cleaner production, in addition to
experimentation with materials that can be utilized through combined elements, with innovative
recycling that does not affect the quality of the remanufactured product.
Comparing 2017 with 2016, there is a 246% growth, the same average growth seen in
2016 concerning 2015. In 2017, 32 articles were published, which accounts for the highest
point in the chart. In 2018, up to the moment of data collection, 25 articles had been published.
Although the analysis used articles published in 2018 even though the fact that the year
had not ended, the studies of this year deal with warnings caused by global warming, the
consequence that the current production model, linear economy, must address towards a
production model that meets CE objectives, helped by the supply chain and reverse logistics.
Figure 3 analyzes the countries where publications originated. Great Britain has 25 publications
listed, corresponding to 19% of total publications concerning CE and supply chain, followed by the
United States, which accounts for 10%, or 13 publications, and by China and the Netherlands, with
8% each. This amounts to an average of 11 publications per country on the subject, followed by the
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remaining countries, with an average of 2% each, or around 2 articles per country. Brazil is
responsible for 1% of articles published. The reason why the UK and China have a greater number
of publications may be because the two countries have specific EC laws. Still, USA and UK were the
countries cradle of supply chain studies (Humphrey and Memedovic, 2006).
Figure 3 – Publications per country
Source: Authors
The 235 papers from the database were classified in 18 Scopus areas, as shown in
Figure 4. It should be noted that, since articles can be classified under more than one subject
area, the amount of publications is different from the number of articles in the database.
About 27%, or 63 articles, are in the field of Environmental Science. Engineering answers
for almost half of this number, with 16% of publications, followed by Energy, with 15% of
publications. There is still a greater difference between the aforementioned areas and the
remainder, which averages out to 3% of publications, or nearly seven articles per area.
Figure 4 – Thematic areas of publications
Source: Authors
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Table 2 shows the journals with at least three articles published on the topic and their
Impact Factor. Impact Factor (IF) is a measure of the frequency with which the average article
of a journal was quoted in a certain year. It is used to gauge the importance or classification
of a journal calculating the frequency with which articles are cited. Calculation is based on two
years and consists in dividing the number of times articles have been cited by the number of
quotable articles (Research Guides, 2018).
It can be seen that the journal Journal of Cleaner Production has the most publications on
the subject, with a total of 20 articles. The scope of this journal is research and practice of
Cleaner Production, which is the type of production that aims at avoiding waste while
increasing efficient use of energy, water, resources, and human capital.
The Sustainability magazine emphasizes environmental, cultural, economic, and social
sustainability of human beings and presents seven publications on the subject. However, it
has less impact than other journals. The Journal of Industrial Ecology expounds on industrial
metabolism, technological change, dematerialization and decarbonization, life cycle planning,
design and evaluation, environmental design, product management, industrial symbiosis,
environment-aimed products and eco-efficient policy, and has presented four publications on
the subject.
The following three journals include three publications each on the subject: ACS
Publications proposes studies about sustainability in the chemical industry and advances in
Green Chemistry and Green Engineering. This journal has the greatest Impact Factor
compared to the others. The International Journal of Production Research focuses on productive
chains and their innovations, as well as on the area of logistics.
The Resources, Conservation and Recycling magazine addresses the transformation
processes involved in a transition to more sustainable production and consumption systems.
The Science of the Total Environment magazine focuses on studying the total environment,
which is the union of atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere, lithosphere, and anthroposphere.
Table 2 – Journals
SOURCE TITLE
#ARTICLES
IF
Journal Of Cleaner Production
20
5.715
Sustainability Switzerland
7
1.789
Journal Of Industrial Ecology
4
4.123
ACS Sustainable Chemistry And Engineering
3
5.951
International Journal Of Production Research
3
2.325
Resources Conservation And Recycling
3
3.313
Science Of The Total Environment
3
4.900
Note: Only journals with three or more publications on the subject were selected.
Source: Authors
Table 2 shows the list of journals and the respective number of publications, besides their
Impact Factor (IF). It must be noted that, although it contains only three publications, the
journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering has a greater Impact Factor than the one
with the largest number of publications, which shows its relevance to the subject.
Analyzing the total citations of the articles in the selected database, Figure 5 tries to
determine which authors are considered outliers, a concept used to define the relationship
between citations between authors and their respective number of citations in other articles.
The articles in the sample were quoted 10.05 times on average, but some are above average,
and five others are considered extreme outliers for having 35 or more citations. Table 3
presents the details of these articles.
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Circular economy and supply chain: a literature review
Figure 5 – Total Citations Outliers
Source: Authors
Based on Figure 5 and aiming at understanding the subjects under debate, the systematic
reading consisted in a thorough reading of the works of the top five cited authors, besides
analyzing these works to find out which were the most relevant topics raised by the authors
and the methods they used, summarize in Table 3.
Table 3 presents the authors, objectives, method and number of citations of each
publication. It deserves notice that three of the five articles examine Chinese enterprises using
the case study method. Overall, the articles attempt to relate sustainability practices to supply
chain management in order to minimize environmental impact, in line with the CE concept.
Criteria were defined for the production of Table 4, namely: the article must have
analyzed some kind of industry, which should have been the subject of at least two articles
concerned with the supply chain, and the article in question must define the type of supply
chain under analysis. Furthermore, the article should not consist of a simple review of
literature, but in a survey or case study.
Table 4 shows that after applying the filter to the first 90 articles, only 55 fit the preestablished criteria. Among these, the construction and manufacture sectors were the most
studied through of case studies. Together, these areas account for more than half of the
articles analyzed using the case study method.
Regarding supply chain analyses, it must be noted that the authors tend to focus on an
environmental analysis of the supply chain, whereas some use green supply chain concepts,
which take into account the environment as a relevant variable. Additionally, the GSC concept
is similar to that of CE.
In bibliometric research, mapping by keywords and most used terms can shed light on
the topic and help researchers define study topics (Alvarado, 1984). The VOSViewer software
offers several graphic analyses based on the joint occurrence of the items analyzed (van Eck
and Waltman, 2010). The system shows the connection between related terms and authors,
allowing their breakup into groups called clusters. Each cluster is represented by a color and
aggregates all items considered similar. The size of the circles in the maps denotes the number
of occurrences of the item, whereas the proximity between two items shows their degree of
relation—the nearer they are, the more related to each other (van Eck and Waltman, 2010).
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The more important an item, the larger it is in writing and the larger its representative circle
(van Eck and Waltman, 2010). According to Figure 6, the top keywords are circular economy and
sustainability, followed by supply chain and recycling. The keyword network has six clusters.
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Winkler, H.
A sustainable supply as a suitable means of
empirical research.
chain approach.
designing closed-cycle
production systems.
Sustainable supply
chain management
and the transition
Genovese, A., Acquaye, A.
towards a circular
A., Figueroa, A., Koh, S. C. L.
economy: Evidence
and some
applications.
Zhu, Q. Geng, Y. Lai, K.-H.
Case-based approach
(adopting examples from
To verify the potential the chemical and foodstuffs
improvement of
industries). The study
sustainable supply chain
examined the
management practices, environmental implications
aligning them with
of the implementation of
circular economy
circular production systems,
concepts.
affording a comparison with
traditional linear production
alternatives.
CITATIONS
METHOD
OBJECTIVE
TITLE
YEAR
AUTHORS
Table 3 – Extreme outliers of the sample
77
74
52
38
Environmental
supply chain
To introduce the CE
cooperation and its
concept to foster
Using data from surveys
effect on the circular economic development collected from 396 Chinese
economy practice- and, at the same time, manufacturers. Analyses are 35
performance
to lower environmental done through hierarchical
relationship among
and resource
regression.
Chinese
challenges.
manufacturers.
Source: Authors
Brazilian Journal of Operations & Production Management, Vol. 17, No. 4, e20201042, 2020
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Circular economy and supply chain: a literature review
Type of Industry
Focus
Research
Mehod
Table 4 – Analysis of the sample
#ARTICLES
FI
Survey
48
59%
Study Case
30
37%
Ambos
4
5%
Supply Chain (SC)
42
60%
Green supply chain (GSC)
25
36%
SC + GSC
3
4%
Manufacturing Industry
9
16%
Food
7
13%
Chemical
8
15%
Bioenergy
4
7%
Automobile
4
7%
Construction
11
20%
Electronic
3
5%
Energy
3
5%
Textile
2
4%
Aluminium
2
4%
Stell
2
4%
Source: Authors
Figure 6 - Co-occurrence of authors’ keywords. Note: This network was drawn up using restriction
criteria of at least two occurrences by the VosViewer software using extracts from the database. The
total strength of the joint occurrence links will be calculated for each of the 29 keywords. Twenty-nine of
the 208 keywords meet the threshold.
Source: Authors
A map of the terms demonstrates the structure of a scientific field, showing the relation
between relevant terms of the area. During term selection, the main study field topics are
Brazilian Journal of Operations & Production Management, Vol. 17, No. 4, e20201042, 2020
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Circular economy and supply chain: a literature review
verified and the relation of the terms with these topics to identify their relevance in
differentiating each article (van Eck and Waltman, 2010).
Keywords are grouped in six clusters and the occurrences are presented in Table 5.
Table 5 – Keyword occurrence
Clusters
Keywords
Circular Economy
Occurrences Clusters
32
Food Waste
3
2
3
Reuse
2
Additive Manufacturing
2
Insects as Feed
2
Supply Chain Management
2
Supply Chain
6
Supply Chain Collaboration
2
Municipal Solid Waste
3
Green Supply Chain Mangement
2
Business Model
2
Pratice
2
Manufacturing
4
Sustainability
10
Resource Productivity
2
Closed-Loop Supply Chain
Industrial Symbiosis
3
3
Agriculture
Manufacturing Industry
2
2
Resource Efficiency
2
Green Supply Chain
2
Business Model Innovation
2
Product-Service Systems
2
Network Desing
2
2
5
China
3
Sustaintable Development
Occurrences
6
Life Cycle Assessment
1
Industrial Ecology
Keywords
Recycling
3
4
5
6
Source: Authors
As they are related to cluster 1, the concepts of “CE”, “supply chain management”, and
“collaboration in the supply chain” form the basis for sustainable management of the green
supply chain, which is important for strategies to achieve environmental advantages. Another
place where this cluster occurs is China, one of the world’s major industrial hubs, which is
committing to improve its environmental performance by developing methods and
techniques to minimize environmental impacts.
Cluster 2 includes a set of publications correlated to the CE concept, defined mainly by
the efficiency of resources that a closed supply chain can afford, allying network design,
industrial symbiosis and sustainable services, and product systems (Genovese et al., 2017).
Foodstuff waste and the existence of chemical surpluses after industrial processing have
been aggravating, and because of this fact, the authors in cluster 3 use CE notions to promote
reutilization of resources that are still being used, recycling everything possible to obtain a
positive life cycle evaluation.
Since municipalities are the most significant sources of solid waste, the studies in cluster
4 address supply chain expertise given regulations in force and use the CE context for proper
management of this waste, applying a business model structured to optimize this situation.
The supply chain is directly related to productivity in agriculture, as shown in cluster 5,
which analyzes the relationship between governance and water treatment to foster
cultivation, which is a strong element in the promotion of monocultures.
The authors in cluster 6, on the other hand, discuss green supply chain strategies based
on the concept of the circular economy in industrial operations, examining the application of
the CE model in sustainable operations.
The articles do not point to studies on a specific supply chain, but only stress the
importance of applying CE to the supply chain to mitigate the environmental impact of
materials and products along with the flow from the production process to end consumers.
CONCLUSION
This paper aimed to analyze the publications about circular economy and supply chain.
With this objective, a systematic review of the literature and bibliometrics was carried out,
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Circular economy and supply chain: a literature review
searching for articles with the terms “circular economy” and “supply chain” in the Scopus
database.
The first publications on the subject date from 2006, and there were periods without any
publication on the topic. From 2013 onwards, there was a steady increase in the number of
publications.
As expected, many publications mentioned the use of CE in the supply chain through
management of the green supply chain, a topic also mentioned by some of the authors in
section 2 of this article.
It was expected that some supply chains be given prominence and that authors would be
able to identify, through their research, which supply chains, of which product, employed the
most sustainable actions and the CE model. However, it was impossible to obtain this
information from the database, and thus no supply chain was analyzed with greater
frequency. Most studies analyze IT product and service supply chains.
The articles in the database were cited 10.05 times, on average, and five authors stood
out for having 35 or more citations: Park et al., (2010); Zhu et al., (2010); Winkler (2011);
Genovese, et al., (2017); and Zhu, et al., (2011). These authors are considered extreme outliers
in the sample, as they are much above the average number of citations. Three of these studies
were drawn up in China, which appears in the keyword network. However, Great Britain is the
country with most publications (around 19%). Thus, it is clear that China has been the site of
studies on the subject and is outstanding for the number of citations of the articles published
there, although it is not the country with the most publications on the subject.
The area with the largest number of publications is that of Environmental Science, with
about 27% of the articles. This significant number of publications is explained by the topic,
which involves the reduction of environmental impact caused in production.
The journal with the most publications is the Journal of Cleaner Production, with 20 articles
analyzed. However, the journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, which published
only three articles, has a higher Impact Factor than the Journal of Cleaner Production. The
Impact Factor measures the frequency with which the average article of a journal was cited in
a given year.
We used only the Scopus database. Other bases could be used, such as Web of Science. A
more in-depth analysis of Brazilian studies could also be drawn up and added to this survey.
Papers could focus on the analysis of the benefits and difficulties of CE in a given supply
chain, to understand the process of transition from linear economy to CE, and what were the
changes and business models used. Thus, analyzing CE through a supply chain, the latter could
be the source of studies to be replicated, researched, and analyzed in other chains. Analyzing
the differences and similarities between the concepts of green supply chain management and
CE is also an option, since many of the articles in the sample mentioned green supply chain
management. Thus, a study could be done looking into how they complement each other, how
they differ and how they are conceptualized by different authors, among other analyses.
Further alternatives would be analyzing the different types of business models based on
CE used in different supply chains, how these models could help the development of chain
members, their similarities, what are the major differences between a linear model and a
circular business model, among other topics. Finally, another suggestion would be to analyze
the social impact of circular economy, although not only from the environmental perspective,
as observed in current practices.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Brazilian research
funding agencies CNPq, FUNCAP and UFCA.
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Circular economy and supply chain: a literature review
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Author contributions: Renan Pereira: data collecting and writing; Edivan Alexandre Ferreira: data collecting,
writing and revision; Josivan Leite Alves: data collecting, writing and revision; Jeniffer de Nadae: managing the
project; Graziela Darla Araujo Galvão: managing the project.
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