Tadesse, Mahlet Demere
- Department of Energy and Technology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2024Peer reviewedOpen access
Tadesse, Mahlet Demere; Gebresenbet, Girma; Ljungberg, David; Tavasszy, Lorant
Digital technologies are essential tools that enable traceability in supply chains. In low-income countries, traceability represents a challenge due to the complicated structure of supply chains and the involvement of multiple stakeholders. This research developed a framework for a digital traceability system (TS), using the Ethiopian coffee supply chain as a case study. A literature review was conducted to gain an in-depth understanding of state-of-the-art digital traceability technologies. A logistics audit was conducted to map the coffee supply chain in Ethiopia and evaluate the implementation level of traceability technologies. Although the implementation of traceability technologies in the Ethiopian coffee supply chain is low, the results revealed that the usage of traceability technologies improves downstream of the supply chain. The traceability framework developed in this study ranges from a paper-based TS to a fully digitalised TS. The implementation of a TS in the coffee supply chain of Ethiopia is met with several challenges such as affordability, limited awareness, resistance of certain stakeholders, infrastructure limitations, restricted accessibility of some technologies and insufficient policy frameworks. Stakeholders from low-income countries can use the framework developed in this study to adopt a TS for their supply chains in line with their needs and current digitalisation levels.
coffee; digital traceability; Ethiopia; logistics audit; low-income countries; supply chain
Future transportation
2024, Volume: 4, number: 3, pages: 780-794 Publisher: MDPI
Transport Systems and Logistics
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/futuretransp4030037
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/132871