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Localisation and Circularity in Apple Supply Chains: An Algorithmic Exploration

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  • Baraa Alabdulwahab
  • Ruzanna Chitchyan

Abstract

Localisation and circularity in perishable food supply chains are essential for sustainability. Poor allocation of time-sensitive food leads to waste, higher transport emissions, and unnecessary long-distance sourcing. Algorithms used in digital trading platforms and allocation systems can help address these problems by improving how local supply is matched with demand under real operational constraints. This paper examines localisation and circularity in the UK apple supply chain. Apples are an informative case because they are perishable, consumed fresh as dessert fruit, used as inputs across multiple food industries, and generate valuable by-products. We present a weighted-sum mixed-integer linear programming formulation for supply-demand allocation. The model encodes a single global objective with explicit weights on four operational criteria: price matching, quantity alignment, freshness requirements, and geographic distance. These weights make priorities explicit and adjustable, enabling transparent balancing between economic and sustainability considerations. The framework also supports the circulation of unallocated supply across allocation cycles. Using a realistic apple supply-demand dataset, we evaluate allocation outcomes under different priority settings. Results indicate that allocation outcomes are strongly shaped by both priority settings and the structure of the underlying supply network characteristics.

Suggested Citation

  • Baraa Alabdulwahab & Ruzanna Chitchyan, 2026. "Localisation and Circularity in Apple Supply Chains: An Algorithmic Exploration," Papers 2603.03288, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2603.03288
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Tahereh Mohammadi & Seyed Mojtaba Sajadi & Seyed Esmaeil Najafi & Mohammadreza Taghizadeh-Yazdi, 2024. "Multi Objective and Multi-Product Perishable Supply Chain with Vendor-Managed Inventory and IoT-Related Technologies," Mathematics, MDPI, vol. 12(5), pages 1-30, February.
    2. Liao, Chao-Hui & Hsu, Hsin-Wei, 2025. "A multi-objective supply chain model for reducing carbon emissions and food losses in a multi-period mixed product environment," Socio-Economic Planning Sciences, Elsevier, vol. 101(C).
    3. Kang-Lin Chiang, 2025. "Multi-Objective Optimization for Sustainable Food Delivery in Taiwan," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(1), pages 1-24, December.
    4. Reza Kiani Mavi & Majid Semiari & Seyed Ashkan Hosseini Shekarabi & Neda Kiani Mavi & Fatemeh Moshkdanian & Arezoo Nikravesh & Sadegh Golsorkhi, 2025. "Multi-Objective Optimization of a Three-Level Sustainable Food Supply Chain: Modeling the Impact of Government Subsidies," Global Journal of Flexible Systems Management, Springer;Global Institute of Flexible Systems Management, vol. 26(3), pages 571-600, September.
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