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Boosting resilience: working with like-minded partners to orchestrate critical supply chains

It’s time to reorchestrate critical supply chains—and the armed forces are in an ideal place to lead the change.

Supply chain disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic and other sources have caused many governments and private sector companies to reconsider supply chain practices. It’s time to reorchestrate critical supply chains—and the armed forces are in an ideal place to lead the change.

Supply chains today are complex, interwoven ecosystems of suppliers, manufacturers, distributors and consumers. Rather than small, neatly organised linear supply chains that are relatively easy to trace and understand, supply chains today are a mosaic of interdependent actors that requires complex and labourious analysis to figure out. The inability to illuminate supply chains can leave vulnerabilities hidden in the complexity. So, when a disruption, like a global pandemic, occurs, it can disturb the entire supply chain. Add in the rising strategic competition between leading trade partners and the need to rethink supply chains to reduce risk becomes increasingly clear.

To reconstruct supply chains in a more resilient manner requires not just focussing on cost and efficiency, but also balancing those concerns against risk. Rather than simply trying to reduce risk through national self-sufficiency, the solution lies in understanding which trading partners can work together to reduce supply chain risk without adding unacceptable financial cost. In this way, solving today’s supply chain problems may be less about reshoring than it is about orchestrating supply chains with close partners and allies, or ‘friendshoring’.

supply chain co-ordination and shared interests needed for trusted trader relationships. Organisations should consider starting small, focussing on trust and building commonality among curated trading partners that share the same strategic interests.

Reorchestrating supply chains to enhance their resilience can mean managing a dizzying number of relationships between producers, manufacturers, distributors and consumers. This can make reorchestration a challenging task for untested practices. Defence supply chains offer a great starting point. The nature of defence supply chains provides defence organisations a unique ability to explore supply chain reorchestration without causing unintended disruption. This is because for many defence products, like nuclear-powered submarines, defence organisations are the only customer. Most defence organisations already possess existing logistical programmes, supply chain co-ordination and shared interests needed for trusted trader relationships. Organisations should consider starting small, focussing on trust and building commonality among curated trading partners that share the same strategic interests.

This paper explores the vital importance of supply chain illumination, risk assessment to identify vulnerabilities and resource choke points for critical products and services, and the need for supply chain reorchestration or ‘friendshoring’ through the right trade vehicle—with armed forces organisations ideally positioned to lead the change.

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