Mineral Raw Material Supply Chain Transparency and Traceability: Does Provenance Matter in the Supply Chain?

Raw material supply chains are complex systems. They build on the presence of economically mineable mineral commodities that will undergo several steps until they are finally being used as consumer products. Trustworthiness into the transparency of a supply chain is of increasing importance, both to...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBHM. Berg- und hüttenmännische Monatshefte Vol. 167; no. 12; pp. 594 - 597
Main Authors Dietrich, Valentina, Melcher, Frank
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Vienna Springer Vienna 2022
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:Raw material supply chains are complex systems. They build on the presence of economically mineable mineral commodities that will undergo several steps until they are finally being used as consumer products. Trustworthiness into the transparency of a supply chain is of increasing importance, both to upstream and downstream companies. Any deviation from best-practice and quality standards in mining, processing and production is critically looked at by consumers. Therefore, certification systems and proof of origin concepts have emerged within the past years, aiming at providing transparency to supply chains. The analytical proof of origin for mineral raw materials could be beneficial to certification schemes in several ways. It represents the least corruptible method of provenance analysis as it relates directly to the chemical composition of the raw material. Other methods, such as documents, tracers, or barcodes, can be outmanoeuvred in one way or another.
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ISSN:0005-8912
1613-7531
DOI:10.1007/s00501-022-01274-8