Abstract
PurposeBusinesses are increasingly vulnerable and exposed to physical climate change risks, which can cascade through local, national and international supply chains. Currently, few methodologies can capture how physical risks impact businesses via the supply chains, yet outside the business literature, methodologies such as sustainability assessments can assess cascading impacts.Design/methodology/approachAdopting a scoping review framework by Arksey and O'Malley (2005) and the PRISMA extension for scoping reviews (PRISMA-ScR), this paper reviews 27 articles that assess climate risk in supply chains.FindingsThe literature on supply chain risks of climate change using quantitative techniques is limited. Our review confirms that no research adopts sustainability assessment methods to assess climate risk at a business-level.Originality/valueAlongside the need to quantify physical risks to businesses is the growing awareness that climate change impacts traverse global supply chains. We review the state of the literature on methodological approaches and identify the opportunities for researchers to use sustainability assessment methods to assess climate risk in the supply chains of an individual business.
Reference136 articles.
1. Sustainability-oriented innovation: a systematic review;International Journal of Management Reviews : IJMR,2016
2. Managing climate risks through social capital in agrifood supply chains;Supply Chain Management,2021
3. Aon (2023), “2023 weather, climate and catastrophe insight”, available at: https://www.aon.com/weather-climate-catastrophe/index.aspx
4. Scoping studies: towards a methodological framework;International Journal of Social Research Methodology,2005