A Conceptual Framework for Measuring Maintenance Impacts on Sustainability
Abstract
The paradigm of sustainable manufacturing has attracted a great deal of attention over the last decade as an
emerging manufacturing approach intending to empower the enterprises to cope with several challenges (such
as depletion of physical resources, stricter laws and regulations, economic stagnation, and customer request
for higher product quality) and guide them to stand out in today’s competitive environment. Sustainable
manufacturing is defined as creation of manufactured goods through the use of a series of processes that
minimise the negative environmental impacts, conserve energy and natural resources, are safe for employees,
communities and consumers, and are economically sound.
In such today’s competitive industrial context, maintenance process is major lever of organisation
efficiency. Indeed, maintenance provides company the ability to keep its production system in efficient state
and able to provide product at the required quality. In that way, maintenance process has a large potential in
pursuit of sustainable manufacturing thanks to its impact on other company’s processes. In fact, maintenance
affects production volume and costs, asset performance, equipment availability, quality of the final product,
but also health and safety of people, the surrounding natural environment and the social welfare. Maintenance
has many direct and indirect impacts on sustainability-related aspects and a proper and sustainable
management of maintenance processes lead to reduce and control such impacts. A sustainable maintenance
management strives for more efficient resource and energy management, for reduction of wastes associated to
maintenance, elimination of negative environmental impact, and guarantee of employees and stakeholders’
safety.
Despite of the increasing attention on the aforementioned area of investigation in very recent years, an
exhaustive and detailed literature review related to ‘maintenance and sustainability in industrial context’ was
not found. For this reason, the current state of the art was investigated in order to provide an overview of the
literature in ‘maintenance and sustainability’. The review was conducted through a scoping literature review
methodology that, differently from conventional reviews based on the author knowledge perspective, follows
a protocol minimizing the subjectivity. The main information was extracted and gaps were identified.
First, the literature review underlined the research challenge of better investigating and defining
maintenance impacts on economic, environmental, and social sustainability. Therefore, the relationships
between maintenance processes and sustainability indicators should be defined and formalised. A sustainable
maintenance management should reduce maintenance impacts and their consequences, and new
frameworks/methodologies/models should be defined in order to guide the stakeholders to reduce economic,
environmental and social impacts associated with industrial maintenance activities.
A conceptual framework for measuring maintenance impacts on sustainability was then developed and
provided in the thesis as scientific contribution to the research challenge identified and reported above.
Therefore, maintenance impacts on sustainability and the relationships between sustainability indicators and
maintenance processes were identified. The developed framework can guide and help several stakeholders to
define maintenance direct and indirect impacts on sustainability aspects, to select the indicators of interest for
measuring such impacts, and to be more aware about maintenance and sustainability relationship.
... [edited by Author]