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Green Value Stream Mapping: A Tool For Increasing Green Productivity (The Case of PT. NIC) Raymond Budihardjo; Wijanto Hadipuro
Journal of Management and Business Environment (JMBE) Vol 4, No 1: July 2022
Publisher : Soegijapranata Catholic University

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.24167/jmbe.v4i1.4620

Abstract

The role of the environment in business success is increasing from day to day. One of the ways to harmonize the goals of making a profit with the environment is by achieving green productivity. Green productivity means that companies can increase their productivity and at the same time improve their environmental performance. To reach that goal one of the ways is that businesses apply value stream mapping and make all the activities to be green which is known as a Green Value Stream Mapping. A combination of secondary data collection and Focus Group Discussions involving all relevant production staffs was conducted to get the initial data and the ideas to improve the performance of electricity, LPG, and water consumption at PT NIC Semarang. Compared to the initial data of the Current State Green Value Stream Mapping, the improvements resulted from the Future State Green Value Stream Mapping were a 51.4% decrease in electricity consumption, a 24.42% decrease in LPG consumption, and a 60% decrease in water consumption. From this empirical study, two important outcomes of future implications were found. For the food industry, implementing GVSM should be adjusted in such a way that the experiments to reach the Future State Green Value Stream Mapping will not affect the quality of the final products and that FGDs are very effective to generate ideas of improvements and getting commitments from production staffs to implement the improvements
Right-to-water Alliances in Indonesia and Two Critical Disjunctions Wijanto Hadipuro; Prathiwi Widyatmi Putri
PCD Journal Vol 8 No 1 (2020): PCD Journal Volume 8 No. 1 2020
Publisher : PCD Press, Department of Politics and Government - Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22146/pcd.v8i1.418

Abstract

Discourses on the right to water have shaped the opposition movement against Indonesia's market-oriented approach. We document how global debate against the privatisation of water has influenced discourses in this sector since 1998, and how activists have utilised such discourses in the context of national and provincial water policy. Our observations and analyses are centred on the decision of the Indonesian Constitutional Court February 2015 to annul the 2004 Law on Water Resources (UU No 7 Tahun 2004 tentang Sumber Daya Air), the legal umbrella under which private water concessions were sanctioned. We seek to understand discourse formations before and after the decision that helped end Indonesia's partial water privatisation. By deploying a textual-oriented discourse analysis of the pros and cons of the right-to-water and market-oriented approaches, this article examines the trajectory of Indonesian social movements opposed to water privatisation. It draws on leading Indonesian newspapers, grey literature—works produced outside academic and commercial publishing—and scientific publications. This article shows that there are limits to the use of the right-to-water discourse among activists, resulting in two critical disjunctions. First, an excessive focus on normative struggles against the privatisation of piped-water services has hindered more progressive, community-oriented responses to market-oriented water policies. Second, social movements in this sector have been disconnected from more recent global agendas for just water governance.