Green supply chain management practices in sustainable development on hospitality industry in Sri Lanka

dc.contributor.advisorDharmasena, C
dc.contributor.authorBandara, WMST
dc.date.accept2018-02
dc.date.accessioned2019-03-19T07:38:01Z
dc.date.available2019-03-19T07:38:01Z
dc.description.abstractTourism is a fast-growing industry in worldwide & business volume of tourism equals or even surpasses that of oil exports, food products or automobiles. It has been identified that tourism is natural resource based industry. Sri Lanka has been recognized one of the most attractive designation mainly due to unique environmental, culture & history characteristics. At present the county is on the path to develop tourism industry as a main source of economic income which create direct and indirect many opportunities. Day by day increasing awareness and demand of environmental concern sustainable tourism, country need to implement sustainability practices to being competitive among other countries in the long run. Further need to achieve sustainable development without generating significant environmental problems. This study investigates Green Supply Chain Management practices available for service sector as general and particularly practical applicability for hospitality sector Sri Lanka. This study finds that (1) commonly practicing green practices in service sector worldwide; (2) green supply chain management practices in hospitality industry in Sri Lanka; (3) impact of green supply chain management practices for sustainable development of hospitality industry in Sri Lanka. The importance of this research is identification, prioritization and validation of green practices, which influence hotel/resorts’ performance in the industry. The theory of Green SCOR model was associated to describe GSCM. Based on a review of the extensive literature and response of in depth interview of industry expert an assessment framework is developed in this research, which consists of identification of green practices and relationship for impact of the firms’ performance. Both deductive and inductive reasoning, the quality of the data gathering will improve significantly and the research will be less biased since the research strategy consists of a ‘mixed method’. Management will be benefited to implement green supply chain practices in sustainable manner in business operation and sharpen the competitive edge as a corporate citizen. This was proven by the practical example in two largest hotel chains in Sri Lanka & Maldives.en_US
dc.identifier.accnoTH3660en_US
dc.identifier.degreeMBA in Operational Researchen_US
dc.identifier.departmentDepartment of Transport & Logistic Managementen_US
dc.identifier.facultyEngineeringen_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/handle/123/14053
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectTourism industryen_US
dc.subjectgreen supply chain management practicesen_US
dc.subjectsustainable developmenten_US
dc.subjectmixed methoden_US
dc.subjectMBA in Supply Chain Management
dc.subjectTRANSPORT AND LOGISTICS MANAGEMENT-Thesis
dc.subjectSUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT- Thesis
dc.subjectTOURISM INDUSTRY-Sri Lanka
dc.subjectSUSTAINABLE TOURISM
dc.subjectGreen Supply Chain Management(GSCM) practices
dc.titleGreen supply chain management practices in sustainable development on hospitality industry in Sri Lankaen_US
dc.typeThesis-Full-texten_US

Files