Record queues of container ships wait at anchor outside the Port of Los Angeles. A 20-mile traffic jam clogs rail lines in Chicago. Store shelves are bare and shortages of numerous products —from automobiles and laptops to clothing, children’s toys and even Christmas trees are showing up across the country. Given the U.S. has been living with the COVID-19 pandemic for more than 18 months, why are there still kinks in the supply chain?
For years, global supply chains expanded and became increasingly complex in a quest to make shipping goods and services around the globe cheaper and faster. The COVID-19 pandemic threw these finely tuned systems into tailspin. Supply chain expert Zachary Rogers from Colorado State University will explain where we go from here, opportunities in innovation and connection, and how this may affect our lives at a free lecture on Tuesday, Nov. 2, at 5 p.m. that can be attended in person or online.
Supply chains are experiencing growing pains as they adjust to the new post-pandemic reality. Fortunately, COVID-related disruptions are also bringing to light new ways to innovate for the future. COVID-19 was not the first disruption to impact supply chains around the world, and it will not be the last. We must heed the hard-won lessons we take from COVID and build resilient systems that will be ready for future disruptions.
Zachary Rogers is an Arizona State University alum who earned a doctorate in supply chain management from the W. P. Carey School of Business in 2016. He is now an assistant professor of operations and supply chain management at CSU. His research focuses on the financial impact of supply chain disruptions, emerging purchasing and logistics technologies, and the increasing importance of supply chain cybersecurity.
Rogers serves as an analyst co-author for the Logistics Managers’ Index (LMI). This bimonthly publication tracks a broad range of logistics activity in the United States and publishes key logistics metrics that act as leading indicators predicting future economic activity. Its information is critical to companies dependent on the complex national and international network for product distribution. Such data are also used by investment professionals and government agencies in planning strategies for U.S. economic growth. This lecture will provide an inside look into the challenges facing consumers as we enter the holiday season — and perhaps an optimistic perspective on opportunities for new business growth.
This lecture series is an annual event that highlights ASU Biodesign Institute’s broad range of excellence in human health, community safety and global sustainability. The series was inspired by Charles Arntzen, Biodesign’s founding director from 2001-2003. He is a biotechnologist best known for his research on new strategies for biomanufacturing protein pharmaceuticals.
Currently, Arntzen is an emeritus professor at the ASU School of Life Sciences. He is a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Inventors, and an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences of India. In 2001, Arntzen was appointed as a member of President George W. Bush’s Presidential Council of Advisors on Science and Technology and in 2004 received a presidential appointment to serve on the National Nanotechnology Oversight Board.
The free, annual Arntzen Grand Challenge Lecture will be held in-person at the Biodesign B Auditorium, 727 E Tyler St, Tempe, AZ 85281. Livestreaming also will be available.
For more information: https://biodesign.asu.edu/arntzen-grand-challenges-lecture-series