Mapping the challenges of a socially sustainable, competitive, and green industry in the age of rapid change a Delphi study / Andreas Wallo, Jason Martin, Mattias Elg, Ulrika Harlin, Nina Bozic, Katrin Skagert, Anna Williamsson, Ida Gremyr.
Wallo, Andreas,1978- (författare)
Martin, Jason,1969- (författare)
Elg, Mattias,1968- (författare)
Harlin, Ulrika(författare)
Bozic, Nina(författare)
Skagert, Katrin(författare)
Williamsson, Anna(författare)
Gremyr, Ida,1975- (författare)
Arbete och arbetsliv(medarbetare)
Linköpings universitet Institutionen för beteendevetenskap och lärande(utgivare)
Linköpings universitet HELIX Competence Centre(utgivare)
Linköpings universitet Institutionen för ekonomisk och industriell utveckling(utgivare)
Publicerad: Linköping : Linköping University Electronic Press, 2023
Engelska 1 onlineresurs (81 sidor)
Serie: HELIX working papers, 1654-8213 1654-8213 ; 23:001
Läs hela texten (Sammanfattning och fulltext från Linköping University Electronic Press)
This report presents the findings of a Delphi study coordinated by Linköping University (LiU) in collaboration with RISE Research Institutes of Sweden and the Chalmers University of Technology. The study was carried out in 2022 as part of a Vinnova-funded planning project aimed at establishing an interdisciplinary research environment to prepare an application for a new competence centre focused on building a long-term, sustainable Swedish industry. The Delphi study aimed to identify key challenges related to the ambition to develop a socially sustainable, competitive, and green industry subjected to an accelerating pace of change. The Delphi study was based on an interactive research approach to facilitate the cocreation of knowledge for the dual purpose of advancing long-term theory development and innovation processes. The consortium and its reference groups consist of industrial companies (such as AstraZeneca, Ericsson IndustryLab, Rimaster, Saab Aeronautics, Scania, Volvo GTO and Volvo Cars), intermediaries and educational actors (such as Skill, IUC Sverige and Linköping Science Park), labour market organisations (including IF Metall, Industriarbetsgivarna, Unionen, and Teknikföretagen), governmental agencies (the Office for Sustainable Working life), and researchers from LiU, Chalmers, and RISE. There are key industrial targets forming the starting point for the Delphi study that also guide policies and investments in strategic agendas for the industrial stakeholders. For the Swedish industry to be resilient and sustainable, new competence and organisational abilities are required to decrease the dependency on fossil energy in production. Transformation towards electrification, circular economy, and digitalisation are key enablers, and these transitions are ongoing and accelerating at a fast pace. Furthermore, new and constantly emerging targets require organisational resilience, like managing new requirements and targets within energy consumption and supply of competence.
The findings of this report include a total of 14 identified challenges. To organise and create conditions for flexible work for all. To successfully manage crises and drastic external events. To successfully drive and contribute to the green industrial transformation. To facilitate employee-driven innovation and organisational learning. To attract, develop and retain employees with the right skills. To take advantage of and exploit the opportunities of digitalisation?To create inclusive workplaces and utilise diversity. To organise competence development. To collaborate with external parties to ensure the availability of competence. To design for socially sustainable work considering efficiency and good health in a dynamic environment. To organise the creation of added value for and together with customers and suppliers. To systematically drive continuous improvement work in parallel with long-term development work. To develop leadership that creates better opportunities both for a climate-neutral footprint and a competitive industry with good working conditions. To transform research- and policy-based knowledge into practice. The 14 challenges were further analysed according to perceived importance and ability and presented in a priority matrix. According to the priority matrix, the 14 challenges were then synthesised into six main research themes: A. Innovative competence supply practice, B. Resilient organisations & production systems, C. Analytics for improvement & learning, D. Socially sustainable work, E. Green transformation practices, and an open and undefined research theme labelled as Future challenges. The research themes are also presented together with six main analytical and theoretical perspectives in a matrix that can be used to intersect and interweave the research themes to guide the research agenda in a potential future research program.