Citation:
Abstract:
This study investigates the integrated planning of production, maintenance, and quality control in a hybrid manufacturing-remanufacturing system, accounting for deterioration, variability in the quality of returned products, carbon emissions, and outsourcing opportunities. The network consists of a manufacturer collaborating with an outsourcing remanufacturing provider. The manufacturer operates a single failure-prone machine to produce new products and to remanufacture returned ones. Recovered products that the manufacturer cannot process are sent to the outsourcing provider for remanufacturing. The system generates harmful emissions, potentially leading to environmental taxes and sanctions. We formulate a mixed-integer nonlinear programming model to determine the optimal integrated manufacturing, remanufacturing, outsourcing, and preventive maintenance plan. Eventually, the proposed strategy minimizes total economic costs and defects and ultimately reduces carbon emissions. We use a global solver for solving small instances, while a genetic algorithm metaheuristic is developed for larger ones. Extensive computational experiments reveal that the developed genetic algorithm is highly efficient, achieving gaps of less than 0.95% within shorter execution times for small instances and significantly outperforming the solver in larger ones. The results show that the integrated outsourcing strategy, combined with accounting for carbon emissions from both new and remanufactured products, significantly reduces the reliance on new products, leading to notable cost savings and environmental benefits. These savings become more pronounced as the number of returns increases.