Government & Defence Supply Chain Management

Supply chain and workforce solutions for government and defence.

Trace helps Defence and Government agencies optimise supply chains, workforce operations, and service delivery. With proven experience across Federal and State Government and as members of multiple government panels, we deliver practical, resilient solutions that improve outcomes in complex, high-stakes environments.

The top deck of a naval ship.

Supporting Australia's most complex operations with practical, outcome-driven consulting.

The Australian Defence Force (ADF) manages one of the country’s largest and most complex supply chains with billions invested annually in procurement, sustainment, and logistics. The performance of these systems is critical to operational readiness and national security.

At Trace Consultants, we bring deep expertise in defence supply chain strategy, government procurement, and public sector service delivery.

Government & Defence Consultants

Meet our government and defence experts:

Smiling man in a light grey blazer and purple shirt stands outdoors, with trees and a building in the background.

Mathew Tolley

Trace Partner
Linked In icon

Mathew has had previous roles in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, including as Director in the Office of Supply Chain Resilience. Over 12 years of experience advising public and private sector organisations.

Woman with long hair smiling, wearing a white blazer and green top, standing outdoors with autumn foliage in the background.

Emma Woodberry

Senior Manager
Linked In icon

Emma is a former Logistics Officer in RAAF, with over 10 years of experience in supply chain specialist consulting across diverse public sector organisations.

A woman smiling in a stylish, patterned jacket, with short hair and sitting by a large window with greenery in the background.

Emma Hope

Senior Manager
Linked In icon

Emma has had previous logistics roles at Department of Defence and over 5 years experience in supply chain specialist consulting for a broad range or public and private sector clients.

Professional portrait of a smiling man in a suit and tie, wearing glasses, with a blurred outdoor background.

David Carroll

Manager
Linked In icon

David Carroll is a Management Consultant with over eight years of experience supporting Federal Government clients.

Core service offerings

Strategic, operational, and technical support for government & defence:

From high-level strategy to hands-on implementation, Trace delivers targeted support across the full spectrum of supply chain, procurement, workforce, and system challenges.

Workforce Strategy & Service Chain Optimisation

We help government agencies and defence departments plan, roster, and deploy workforces that are efficient, resilient, and ready. Our work spans the full end-to-end service chain, from strategic workforce planning through to daily scheduling.

Key Services:

  • Workforce Strategy & Organisation Design
  • Procurement Strategy for Services
  • Skills Mix Analysis & Forecasting
  • Rostering Strategy & Scheduling Optimisation
  • Cost Efficiency Reviews
  • KPI Dashboards & Reporting
  • Workforce Process Improvement

Defence & Government Supply Chain Consulting

Our consultants bring real-world supply chain experience from base logistics to multi-tier procurement, combined with deep understanding of public sector governance and risk frameworks. We design and implement defence supply chain strategies that are future-ready and built for complexity.

Key Services:

  • Defence Supply Chain Strategy
  • Supply Chain Operating Model Design
  • Integrated Product Support (IPS)
  • Supply Chain Planning & Forecasting
  • Preparedness Modelling & Resilience Diagnostics
  • Process Improvement & Cost Reviews
  • Governance Frameworks & Reporting

System Selection & Implementation

We guide agencies through the full lifecycle of supply chain and workforce technology transformation. From requirements gathering to post-go-live support, we ensure tech investments are fit-for-purpose, people-friendly, and properly embedded.

Key Services:

  • Requirements Definition & Functional Scoping
  • Technology and Software Selection
  • Implementation Project Support
  • End-User Support & Adoption

Download our Capability Overview:

A concise, shareable overview of our approach to supply chain risk and resilience across government and commercial environments.

Thanks for your interest, your capability overview is ready to download below.

Download the Capability Overview (PDF)
*Please ensure you have filled out all required fields.
Futuristic digital network with glowing lines and transparent data panels representing supply chain risk and resilience.

How to engage us

Federal & State Government panels.

Trace is a listed provider on multiple Federal and State Government panels, making it simple for agencies to engage our services through established procurement pathways. Engage our services through:

Australian National Audit Office (ANAO)
Provision of Professional and Associated Services SON3921486

System Assurance Audits, Financial Statement Audits, Performance Audits, Labour Hire Contractor Recruitment services, and other additional services.

Australian Electoral Commission (AEC)
Provision of Transport, Logistics, and Related Services SON4025476

The provision of freight transport, logistics, and associated services, including the movement of electoral materials, furniture relocation, short-term storage, and technical advice.

Department of Finance – PD
Management Advisory Services (MAS Panel) SON3751667

Benchmarking, competition and market analysis, regulatory and policy analysis, business case development, cost-benefit analysis, supply and demand forecasting and more.

NSW Government
Performance and Management Services

Government and Business Strategy, Business Processes, Financial Services, Audit, Quality Assurance and Risk, Procurement and Supply Chain Services.

Digital Transformation Agency
Performance and Management Services

Strategy, Policy and Governance services, Business, Systems and Process analysis services, Solutions Implementation services

Our Experience

Proven track record with Federal and State Government clients:

Insights and resources

Latest insights on government & defence topics.

Resilience and Risk Management

China-Plus-One for Australian Businesses: How to Diversify Your Supplier Base Without Losing Quality, Reliability or Cost Competitiveness

Mathew Tolley
Mathew Tolley
March 2026
China accounts for roughly 28% of Australia's total merchandise imports — over US$75 billion annually. For many Australian manufacturers, retailers, and distributors, that concentration represents a strategic vulnerability that boards and executive teams can no longer ignore. But diversification done poorly creates more problems than it solves. Here's how to approach it as a structured procurement and supply chain design challenge.

Every few years, the conversation about reducing dependence on Chinese manufacturing gets louder. The pandemic accelerated it. US-China trade tensions intensified it. Tariff escalations in 2025 — with effective duty rates on some Chinese-origin products exceeding 50% for US importers — brought it to a head. And while Australia hasn't imposed equivalent tariffs, the flow-on effects are reshaping global supply chains in ways that Australian businesses can't afford to ignore.

According to the United Nations COMTRADE database, Australia imported US$75.7 billion in goods from China in 2024. China remains Australia's largest source of manufactured imports by a significant margin, supplying everything from electronics and machinery to building materials, packaging, and consumer goods. For many Australian businesses, Chinese suppliers represent 60-90% of their imported product base. That kind of concentration — in any category, from any source — is a risk that prudent supply chain management should address.

But the China-Plus-One conversation often starts in the wrong place. It starts with a reaction — a geopolitical headline, a tariff announcement, a supply disruption — and jumps straight to "we need to find suppliers in Vietnam" without the structured evaluation that a decision of this magnitude demands. Supplier diversification is not just a procurement exercise. It's a supply chain design challenge that touches sourcing strategy, logistics network configuration, quality management, inventory policy, working capital, and risk management simultaneously.

This article is about how to approach that challenge methodically — evaluating alternatives honestly, understanding the trade-offs, and building a diversified supplier base that actually works in practice, not just on a strategy slide.

Why diversification matters now — and why it's harder than it looks

The case for diversification is straightforward. Concentration risk in any part of a supply chain creates vulnerability to disruption — whether from geopolitical tension, regulatory change, natural disaster, or pandemic. When 76% of European shippers reported supply chain disruptions in 2024, with a quarter experiencing more than 20 disruptive events, the data confirmed what most supply chain leaders already knew: single-source and single-country strategies carry real financial consequences.

For Australian businesses specifically, the calculus includes several additional factors. Australia's geographic remoteness means that any supply chain disruption from Asia has an amplified impact — longer shipping lanes mean longer recovery times. The diplomatic relationship between Australia and China, while stabilising, has demonstrated that trade can be used as a geopolitical lever. And the broader reconfiguration of global trade — with the US imposing escalating tariffs, companies pursuing regionalisation strategies, and new trade corridors emerging — is reshaping the competitive landscape for sourced goods.

But here's what the diversification advocates often understate: China's manufacturing ecosystem is genuinely difficult to replace. It's not just about cheap labour anymore — China's average manufacturing wages reached approximately US$770 per month in 2023, higher than many ASEAN alternatives. China's advantage lies in the depth and breadth of its supplier base, the speed and scale of its production capacity, and the quality of its industrial infrastructure. Chinese manufacturers can scale rapidly because they operate within dense supplier ecosystems where components, materials, and services are available locally. Trying to replicate that in a market where you need to import raw materials from China to manufacture in Vietnam somewhat undermines the diversification thesis.

This is why diversification needs to be approached as a structured strategic exercise, not a reactive scramble. Done well, it reduces risk, builds resilience, and can even improve total cost outcomes. Done poorly, it fragments your supply base, increases complexity, degrades quality, and costs more than staying concentrated.

The alternative markets: an honest assessment

Vietnam

Vietnam is the most commonly cited China-Plus-One destination, and for good reason. Its electronics exports reached US$72.6 billion in 2024, up 26.6% year on year, driven by major investments from Samsung, Apple suppliers, Intel, and others. The country has a young, increasingly skilled workforce, with average manufacturing wages roughly half of China's. Its government has been proactive in developing industrial zones, improving port infrastructure, and signing trade agreements.

For Australian importers, Vietnam offers strong trade agreement coverage. It's a signatory to the CPTPP, RCEP, and AANZFTA — giving Australian businesses multiple pathways to preferential tariff treatment. The country excels in electronics assembly, textiles and apparel, footwear, furniture, and increasingly in light industrial manufacturing.

The challenges are real, though. Vietnam's total population of approximately 98 million limits its scalable workforce compared to China or India. Infrastructure, while improving rapidly, is under pressure — ports and roads face congestion as trade volumes surge. And critically, many Vietnamese manufacturers still rely on Chinese-sourced raw materials and components, which means your supply chain diversification may be less complete than it appears on paper. If you're sourcing finished goods from Vietnam but those goods contain 60-70% Chinese inputs, you've moved assembly but not truly diversified your supply base.

India

India offers scale that few other markets can match — a population exceeding 1.4 billion, a large English-speaking workforce, and a government actively pursuing manufacturing investment through the "Make in India" initiative and Production-Linked Incentive schemes across electronics, pharmaceuticals, solar, textiles, and automotive.

Australia's trade relationship with India is strengthening. The Australia-India Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (AI-ECTA), which entered into force in December 2022, is reducing tariffs on a growing range of goods, with a more comprehensive agreement (AI-CECA) under negotiation. India has been described as the world's third most sought-after manufacturing destination, with the potential to export US$1 trillion worth of goods by 2030.

The reality on the ground, however, requires careful navigation. Infrastructure remains uneven — while major metro areas have improved power, ports, and highways, many industrial regions still suffer from logistics delays, power reliability issues, and congestion. Bureaucratic complexity is well-documented. Labour laws vary by state and can be restrictive. And India is not yet a member of the CPTPP, which limits some of the tariff advantages available through other ASEAN sourcing routes. For Australian businesses, India works best for categories where scale matters, lead times are manageable, and quality can be controlled through established supplier relationships — pharmaceuticals, textiles, automotive components, and increasingly electronics.

Indonesia

Indonesia is Southeast Asia's largest economy, with a population of over 270 million and a government that has committed to industrial development through its "Making Indonesia 4.0" programme. The country received approximately US$33 billion in greenfield manufacturing FDI in 2023, reflecting genuine investor confidence.

For Australian businesses, Indonesia offers several advantages. Geographic proximity means shorter shipping lanes than China for many routes. The Indonesia-Australia Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (IA-CEPA), in force since July 2020, provides preferential market access. Indonesia is also a RCEP and AANZFTA member. The country has established manufacturing capabilities in textiles, automotive, palm oil derivatives, building materials, and is positioning itself as a hub for electric vehicle battery supply chains, leveraging its substantial nickel reserves.

Indonesia's challenges include infrastructure gaps across its archipelago, regulatory complexity that varies by region, and a manufacturing base that, while growing, lacks the density of China's supplier ecosystems. Scaling production can take longer, and quality control requires more active management than in more mature manufacturing markets.

Mexico

While geographically distant from Australia, Mexico deserves mention because the US-China tariff environment is redirecting significant manufacturing investment there. Companies serving North American markets are establishing Mexican production to avoid Chinese-origin tariffs. For Australian businesses with US-facing supply chains or those sourcing from global manufacturers with Mexican operations, this shift can create new procurement options. Mexico is also a CPTPP signatory, which provides a framework for preferential trade with Australia.

Australia's trade agreement advantage

One aspect of the diversification conversation that's often underappreciated is just how well-positioned Australia is from a trade agreement perspective. Australia has free trade agreements in force with virtually every significant alternative manufacturing country, including AANZFTA (covering all ten ASEAN nations), RCEP (covering China, Japan, Korea, and ASEAN), CPTPP (covering Vietnam, Malaysia, Mexico, and others), IA-CEPA (Indonesia), and AI-ECTA (India).

This means Australian businesses can access preferential tariff rates from multiple alternative sourcing countries. The AANZFTA upgrade, which entered into force in April 2025, further improves processes for traders to access existing tariff preferences. RCEP, as the world's largest free trade agreement by members' GDP, provides common rules of origin that can simplify multi-country sourcing strategies.

The practical implication is that Australian procurement teams should be actively evaluating the tariff and rules-of-origin implications of sourcing shifts — because in many categories, the trade agreement framework already supports diversification. The barrier isn't tariffs; it's the operational complexity of managing a diversified supplier base.

A structured approach to diversification

The organisations that diversify successfully treat it as a deliberate strategy and network design exercise, not an ad hoc reaction. Here's what that looks like in practice.

Start with a supplier concentration audit

Before evaluating alternatives, understand your current exposure. Map your supply base by country of origin — not just where your purchase orders go, but where the goods are actually manufactured and where the critical raw materials originate. Many Australian businesses discover that their apparent diversity (ordering from multiple trading companies) masks genuine concentration (all the product comes from the same region or even the same factory cluster in China).

Identify which categories have the highest concentration risk, the highest spend, and the greatest vulnerability to disruption. These are your priority categories for diversification. Don't try to diversify everything simultaneously — that's a recipe for the complexity explosion that makes diversification fail.

Define what you're optimising for

Diversification involves trade-offs. You may accept slightly higher unit costs in exchange for reduced concentration risk. You may accept longer lead times from a new market in exchange for tariff savings. You may accept lower initial quality from a developing supplier in exchange for long-term optionality.

Being explicit about these trade-offs — and quantifying them where possible — is essential. A total cost of ownership model that includes unit cost, freight, duties, quality costs, inventory carrying costs, lead time variability costs, and risk-adjusted disruption costs will give you a more honest comparison than unit price alone. In our experience, organisations that evaluate alternatives on unit price alone consistently underestimate the true cost of switching — and then either revert to Chinese suppliers or accept higher costs than they anticipated.

Evaluate suppliers on capability, not just cost

The most common failure mode in China-Plus-One strategies is selecting alternative suppliers primarily on price and then discovering that quality, reliability, or capacity doesn't meet requirements. A structured supplier evaluation should assess manufacturing capability and capacity (not just current output, but ability to scale), quality management systems and track record, raw material sourcing and sub-tier supply chain visibility, financial stability, logistics infrastructure and export capability, and compliance with Australian standards and regulations.

This evaluation takes time and resources. It typically involves site visits, sample production runs, and a qualification period before shifting meaningful volume. Organisations that shortcut this process — or rely solely on online supplier directories and trading company introductions — take on significant quality and reliability risk.

Plan for a transition, not a switch

Diversification is not about abandoning Chinese suppliers overnight. The most effective approach is to gradually build alternative sources while maintaining existing relationships. A common starting point is shifting 20-30% of volume in a target category to an alternative supplier, running dual supply for a qualification period, and then adjusting the allocation based on performance.

This parallel approach has several advantages. It maintains your relationship and leverage with existing Chinese suppliers. It allows you to test the alternative supplier at manageable volumes before committing. It gives your logistics and planning teams time to adapt to new lead times, shipping routes, and inventory patterns. And it provides a fallback if the alternative supplier doesn't perform as expected.

Redesign your inventory and logistics strategy

Adding supply sources from new countries changes your logistics network and inventory requirements. Different lead times, shipping frequencies, and reliability profiles from Vietnam or India versus China may require adjusting safety stock levels, reorder points, and warehouse configurations. If you're sourcing the same product from two countries, you need a planning process that can manage split allocations and variable lead times without creating either stockouts or excess inventory.

This is where diversification intersects with supply chain planning. Organisations that treat sourcing diversification as purely a procurement exercise — without adjusting their planning parameters, inventory policies, and logistics arrangements — often find that the operational disruption of dual-sourcing outweighs the risk reduction benefits.

Invest in supplier development and quality management

Alternative markets are called "alternative" for a reason — many suppliers in Vietnam, India, and Indonesia are less mature than their Chinese counterparts in areas like quality management, process standardisation, and export documentation. This doesn't mean they can't deliver quality product, but it does mean you may need to invest more in supplier development, quality assurance, and ongoing management than you do with established Chinese suppliers.

Demand for third-party inspections and audits in ASEAN countries has surged — up 36-62% year on year in some markets — as companies diversifying from China recognise the need for more active quality oversight during the transition period. This investment in quality management should be factored into the total cost of diversification, and it should be treated as a capability-building exercise, not just a policing exercise.

For Australian businesses, the practical implication is that your procurement team needs the capacity and capability to manage a more complex supplier base. If your team is already stretched managing existing Chinese suppliers, adding suppliers across two or three additional countries without additional resources or organisational design changes is likely to result in quality failures, delivery problems, and frustrated stakeholders. Diversification requires investment in people and processes, not just contracts.

What this means for Australian businesses

The China-Plus-One conversation is not going away. The structural forces driving it — geopolitical tension, tariff escalation, supply chain resilience imperatives, regulatory change, and the broader reconfiguration of global trade — are long-term trends, not temporary disruptions.

For Australian businesses, the question isn't whether to diversify, but how to do it in a way that actually improves your competitive position rather than just adding cost and complexity. It's worth noting that the original "China-Plus-One" concept is itself evolving. Leading organisations are now building multi-country sourcing networks — "China-Plus-Many" — with different countries serving different purposes in the portfolio. China for complex, high-volume production where ecosystem depth matters. Vietnam for mid-tier manufacturing with strong trade agreement access. India for categories where long-term scale and English-speaking business engagement provide advantages. Indonesia for resource-linked products and proximity benefits. The point isn't to find a single replacement for China — it's to build a portfolio of sourcing options that gives you flexibility and reduces your exposure to any single point of failure. The organisations getting this right share several characteristics: they approach diversification as a strategic programme rather than an ad hoc procurement exercise; they invest in structured supplier evaluation and qualification rather than chasing the cheapest quote; they adjust their supply chain operating model — planning, inventory, logistics — to accommodate a more complex supplier base; and they maintain strong relationships with Chinese suppliers while building alternatives, rather than treating it as an either-or decision.

Australia's trade agreement network provides a genuine advantage that many businesses aren't fully leveraging. With preferential access to ASEAN, India, and a growing list of other markets, the tariff barriers to diversification are lower than many procurement teams assume. The real barriers are operational — and overcoming them requires the kind of structured approach outlined above.

How Trace can help

At Trace, we help Australian organisations design and execute supplier diversification strategies that balance risk reduction with commercial pragmatism. We don't believe in diversification for its own sake — we believe in building supply chains that deliver reliable, cost-competitive outcomes across a range of scenarios.

Our work in this space typically starts with a supplier concentration and risk assessment: mapping your current supply base by country of origin, identifying single-source and single-country dependencies, and quantifying the financial exposure of concentration risk. From there, we help clients develop category strategies that identify which categories should be prioritised for diversification and which alternative markets offer the best fit, build total cost of ownership models that give an honest comparison of alternatives — not just unit prices but landed costs, quality costs, inventory implications, and risk-adjusted disruption costs, design sourcing strategies that structure the transition from concentrated to diversified supply bases without disrupting operations, adjust supply chain planning and inventory policies to accommodate new lead times, shipping routes, and supplier reliability profiles, and evaluate the trade agreement and tariff implications of sourcing shifts to ensure you're capturing available preferential treatment.

We work across FMCG and manufacturing, retail, government, health, and resources — sectors where supply chain concentration risk is both significant and actionable.

We're independent. We don't represent suppliers, we don't take commissions from sourcing agents, and we don't have preferred-country partnerships that bias our recommendations. Our interest is in helping you build a supply chain that's resilient, competitive, and aligned to your commercial strategy.

If you're evaluating your China exposure, exploring alternative sourcing markets, or navigating the trade agreement landscape — get in touch. Diversification done well is a source of competitive advantage. Diversification done poorly is just expensive complexity. We can help you get it right.

Trace Consultants is an Australian supply chain and procurement consulting firm. We help organisations build resilient, cost-competitive supply chains through structured strategy, not reactive switching. Visit our insights page for more on the challenges shaping Australian supply chains.

Strategy & Design

The 12 Most Searched Supply Chain Problems in Australia Right Now — And What to Do About Each One

Shanaka Jayasinghe
Shanaka Jayasinghe
February 2026
We track what Australian supply chain and procurement leaders are searching for. In early 2026, the same twelve problems keep appearing — driven by a combination of regulatory deadlines, trade disruption, cost pressure, technology change and workforce challenges. Some are perennial. Some are new. All of them are urgent. This guide covers every one: what's driving it, why it matters, what good looks like, and where to start.

We spend a lot of time talking to supply chain and procurement leaders across Australian organisations — in FMCG, retail, manufacturing, resources, healthcare, government and defence. The conversations vary, but the underlying problems are remarkably consistent. The same challenges keep surfacing, in boardrooms, in planning meetings, in procurement reviews, and in the search queries that bring people to our website.

In early 2026, the Australian supply chain landscape is shaped by a convergence of forces: mandatory climate reporting deadlines that are turning Scope 3 emissions into an operational emergency, a global trade environment still reverberating from tariff disruption, persistent cost pressure against thin margins, technology investment decisions that carry significant risk, labour shortages that refuse to resolve, and the ever-present question of how to make supply chains more resilient without making them more expensive.

These forces aren't theoretical. They're showing up as real, urgent problems that organisations need practical help with — not more frameworks, not more thought leadership that describes the problem without solving it, but concrete guidance on what to do, in what order, with what resources.

This article covers the twelve supply chain problems that Australian organisations are searching for answers to right now. For each one, we explain what's driving it, why it matters in the Australian context specifically, what good practice looks like, and how Trace Consultants can help. It's long — deliberately so — because each of these problems deserves serious treatment, not a paragraph and a platitude.

Before we get into the specifics, a few things are worth noting about the Australian supply chain landscape in 2026.

Business confidence remains fragile — the NAB Business Confidence Index slipped to just 1 in November 2025, the weakest reading since April, even as consumer sentiment improved. Businesses are operating near full capacity (utilisation at 83.6%, the strongest in 18 months) but with thin margins and limited room for error. This creates a paradox: organisations know they need to invest in supply chain capability, but they need those investments to deliver returns quickly and with high certainty.

The ASCLA (formerly SCLAA) identifies three priorities for 2026: leveraging technology and automation, building resilience and managing risk, and embedding sustainability into strategy. Manhattan Associates research shows 81% of Australian supply chain leaders expect new technologies to reduce freight costs and improve efficiency. FedEx's B2B Trends 2026 report describes AI adoption as "table stakes" rather than experimental, with IoT-enabled sensors detecting more than 60% of potential supply chain disruptions earlier.

Against this backdrop, here are the twelve problems that are generating the most search activity, the most client conversations, and — in our assessment — the most genuine need for practical advisory support.

1. Scope 3 Emissions Reporting and Supply Chain Decarbonisation

If there's one topic that has moved from "nice to have" to "board-level emergency" faster than any other, it's Scope 3 emissions reporting. And it's fundamentally a supply chain problem — even if many organisations are still treating it as an accounting exercise.

What's driving it. Australia's mandatory climate reporting regime under the Australian Sustainability Reporting Standards (ASRS) is now live. AASB S2 requires companies to report on climate-related risks, opportunities and greenhouse gas emissions. For the largest companies — those with revenue above $500 million — reporting started from 1 January 2025. Critically, while Scope 3 emissions disclosure is not required in the first reporting year, it becomes mandatory from the second year onwards. For the first tranche of companies, that means Scope 3 reporting is required from mid-2026.

The second tranche — companies with revenue above $200 million — faces comprehensive emissions reporting from 2026, including Scope 3. Smaller companies earning above $50 million join the mandatory framework in 2027. By that point, virtually every significant business in Australia will need to understand and report on its supply chain emissions.

The implications cascade through supply chains. Even organisations that aren't directly in scope of the reporting requirements will feel the effects. As ASIC has noted, many small businesses form part of the supply chains of larger businesses, which means they may need to engage with climate reporting considerations over time — because the Scope 3 emissions of a large reporting entity include the emissions of its suppliers. In practice, this means larger organisations will begin requesting emissions data from their suppliers, creating a ripple effect that extends the reporting requirement well beyond the entities directly in scope.

The penalties for non-compliance mirror those for financial reporting under the Corporations Act, including civil penalties for directors. This isn't soft regulation — it has teeth.

Why it's a supply chain problem. Scope 3 emissions — the indirect emissions that occur across an organisation's value chain, both upstream and downstream — typically represent 65-95% of a company's total carbon footprint, according to PwC's analysis. They include emissions from purchased goods and services, transportation and distribution, business travel, waste generated in operations, and the use and end-of-life treatment of sold products.

Measuring these emissions requires detailed understanding of the supply chain: who supplies what, from where, using what processes, with what transport modes, over what distances. It requires data from suppliers — many of whom don't yet measure their own emissions — and methodologies for estimating where direct data isn't available. The Greenhouse Gas Protocol allows the use of industry averages, proxies and spend-based methodologies, but the direction of travel is clearly toward more granular, supplier-specific data.

PwC's experience suggests that as much as 80% of an organisation's supply chain emissions can come from as few as one-fifth of its purchases. One public-sector agency found that just 20 suppliers were responsible for 94% of its Scope 3 supply chain emissions. This concentration means that targeted supplier engagement — rather than boiling the ocean — can be a practical path to both measurement and reduction.

What good looks like. Organisations that are handling Scope 3 well are treating it as a supply chain transformation opportunity, not just a compliance obligation. They're mapping their supply chains to identify emission hotspots, engaging with key suppliers on data collection and reduction targets, building internal capability to measure and manage supply chain emissions on an ongoing basis, and connecting Scope 3 insights to procurement decisions — factoring emissions into supplier selection, contract negotiation and category strategy.

They're also being honest about data limitations. The Australian standards acknowledge that Scope 3 data will be imperfect, particularly in early years, and include transitional provisions for "reasonable endeavours" in data collection. The key is to start, establish a baseline, and improve over time — not wait for perfect data before acting.

The procurement connection. One of the most practical ways to address Scope 3 emissions is through procurement. If up to 90% of a company's carbon emissions sit in its supply chain — as research from The Carbon Trust suggests — then procurement decisions are climate decisions. Supplier selection criteria should include emissions performance. Contract negotiations should address emissions reduction targets. Category strategies should identify decarbonisation opportunities within each spend category. And supplier performance management should track emissions alongside cost, quality and service.

This doesn't require a complete overhaul of procurement processes. It requires adding an emissions lens to existing processes — and having the supply chain data to support it. Organisations that already have strong procurement disciplines — structured category management, rigorous go-to-market processes, active contract governance — are well-positioned to integrate emissions management. Those that don't will struggle with Scope 3 regardless of how much they invest in emissions measurement tools.

The assurance dimension. It's worth noting that assurance requirements are being introduced gradually under the ASRS. In early years, limited assurance is required; by year four, reasonable assurance kicks in across all categories. This means companies need clear records, consistent methodologies and reliable data trails — not just a number at the end. The governance framework for Scope 3 reporting needs to be robust enough to withstand external scrutiny, which in turn requires clear ownership, documented assumptions and transparent limitations.

How Trace Consultants can help. At Trace, we approach Scope 3 as a supply chain mapping and procurement challenge. We help organisations map their supply chain emission hotspots, identify the suppliers and categories that account for the majority of Scope 3 emissions, develop data collection frameworks and supplier engagement strategies, integrate emissions considerations into procurement processes and category strategies, design the governance and organisational frameworks to sustain Scope 3 management beyond the first reporting cycle, and connect Scope 3 work with broader supply chain resilience and cost optimisation — because decarbonisation, when done well, often reduces cost and risk as well. Our independence from emissions software vendors means our advice is focused on what works operationally — not what creates the most subscription revenue.

2. Tariff Impact, Trade Disruption and Supply Chain Reconfiguration

The global trade environment has been turbulent for years, but 2025-2026 has brought a new level of complexity for Australian businesses. The search volume around tariff impact, sourcing diversification and supply chain reconfiguration is at levels we haven't seen since the pandemic.

What's driving it. The U.S. tariff regime introduced in 2025 imposed a 10% baseline tariff on Australian exports, 25% on steel and aluminium, and up to 54% on Chinese goods. Australian exporters have paid approximately A$1.4 billion in additional duties since the measures were introduced, according to industry estimates. In February 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the IEEPA tariffs were unlawful — only for the administration to replace them with a 15% Section 122 tariff that roughly approximates the previous regime.

The Australian Industry Group reports that 47% of Australian industrial businesses are now experiencing supply chain disruptions, with the rate still rising as tariff effects work through supply chains. Among affected businesses, 81% report increased costs as the leading impact. Critically, the Ai Group notes that the full impact of already-in-force tariffs won't become apparent until early 2026, with further tariffs lagging after that.

Beyond the direct U.S.-Australia trade relationship, the secondary effects are significant. U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods are diverting Chinese exports to alternative markets — including Australia — creating competitive pressure for domestic manufacturers. Meanwhile, the broader trend toward "secure trade" rather than liberalised trade is reshaping how governments and businesses think about supply chain design.

The Australian context. Australia's position as an island continent heavily reliant on maritime and air freight for both imports and exports makes it particularly vulnerable to trade disruption. Long inbound supply chains, concentrated shipping lanes and limited domestic manufacturing capacity mean that tariff-driven reconfiguration of global supply chains has outsized impacts here.

At the same time, Australia has opportunities. The CPTPP and RCEP agreements provide rules-based access to Indo-Pacific markets with preferential tariff treatment. Australia's critical minerals endowment — lithium, rare earths, antimony — positions it as a strategic supplier in the global energy transition and defence supply chains.

What good looks like. Organisations that are navigating trade disruption effectively are mapping their tariff exposure across the full supply chain — not just direct imports but the embedded tariff costs in components sourced by their suppliers. They're modelling alternative sourcing scenarios using network design tools, diversifying supplier bases with a deliberate "China-plus-one" or multi-source strategy, leveraging free trade agreements for preferential tariff treatment, and building the agility to shift sourcing and logistics patterns as trade policy evolves.

The organisations that have coped best aren't the ones that predicted exactly what would happen. They're the ones that built optionality into their supply chains before the disruption hit.

The EU-Australia FTA dimension. Adding further complexity, the EU-Australia Free Trade Agreement — which launched negotiations in 2018 — may be finalised in early 2026. As one procurement commentator noted, this "will mean structural change flowing through to sourcing strategies, pricing structures, and long-term supply chain risk planning." The EU is Australia's third-largest two-way trading partner and second-largest source of foreign investment. For procurement and supply chain professionals, this creates both opportunity (lower tariffs on EU goods, new sourcing options) and urgency (limited runway to prepare).

Meanwhile, Australia's existing FTA network — CPTPP, RCEP, the bilateral agreements with the UK, India, UAE and others — provides a web of preferential trade arrangements that sophisticated sourcing strategies can leverage. But taking advantage of these agreements requires understanding rules of origin, tariff schedules and compliance requirements that many procurement teams are not yet equipped to navigate.

The practical response. For most Australian organisations, the response to trade disruption shouldn't be a wholesale restructuring of the supply chain. It should be a structured assessment of exposure and a pragmatic plan to build resilience. This means starting with visibility — mapping where your goods and materials actually come from, through all tiers of the supply chain, and identifying where tariff exposure and concentration risk sit. Then modelling the financial impact of different scenarios — what happens to your landed cost if tariffs on Chinese goods increase by another 10%? What if the EU FTA is finalised and you can shift sourcing to European suppliers? What if a key shipping corridor is disrupted for 60 days?

With that analysis in hand, the strategy becomes clearer: which sourcing shifts are worth pursuing now, which should be planned as options, and which are better managed through other mechanisms (inventory buffers, contractual protections, pricing pass-through).

How Trace Consultants can help. Trace has written extensively about tariff implications for Australian businesses, and we work with organisations on export and risk assessments, n-tier supply chain mapping to identify embedded tariff exposure, scenario modelling for alternative sourcing strategies, procurement strategy for supplier diversification, FTA utilisation analysis, and network design to optimise the trade-offs between cost, risk, service and resilience under different trade scenarios.

3. Supply Chain Cost Reduction

Cost reduction never goes out of fashion in supply chains, but the current environment has made it existential for many Australian organisations. More than a third of supply chain leaders surveyed by TMX Transform identify cost as their single biggest challenge — and margins are being squeezed from multiple directions simultaneously.

What's driving it. The cost pressure facing Australian supply chains in 2026 is multi-dimensional. Logistics costs remain volatile, driven by fuel price uncertainty, tariff effects and Red Sea shipping disruptions that continue to affect global freight rates. Labour costs in warehousing, transport and logistics have risen sharply due to persistent shortages — the ASCLA reports ongoing difficulty finding skilled truck drivers, warehouse staff and logistics professionals. Interest rates, while beginning to moderate, have made working capital more expensive, amplifying the cost of carrying excess inventory. Meanwhile, new compliance requirements — Scope 3 reporting, modern slavery due diligence, product safety standards — add operational cost even as they deliver other benefits.

The challenge is that traditional cost-reduction approaches — renegotiating supplier rates, reducing headcount, consolidating shipments — have largely been exhausted. Organisations that have already gone through multiple rounds of procurement savings are finding diminishing returns from the same playbook. The costs that remain are often structural: embedded in network design, process inefficiency, specification creep, contract structures and technology limitations.

Where costs actually hide. In our experience working across Australian supply chains, the biggest cost reduction opportunities typically sit in five areas: network and logistics costs (sub-optimal DC locations, inefficient transport routes, excessive nodes in the distribution network, carrier contracts that haven't been market-tested), inventory carrying costs (excess safety stock, slow-moving and obsolete inventory, poor demand forecasting driving overstock, misaligned replenishment parameters), procurement leakage (specifications that haven't been challenged, contracts that auto-renew without renegotiation, fragmented buying across categories, poor compliance with negotiated agreements), operational inefficiency (manual processes that should be automated, warehouse layouts that create wasted movement, planning processes that consume analyst time without improving decision quality), and total cost of ownership blind spots (evaluating purchases on unit price rather than total cost, ignoring transition costs, underweighting quality and service costs).

What good looks like. Effective cost reduction in 2026 requires an end-to-end view — connecting procurement savings with network design optimisation, inventory planning improvements and warehouse operational efficiency. The organisations capturing the most value are the ones that look across these dimensions simultaneously, rather than optimising each in isolation.

The best cost reduction programs also distinguish between quick wins (contract renegotiations, specification reviews, process fixes that can deliver savings within 3-6 months), structural improvements (network redesign, planning process transformation, technology implementation that deliver sustained savings over 1-3 years), and strategic shifts (sourcing strategy changes, make-or-buy decisions, operating model redesign that reshape the cost base fundamentally).

Starting with quick wins builds credibility and funds the longer-term work. But if the program stops at quick wins, the structural costs remain — and the same exercise needs to be repeated every two years, with diminishing returns each time.

The working capital dimension. One cost category that deserves special mention is inventory and working capital. With interest rates still elevated relative to the near-zero environment of 2020-2021, the cost of carrying inventory is materially higher. For a business carrying $50 million in inventory at a weighted average cost of capital of 8%, the annual carrying cost is $4 million — before you add warehousing, insurance, obsolescence and shrinkage. Reducing inventory by 20% — through better demand forecasting, optimised safety stock parameters, improved supplier lead times and disciplined slow-moving management — can release $10 million in working capital and save $800,000 or more annually in carrying costs alone.

This is where the connection between planning and cost reduction becomes critical. Inventory is a symptom — of forecast error, supply variability, long lead times, poor parameter management and inadequate governance. Attacking the symptom (writing off slow movers, cutting stock targets) without addressing the causes (improving forecast accuracy, reducing lead times, optimising replenishment parameters) just creates service problems.

How Trace Consultants can help. Cost reduction runs through everything we do at Trace. Our approach starts with understanding where costs actually sit — through data analysis, process observation and benchmarking — and then identifying the structural changes that will deliver sustainable reduction rather than one-off savings. We work across procurement (strategic sourcing, category strategy, go-to-market processes, contract management), planning and operations (demand planning, inventory optimisation, S&OP, replenishment), warehousing and distribution (network design, warehouse efficiency, logistics optimisation, 3PL management), and organisational design (operating model, capability, governance). Our end-to-end perspective means we identify the cross-functional opportunities that siloed cost reduction exercises miss — like the procurement decision that's optimising unit price at the expense of total logistics cost, or the inventory policy that's reducing stockholding at the expense of production efficiency.

4. Warehouse and Distribution Network Optimisation

As organisations grapple with cost pressure, service expectations and resilience requirements, distribution network design is getting serious strategic attention. The question isn't just "where should our warehouses be?" — it's "what's the right number of nodes, in what locations, with what capabilities, serving what channels, at what service level, at what cost?"

What's driving it. Several forces are converging to make network design a priority. E-commerce growth continues to reshape fulfilment requirements — consumers expect faster delivery, accurate tracking and flexible fulfilment options. The TMX Transform State of Supply Chain report identifies the tension between cost management and customer experience as the dominant theme for 2026. Climate events — flooding and extreme weather — have exposed the fragility of networks built around single distribution hubs, driving a shift toward more distributed, resilient network models. Industrial property costs in major Australian markets have risen significantly, making warehouse space more expensive and forcing harder decisions about where to invest. And the ASCLA forecasts that some congestion and bottlenecks will ease as companies expand regional distribution centres and diversify transport modes — but advises building multi-modal backup plans rather than assuming steady improvement.

The Australian challenge. Australia's geography creates unique network design challenges. The population is concentrated in a handful of coastal cities separated by vast distances. Interstate freight is dominated by road and rail corridors that are vulnerable to disruption. Port infrastructure constraints limit the capacity to handle volume fluctuations. And the economics of last-mile delivery in a dispersed suburban landscape are fundamentally different from the dense urban environments that most global logistics models are designed for.

For organisations serving national markets, the trade-off between centralised efficiency (fewer, larger DCs) and decentralised service (more DCs closer to customers) is a genuine strategic decision — not an obvious answer. The right answer depends on product characteristics, demand patterns, service level requirements, channel mix, transport cost structures and tolerance for inventory investment.

What good looks like. Strong network design combines quantitative modelling with strategic judgement. The modelling piece uses actual demand data, transport cost structures, warehouse operating costs and service level requirements to test different network configurations — how many DCs, where, what size, what product range, what replenishment frequency. The strategic judgement piece incorporates factors that models struggle with: future demand growth patterns, channel evolution, resilience requirements, lease flexibility and the practical realities of warehouse labour markets in different locations.

Organisations that get this right typically review their network design every 3-5 years or when triggered by significant changes in demand patterns, channel mix, customer locations, cost structures or service requirements. They don't treat network design as a one-time project but as a strategic capability that informs ongoing decisions about where to invest, what leases to renew, and how to allocate inventory.

The automation question. Distribution network decisions increasingly intersect with automation investment decisions. The level of automation appropriate for a DC depends on throughput volume, SKU range, order profile, labour availability and cost, and the expected life of the facility. A network design that recommends consolidating two manual DCs into one larger facility may be predicated on automation enabling the throughput that manual operations couldn't achieve. Conversely, a network design that distributes inventory across multiple smaller facilities may not generate the volume to justify automation at any single site.

These decisions need to be made together, not sequentially. The optimal network design depends on the automation strategy, and vice versa. Organisations that separate these decisions — running a network design project first and then an automation feasibility study — often find that the conclusions of one invalidate the assumptions of the other.

Multi-channel complexity. For organisations serving both retail and direct-to-consumer channels, network design has become significantly more complex. Retail replenishment typically involves pallet and carton movement in predictable patterns, while e-commerce fulfilment involves individual item picking with high variability and tight delivery windows. These channels have different optimal network configurations — which creates the question of whether to serve both from the same facilities, operate parallel networks, or use hybrid models with shared infrastructure and separate fulfilment areas.

The answer depends on the relative volume of each channel, the degree of SKU overlap, the service level requirements, and the cost structure. There's no universal right answer, which is why modelling with real data matters more than adopting a generic "best practice" model.

How Trace Consultants can help. Network design is one of Trace's core capabilities. We help organisations model and evaluate distribution network alternatives using scenario analysis, quantifying the cost, service and risk trade-offs of different configurations. We support DC site selection, 3PL evaluation, automation feasibility assessment, and the transition planning required to move from current to target state. Our work spans FMCG and manufacturing, retail and consumer, health and human services and government and defence — each with distinct network design requirements.

5. S&OP and Integrated Business Planning Transformation

Sales and operations planning remains one of the most searched — and most frustrating — topics in supply chain management. Almost every organisation has some form of S&OP process. Very few are happy with it.

What's driving it. The challenge with S&OP isn't a lack of awareness — it's a gap between what S&OP is supposed to deliver (cross-functional alignment, better demand-supply balancing, improved decision-making) and what most organisations actually experience (a monthly meeting cycle that consumes enormous time, produces consensus forecasts that nobody fully trusts, and fails to connect operational planning with financial outcomes).

A recent MHD Supply Chain Solutions feature on an ANZ-based manufacturer's planning transformation highlights the typical starting point: fragmented planning processes across regions, manual reconciliation, inconsistent data structures, and planning outcomes that varied depending on local tools and planning maturity. The manufacturer had average inbound lead times of four months but an order book that extended only a few weeks — creating permanent tension between inventory levels, service performance and responsiveness.

The article highlighted what many organisations discover: that technology alone won't resolve planning challenges without disciplined data and process foundations. Master data quality, consistent planning parameters, standard processes and clear governance are prerequisites — not afterthoughts.

The evolution to IBP. The leading organisations are moving beyond traditional S&OP toward integrated business planning (IBP) — a cross-functional planning operating model that connects demand planning, supply planning, inventory planning and financial reconciliation into a single process. IBP doesn't just balance demand and supply; it aligns operational plans with business strategy and financial targets.

This evolution requires several things that many organisations lack: a single version of the truth for demand (rather than competing forecasts from sales, marketing and supply chain), planning processes that operate at the right level of granularity for each decision (strategic vs tactical vs operational), financial integration that translates volume plans into P&L and cash flow impacts, and governance that ensures planning decisions are made by the right people at the right time.

What good looks like. Effective S&OP/IBP is characterised by a demand planning process that produces a realistic, unbiased baseline forecast — ideally with statistical or AI-generated foundations — that's then enriched by commercial intelligence. A supply planning process that translates demand into production, procurement and logistics requirements, identifying constraints and trade-offs. An inventory planning process that sets parameters based on service level targets, demand variability and supply lead times — not gut feel. A financial reconciliation step that ensures plans are achievable and aligned with budget. And an executive S&OP meeting that focuses on decisions, not data review.

The data foundation. One theme that surfaces consistently in planning transformations is the criticality of master data quality. Consistent item hierarchies, lead times, sourcing rules and planning parameters are prerequisites for any planning system or process to produce reliable outputs. This applies whether you're using spreadsheets, a mid-range planning tool, or a full APS implementation. Without disciplined data foundations, the planning engine — however sophisticated — will produce unreliable outputs that planners learn to ignore.

This data work needs to run in parallel with process design and system implementation. It's tempting to treat it as a precursor that can be "completed" before the main project starts. In reality, data readiness is an ongoing discipline that needs governance, ownership and continuous attention. The organisations that succeed at planning transformation are the ones that invest in master data governance as a permanent capability, not a one-off project.

The Australian context. For Australian supply chains specifically, long inbound lead times (4-6 months is common for imported goods) create a structural tension in planning. The demand signal changes faster than the supply chain can respond. This makes forecast accuracy particularly valuable — every percentage point of improvement in forecast accuracy translates directly to reduced safety stock requirements and improved service levels. It also makes S&OP governance more important: when the supply chain is slow, the quality of decisions made months in advance determines operational outcomes today.

Seasonal patterns (reversed from the Northern Hemisphere, creating alignment challenges for global businesses), promotional intensity (particularly in FMCG and retail), and concentrated customer bases (where a handful of major retailers represent a disproportionate share of demand) all create planning complexity that generic global S&OP models don't always address.

How Trace Consultants can help. Trace helps organisations design and implement planning and operations processes that actually work — from demand planning through S&OP to execution. We've also written a detailed guide to Advanced Planning Systems and their role in supporting planning process maturity. Our approach starts with understanding the current process, identifying where value is being lost, and designing a target operating model that's realistic for the organisation's maturity level — then helping implement it with the right blend of process design, technology enablement, data foundation work and change management. We're sector-agnostic on planning — the principles are consistent across FMCG, retail, resources and government — but the specific design needs to reflect each sector's demand patterns, supply chain characteristics and decision-making rhythms.

6. 3PL Selection, Outsourcing and Transition Management

The decision to outsource logistics — or to retender an existing 3PL arrangement — is one of the most consequential supply chain decisions an organisation can make. And in the current cost environment, many Australian organisations are revisiting these arrangements.

What's driving it. Several factors are pushing organisations to reassess their logistics outsourcing. Contract renewal cycles — many 3PL contracts established during or after the pandemic are coming up for renewal, and organisations want to ensure they're getting market-competitive pricing and service. Cost pressure — the gap between 3PL costs and in-house alternatives is narrowing in some categories as warehouse automation becomes more accessible. Service dissatisfaction — organisations that outsourced logistics to reduce cost are finding that service levels, flexibility and responsiveness aren't meeting expectations. Scale changes — growth, channel evolution or geographic expansion may mean the current 3PL arrangement no longer fits. And consolidation in the Australian 3PL market is changing the competitive landscape, creating opportunities for organisations that go to market at the right time.

The complexity. 3PL selection is more complex than most procurement exercises because you're buying an operating capability, not just a product or service. The 3PL will run your warehouse, handle your inventory, pick and pack your orders, manage your transport, and interact with your customers. Their performance directly affects your service levels, your cost structure and your brand reputation. Getting it wrong — or managing the transition poorly — can cause significant operational disruption.

The evaluation needs to go well beyond price. It should assess operational capability (can they actually run the operation at the required volume, complexity and service level?), technology and systems (is their WMS compatible with your systems? do they offer the visibility and reporting you need?), cultural fit (will they be responsive, transparent and collaborative?), flexibility (can they scale up and down as your volumes change?), and financial stability (will they be around for the term of the contract?).

The make-or-buy question. Before going to market for a 3PL, organisations should honestly assess whether outsourcing is the right model. The case for 3PL outsourcing is typically strongest when the operation requires specialist capability the organisation doesn't have internally (cold chain, dangerous goods, high-volume e-commerce fulfilment), when volume variability is high and the organisation needs to avoid fixed cost (seasonal peaks, promotional surges), when the organisation wants to focus management attention on core activities rather than logistics operations, and when the 3PL can leverage shared infrastructure across clients to deliver cost advantages.

The case for in-house operations is typically strongest when logistics is a core competitive differentiator (customer experience, speed, quality control), when volume is stable enough to utilise fixed assets efficiently, when integration between logistics and other functions (manufacturing, customer service, merchandising) is critical, and when the organisation has strong operational management capability.

Many organisations end up with hybrid models — some operations in-house, others outsourced — based on the specific characteristics of each operation. The important thing is that the decision is deliberate and evidence-based, not a legacy of historical choices that nobody has revisited.

The contract structure. 3PL contracts deserve more attention than they typically receive. The commercial structure — open book vs closed book, fixed vs variable pricing, gain-share mechanisms, KPI regimes, indexation provisions — determines the incentive alignment between client and provider. A poorly structured contract can create perverse incentives: a 3PL paid per unit handled has no incentive to reduce handling; a 3PL on a fixed fee has no incentive to invest in efficiency improvements that benefit the client.

The best 3PL contracts balance risk and reward, include meaningful performance metrics with financial consequences, provide transparency into the cost base, and include clear mechanisms for managing change — because the operation will change over the contract term, and the contract needs to accommodate that without triggering renegotiation every time.

What good looks like. A well-run 3PL selection process starts with a clear understanding of what you need — documented in sufficient detail for 3PL providers to price accurately and for the evaluation to be meaningful. It includes a market scan to identify the right providers, a structured RFx process that gives providers enough information to respond thoughtfully, an evaluation methodology that weights operational capability alongside price, site visits and reference checks, and detailed transition planning that manages the handover risk.

The transition is where most 3PL engagements succeed or fail. The best organisations invest significant time in transition planning — including parallel running, phased handover, clear escalation paths and performance monitoring during the stabilisation period. A typical 3PL transition takes 3-6 months from contract signing to steady-state operations, with the first 8-12 weeks being the highest risk period. Having dedicated project management, clear workstream ownership and agreed milestones is essential.

Post-transition, the ongoing governance model matters enormously. The initial contract sets the terms, but the day-to-day management determines whether the relationship delivers value. This means regular performance reviews against agreed KPIs, structured business improvement processes, open book cost transparency (where the commercial model supports it), and a clear process for managing scope changes and resolving disputes.

The current market. The Australian 3PL market is consolidating, with larger providers acquiring regional operators and investing in technology and automation. This creates opportunities for organisations going to market — there's active competition for quality accounts. But it also means that the due diligence needs to be thorough: understanding the integration risks when a 3PL has recently acquired another business, assessing whether the local management team (not just the corporate pitch team) has the capability to run your operation, and ensuring that the technology platform is stable and fit for purpose.

How Trace Consultants can help. Trace supports organisations through the full 3PL lifecycle — from the initial make-or-buy decision through go-to-market strategy, RFx development and management, evaluation and shortlisting, commercial negotiation, and transition planning and execution. Our warehousing and distribution expertise means we understand the operational realities of what we're asking 3PL providers to deliver — which makes for better requirements, better evaluation and better outcomes.

7. Procurement Transformation and Operating Model Design

Procurement has undergone a fundamental repositioning in recent years — from back-office cost centre to strategic function. But for many Australian organisations, the operating model hasn't kept pace with the ambition.

What's driving it. The 2026 ProcureCon Australia agenda captures it well: procurement is expected to "elevate its influence, align more closely with business priorities, and lead transformative initiatives." BCG's Inverto procurement trends report identifies four strategic imperatives for 2026: scaling AI across procurement, driving innovation through procurement partnerships, building geopolitical resilience, and developing AI-ready procurement talent.

But the reality on the ground in many Australian organisations is more prosaic. Procurement teams are stretched — expected to deliver more savings, more governance, more risk management, more sustainability compliance — with headcount that hasn't grown since pre-COVID. The workload arrives in surges (contract renewals clustering, major sourcing programs coinciding), and the operating model isn't designed to handle the peaks. Category management exists in theory but not in practice. Contract management is reactive rather than strategic. Supplier relationship management is a spreadsheet, not a discipline. And the data quality and technology infrastructure needed to support a modern procurement function often isn't there.

What good looks like. A well-designed procurement operating model addresses several dimensions: organisational structure (how is the team organised — by category, by business unit, by process? where does procurement sit in the organisation? what's the reporting line?), capability and roles (what roles exist, what skills are required, where are the gaps? how do you attract and retain procurement talent in a competitive market?), process and governance (how are sourcing decisions made? what approvals are required? how are contracts managed after award? how is supplier performance measured?), technology and data (what systems support procurement processes? is spend data visible and trusted? can the team access market intelligence and analytics?), and performance measurement (how is procurement's contribution measured? beyond savings — what about risk reduction, service improvement, sustainability outcomes, working capital impact?).

The concept of Procurement as a Service (PraaS) is gaining traction in Australia — a managed, scalable procurement capability that can be dialled up or down based on workload. This isn't outsourcing procurement; it's augmenting internal capability with structured external support during peak periods or for specialist categories.

Done well, PraaS provides several things that internal teams often struggle with: surge capacity when major sourcing programs cluster, specialist category expertise for complex or infrequent procurement (facilities management, IT managed services, logistics outsourcing), structured methodology and tools that may not exist internally, and market intelligence and benchmarking from working across multiple organisations and categories.

The key to effective PraaS is structure. It needs standard ways of working, clear governance, defined roles and responsibilities, and integration with the client's internal procurement team — not a parallel function that operates independently.

The capability gap. Deloitte's latest CPO survey highlights digital literacy and AI fluency as core skills for tomorrow's procurement teams. The BCG/Inverto trends report emphasises that winning procurement organisations invest in workforce readiness, operating model redesign and cross-functional change management to ensure AI becomes embedded in everyday decision-making. New roles are emerging: procurement data translators who turn analytics into action, automation and AI product owners for source-to-pay workflows, and supplier risk and ESG specialists embedded in category teams.

For many Australian procurement teams, this represents a significant capability gap. The current team may be excellent at running sourcing events and managing supplier relationships, but lack the data skills, technology fluency and strategic capabilities that the evolving role demands. Bridging this gap requires deliberate investment in recruitment, training, role design and career development — not just an expectation that existing staff will "upskill" in their spare time.

How Trace Consultants can help. Procurement transformation is core to what Trace does. We help organisations design and implement procurement operating models that deliver strategic value — from organisational design and capability assessment through process redesign, technology enablement and performance framework development. We also provide Procurement as a Service for organisations that need scalable procurement capacity, including go-to-market management, contract management support, category strategy execution and strategic workforce planning for the procurement function itself.

8. Supply Chain Resilience and Risk Management

Resilience has been a buzzword in supply chains since the pandemic. But in 2026, it's moving from concept to operational discipline — driven by regulatory requirements, board-level accountability and the lived experience of repeated disruptions.

What's driving it. The Australian Industry Group's trade and supply chain report provides a stark picture: 47% of industrial businesses are experiencing supply chain disruptions, up from pre-pandemic levels. The rate is expected to continue rising as tariff effects work through supply chains. Among affected businesses, 81% report increased costs, 44% report constrained growth, and significant proportions report reduced productivity and customer service impacts.

Beyond tariffs, the disruption landscape includes climate events (the ASCLA identifies extreme weather as having exposed the fragility of single-hub networks), geopolitical risk (U.S.-China tensions, Red Sea shipping disruptions, critical mineral export restrictions), cyber threats (increasingly targeting supply chain systems and data), regulatory risk (new compliance requirements creating supply chain complexity), and supplier financial risk (cost pressures creating viability concerns for smaller suppliers).

The regulatory environment is also pushing resilience higher on the agenda. CPS 230 requires banks and other APRA-regulated entities to identify critical operations, maintain tolerance levels for disruption, and extend oversight to third and fourth parties — effectively mandating supply chain resilience. The standard came into force on 1 July 2025, with material service provider registers due to APRA by 1 October 2025 and pre-existing contracts required to comply by the earlier of renewal or 1 July 2026.

CPS 230 is significant because it treats operational resilience as fundamentally a supply chain problem. It requires organisations to map their operational supply chains — not just direct service providers but the suppliers' suppliers (fourth parties) — with the same rigour that supply-chain-intensive industries have applied for decades. It requires identifying concentration risks (where multiple critical operations depend on the same provider — for example, a single cloud infrastructure provider), establishing tolerance levels for disruption (how long can each critical operation be disrupted before the impact becomes unacceptable?), and maintaining business continuity plans that are regularly tested.

While CPS 230 is specific to financial services, the principles are spreading. Boards across sectors are asking harder questions about supply chain vulnerability, driven by the lived experience of pandemic disruption, the ongoing tariff volatility, climate events and cyber incidents. Organisations that build resilience capability now — regardless of their regulatory obligations — will be better positioned when broader resilience requirements inevitably emerge.

What good looks like. Effective supply chain resilience combines several capabilities: risk identification and assessment (understanding which supply chain nodes, suppliers and dependencies create the greatest vulnerability), scenario planning and stress testing (modelling the impact of specific disruption scenarios — not generic risk matrices but specific, quantified analysis of what happens if a key supplier fails, a transport corridor is disrupted, or a critical material becomes unavailable), mitigation planning (for identified risks — dual sourcing, safety stock positioning, alternative logistics routes, contractual protections, insurance), monitoring and early warning (tracking leading indicators that suggest a disruption is emerging — supplier financial health, geopolitical developments, weather patterns, demand anomalies), and response capability (the organisational muscle to respond quickly when disruption occurs — clear roles, pre-defined playbooks, communication protocols, escalation paths).

The best organisations treat resilience as a design principle, not a bolt-on. They build optionality into their supply chain design — multiple suppliers, flexible contracts, distributed inventory, multi-modal logistics — so that when disruption occurs, they have options.

The cost of resilience — and how to manage it. One of the most common objections to resilience investment is cost. Dual sourcing costs more than single sourcing. Safety stock costs more than just-in-time. Distributed networks cost more than centralised ones. These trade-offs are real — but they're often overstated, and they need to be weighed against the cost of disruption.

The Ai Group's data shows that 81% of disrupted businesses report increased costs as a consequence. Those costs — expedited freight, emergency sourcing, lost sales, production downtime, customer penalties, reputational damage — are often invisible in normal cost reporting because they're spread across multiple budget lines. When you quantify the actual cost of recent disruptions and compare it to the incremental cost of resilience measures, the business case often changes dramatically.

The smartest organisations are finding ways to build resilience that don't simply add cost. Supplier diversification, for example, can increase competitive tension and improve commercial outcomes. Better demand planning can reduce safety stock requirements while improving service reliability. Network redundancy can be achieved through flexible 3PL arrangements rather than owned assets. The key is creative design, not simply spending more.

Resilience as competitive advantage. There's also an offensive dimension to resilience that's often overlooked. When disruption hits an industry, the organisations that maintain supply gain market share from those that don't. Customers who switch suppliers during a disruption often don't switch back. Being the reliable supplier in an unreliable market is a powerful competitive advantage — one that can justify the investment in resilience many times over.

How Trace Consultants can help. Trace helps organisations build resilience into their supply chain design and operations. This includes supply chain risk assessment and n-tier mapping, scenario modelling and stress testing, network design for resilience (balancing cost efficiency with redundancy and flexibility), supplier risk assessment and mitigation planning, business continuity planning for supply chain operations, CPS 230 compliance support for APRA-regulated entities, and integration of resilience considerations into procurement strategy and supplier selection.

9. WMS, TMS and Supply Chain Technology Selection

Technology selection is one of the highest-stakes decisions in supply chain management. Get it right and you unlock years of operational improvement. Get it wrong and you're stuck with a system that doesn't fit your operation, at a cost that wasn't in the business case.

What's driving it. The Australian supply chain management software market reached USD $647 million in 2025 and is growing at nearly 10% CAGR, according to IMARC Group data. Industry surveys show 68% of Australian enterprises plan to increase spending on supply chain software and analytics over the next two years. Cloud-based platform adoption among mid-sized enterprises increased 22% year-on-year in 2025.

The drivers are familiar: legacy systems that can't support modern requirements (real-time visibility, AI-enabled planning, omnichannel fulfilment), integration challenges between fragmented systems, the need for better data and analytics, and vendor pressure as major platforms (SAP, Oracle, Blue Yonder, Manhattan, Kinaxis) invest heavily in next-generation capabilities.

The categories getting the most attention in Australia right now are warehouse management systems (driven by e-commerce complexity, labour cost pressure and automation investment), transport management systems (driven by logistics cost pressure and the need for route optimisation and carrier management), and advanced planning systems (driven by the desire for AI-enhanced forecasting, inventory optimisation and scenario planning — a topic we've covered in detail in our guide to APS selection).

What organisations get wrong. The most common mistakes in supply chain technology selection are starting with the vendor rather than the problem (letting vendor shortlists drive requirements rather than the other way around), evaluating against feature checklists (counting features rather than testing whether the system produces better decisions with your data in your process), accepting canned demos (every demo looks impressive when the vendor controls the data and the scenario), underweighting implementation (the implementation partner, approach and change management typically determine 70% of the outcome — yet receive 30% of the evaluation focus), treating cost as licensing cost (implementation, integration, data migration, training and change management typically represent 60-70% of total cost of ownership), and selecting technology without redesigning processes (new technology in old processes produces old results — just more expensively).

What good looks like. A well-run technology selection process starts with a clear definition of the operational problem to be solved, not a technology specification. It includes a structured go-to-market process with clearly defined requirements, scenario-based demonstrations using representative data, evaluation criteria that weight implementation approach and team alongside software capability, total cost of ownership analysis, and thorough reference checking and site visits.

The integration question. One of the biggest decisions in supply chain technology is architecture: should you pursue an integrated suite from a single vendor (simpler integration, single relationship, potential compromises on functionality) or a best-of-breed approach with specialist tools connected via APIs (best functionality for each domain, more complex integration, multiple vendor relationships)?

The trend in 2026 is clearly toward composable, API-first ecosystems — an ERP backbone surrounded by specialist tools for planning, warehousing, transport, procurement and analytics. The "rip and replace" mega-suite approach is losing ground as organisations recognise that no single vendor is best-in-class across all domains, and that API technology has made integration far more feasible than it was a decade ago.

But integration still requires investment, governance and ongoing maintenance. Every API connection is a potential point of failure. Data consistency across systems needs active management. And the total cost of a multi-vendor ecosystem — including integration development, data orchestration and vendor management overhead — can exceed a single-vendor approach if not managed carefully.

The right answer depends on the organisation's complexity, internal technical capability, budget, and the specific functional gaps that need to be addressed. There's no universal "right" architecture — which is why independent advisory that starts from business requirements rather than technology preference is valuable.

The AI dimension. Increasingly, supply chain technology selection involves evaluating AI and machine learning capabilities — whether embedded in APS platforms (AI-enhanced demand forecasting, inventory optimisation), WMS systems (predictive slotting, demand-driven labour scheduling), or standalone AI tools. We've covered this topic extensively in our guide to AI adoption in supply chain and operations, including the readiness assessment, process design and data foundations that determine whether AI technology delivers value.

How Trace Consultants can help. Technology advisory is a core Trace capability. We help organisations navigate the supply chain technology landscape with an independent perspective — evaluating WMS, TMS, APS and other platforms against specific operational requirements through structured procurement processes. We support the full selection lifecycle: requirements definition, market scan, RFx development, vendor evaluation, commercial negotiation and implementation readiness. We're independent of technology vendors, which means our recommendations are based on what will deliver the best outcome for the client, not what generates vendor commission.

10. Labour, Workforce Planning and Automation in Supply Chain

Labour challenges in Australian supply chains are structural, not cyclical. They're not going away, and they're reshaping how organisations think about workforce planning, automation investment and operating model design.

What's driving it. The ASCLA reports ongoing shortages of skilled truck drivers, warehouse staff and logistics professionals across Australia. These shortages have pushed up labour costs, slowed throughput and contributed to the broader cost pressure facing supply chains. The workforce transformation lag is real — adapting to automation and robotics requires training investment, even as many companies struggle to attract and retain workers.

At the same time, automation and robotics are becoming more accessible and more proven in Australian supply chain operations. Dematic reports having implemented over 25 automated meat production storage and distribution systems in ANZ, enabling red meat companies to ship products internationally up to one day faster. Robotics investment in food processing is delivering 50% operational efficiency gains for some SMEs, according to data cited in the National Robotics Strategy. The Australian Government's National Robotics Strategy targets AUD $170-600 billion in annual GDP contribution by 2030 from robotics and automation. And the National Reconstruction Fund's $15 billion allocation supports automation deployment across manufacturing and logistics.

The investment case is supported by government incentives, but the practical challenges remain significant. Automation requires capital investment, lead time for implementation (typically 12-24 months for significant warehouse automation projects), technical skills for operation and maintenance, and process redesign to capture the benefits. Infrastructure limitations — including electricity supply at new sites — create practical constraints. And the human factor remains critical: supply chain operations need people who can work alongside technology, manage exceptions, make judgement calls and maintain relationships with customers and suppliers.

The workforce planning challenge. For most Australian supply chain operations, the question isn't "automate everything" or "keep doing things manually." It's "which tasks should be automated, in what sequence, with what timeline, and how do we manage the workforce transition?" This requires a structured approach to strategic workforce planning that considers current and forecast labour requirements by role and skill, automation opportunities ranked by business case and feasibility, transition planning for affected roles (redeployment, retraining, natural attrition), new roles and skills required to operate and maintain automated systems, and workforce sourcing strategy (permanent, contract, agency, outsourced) for different role types.

What good looks like. The organisations managing this transition well are taking a phased approach — starting with automation in high-volume, repetitive tasks where the business case is clearest, building internal capability to operate and maintain automated systems, and using the efficiency gains to fund the next wave of investment. They're also investing in their existing workforce — upskilling operators to work with new technology rather than treating automation as purely a headcount reduction exercise.

The economics of automation in Australia. The business case for automation in Australian warehousing and logistics is often stronger than in other markets because of the labour cost structure. Australian warehouse labour costs are among the highest globally, which means the payback period for automation investment can be shorter than in lower-wage markets. A goods-to-person picking system that costs $5 million to implement but reduces picking labour by 60% can pay back in 2-3 years in an Australian warehouse — compared to 5-7 years in some Asian markets.

However, the economics are sensitive to volume. Automation assets need throughput to justify their cost. Seasonal businesses, or operations with significant volume variability, need to model carefully whether the average throughput justifies the investment — or whether the automation will be underutilised for much of the year while the peaks still require manual labour to supplement.

Infrastructure readiness is also a factor. As industry commentators have noted, electricity supply can be challenging at new sites in Australia, which affects the feasibility of automation deployment. Site selection for automated facilities needs to consider power availability, three-phase supply, and the capacity to support peak loads alongside normal building services.

The hybrid model. For most Australian supply chain operations, the foreseeable future is a hybrid model — automation handling the predictable, high-volume tasks while human workers manage exceptions, complex decisions and tasks requiring physical dexterity or judgement. Designing for this hybrid model is an organisational design challenge as much as a technology challenge: how do workflows integrate automated and manual tasks? How are handoffs managed? How are performance metrics designed to reflect the different characteristics of automated and manual processes?

How Trace Consultants can help. Trace helps organisations plan the workforce transition in supply chain and operations through strategic workforce planning (forecasting future skill requirements and developing pathways), automation opportunity assessment and business case development (quantifying the case and identifying the right starting point), organisational design for automated and hybrid operations (redesigning roles, workflows and governance), and project and change management for technology-driven workforce transitions (managing the human side of automation rollouts). We work across sectors where automation is gaining traction — including FMCG, retail, health and government — bringing cross-sector perspective on what works in practice.

11. Supplier Diversification and China-Plus-One Sourcing Strategy

The geopolitical landscape has made supplier concentration risk a strategic issue — not just a procurement consideration. "China-plus-one" has become shorthand for a broader rethinking of how Australian organisations structure their global supply bases.

What's driving it. The convergence of U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods, China's own export restrictions on critical materials (including the antimony export ban implemented in December 2025), and broader geopolitical tensions between major economies has forced Australian businesses to reconsider supply chains that are heavily concentrated in China.

The HKTDC reports that many Australian businesses are adopting a China-plus-one strategy, diversifying their supplier base to reduce reliance on a single source. Manufacturers are considering reshoring operations and investing in local suppliers to enhance supply chain resilience. The most commonly cited alternative sourcing locations are Vietnam, India, Indonesia and Mexico — each with different cost structures, capability profiles, infrastructure maturity and risk characteristics.

The complexity of diversification. Supplier diversification sounds simple in principle — just add more suppliers in more locations. In practice, it's a significant undertaking that involves identifying and qualifying new suppliers in unfamiliar markets (assessing capability, quality, capacity, financial stability, ESG compliance), managing the cost premium that diversification often introduces (alternative suppliers may not offer the same cost as established Chinese suppliers, at least initially), maintaining quality and consistency across a broader supplier base, building logistics and customs capability for new trade lanes, and managing the relationship with existing Chinese suppliers (who may still be the best option for certain products or components).

The risk of doing it badly — rushing into alternative suppliers without proper qualification, or diversifying on paper without building genuine dual-source capability — can be worse than maintaining the status quo.

Evaluating alternative markets. Each alternative sourcing market has a distinct profile that procurement teams need to understand before committing.

Vietnam has emerged as the most common first alternative for organisations diversifying from China, particularly for textiles, electronics assembly and light manufacturing. It offers lower labour costs, improving infrastructure and a growing industrial base. But capacity constraints in high-demand categories, quality variability, and less developed supply chain infrastructure compared to China mean that transitioning isn't straightforward.

India offers enormous scale potential, a strong engineering and pharmaceutical manufacturing base, and growing government support for manufacturing investment. However, infrastructure challenges (particularly inland logistics), bureaucratic complexity and quality consistency concerns remain barriers for many categories.

Indonesia has a large domestic market, competitive labour costs and proximity to Australia (important for freight cost and lead time). But manufacturing capability is concentrated in certain categories, and the regulatory environment requires careful navigation.

For Australian organisations specifically, Southeast Asian alternatives offer the additional advantage of shorter shipping lanes compared to China — potentially reducing both transit time and freight cost, while also lowering Scope 3 transport emissions.

The local manufacturing option. For some categories, diversification doesn't necessarily mean shifting to another Asian market — it means exploring Australian or New Zealand manufacturing. The National Reconstruction Fund's $15 billion allocation supports domestic manufacturing capability. For products where quality control, IP protection, speed to market or supply chain security are paramount, local manufacturing may justify a cost premium.

This is particularly relevant for defence and government procurement, where sovereign capability requirements are increasingly explicit, and for categories where supply chain risk cost — the potential cost of disruption — is high enough to change the total cost of ownership calculation.

What good looks like. Effective supplier diversification is driven by a clear understanding of which products and components are most exposed to concentration risk, a structured assessment of alternative markets and suppliers, a phased transition plan that manages risk (dual sourcing before switching, rather than abrupt changes), investment in supplier development and qualification, and ongoing monitoring of the diversified supply base for quality, cost and risk performance.

It should also be connected to broader procurement strategy — not treated as a standalone project. Category strategies should reflect diversification objectives, and sourcing decisions should be evaluated against total cost of ownership (including risk cost), not just unit price.

The timeline reality. Supplier diversification is not a quick fix. Qualifying a new supplier in a new market typically takes 6-18 months, depending on the complexity of the product, the regulatory requirements (particularly for food, pharmaceutical and medical device categories), and the maturity of the supplier. Building the new supplier to the point where they can reliably serve as a genuine alternative — not just a name on the approved supplier list — takes longer still.

This means organisations that are only now starting to think about diversification in response to the 2025-2026 tariff disruptions are already behind. The organisations that were best prepared had begun diversification work in 2022-2023, giving their alternative suppliers time to qualify, build capacity and prove their reliability before the disruption hit.

For organisations starting now, the implication is clear: begin the qualification process immediately, even if the current supply base is adequate. Build optionality before you need it, because by the time you need it, it's too late to build. Treat diversification as a multi-year strategic program, not a reactive response to the latest tariff headline.

The data challenge. Effective supplier diversification also requires visibility into the current supply base that many organisations lack. How concentrated is your supplier base? What percentage of spend flows through your top 10 suppliers? What's the geographic distribution? How many critical components have a single source? These questions sound basic, but many organisations can't answer them confidently — because their procurement data is fragmented across systems, business units and categories.

How Trace Consultants can help. Trace supports organisations through supplier diversification with supply chain risk assessment and exposure mapping, market analysis and alternative supplier identification, procurement strategy that integrates diversification with cost and service objectives, supplier qualification and evaluation frameworks, transition planning and project management, and ongoing supplier performance management. We work across sectors including FMCG and manufacturing, resources and energy and government and defence — each with distinct diversification requirements and considerations.

12. Healthcare and Aged Care Supply Chain Transformation

Healthcare supply chain is a category that's generating increasing search volume — driven by sector growth, operational complexity and growing recognition that supply chain efficiency directly impacts patient outcomes and financial sustainability.

What's driving it. Healthcare is Australia's largest employer, with more than 2.23 million workers. The sector is expanding rapidly, driven by an ageing population, increased demand for aged care and community services, growth in home health and specialty care, and the ongoing rollout of telehealth and digital health services. Healthcare expenditure is among the fastest-growing categories in the Australian economy — and supply chain costs represent a significant proportion of operating budgets.

At the same time, healthcare supply chains face unique challenges: product complexity (thousands of SKUs across medical devices, pharmaceuticals, surgical supplies, personal protective equipment, food and nutrition, linen and laundry, and general consumables), regulatory requirements (TGA compliance, cold chain management, traceability requirements, product recall capability), demand variability (driven by patient acuity, seasonal illness patterns, pandemic preparedness requirements and elective surgery scheduling), and fragmented procurement (clinical preference items, physician-preferred devices, and the tension between clinical autonomy and procurement standardisation).

For aged care providers specifically, the Royal Commission's recommendations have created additional expectations around care quality, workforce capability and financial transparency — all of which have supply chain and procurement implications. Food services, clinical supplies, equipment management and facility services all need to be managed more professionally and with greater visibility.

The cost opportunity. Healthcare supply chain costs in Australia are significant — and often poorly understood. Many healthcare organisations don't have clear visibility of total supply chain cost, because spending is fragmented across clinical departments, facilities management, food services, linen, and general operations. Procurement decisions are made by clinicians, administrators, facilities managers and finance teams — often without coordination and sometimes without the commercial rigour that would be applied in other sectors.

In our experience, healthcare organisations that undertake a thorough supply chain and procurement diagnostic typically identify cost reduction opportunities of 10-20% in non-clinical categories and 5-15% in clinical categories — without compromising care quality. The savings come from standardisation (reducing product variation where clinical equivalence exists), consolidation (leveraging volume across sites and categories), process improvement (reducing waste, improving inventory management, streamlining logistics), and commercial improvement (better-structured contracts, more competitive go-to-market processes, stronger supplier performance management).

The clinical product challenge. Clinical preference items — the products that clinicians specify based on their training, experience and personal familiarity — represent one of the most complex procurement challenges in healthcare. Surgeons have strong preferences for specific implants, instruments and consumables. These preferences are often clinically justified, but they can also create cost variability that's difficult to manage.

The most effective approach isn't to override clinical preference — it's to engage clinicians in evidence-based product evaluation that considers clinical outcomes, safety, quality and cost together. This requires procurement teams with the credibility and clinical literacy to have those conversations, and governance structures that bring clinical and commercial perspectives together in a constructive way.

Digital health implications. The growth of telehealth, remote monitoring, hospital-in-the-home programs and digital therapeutics is creating new supply chain requirements that traditional healthcare logistics models aren't designed for. Medical devices, monitoring equipment and pharmaceutical supplies need to be delivered to patients' homes — not just to hospital loading docks. This creates last-mile logistics challenges, reverse logistics for equipment return and refurbishment, and inventory management across a dispersed network of care locations.

Where the opportunities sit. In our experience, the biggest improvement opportunities in healthcare supply chain typically include procurement consolidation and standardisation (reducing product variation, leveraging volume across sites, challenging clinical preference where clinically appropriate alternatives exist at lower cost), inventory management (reducing stockholding without compromising availability, improving demand visibility, implementing automated replenishment for high-volume consumables), distribution and logistics (optimising delivery frequency, consolidating suppliers, improving receiving and put-away processes, developing home delivery capability for hospital-in-the-home programs), contract management (establishing proper governance for supplier contracts, monitoring compliance, managing price escalation mechanisms), and workforce and capability (building procurement and supply chain capability in organisations where these functions have historically been under-resourced).

What good looks like. Healthcare organisations that are leading in supply chain performance are treating supply chain as a clinical support function — not just a cost centre. They're investing in data and visibility (understanding what they spend, with whom, on what), standardising where possible while maintaining clinical flexibility where necessary, building procurement and supply chain capability as a professional discipline, and connecting supply chain performance to patient outcomes and financial sustainability.

They're also learning from other sectors. Many of the supply chain disciplines that are well-established in FMCG, retail and manufacturing — demand planning, inventory optimisation, structured go-to-market processes, supplier performance management, network design — are directly applicable to healthcare, with appropriate adaptation for the clinical context. The organisations that are making the fastest progress are the ones that bring supply chain expertise into healthcare, rather than trying to develop it entirely from within.

The aged care dimension. Aged care deserves specific mention because the supply chain challenges are distinct from acute healthcare. Aged care facilities are typically smaller, more geographically dispersed, and more focused on consumables (food, personal care products, cleaning supplies, linen) than high-value medical devices. The procurement challenge is often about consolidation and leverage — aggregating demand across multiple sites to achieve better commercial outcomes — while the logistics challenge is about efficient delivery to a large number of small-volume locations. Many aged care providers have grown through acquisition and haven't integrated their supply chain operations, resulting in inconsistent practices, fragmented supplier relationships and limited visibility of total spend.

How Trace Consultants can help. Trace works with healthcare and aged care organisations on procurement strategy and execution (including clinical product standardisation and category strategy), supply chain operating model design, inventory management and replenishment optimisation, distribution network and logistics efficiency, and organisational design and capability building for healthcare supply chain functions. Our work in the health and human services sector means we understand the unique dynamics of healthcare supply chains — the clinical context, the regulatory environment, the stakeholder complexity and the imperative to balance cost efficiency with care quality.

The common thread: operational discipline beats silver bullets

Across all twelve of these problems, there's a consistent pattern. The organisations that are solving them most effectively aren't the ones with the biggest budgets, the most advanced technology, or the most innovative strategies. They're the ones with the strongest operational discipline: clear processes, good data, capable people, honest measurement and the willingness to do the unglamorous foundational work that makes everything else possible.

Technology matters — but technology deployed on poor foundations delivers poor results. Strategy matters — but strategy without execution is a slide deck. Innovation matters — but innovation without governance is experimentation.

What we see working in the Australian market, across every one of these twelve challenges, is a combination of clear-eyed diagnosis (understanding the problem as it actually is, not as you wish it were), practical strategy (solutions that work in the Australian context, with Australian constraints, at Australian scale), disciplined execution (structured approaches that deliver results on time and on budget), and sustainable capability (building the internal skills and processes that ensure improvements stick after the consultants leave).

The interconnections matter. One thing that's easy to miss when looking at these twelve problems individually is how interconnected they are. Scope 3 reporting requires supply chain mapping — which is also the foundation for resilience planning and supplier diversification. Cost reduction requires better planning — which requires better data — which requires technology investment — which requires a structured selection process. Procurement transformation underpins better go-to-market processes — which deliver better 3PL contracts — which improve warehouse and logistics performance — which reduces cost and improves service.

These connections mean that siloed approaches to individual problems often underperform. An organisation that runs a Scope 3 reporting project, a cost reduction program, and a technology selection process as three separate initiatives — with three different teams, three different consultants, and three different timelines — will miss the synergies and create inefficiencies. The best results come from an integrated approach that recognises the connections and designs solutions that work across multiple challenges simultaneously.

The sequencing matters too. Not all twelve problems need to be tackled at once. For most organisations, the right approach is to prioritise based on urgency (what has a regulatory deadline or a board mandate?), impact (what will deliver the most financial value?), readiness (where does the organisation have the data, people and processes to succeed?), and dependencies (what needs to happen first to enable other initiatives?).

In our experience, the most common and effective starting points are a supply chain diagnostic that maps cost, capability and risk across the end-to-end chain — creating the fact base for prioritisation, a procurement improvement program that delivers measurable savings in 3-6 months while building the commercial capability for more strategic work, a planning process redesign that improves forecast accuracy and inventory management — creating the data and process foundation for AI adoption, and a network review that evaluates whether the current distribution footprint is fit for purpose — particularly for organisations that haven't reviewed their network in the past 3-5 years.

From these foundations, more ambitious initiatives — AI adoption, technology transformation, Scope 3 integration, resilience capability — can be built on solid ground.

How Trace Consultants can help

At Trace Consultants, we work with Australian organisations across all twelve of these challenge areas. We're a specialist supply chain and procurement consulting firm — it's all we do, which means we bring depth and practical experience that generalist firms can't match.

Our approach is grounded in a few principles that our clients tell us matter:

Independence. We don't sell software, run warehouses, or operate logistics networks. We don't have vendor partnerships that influence our recommendations. Our advice is based entirely on what will deliver the best outcome for your organisation. This matters particularly for technology selection, where many advisory firms have commercial relationships with vendors that create conflicts of interest.

Practicality. We focus on solutions that work in the real world — not theoretical frameworks that look good in presentations but don't survive contact with operational reality. Every recommendation we make is designed to be implementable, affordable and sustainable. We've seen too many consulting engagements that produce beautiful strategy documents and then leave the organisation to figure out how to actually do it. That's not how we work.

Depth. We've worked across every sector that matters in Australia — FMCG and manufacturing, retail and consumer, resources and energy, health and human services, and government and defence. We understand how supply chain challenges play out in each context — the economics, the constraints, the stakeholders and the politics. A supply chain problem in a hospital looks very different from the same problem in a fast-moving consumer goods company, even if the underlying principles are similar.

End-to-end capability. From strategy and network design through procurement, planning and operations, warehousing and distribution, organisational design, technology, resilience, strategic workforce planning, and project and change management — we cover the full supply chain, which means we see the connections between problems that siloed approaches miss. When we help an organisation with procurement, we understand the implications for planning. When we redesign a distribution network, we understand the workforce and technology implications. When we assess AI readiness, we understand the operational processes that AI needs to serve.

Commitment to results. We measure our success by the results our clients achieve — not by the reports we produce. Every engagement is designed to deliver measurable improvement: cost reduction, service improvement, risk mitigation, capability uplift, or strategic clarity. We stay close to the work, we take accountability for outcomes, and we build the internal capability to ensure improvements are sustained long after our engagement ends.

If any of these twelve challenges are keeping you up at night — or if you're not sure which ones should be your priority — we'd welcome the conversation.

Strategy & Design

Reverse Logistics of Electrified Products: Why Australia's Supply Chains Aren't Ready for What's Coming Back

Shanaka Jayasinghe
Shanaka Jayasinghe
February 2026
Australia sold millions of lithium-ion battery products last year. Most of them don't have a viable path back. E-bikes, e-scooters, power tools, cordless vacuums, electric ride-on toys — the electrification of everyday products has outpaced the reverse logistics systems meant to handle them at end of life. The result: fires in garbage trucks, overwhelmed councils, hazardous stockpiles, and a growing regulatory scramble. Here's what needs to change.

Walk through any Australian suburb on hard rubbish day and you'll see it: a dead e-scooter propped against a bin, a cordless vacuum with a swollen battery pack, a child's electric ride-on that stopped holding charge. None of these things should be sitting on the kerb. All of them contain lithium-ion batteries that, if crushed in the back of a compactor truck or punctured at a waste transfer station, can ignite a fire that's fast, toxic and extraordinarily difficult to extinguish.

This isn't a theoretical risk. It's happening every day across Australia.

The waste and recycling industry estimates that lithium-ion batteries are responsible for between 10,000 and 12,000 fires per year in Australia's waste and recycling streams. In the first half of 2025, the South Australian Metropolitan Fire Service responded to more than half of the previous year's total battery-related incidents in just six months — with roughly one in four linked to e-mobility devices. In New South Wales, about one in every 40 fires attended by Fire and Rescue NSW now involves a lithium-ion battery or battery-powered device. Queensland Fire Department reported more than 200 lithium-ion battery fires in the first eleven months of 2025 alone.

The Australian Capital Territory's main recycling facility was destroyed by a battery-related fire in 2022. The cost to replace a destroyed recycling facility runs to around $60 million. A single damaged waste collection truck costs between $250,000 and $500,000 to replace.

And yet, according to B-cycle's 2025 annual report, Australia is still only recycling around 18.5 per cent of available batteries. Half of all Australian households are still throwing batteries into general waste or recycling bins. Just three per cent of e-bike companies participate in battery stewardship schemes.

This is a supply chain problem. A big one. And it's getting bigger with every e-bike, e-scooter, cordless drill, robot vacuum and electric garden tool that rolls off a container ship and into Australian homes, workplaces and public hire fleets.

The electrification wave nobody planned the return journey for

The forward supply chain for electrified consumer products works well enough. Manufacturers design. Importers bring product in. Retailers sell. Consumers buy. Logistics networks deliver. The product reaches the customer with relative efficiency.

The reverse supply chain — what happens when that product reaches end of life, or when the battery degrades, swells, or fails — barely exists for most product categories.

This isn't because nobody cares. It's because the volume, diversity and hazard profile of electrified products has grown faster than the collection, transport, processing and recycling infrastructure needed to handle them safely. A decade ago, the battery challenge was largely confined to mobile phones, laptops and the occasional power tool. Today, lithium-ion batteries are embedded in everything from children's toys and Bluetooth speakers to ride-on mowers, electric wheelchairs, home energy storage systems, and — most visibly — the booming e-bike and e-scooter market.

The scale is striking. Global demand for batteries is expected to increase by 500 per cent by 2050. Lithium-ion battery waste in Australia could exceed 100,000 tonnes by 2036. Every one of those products will, at some point, need to come back through a reverse logistics system that currently can't cope with what's already in circulation.

For government and defence agencies, councils, waste management operators and the businesses that import and sell these products, this isn't a future problem. It's a now problem.

Why reverse logistics for electrified products is so different

Reverse logistics is never as simple as forward logistics in reverse. Products come back in unpredictable volumes, in variable condition, through fragmented channels, with inconsistent information about what's inside them. That's true for any product category.

But electrified products — specifically those containing lithium-ion batteries — add layers of complexity that make them fundamentally different from conventional reverse logistics flows.

They're hazardous goods. A lithium-ion battery that has been damaged, degraded, overcharged, improperly stored or exposed to heat or moisture can undergo thermal runaway — an uncontrollable self-heating reaction that produces toxic, flammable gases and can result in fire or explosion. This isn't a defect in the battery; it's a characteristic of the chemistry. It means that collection, transport, storage and processing all need to comply with dangerous goods regulations, including the Australian Dangerous Goods Code. That adds cost, requires specialist handling, limits which vehicles and facilities can be used, and creates liability for everyone in the chain.

They come in wildly different form factors. A button battery from a hearing aid, a removable battery pack from an e-bike, and an embedded battery in a cordless vacuum are all "lithium-ion batteries," but they require completely different collection containers, handling procedures, transport packaging and processing methods. A reverse logistics system that handles one category well may be entirely unsuitable for another.

Many batteries are embedded and non-removable. This is one of the most significant practical barriers. A growing proportion of consumer electronics and appliances have batteries that are glued, soldered or structurally integrated into the product — deliberately designed to be non-removable by the consumer. That means the entire product needs to enter the reverse logistics stream, not just the battery. Collection points, transport systems and processing facilities all need to accommodate whole products, which are bulkier, heavier and more complex to sort than standalone batteries.

Condition on return is unknown and variable. A battery that arrives at a collection point might be fully charged, partially discharged, physically damaged, water-affected, or already in the early stages of thermal instability. There's no reliable way to assess condition remotely. This uncertainty drives conservative handling requirements and creates genuine safety risks for workers at every point in the chain — from the council worker emptying a community recycling bin to the operator at a processing facility.

The economics are challenging. Unlike some material streams where the recovered commodity value offsets collection and processing costs, battery recycling is expensive. Transport of hazardous goods is costly. Processing requires specialist equipment. The value of recovered materials — lithium, cobalt, nickel — fluctuates with commodity markets and doesn't always cover the cost of safe handling and processing. Without stewardship levies, government subsidies or regulatory mandates, the commercial incentive to invest in reverse logistics infrastructure is marginal at best.

These characteristics mean that the reverse supply chain for electrified products can't simply be bolted onto existing waste management systems. It requires purpose-designed collection networks, specialist transport, dedicated storage and processing facilities, trained workforce, regulatory compliance frameworks and — critically — supply chain coordination across multiple parties who don't traditionally work together.

This is exactly the kind of challenge that benefits from rigorous strategy and network design thinking.

The e-bike and e-scooter headache

No product category illustrates the reverse logistics gap quite like e-bikes and e-scooters.

Sales have surged in Australia. E-bikes are now one of the fastest-growing segments of the cycling market, and shared e-scooter schemes operate in multiple capital cities. The batteries in these devices are large — typically 36V to 52V packs weighing several kilograms — and store enough energy to power a vehicle at speed for 40 to 80 kilometres. When they fail, they fail dramatically.

The fire risk is well documented. South Australia's Premier launched a joint emergency services campaign in mid-2025 specifically targeting lithium-ion battery fires from e-mobility devices, following a spike in residential fires linked to e-scooters and e-bikes being charged on incompatible chargers or modified by users to boost performance. NSW introduced mandatory safety standards for e-micromobility devices from February 2025, with testing, certification and marking requirements taking effect from February 2026 — including requirements for safe disposal information at point of sale. Victoria's Energy Safe regulator published a consultation paper in August 2025 proposing to declare e-transport devices as controlled electrical equipment, driven by the growing number of fire incidents.

But regulation at point of sale only addresses part of the problem. What happens when a three-year-old e-bike battery reaches end of life and the owner wants to get rid of it?

Right now, the answer is messy. Some users drop batteries at B-cycle collection points, which accept removable batteries up to 5 kilograms — but most e-bike batteries exceed that threshold. Some take them to council hazardous waste events, which happen periodically rather than continuously. Some leave them in garages, sheds or on balconies indefinitely. And some — too many — put them in the general waste bin or leave them on the kerb, where they enter a waste stream that's not designed to handle them.

For councils and government agencies managing waste services, this creates a compounding problem: rising fire risk in collection vehicles and transfer stations, growing volumes of hazardous material at facilities not rated for dangerous goods storage, increasing insurance costs and liability exposure, community expectation for convenient disposal options, and no clear funding mechanism to pay for purpose-built collection and processing infrastructure.

South Australia's government established four dedicated collection points in late 2025 specifically for embedded battery products — a welcome step, but one that highlights how far behind infrastructure has fallen relative to the products already in circulation.

The broader electrified product challenge

E-bikes and e-scooters are the most visible part of the problem, but they're far from the only one. Cordless power tools — drills, angle grinders, lawn mowers — run on substantial lithium-ion packs, and just 65 per cent of power tool companies participate in the B-cycle stewardship scheme. Electric mobility devices serve vulnerable users who may struggle to transport heavy batteries to collection points. Home energy storage systems will create a future wave of large-format battery returns that current residential waste systems are entirely unequipped for. And then there's the long tail: vapes, electric toys, robotic vacuums, portable speakers, fitness devices — each with different battery configurations, different disassembly requirements, and different end-of-life pathways, all converging on the same constrained recycling infrastructure.

The common thread: the forward supply chain works smoothly while the reverse supply chain ranges from inadequate to non-existent.

What a functioning reverse logistics system actually needs

Solving the reverse logistics challenge for electrified products requires thinking about it as a supply chain — with all the design, planning, infrastructure and governance disciplines that implies.

Collection network design. The most fundamental requirement is getting products and batteries out of homes, workplaces and public spaces and into a controlled stream. This means permanent, accessible collection points — not just periodic hazardous waste events. It means collection infrastructure that's designed for the actual products being returned (including large, heavy items like e-bike batteries and power tool packs, not just AA cells). It means geographic coverage that reflects where the products are sold and used, including regional and remote areas. And it means collection systems that are safe for the people operating them, with proper containment, labelling and handling procedures.

The network design challenge here is analogous to designing any distribution network — but in reverse. Where should collection points be located? How many are needed? What capacity do they require? How frequently do they need to be serviced? What's the catchment area for each point? These are strategy and network design questions that need to be answered with the same analytical rigour that would be applied to a retail distribution network or a warehousing and distribution strategy.

Transport, consolidation and storage. Moving collected batteries from dispersed collection points to processing facilities is a dangerous goods logistics challenge — vehicles need to be rated, packaging must comply with the Australian Dangerous Goods Code, drivers need to be trained, and the economics of collection transport (particularly in regional areas) need to work or the system won't scale. Between collection and processing, there's typically a consolidation step at transfer facilities that need to be purpose-designed for hazardous materials, with fire suppression, ventilation, spill containment and appropriate separation distances. Many existing waste transfer stations don't meet these requirements, which is why battery fires at these facilities are so common.

Processing and recycling infrastructure. Australia's domestic battery recycling capacity is growing but remains limited relative to the volume of batteries entering the market. B-cycle recycled over 3.3 million kilograms of batteries in its most recent reporting year through partners like Ecobatt, but this represents less than a fifth of available batteries. Scaling processing capacity requires capital investment, skilled workforce, environmental approvals and — critically — a stable feedstock supply that justifies the investment. That feedstock supply depends on the collection and transport systems upstream being effective.

Data and traceability. A functioning reverse logistics system needs visibility across the chain — what's been collected, where, in what condition, and where it's going. Without data, you can't optimise collection routes, manage inventory at consolidation points, forecast processing demand, or report on diversion rates and compliance. Technology systems that provide chain-of-custody tracking, condition assessment and performance reporting are essential infrastructure, not optional extras.

Governance and stakeholder coordination. A reverse logistics system for electrified products involves manufacturers, importers, retailers, consumers, councils, state and federal agencies, waste collectors, dangerous goods operators, storage facilities, recyclers and stewardship bodies. No single party controls the whole chain. Making it work requires governance structures that define roles, responsibilities, funding mechanisms and performance standards.

This is where procurement frameworks, organisational design and multi-stakeholder governance become essential. The supply chain won't self-organise.

The regulatory landscape is shifting — fast

Australian governments are moving on this, though not always in a coordinated way. NSW passed the Product Lifecycle Responsibility Bill in March 2025 — the first mandatory product stewardship legislation for batteries in Australia, requiring battery brand owners to participate in approved stewardship schemes. Victoria's Energy Safe regulator is consulting on declaring e-transport devices as controlled electrical equipment. Queensland, NSW and Victoria have been tasked by environment ministers to lead national reform on battery product stewardship. South Australia has introduced dedicated collection infrastructure. And the federal government has committed to national battery stewardship reform as part of its circular economy agenda.

For businesses importing and selling electrified products, these regulatory shifts create new compliance obligations around disposal information, stewardship participation and potentially design-for-disassembly requirements. For councils and government agencies, they create both obligations and opportunities to redesign collection systems and access stewardship funding. For waste operators, they create market signals about future volumes that may justify infrastructure investment.

But regulation alone doesn't build a supply chain. Legislation sets the rules. Someone still has to design, build and operate the physical network — the collection points, the transport routes, the consolidation facilities, the processing infrastructure — that actually moves material safely from consumer to recycler.

The role of product stewardship in funding reverse logistics

B-cycle, administered by the Battery Stewardship Council, is Australia's primary battery stewardship scheme. It operates over 5,400 collection points, has recycled millions of kilograms of batteries since launch, and is preparing its next phase — B-cycle 2.0 — to address current limitations and prepare for mandatory regulation.

Stewardship schemes work by placing a levy on products at point of import or sale, then using that revenue to fund collection, transport, processing and education. In principle, this closes the economic gap that makes reverse logistics commercially unviable without intervention. In practice, effectiveness depends on participation rates, levy levels being sufficient to fund safe collection and processing, collection infrastructure being convenient enough to achieve meaningful diversion rates, and processing capacity being available domestically at scale.

For organisations involved in the electrified product supply chain — whether as importers, retailers, councils or waste operators — understanding stewardship obligations and designing operational systems to meet them is becoming a core business requirement, not a peripheral compliance exercise.

The workforce dimension

Collecting, handling, transporting and processing lithium-ion batteries safely requires training that most waste and recycling workers don't currently have. Dangerous goods handling, thermal runaway recognition, emergency response procedures, high-voltage safety protocols — these are specialist skills that need structured training programs, not just toolbox talks. At the processing end, battery recycling is a technical discipline requiring mechanical, chemical and electrical engineering knowledge that's in short supply. And at the governance level, councils and government agencies need people who understand both supply chain management and hazardous materials regulation — a combination that's rare in the current workforce.

This is a strategic workforce planning challenge that intersects with training policy, industry development and organisational capability building.

How Trace Consultants can help

At Trace Consultants, we work with government agencies, councils and industry on supply chain challenges that sit at the intersection of infrastructure, logistics, procurement and operations — exactly where the reverse logistics challenge for electrified products lives.

We don't sell batteries, collection bins or recycling equipment. We bring independent supply chain expertise to the strategic and operational decisions that determine whether reverse logistics systems actually work.

Reverse logistics network design. We help organisations design collection, consolidation and processing networks optimised for coverage, cost and safety — including location analysis, capacity modelling, transport route optimisation and facility design. Our strategy and network design approach ensures infrastructure investment is directed where it will have the greatest impact.

Procurement strategy for stewardship and waste services. As mandatory stewardship obligations expand, councils and agencies need to procure collection, transport and processing services that comply with new requirements while managing cost. We design procurement strategies with clear service specifications, appropriate risk allocation and built-in performance measurement.

Warehouse and facility design. Consolidation facilities for returned electrified products need to meet dangerous goods requirements while operating efficiently. We bring warehousing and distribution and back-of-house logistics expertise to facility design — including layout, workflow, inventory management and safety systems.

Operating model and organisational design. For councils and agencies standing up new collection programs, we design the organisational structures, governance frameworks and planning and operations processes needed to manage a service line involving hazardous materials and multi-stakeholder coordination.

Workforce planning and change management. We support workforce planning and change management programs that build the skills, procedures and safety culture needed to operate reverse logistics systems safely.

Technology, data and resilience. Visibility across the reverse supply chain is essential for optimisation and compliance. We help organisations select technology solutions for traceability and performance monitoring, and design resilience frameworks that ensure continuity of service for safety-critical operations.

The window for planning is now

The electrification of consumer products isn't slowing down. Battery volumes entering Australia are growing year on year. Mandatory stewardship obligations are being legislated. Fire risk in waste systems is escalating. And the infrastructure gap between what's needed and what exists is widening.

Organisations that start designing their reverse logistics capability now — whether they're councils redesigning waste services, government agencies developing policy, importers preparing for stewardship obligations, or waste operators investing in infrastructure — will be far better positioned than those that wait for the next waste facility fire or the next regulatory deadline to force their hand.

Because the products are already out there. Millions of them. And every single one of them is eventually coming back.

The question is whether there's a supply chain ready to receive them safely — or whether they end up on the kerb, in the bin, or in the back of a truck that catches fire on a Tuesday morning.

If your organisation is grappling with the reverse logistics challenge for electrified products, batteries or hazardous end-of-life materials, we'd welcome the conversation.

Start a conversation

Engage a trusted panel partner with real delivery experience.

Trace works with government and defence agencies to deliver high-impact projects across supply chain, workforce, and systems.

Our team brings the operational expertise to turn complex challenges into practical, measurable results.

Two men and one woman wearing suits standing outside a building.