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For most of the past three decades, supply chain was an operational matter.
The board set the strategy. The CFO approved the capex. And somewhere downstream, a supply chain team worked out how to move goods from suppliers to customers as cheaply as possible. Supply chain was a cost centre. It was measured in freight rates, inventory turns, and DIFOT. It rarely appeared on a board agenda unless something went badly wrong.
That model has broken down — and the evidence is now overwhelming.
Since 2020, Australian businesses have experienced pandemic-driven supply disruptions, port congestion, shipping cost spikes, China trade sanctions, the Red Sea crisis, geopolitical decoupling between the US and China, and a new wave of US tariffs that have materially impacted sourcing costs and market access. Add to this the emergence of mandatory modern slavery reporting, increasing ESG scrutiny from investors, cyber-attacks on supply chain partners, and climate-driven disruptions to agricultural and energy supply chains — and the picture is clear.
Supply chain is no longer a back-office function. It is a strategic risk, a competitive asset, and an ESG obligation simultaneously. It belongs on the board agenda. Most Australian boards are still catching up.
What Changed — and Why It Changed Now
Supply chain has always been operationally important. What has changed is the frequency, scale, and visibility of supply chain failure — and the connection between supply chain events and shareholder value.
The COVID-19 pandemic was the trigger. When global supply chains seized up in 2020 and 2021, organisations that had treated supply chain as a cost-minimisation function discovered its strategic significance the hard way. Manufacturers couldn't source components. Retailers couldn't stock shelves. Hospitals ran low on critical medical supplies. The Australian Industry Group reported that at the peak of pandemic-era disruption in late 2022, nearly 80% of Australian industrials were experiencing active supply chain disruptions. The lesson — that supply chain resilience is a precondition for business continuity, not an optional upgrade — landed at the executive and board level in a way that years of supply chain argument had not achieved.
The geopolitical environment compounded the lesson. China's economic coercion — most visibly the tariffs on Australian barley, wine, beef, and coal from 2020 — demonstrated that trade relationships that were treated as stable had significant political risk embedded in them. Australian businesses that had concentrated sourcing in China because it was the cheapest option found themselves with exposure they hadn't modelled. The subsequent US tariff announcements from April 2025 — a 10% baseline tariff on Australian goods, with 50% on steel and aluminium — added another layer of trade uncertainty that directly affects supply chain cost structures and market access for exporters.
The ESG dimension has added a third driver. The Modern Slavery Act 2018 imposes mandatory reporting obligations on Australian organisations with annual consolidated revenue above $100 million. More recently, the Treasury Laws Amendment (Financial Market Infrastructure and Other Measures) Act 2024 introduced mandatory climate-related financial disclosures for large Australian entities. Both create direct board accountability for supply chain decisions — who you source from, under what conditions, and what climate risk your supply chain carries. Getting these wrong is no longer just an ethical problem; it's a legal and reputational risk with regulatory teeth.
The Six Dimensions of Supply Chain Board Risk
When we talk about supply chain as a board issue, we're talking about six distinct categories of risk that have both strategic and governance implications.
1. Concentration Risk
Most Australian businesses have not systematically mapped the concentration in their supply chains — the degree to which their ability to operate depends on a small number of suppliers, a single geography, or a single logistics route.
Concentration creates fragility. A business that sources 80% of a critical input from a single supplier, or that depends on a single container shipping route, has a risk profile that belongs in the organisation's risk register — and probably isn't there. When that supplier fails, that route closes, or that geography becomes inaccessible, the organisation discovers its exposure at the worst possible time.
Board-level visibility of concentration risk requires systematic supply chain mapping — not just tier-one supplier lists, but the critical tier-two and tier-three dependencies that determine actual vulnerability. Most Australian boards don't have this picture. Building it is a foundational governance improvement.
2. Geopolitical and Trade Policy Risk
Australia's trade exposure is disproportionate. We export 34% of our goods to China. We have a major defence and technology alliance with the US. We compete in global commodity markets where US-China tensions drive pricing volatility. And we've demonstrated, through the 2020 Chinese trade sanctions and the 2025 US tariffs, that both of our major trading relationships carry political risk that can materialise suddenly and with significant operational and financial consequences.
For boards, geopolitical risk management requires a different kind of analysis than traditional commercial risk. It requires scenario planning against plausible trade policy changes — what happens to our cost structure if tariffs on key inputs increase by X%? What alternative supply routes exist if this shipping lane becomes unavailable? — and it requires regular review, because the geopolitical landscape is changing faster than the typical board review cycle.
3. Operational Resilience and Business Continuity
The ability to maintain supply to customers through disruption — whether that disruption is a supplier failure, a port closure, a cyber-attack on a logistics partner, or an extreme weather event — is an operational resilience question that has board governance implications.
The APRA CPS 230 operational risk standard, effective from July 2025 for regulated financial institutions, provides a useful framework even for organisations not subject to it. It requires organisations to identify and manage critical operations and their dependencies, including supply chain dependencies. For non-regulated organisations, adopting the same discipline voluntarily is sound governance.
Business continuity planning that doesn't account for supply chain failure scenarios is incomplete. Boards should be asking: what are the supply chain events that would materially disrupt our ability to serve customers? What are our response plans for those events? Have those plans been tested?
4. ESG and Modern Slavery Obligations
Supply chain ESG risk is simultaneously a compliance obligation, a reputational risk, and increasingly a market access requirement.
Modern slavery reporting requires Australian entities to report on the risks of modern slavery in their operations and supply chains — and the actions taken to address them. This is not a box-ticking exercise. The Home Affairs enforcement posture has been strengthening, and Australia's Modern Slavery Act is currently under review with recommendations for mandatory due diligence requirements that would significantly increase obligations. Boards that have not ensured their organisations have genuine supply chain visibility and a credible modern slavery programme are exposed.
Climate risk disclosure requirements create a parallel obligation. For large Australian entities required to disclose under the new mandatory framework, supply chain emissions (Scope 3) are often the largest component of their total emissions profile — and they require supply chain data that most organisations don't currently collect systematically.
5. Cost Volatility and Working Capital Impact
Supply chain cost volatility has become a material earnings risk for many Australian businesses. Freight cost spikes, commodity price movements, supplier input cost inflation, and tariff changes can each materially move the cost base — and the speed with which these changes occur has increased.
Working capital is equally affected. Inventory decisions made to buffer supply chain uncertainty — holding more safety stock, dual-sourcing, building domestic inventory buffers — tie up capital that has to be funded. In a higher-interest-rate environment, the cost of that working capital is not trivial.
Boards should be asking for supply chain cost volatility to be modelled in the same way that currency and interest rate risk are modelled — with explicit scenario analysis and hedging strategies where appropriate.
6. Competitive Differentiation
The flip side of supply chain risk is supply chain advantage. Organisations that build genuinely resilient, responsive, and low-cost supply chains gain a competitive position that is difficult for competitors to replicate quickly.
The Australian retailers, manufacturers, and distributors that managed through pandemic disruption better than their competitors typically had better supplier relationships, more diversified sourcing, and more visible, data-rich supply chains. Those advantages were built before the disruption — and they translated directly into market share gains and customer retention when competitors were unable to supply.
Boards that frame supply chain only as a risk miss the strategic opportunity. Supply chain capability is a source of competitive advantage that deserves investment, not just cost management.
What Good Governance Looks Like
For Australian directors grappling with how to bring supply chain into appropriate governance frameworks, there are five practical steps.
Put supply chain on the board risk register. A formal risk assessment of supply chain — covering concentration, geopolitical exposure, operational resilience, ESG obligations, and cost volatility — belongs in the enterprise risk framework with the same rigour applied to financial, regulatory, and cyber risk.
Request a supply chain vulnerability assessment. Before reviewing strategy, a board needs to understand the current state. A vulnerability assessment that maps critical dependencies, identifies single points of failure, and quantifies the financial exposure of key scenarios is the foundation for everything else.
Establish reporting cadence. Supply chain performance and risk should be a standing board reporting item — not as operational detail, but as strategic indicators. Key metrics: supplier concentration by category, critical input cost movements, inventory levels and coverage, DIFOT performance, and any emerging disruption signals.
Require a resilience investment plan. Once vulnerabilities are identified, the board should require management to present a time-phased investment plan for addressing them — with cost, timeline, and the residual risk profile if the investment isn't made.
Ensure ESG and modern slavery governance is embedded. Board oversight of modern slavery and climate-related supply chain obligations should be explicit, with clear ownership at the executive level and regular reporting against the disclosure requirements.
How Trace Consultants Can Help
Moving supply chain from the operations floor to the boardroom requires both the analytical work to understand the current risk picture and the strategic capability to design and execute a response.
Trace Consultants works with Australian boards and executive teams to build the supply chain governance frameworks, risk assessments, and resilience strategies that meet contemporary board obligations.
Supply chain risk assessment. We map your supply chain dependencies, identify concentration and geopolitical exposure, and quantify the financial implications of key disruption scenarios — producing a board-ready risk picture.
Resilience strategy. We develop practical, prioritised strategies for reducing supply chain vulnerability — covering sourcing diversification, network redesign, inventory policy, supplier relationship depth, and business continuity planning.
ESG and modern slavery. We help organisations build the supply chain visibility, supplier due diligence frameworks, and reporting processes needed to meet Modern Slavery Act obligations and climate disclosure requirements.
Strategy and network design. For boards considering significant supply chain restructuring in response to changing trade conditions, we provide the analytical and implementation capability to execute.
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Ready to turn insight into action?
We help organisations transform ideas into measurable results with strategies that work in the real world. Let’s talk about how we can solve your most complex supply chain challenges.







