Mathematical models for optimizing production chain planning in salmon farming
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2013Metadata
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Bravo, Fernanda
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Mathematical models for optimizing production chain planning in salmon farming
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Abstract
The salmon farming production chain is structured in four consecutive phases: freshwater, seawater, plant
processing, and distribution and marketing. The phases interact in a pull manner, freshwater stocks fish to
meet seawater’s demand, seawater produces to meet plant processing biomass demand, and the processing
plant produces to satisfy consumers’ demand. Freshwater planning decisions are in regard to which freshwater
center the fish should be located depending on the state of development of the fish. The goal is to
satisfy seawater’s demand while minimizing costs. In the seawater phase, the fish are first placed in seawater
centers, and then sent to the processing plant as they approach suitable harvest conditions. The goal of
seawater is to maximize harvested biomass while satisfying processing plant’s demand. This paper presents
two mixed-integer linear programming models—one for the freshwater phase and another for the seawater
phase. These models are designed in such a way that the production planning is well integrated and more
efficient and incorporates the requirements of the farm operator’s freshwater and seawater units (biological,
economic, and health-related constraints) ensuring that production in both phases is better coordinated. The
development of the two models was based on the farming operations of one of the main producer farms in
Chile. Preliminary evaluations of the models indicate that they not only succeed in enforcing constraints that
are difficult to be met by manual planning but also led to more effective results in terms of the objectives set
out.
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Intl. Trans. in Op. Res 20 (2013) 731–766
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