SLIIT Conference and Symposium Proceedings

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All SLIIT faculties annually conduct international conferences and symposiums. Publications from these events are included in this collection.

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    PublicationOpen Access
    Investigation of the Carbon Offsetting Targets Towards Sustainability: A Focus on 3PL Companies
    (ICSDB 2024 and SLIIT Business School, 2024-12-10) Erandika, T.; Pallawala, T.; Wijesinghe, A.; Perera, D.; Karunarathna, N.; Kalansuriya, N.
    This study examines the carbon emission reduction goals of third-party logistics (3PL) firms for sustainable activities, assessing their effectiveness and impact on sustainability. It explores the goals and methods used by these companies, their implementation challenges, and the potential effects on sustainability outcomes like reduced emissions, improved operational efficiency, and increased stakeholder participation. This aims to understand how 3PL companies reduce their carbon footprints and identify opportunities. This study examines the leading 3PL providers in the global content market using a comprehensive analysis of literature articles. The effect of carbon footprints on efficiency in third-party logistics companies is examined in the present research. With an emphasis on carbon mitigation, the effects of carbon footprints on organisations, and the tactics 3PL entities employ to lower their carbon footprints, it included 76 research publications during 2019–2024. The study examines supply chain management, sustainability, and emission reduction using the theories of carbon management, stakeholders, and the environment. The outcomes demonstrate how well the retention of carbon techniques works to raise industrial sustainability standards. This study evaluates the interest and difficulties experienced by 3PL companies by comparing the results with those of other countries. Consequently, the goal of the research is to raise the general understanding of environmental issues and accomplish long-term sustainability objectives in the transportation industry, as a finding of this research, Direct, indirect, and fugitive carbon footprints have considerable impacts on the environment and economy. Compared to individuals, businesses are more responsible for global warming, which damages infrastructure, disrupts supply chains, and lowers productivity. 3PL companies can employ carbon mitigation strategies, such as waste reduction, renewable energy investments, and environmentally friendly transportation while interacting with stakeholders and governments to minimise the negative environmental effects. Likewise,20% of the world's greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions come from the transportation sector, which includes 3PL companies.
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    PublicationEmbargo
    Production of Disease Free Rumohra adiantiformis (Leatherleaf Fern) Using In Vitro Propagation
    (Faculty of Humanities and Sciences - SLIIT, 2021-03-26) Perera, D.; Peiris, S.E.
    This study investigated the use of rhizome tips as explants in regenerating disease-free plantlets of Rumohra adiantiformis (G. Frost) using the micropropagation technique. Rhizome tips of 0.5 cm, 1 cm, 1.5 cm, and 2 cm in length, and with and without outer skin were used as explants.The highest regeneration rate (30%) was achieved with an explant size of one centimetre when the outer skin was not present in rhizome explants. Rhizome tips produced complete plantlets in Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium without any growth regulators in 80 - 90 days of culture initiation. In vitro multiplication of disease-free plants was achieved by culturing four months old in vitro plantlets in the MS medium supplemented with 2 mg/L Benzyl Amino Purine (BAP) and 0.1mg/L Naphthalene Acetic Acid (NAA). Plantlets produced clusters of shoot primordia which are known as green globular bodies (GGB) in the multiplication medium, 10 weeks after culturing. Plantlets were obtained by culturing 2-3 mm size GGB segments in the basal medium without any plant growth regulators. Disease indexing of the in vitro derived plantlets verified that at in vitro level 60% of the plantlets obtained from the rhizome tips of one centimetre were free from bacterial and fungal diseases.