Environmental efficiency and abatement efficiency measurements of China's thermal power industry: a data envelopment analysis based materials balance approach
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1744476
DOI10.1016/j.ejor.2017.04.053zbMath1431.91285OpenAlexW2609986053MaRDI QIDQ1744476
Publication date: 23 April 2018
Published in: European Journal of Operational Research (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2017.04.053
OR in environment and climate changeemission reductionelectricity generationmaterials balance principlepollutant abatement
Management decision making, including multiple objectives (90B50) Environmental economics (natural resource models, harvesting, pollution, etc.) (91B76)
Related Items
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Some Models for Estimating Technical and Scale Inefficiencies in Data Envelopment Analysis
- Measuring the efficiency of decision making units
- Accounting for externalities and disposability: a directional economic environmental distance function
- Environmental efficiency measurement and the materials balance condition reconsidered
- Modelling pollution-generating technologies in performance benchmarking: recent developments, limits and future prospects in the nonparametric framework
- Alternative measures of environmental technology structure in DEA: an application
- Data envelopment analysis for environmental assessment: comparison between public and private ownership in petroleum industry
- Quantitative models for performance evaluation and benchmarking. Data envelopment analysis with spreadsheets
- Modeling undesirable factors in efficiency evaluation
- Modeling undesirable factors in efficiency evaluation: comment
- Handbook on data envelopment analysis
- A response to comments on `Modeling undesirable factors in efficiency evaluation'.
- A global Malmquist productivity index
- Shadow pricing of undesirable outputs in nonparametric analysis
- The Economic Theory of Index Numbers and the Measurement of Input, Output, and Productivity
- Measuring Eco-Inefficiency: A New Frontier Approach
- Undesiderable outputs in efficiency valuations