Jl. Zofio et Am. Prieto, Environmental efficiency and regulatory standards: the case of CO2 emissions from OECD industries, RES ENER EC, 23(1), 2001, pp. 63-83
It is generally accepted that production processes should take into account
environmental sustainability principles. Hence, any attempt to measure the
performance of these processes should highlight, as a reference standard,
those processes that combine greater amounts of desirable production with l
ower levels of undesirable outputs, e.g, waste generation or emissions of g
reenhouse gases. Using this concept of environmental performance, it is pos
sible to establish efficiency scores within a Data Envelopment Analysis (DE
A! framework, and to calculate desirable output losses when specific enviro
nmental standards on undesirable production are set by the authority, i.e.
legislative opportunity costs. This can be achieved by solving programming
models that call for a reduction of undesirable outputs and that stress the
weak disposability of such outputs. Once a standard is set, it congests or
binds the technology if the reductions in undesirable production required
to meet it imply lower desirable output levels, i.e, the regulation is cost
ly. DEA enables us to simulate, for each producer, the effect of any regula
tory standard on production, and the limits beyond which production is impo
ssible - lower limits, or superfluous - upper limits, because the chosen st
andard does not bind production. The empirical implications of the DEA proc
ess are analyzed considering different regulatory scenarios on CO2 emission
s for the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)'s ma
nufacturing industries. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
JEL classification: C61; Q20.