Evaluating sustainability of household consumption-Using DEA to assess environmental performance

We assess environmental performance across product types and across household types in order to evaluate environmental pressure from human activities. To so do, we combine family budget statistics, input-output tables, energy and material flow matrices, various types of emissions and environmental e...

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Veröffentlicht in:Economic systems research 2005-12, Vol.17 (4), p.425-447
Hauptverfasser: Wier, Mette, Christoffersen, Line Block, Jensen, Trine S., Pedersen, Ole G., Keiding, Hans, Munksgaard, Jesper
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We assess environmental performance across product types and across household types in order to evaluate environmental pressure from human activities. To so do, we combine family budget statistics, input-output tables, energy and material flow matrices, various types of emissions and environmental effects indices for various effect types (e.g. a global warming potential index, an ozone depletion potential index, etc). Subsequently, using DEA (Data Envelopment Analysis), we use these weighted environmental effects indices to form one environ-mental performance score for each family type and product type. We find that the environmental performance of each family type changes considerably across environmental effect types. The analysis of the overall environmental performance scores shows that families living in urban flats, especially the young and elderly families, have the most environmentally friendly consum-ption pattern. Middle income families living in houses have the least environmentally friendly consumer basket, and these families constitute a high share of all families in Denmark.
ISSN:0953-5314
1469-5758
DOI:10.1080/09535310500284276