0000000000015767

AUTHOR

Alexandros Maziotis

0000-0001-9817-1470

showing 21 related works from this author

Eco-efficiency assessment under natural and managerial disposability: an empirical application for Chilean water companies.

2022

Getting a good understanding regarding the economic and environmental performance of water utilities is of great importance to achieve the goal of an efficient and sustainable industry. In this study, we apply the range adjusted measure (RAM) data envelopment analysis (DEA) model to evaluate the integrated (production and environmental) efficiency of several water utilities located in Chile. Integrated efficiency is evaluated using the concepts of natural and managerial disposability. This approach further allows us to quantify the contribution of each input and undesirable product on efficiency scores. The results highlighted that the Chilean water industry showed high levels of production…

Health Toxicology and MutagenesisEnvironmental ChemistryRecursos hidràulics ExplotacióGeneral MedicineEcologia aquàticaPollutionDesenvolupament econòmic Aspectes ambientalsEnvironmental science and pollution research international
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Carbon efficiency analysis in the provision of drinking water : Estimation of optimal greenhouse gas emissions

2023

Producción Científica

Renewable Energy Sustainability and the EnvironmentStrategy and ManagementGreenhouse gas emissionsWater servicesEfficiency analysis trees (EAT)3308 Ingeniería y Tecnología del Medio AmbienteRecursos hidràulics ExplotacióBuilding and ConstructionEnvironmental variablesCarbonIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringGeneral Environmental ScienceDesenvolupament econòmic Aspectes ambientals
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Marginal abatement cost of carbon dioxide emissions in the provision of urban drinking water

2021

Abstract Reducing greenhouse gas emissions is a major challenge faced by cities seeking to improve their environmental sustainability. Doing so requires a good understanding of the costs associated with lowering emissions and factors that may influence this cost. This study estimated the marginal abatement cost of reducing both direct and indirect CO2 emissions in the provision of drinking water by several water companies in England and Wales. The results indicated that during the years 2013–2018, the average cost to the English and Welsh water industry to prevent 1 kg of CO2 emissions was 0.264₤ which was equivalent to 61% of the price of the delivered drinking water The results of the Mor…

Environmental EngineeringRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industryElasticity of substitution020209 energyEnvironmental engineering02 engineering and technologyWater industry010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesIndustrial and Manufacturing Engineeringchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryGreenhouse gasCarbon dioxideSustainability0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceWater treatmentbusinessMarginal abatement costhealth care economics and organizationsAverage cost0105 earth and related environmental sciencesSustainable Production and Consumption
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Estimating the cost of improving service quality in water supply: A shadow price approach for England and wales

2015

Service quality to customers is an aspect that cannot be ignored in the performance assessment of water companies. Nowadays water regulators introduce awards or penalties to incentivize companies to improve service quality to customers when setting prices. In this study, the directional distance function is employed to estimate the shadow prices of variables indicating the lack of service quality to customers in the water industry i.e., written complaints, unplanned interruptions and properties below the reference level. To calculate the shadow price of each undesirable output for each water company, it is needed to ascribe a reference price for the desirable output which is the volume of w…

Service qualityEngineeringEnvironmental Engineeringbusiness.industry020209 energyShadow priceReference priceWater supply02 engineering and technologyWater industryCubic metre010501 environmental sciencesEnvironmental economics01 natural sciencesPollutionReference level0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringComplaintEnvironmental ChemistrybusinessWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental sciencesScience of The Total Environment
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Water company productivity change: A disaggregated approach accounting for changes in inputs and outputs

2021

Abstract The assessment of the productivity change of water utilities provides essential information to sector managers and regulators. This study uses the Luenberger-Hicks-Moorsteen Productivity Indicator (LHMPI) to evaluate productivity change as it can be further decomposed into three components namely technical change (TC), technical efficiency change (TEC), and scale efficiency change (SEC). This study evaluates the productivity of several water companies in England and Wales from 2001 to 2018. We found that productivity declined 1.2% per year due to the use of inputs that increased by 1.4% per year relative to outputs that increased by 0.2% per year.

Scale efficiencyProductivity changeSociology and Political Science020209 energyTEC02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and LawDevelopment01 natural sciencesTechnical changeWater companyAgricultural science0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringEnvironmental sciencesense organsBusiness and International Managementskin and connective tissue diseasesProductivity0105 earth and related environmental sciencesUtilities Policy
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The Luenberger productivity indicator in the water industry: An empirical analysis for England and Wales

2014

Abstract We innovate in the field of water companies' performance with an application of the directional distance function and the Luenberger productivity indicator (LPI) to the assessment of water companies' productivity growth. The advantage of our approach is that it takes into account both input contractions and output expansions. The analysis covered 22 water companies from England and Wales using data over the period 2001–2008. To the best of our knowledge, there are no prior studies applying the Luenberger productivity indicator to the water industry in England and Wales or other countries. For the sake of comparison, the traditional Malmquist productivity index (MPI) was also estima…

EngineeringIndex (economics)Sociology and Political Sciencebusiness.industryWater industryManagement Monitoring Policy and LawDevelopmentProduction–possibility frontierlanguage.human_languageNegative shiftWelshEconometricslanguageOperations managementBusiness and International ManagementbusinessProductivityMalmquist indexWater sectorUtilities Policy
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Financial winners and losers since the privatization of the English and Welsh water and sewerage industry: a profit decomposition approach

2020

Evaluating changes in profit, price and productivity over time can be of great importance for regulated water industries. We investigate the drivers of profit, price (capital, labour and other inputs) and productivity change (cost efficiency change, technical change and scale effect) and the recipients of productivity change (consumers, the business itself, employees and other resource suppliers) of the English and Welsh water and sewerage companies over the period of 1995–2016. The results indicate that the profit decreased over time due to the negative quantity effect, which offset the positive price effect. A further decomposition of the quantity effect illustrates the negative impact of…

0208 environmental biotechnologyGeography Planning and Development02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciences01 natural scienceslanguage.human_languageProfit (economics)020801 environmental engineeringWelshMarket economySeweragelanguageBusiness0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and TechnologyUrban Water Journal
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Changes in the total costs of the English and Welsh water and sewerage industry: The decomposed effect of price and quantity inputs on efficiency

2020

Abstract Understanding what drives changes in regulated water companies' costs is of great relevance to water regulators. This study decomposes and estimates the change in total costs for a sample of ten water and sewerage companies in England and Wales from 1993 to 2016. The results demonstrate that companies' total costs increased over time due to increases in input prices and input quantity. Any gains obtained from the efficient allocation of resources and technical progress were lost due to mergers and technical inefficiency. Finally, we link our results with the regulatory cycle to evaluate the impact of the regulatory regime on companies' costs and discuss some policy implications.

Sociology and Political ScienceNatural resource economicsTotal cost020209 energySample (statistics)02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and LawDevelopment01 natural scienceslanguage.human_languageTechnical progressWelshSewerage0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringData envelopment analysislanguageBusinessBusiness and International ManagementInefficiencyProductivity0105 earth and related environmental sciencesUtilities Policy
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Understanding water energy nexus in drinking water provision: an eco-efficiency assessment of water companies

2022

Producción Científica

Greenhouse EffectEnvironmental EngineeringEficiencia ambientalEco-efficiencyEcological ModelingDrinking WaterServicios de aguasEfficiencyPollutionGreenhouse GasesEcoeficienciaWater SupplyEnvironmental efficiencyWater utilitiesWaste Management and DisposalWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural Engineering
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Eco-Efficiency of the English and Welsh Water Companies: A Cross Performance Assessment

2021

Analyzing costs and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions could be of great importance for the water utilities to supply water services in a healthy and sustainable manner. In this study, we measured the eco-efficiency of several water utilities in England and Wales by incorporating GHG as an undesirable output. For the first time, we evaluated the eco-efficiency of the water production process using robust cross-efficiency data envelopment analysis (DEA) techniques. The further use of clustering and regression techniques allowed us to better understand the drivers of eco-efficiency. The results showed that the mean eco-efficiency of the water sector was 0.748, which indicates that costs and GHG e…

Greenhouse EffectHigh energy020209 energyHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesiscross eco-efficiencylcsh:MedicineEficiència industrial02 engineering and technologyWater industryEfficiency010501 environmental sciencesEco-efficiency01 natural sciencesWater productionArticleWelshWater Supply0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringData envelopment analysisWater sector0105 earth and related environmental scienceswater utilitiesWalesbusiness.industrygreenhouse gas emissionslcsh:RPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthWaterEngland and WalesEnvironmental economicslanguage.human_languageEnglandGreenhouse gaslanguageEnvironmental sciencebusinessenvironmental variables
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Impact of external costs of unplanned supply interruptions on water company efficiency: Evidence from Chile

2020

Abstract Conventional performance assessments of water companies ignore the external costs due to water supply outages. To overcome this gap, we evaluate the impact of external costs of unplanned supply interruptions on the efficiency of water companies. Two efficiency metrics, internal technical efficiency (ITE), and total technical efficiency (TTE), were estimated based on data envelopment analysis (DEA). The results evidence that the external costs of unplanned water supply interruptions impact, on average, 7.9% of the efficiency of water companies. We also explored the impact of a set of environmental variables on water company efficiency.

Sociology and Political Sciencebusiness.industry020209 energyWater supply02 engineering and technologyBenchmarkingWater industry010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and LawDevelopmentEnvironmental economics01 natural sciencesWater company0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringData envelopment analysisBusinessBusiness and International ManagementExternality0105 earth and related environmental sciencesUtilities Policy
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Profit change and its drivers in the English and Welsh water industry: is output quality important?

2014

Abstract The assessment of profit change over time and its drivers is essential to analyse firms' financial performance. This paper investigates profit change and its components for the 10 English and Welsh water and sewerage water companies over the period 1991–2008 and for three regulatory sub-periods. Profit changes and their drivers are computed following two approaches, namely: without controlling for water and sewerage quality issues, and after decomposing the output effect into high quality and low quality output effect. In both cases, profit change is decomposed into various factors such as quantity and price effect, technical change, efficiency change, resource mix, product mix, an…

Net profitActuarial sciencebusiness.industry0208 environmental biotechnologyGeography Planning and Development02 engineering and technologyWater industryManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawlanguage.human_languageProfit (economics)Technical change020801 environmental engineeringWelshGross profitSewerageEarnings before interest and taxeslanguageEconomicsbusinessIndustrial organizationWater Science and TechnologyWater Policy
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Performance assessment of water companies: A metafrontier approach accounting for quality of service and group heterogeneities

2021

Abstract The assessment of water companies’ efficiency, productivity and quality of service is part of the process to set water tariffs and therefore, is relevant for regulators and customers. However, the water industry involves several heterogeneous water companies. Following a pioneering approach, this study estimates productivity change and its drivers considering the non-homogeneous nature of the water companies and incorporating quality of service variables as undesirable outputs. In doing so, the metafrontier Malmquist Luenberger productivity index was estimated for a sample of English and Welsh water and sewerage companies (WaSCs) and water only companies (WoCs) over the years 2001–…

Economics and Econometrics021103 operations researchIndex (economics)business.industryProcess (engineering)Strategy and ManagementQuality of service05 social sciencesGeography Planning and Development0211 other engineering and technologiesSample (statistics)02 engineering and technologyWater industryManagement Science and Operations ResearchTechnical progress0502 economics and businessSewerage050207 economicsStatistics Probability and UncertaintybusinessProductivityIndustrial organizationSocio-Economic Planning Sciences
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Assessing the productivity change of water companies in England and Wales: A dynamic metafrontier approach

2017

The assessment of productivity change and its drivers across water companies and over time is a powerful tool for both regulators and companies when setting water tariffs. Water and sewerage companies (WaSCs) and water only companies (WoCs) provide different services. Hence, their productivity change cannot directly be evaluated jointly. In this paper and for the first time, we provide a pioneering approach to assess and compare the dynamics of productivity change of WaSCs and WoCs. To achieve this, both the traditional Malmquist productivity index and the metafrontier Malmquist productivity index and its components are computed to assess the productivity change for a sample of English and …

EngineeringEnvironmental EngineeringIndex (economics)0208 environmental biotechnologyWater supplySample (statistics)Efficiency02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and Law01 natural sciencesWater SupplySewerageData envelopment analysisWaste Management and DisposalProductivity0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWalesbusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementWaterGeneral MedicineProduction–possibility frontierEnvironmental economics020801 environmental engineeringEnglandSustainabilitybusinessJournal of Environmental Management
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Drivers of productivity change: a comparison of English and Welsh water only and water and sewerage companies

2021

In regulated industries, such as the water industry, it is of great significance to estimate productivity change as it helps policy makers to evaluate the effectiveness of regulatory regime and ind...

Productivity changebusiness.industryNatural resource economics0208 environmental biotechnologyGeography Planning and DevelopmentUrban water cycle02 engineering and technologyWater industry010501 environmental sciences01 natural scienceslanguage.human_language020801 environmental engineeringWelshStochastic frontier analysisSeweragelanguagesense organsBusinessskin and connective tissue diseaseshealth care economics and organizations0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and TechnologyUrban Water Journal
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Accounting for service quality to customers in the efficiency of water companies: evidence from England and Wales

2015

This paper investigates the role of service quality to customers in the efficiency assessment of water companies in England and Wales. To achieve this, data envelopment analysis techniques are employed to compute the technical efficiency of the water companies following two approaches: (i) traditional assessment based on quantity variables (without the inclusion of service quality variables) and (ii) alternative assessment considering quantity and service quality variables as undesirable outputs. The analysis covers 22 water and sewerage companies and water only companies providing drinking water services. The results indicate that the traditional efficiency assessment reveals a high level …

Service qualitybusiness.industryQuality of service05 social sciencesGeography Planning and DevelopmentBenchmarkingWater industry010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and LawEnvironmental economics01 natural sciencesAlternative assessment0502 economics and businessSewerageData envelopment analysisService guarantee050207 economicsMarketingbusiness0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and TechnologyWater Policy
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Assessing the marginal cost of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the English and Welsh water and sewerage industry: A parametric approach

2021

Abstract Reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions involves effort from different sectors of the economy, including the water and sewerage industry. This study estimates the marginal cost of curtailing GHG emissions in the water and sewerage industry using stochastic frontier analysis techniques for a sample of ten English and Welsh water and sewerage companies over the 2010–2019 period. Results illustrated that the average marginal cost of reducing GHG emissions was 0.181 £/Kg CO2 equivalent. The marginal cost estimated notably differs across companies and over time. Findings further illustrate the impact of water companies' operating characteristics on the marginal cost of reducing carbon e…

Marginal costSociology and Political ScienceNatural resource economics020209 energyEconomic sectorUrban water cycleSample (statistics)02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and LawDevelopment01 natural scienceslanguage.human_languageWelshStochastic frontier analysisGreenhouse gasSewerage0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringlanguageEnvironmental scienceBusiness and International Management0105 earth and related environmental sciencesUtilities Policy
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Estimating performance and savings of water leakages and unplanned water supply interruptions in drinking water providers

2022

Producción Científica

Economics and EconometricsWaste Management and Disposal
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Estimating Profit, Price, and Productivity Changes in Water Industry Using Bennet-Bowley Indicator

2019

AbstractThe assessment of profit, productivity, and price change over time is valuable for regulators and companies when setting tariffs. This paper innovates by comparing profit, price, and produc...

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesbusiness.industry0208 environmental biotechnologyGeography Planning and Development02 engineering and technologyWater industryManagement Monitoring Policy and Law01 natural sciencesProfit (economics)Agricultural economics020801 environmental engineeringPrice changeEconomicsbusiness0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringJournal of Water Resources Planning and Management
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A comprehensive assessment of energy efficiency of wastewater treatment plants: An efficiency analysis tree approach

2023

Producción Científica

3305.15 Ingeniería HidráulicaÁrboles de regresiónMedio ambiente Estudios de impactoEficiencia energéticaEnvironmental EngineeringRegression treesPlantas depuradoras de aguas residuales3308 Ingeniería y Tecnología del Medio AmbienteEnergia DesenvolupamentEnergy savingsPollutionAigua DepuracióEnergy efficiencyAhorro energéticoWastewater treatment plantsEnvironmental ChemistryAguas residuales DepuraciónWaste Management and DisposalScience of The Total Environment
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Drivers of productivity change: a comparison of English and Welsh water only and water and sewerage companies

2021

In regulated industries, such as the water industry, it is of great significance to estimate productivity change as it helps policy makers to evaluate the effectiveness of regulatory regime and industry performance. In this paper, and for the first time, a translog input distance function was used to estimate and decompose productivity change into several components such as technical efficiency change, scale efficiency change, input-mix, and technical change. A further decomposition of technical change into neutral, output- and input-induced shifts of the frontier is provided. The above decomposition was applied to the English and Welsh water and sewerage companies and water only companies …

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