Abstract

To relieve the problems of energy shortage and environmental pollution, many countries have implemented a variety of policies to improve the energy efficiency of the power industry. To understand the impacts of such policies on energy efficiency, this paper constructs novel network data envelopment analysis models to recognize the policy-induced structural changes in the power system. Compared with previous studies, the new models project the inefficient points onto a more realistic efficient production frontier, considering how the distribution proportion of shared resources will change when the power system, modeled as a power generation stage and a power sale stage, is led by the latter stage. Our empirical study on China’s power system shows that the province of Guangdong and the eastern region of China perform best, and all power production stages perform better than the corresponding power sale stages. The development of the two power subsystems in the four regions is unbalanced. More than half of the power supply systems choose to allocate more proportion of the shared resources to the sale stage rather than use a more balanced distribution between the two stages.

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