18,226 research outputs found

    REGIONAL PLANNING OF WASTEWATER REUSE FOR IRRIGATION AND RIVER REHABILITATION

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    With some agri-environmental restrictions, municipal wastewater can be utilized for agricultural irrigation and river rehabilitation. This paper develops a single-year planning model for a region in Israel which consists of a city and three potential wastewater consumers. The model incorporates, in one endogenous system, the economic, physical and biological relationships in the water-soil-plant environment system and its objective is to maximize the regional social welfare composed of the sum of agricultural and environmental net benefits. The model determines the optimal crop mix and the optimal allocation of the limited water and land resources among all potential users. Then, different allocation approaches from the concept of transferable utility games are applied to determine a reasonable and fair allocation of the additional net benefits which will be accepted by the players. The results support the collaboration among the economic entities and indicate economic and environmental advantages which can serve the decision-makers.Wastewater reuse, Allocation, Optimization Model, Transferable utility games, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,

    Cooperation in an HMMS-type supply chain: A management application of cooperative game theory = KooperĂĄciĂł egy HMMS-tĂ­pusĂș ellĂĄtĂĄsi lĂĄncban: A kooperatĂ­v jĂĄtĂ©kelmĂ©let egy menedzsment alkalmazĂĄsa

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    We apply cooperative game theory concepts to analyze a Holt-Modigliani-Muth-Simon (HMMS) supply chain. The bullwhip effect in a two-stage supply chain (supplier-manufacturer) in the framework of the HMMS-model with quadratic cost functions is considered. It is assumed that both firms minimize their relevant costs, and two cases are examined: the supplier and the manufacturer minimize their relevant costs in a decentralized and in a centralized (cooperative) way. The question of how to share the savings of the decreased bullwhip effect in the centralized (cooperative) model is answered by the weighted Shapley value, by a transferable utility cooperative game theory tool, where the weights are for the exogenously given “bargaining powers” of the participants of the supply chain. = A cikkben a kooperatĂ­v jĂĄtĂ©kelmĂ©let fogalmait alkalmazzuk egy Holt-Mogigliani-Muth-Simon-tĂ­pusĂș ellĂĄtĂĄsi lĂĄnc esetĂ©ben. Az ostorcsapĂĄs-hatĂĄs elemeit egy beszĂĄllĂ­tĂł-termelƑ ellĂĄtĂĄsi lĂĄncban ragadjuk meg egy kvadratikus kĂ©szletezĂ©si Ă©s termelĂ©si költsĂ©g mellett. FeltĂ©telezzĂŒk, hogy mindkĂ©t vĂĄllalat minimalizĂĄlja a relevĂĄns költsĂ©geit. KĂ©t mƱködĂ©si rendszert hasonlĂ­tunk össze: egy hierarchikus döntĂ©shozatali rendszert, amikor elƑször a termelƑ, majd a beszĂĄllĂ­tĂł optimalizĂĄlja helyzetĂ©t, majd egy centralizĂĄlt (kooperatĂ­v) modellt, amikor a vĂĄllalatok az egyĂŒttes költsĂ©gĂŒket minimalizĂĄljĂĄk. A kĂ©rdĂ©s Ășgy merĂŒl fel, hogy a csökkentett ostorcsapĂĄs-hatĂĄs esetĂ©n hogyan osszĂĄk meg a rĂ©szvevƑk ebben a transzferĂĄlhatĂł hasznossĂĄgĂș kooperatĂ­v jĂĄtĂ©kban a költsĂ©g megtakarĂ­tĂĄst, exogĂ©n mĂłdon adott tĂĄrgyalĂĄsi pozĂ­ciĂł mellett

    Cooperative game theory and its application to natural, environmental, and water resource issues : 1. basic theory

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    Game theory provides useful insights into the way parties that share a scarce resource may plan their use of the resource under different situations. This review provides a brief and self-contained introduction to the theory of cooperative games. It can be used to get acquainted with the basics of cooperative games. Its goal is also to provide a basic introduction to this theory, in connection with a couple of surveys that analyze its use in the context of environmental problems and models. The main models (bargaining games, transfer utility, and non-transfer utility games) and issues and solutions are considered: bargaining solutions, single-value solutions like the Shapley value and the nucleolus, and multi-value solutions such as the core. The cooperative game theory (CGT) models that are reviewed in this paper favor solutions that include all possible players and ignore the strategic stages leading to coalition building. They focus on the possible results of the cooperation by answering questions such as: Which coalitions can be formed? And how can the coalitional gains be divided to secure a sustainable agreement? An important aspect associated with the solution concepts of CGT is the equitable and fair sharing of the cooperation gains.Environmental Economics&Policies,Economic Theory&Research,Livestock&Animal Husbandry,Education for the Knowledge Economy,Education for Development (superceded)

    Supply chain collaboration

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    In the past, research in operations management focused on single-firm analysis. Its goal was to provide managers in practice with suitable tools to improve the performance of their firm by calculating optimal inventory quantities, among others. Nowadays, business decisions are dominated by the globalization of markets and increased competition among firms. Further, more and more products reach the customer through supply chains that are composed of independent firms. Following these trends, research in operations management has shifted its focus from single-firm analysis to multi-firm analysis, in particular to improving the efficiency and performance of supply chains under decentralized control. The main characteristics of such chains are that the firms in the chain are independent actors who try to optimize their individual objectives, and that the decisions taken by a firm do also affect the performance of the other parties in the supply chain. These interactions among firms’ decisions ask for alignment and coordination of actions. Therefore, game theory, the study of situations of cooperation or conflict among heterogenous actors, is very well suited to deal with these interactions. This has been recognized by researchers in the field, since there are an ever increasing number of papers that applies tools, methods and models from game theory to supply chain problems

    Intergenerational transfers in rural households: A game theoretical approach

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    The household membership decision is viewed as a “research project” where the offspring invests in human and non human capital to influence the probability of finding an alternative to the parental household. The problem is formulated as a differential game between a selfish offspring and altruistic parents. The solution is consistent with facts” such as the “flexibility of inheritance systems” and the “generational fragmentation” of the family property when the economic opportunities expand outside the parental household.intergenerational transfers, rural households, game theory

    Intergenerational transfers in rural households: A game theoretical approach

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    The household membership decision is viewed as a “research project” where the offspring invests in human and non human capital to influence the probability of finding an alternative to the parental household. The problem is formulated as a differential game between a selfish offspring and altruistic parents. The solution is consistent with facts” such as the “flexibility of inheritance systems” and the “generational fragmentation” of the family property when the economic opportunities expand outside the parental household.intergenerational transfers, rural households, game theory

    Cooperative game theory and its application to natural, environmental, and water resource issues : 3. application to water resources

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    This paper reviews various applications of cooperative game theory (CGT) to issues of water resources. With an increase in the competition over various water resources, the incidents of disputes have been in the center of allocation agreements. The paper reviews the cases of various water uses, such as multi-objective water projects, irrigation, groundwater, hydropower, urban water supply, wastewater, and transboundary water disputes. In addition to providing examples of cooperative solutions to allocation problems, the conclusion from this review suggests that cooperation over scarce water resources is possible under a variety of physical conditions and institutional arrangements. In particular, the various approaches for cost sharing and for allocation of physical water infrastructure and flow can serve as a basis for stable and efficient agreement, such that long-term investments in water projects are profitable and sustainable. The latter point is especially important, given recent developments in water policy in various countries and regional institutions such as the European Union (Water Framework Directive), calling for full cost recovery of investments and operation and maintenance in water projects. The CGT approaches discussed and demonstrated in this paper can provide a solid basis for finding possible and stable cost-sharing arrangements.Town Water Supply and Sanitation,Environmental Economics&Policies,Water Supply and Sanitation Governance and Institutions,Water Supply and Systems,Water and Industry
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