Next Article in Journal
Analysis and Evaluation of Multi-Energy Cascade Utilization System for Ultra-Supercritical Units
Next Article in Special Issue
Performance Assessment of the Semiconductor Industry: Measured by DEA Environmental Assessment
Previous Article in Journal
Control System Development for the Three-Ports ANPC Converter
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Operational Performance of Electric Power Firms: Comparison between Japan and South Korea by Non-Radial Measures

1
Department of Management, New Mexico Institute of Mining & Technology, 801 Leroy Place, Socorro, NM 87801, USA
2
School of Environment and Society, Tokyo Tech World Research Hub Initiative, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 3-3-6 Shibaura, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108-0023, Japan
3
College of Professional Studies, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Energies 2020, 13(15), 3968; https://doi.org/10.3390/en13153968
Submission received: 6 July 2020 / Revised: 27 July 2020 / Accepted: 28 July 2020 / Published: 2 August 2020
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Challenges in Energy and Environment)

Abstract

:
This study compares the electric power sectors between Japan and South (S) Korea. Both nations have been under a global trend of deregulation. To assess their progress due to industrial change and technology development, we use Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) as an assessment tool that enables us to evaluate the level of simultaneous achievements on economic and technological measures, so assessing the degree of holistic development. DEA has been widely applied for performance assessment in the past decades. In this study, the method compares electric power firms by their operational efficiencies. To compare their achievements, it is necessary to develop a new type of DEA application for performance measurement. The proposed approach adds two analytical capabilities. First, the approach needs to handle “zero” in a data set and then restrict multipliers (i.e., weights among inputs and outputs) without any prior information to increase our empirical reliability. No study has simultaneously explored the two capabilities in DEA. Using the proposed method, our empirical study identifies two findings. One of the two is that the electric power industry of S. Korea outperformed that of the Japanese industry in the observed periods (2014–2018) because the Japanese power sector still suffered from an occurrence of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant disaster which occurred on 1 March 2011. However, the difference has been gradually diminishing because the Japanese electricity industry has been gradually recovering from the huge disaster. The other is that the S. Korean power industry has been in a descending trend because the nation has shown technical regress as a result of inconsistent technology development (e.g., shifting its R&D: Research and Development) focus from electrical engineering to chemistry). The former R&D area is essential in maintaining the technical level of S. Korea′s electric power industry.

1. Introduction

In regulated markets, electricity firms often hold control over a complete process, from generation all the way down to end-users. Electricity deregulation takes some of the ownership/operation away from the electric power process under vertically-integrated structures. In contrast, in deregulated markets, they may control part of the generation, distribution, maintenance of wires and poles, and invoicing of consumers for those services. Some expected benefits of the deregulation include (a) improved energy technologies, (b) lower rates, (c) additional energy options, (d) advanced customer service, and (e) economic growth. The deregulation in the electric power industry is a world-wide trend, because we may expect many benefits due to the deregulation. Both Japan and South (S) Korea belong to the global trend of deregulation.
A difficulty in assessing such a competitive and deregulated industry is that we do not have a practical method to assess firms from both their economic and technological developments on multiple production factors. To partly deal with the methodological difficulty, this research proposes a new use of Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) that we have previously utilized as a practical approach for performance assessment on various organizations in private and public sectors [1].
In the previous studies [2] on DEA, we observed that the assessment had a wide range of applications, because it could avoid specifying a functional form that connects among multiple components of X (inputs) and G (outputs) in the assessment. The method can relatively evaluate an efficiency level of many organizations, often referred to as Decision-Making Units (DMUs: electric power firms in this research), by a percentile expression (so, measuring operational efficiency). Such unique features indicate the practicality of DEA in the area of energy.
However, the practicality is still limited in the scope of this study. For example, in the comparison of two electric power sectors, we find two methodological difficulties. One of them is that the proposed approach needs to handle “zero” in our data set. This study uses the amount of R&D expenditure (as an input) and the number of patents (as an output) to measure technology progress in the power sectors. The number of patents contains zero in our data set. The conventional DEA usually assumes strict positivity on all observations so that a straight forward use of DEA does not function in this study. To handle the zero in a data set, we select a “non-radial model” as a tool for our performance assessment. The other difficulty is that we need to consider multiplier restriction, in which multipliers are weights among inputs and outputs, without any prior information to attain empirical reliability. In conventional use, DEA usually produces many efficient DMUs as a result of not using multiplier restriction. For example, the conventional DEA result shows that 90% of DMUS are efficient and the remaining 10% are inefficient. Such a result is mathematically acceptable but practically not ideal. To reduce the number of efficient DMUs in DEA, scholars have developed many multiplier restriction techniques, such as assurance region analysis [3] and cone ration [4], based upon prior information (e.g., experimental results and common sense). A problem is that this study cannot assess such prior information. Thus, it is necessary for us to develop an approach for multiplier restriction without prior information.
Research motivation: In addition to the two methodological difficulties identified in this study, we need to mention two research motivations. One of the two is that for our international comparison, the Japanese power sector has suffered from the occurrence of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant′s disaster on 11 March 2011. The use of nuclear energy has been limited and it is almost impossible to resume the nuclear power plants in Japan [5]. The nation needs other energy sources, such as liquid natural gas and renewable energies. In contrast, S. Korea did not have such a nuclear problem in the operation of electric power plants. Even so, some previous administrations have implemented pro-nuclear policies. Due to the difference in their fuel mixes, we expect that S. Korea may operate more efficiently than Japan in terms of their operational efficiencies. The other concern is that the two nations may have different industrial structures. So, it is important for us to examine the performance of the electric power firms by considering whether their industrial structures influence their operational efficiencies. No study has explored this type of research issue.
This article is organized as follows. Section 2 summarizes a literature review. Section 3 compares Japan and S. Korea in terms of their industrial restructures. Section 4 describes the methodological features of DEA and explains why we use the method for this research. We also explain the extensions in the proposed approach. Section 5 summarizes the DEA-based empirical results. Section 6 concludes this study, along with future research tasks. Appendix A compares differences in the fuel mixes and industrial structures between the two nations.
All abbreviations used in this study are summarized as follows: CNIPA: China National Intellectual Property Administration, DEA: Data Envelopment Analysis, DMU: Decision-Making Unit, EPO: European Patent Office, EPSIS: Electric Power Statistics Information System, FTE: Full Time Equivalent, GDP: Gross Domestic Product. GHG: Greenhouse Gas, GWh: Gigawatt hours, IPC: International Patent Classification, JPO: Japan Patent Office, KEPCO: Korea Electric Power Corporation, KIPO: Korean Intellectual Property Office, KPX: Korea Power Exchange, METI: Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, OCCT: Organization for Cross-regional Coordination Transmission, OE: Operational Efficiency, OECD: Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, PV: Photovoltaic, R&D: Research and Development, RTS: Returns to Scale, URS: Unrestricted, US: United States, USPTO: U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and WIPO: World Intellectual Property Organization.

2. Literature Review

In reviewing previous efforts on DEA, the works [1,2] have provided their historical review on the developments from the contribution of Professor W.W. Cooper, who was the first inventor. The research [1] has examined a research trend on the DEA applications from the 1980s to 2010s. Many researchers have paid serious attention to the environmental issues regarding how to combat various difficulties in the areas of energy and environment. As a result, the number of articles that used DEA environmental assessment has dramatically increased, particularly after the 2000s. The book [2] extended the previous work [1] by adding previous studies on conventional DEA. The work listed more than 800 peer-reviewed articles on DEA and these applications in performance assessment. Since the two previous efforts [1,2] have summarized most of previous works on DEA environmental assessment, this research does not provide a detailed description on previous research efforts here.
Considering its significant contribution to reduce carbon emissions as well as industrial base (particularly manufacturing base), the electric power sector has attracted attention among DEA researchers. While there is a great body of DEA applications in many countries (e.g., [6] in Australia and [7] in China), this study focuses on comparing Japanese with S. Korean electric power sectors. Table 1 summarizes major literature in the area. While they contributed to closing gaps in the pre-existing literature by (a) assessing efficiencies of electric power sector at multiple levels (power plant, company, and country) and (b) incorporating the emissions of CO2 or other air pollutants to reflect the importance of environmental sustainability, there is still room for new studies from the perspective of deregulation and technology development.
Note that Japan and S. Korea have some similarities in deregulation. Both countries started the liberalization efforts in the late 1990s. S. Korea implemented actual policy programs (particularly divesting one state-owned, vertically-integrated company of power generation part) in the early 2000s [8]. With globalization, both nations accepted the liberalization of the electric power industry as a global standard and sought to take advantage of (through competition) lowering the price of electricity, which was critical for maintaining their industrial competitiveness (particularly in electricity-intensive industries such as information and communications technology and automobile manufacturing). On the other hand, both nations were concerned about the unintended consequences of rapid liberalization shown in California, U.S.A. and the United Kingdom (e.g., the price of electricity dropped right after the deregulation but it went up again after a while in the U.S.A. [9]; and a power pool market in the U.K. did not function as well as expected [10]). Thus, they adopted an incremental reform rather than a revolutionary one.
However, there are also differences between the two nations, particularly in the speed of liberalization. Although both nations sought a gradual transition from the generation competition to the wholesale competition and further to the retail competition market, Japan reached the last stage through a series of reforms whereas S. Korea stagnates in the first stage [11]. Japan already opened its wholesale and retail market to the private sector, but S. Korea remains in the competitive generation market, which is still not completely privatized yet. Six major power generation companies are subsidiaries of Korea Electric Power Company (KEPCO), which monopolizes the transmission, distribution, and retail of electric power. Also, more than 50% of KEPCO′s shares are owned by the government [12].
The two countries have also faced different challenges. While Japan has improved the efficiency, independence, and transparency of its electric power industry over time, the nation was confronted with an unforeseen event, the Fukushima Daiichi disaster, which disrupted its electricity market [13,14]. On the other hand, S. Korea has experienced deteriorating productivity issues primarily because of technical regress stemming from increasing generation cost [15]. One of the potential reasons was increased peak-load generation, rather than base-load generation, which is related to the expansion of power plant facilities. Another reason was the inefficiency of technological innovation activities. There may be a lack of R&D investment or insufficient technology development in the Korean electricity industry.
Position of this study: To the best of our knowledge, no DEA study has explored the comparison between Japanese and Korean electric power industries, although both countries have a strong manufacturing focus and similar industrial base (particularly in information and communications technology, as well as automobile manufacturing). In addition to their energy-intensive industries, they also share some other similarities. Both nations are highly reliant on imported energy sources, given their scarce fossil energy reserves. They have also embraced the global trend of deregulation in the electric power sector (particularly in the power generation area) in a relatively similar timeframe.
Another concern to be noted is the issue of data and period length used in the DEA literature. While there are some non-DEA studies that show more recent datasets related to the electric power sector, existing DEA literature unveiled the Japanese or Korean electric power sector relatively long time ago. In the former, for instance, [16] employed the negative binomial panel regression model but used Japanese electric power companies′ 1999–2018 data, although the data focused on the R&D activities. The work [17] investigated the efficiency issue of Korean electric power companies by employing cost function (rather than production function) and used 1982–2016 data. In the latter, however, they used 2005–2010 and 1990–2010 data, respectively, to study Japanese and S. Korean cases. This study may be a timely effort to update the performance of the current electric power sector in both countries. Additionally, with the emergence of electronic government initiatives (e.g., Open Government Data Projects in Japan and Public Data Portal such as data.go.kr in S. Korea), both nations have tended to open more data to the public and have become more transparent. In S. Korea, for instance, the ALIO (All Public Information In-One) system offers various types of management information of public agencies, including utility companies since 2015. This study takes advantage of using more reliable and consistent datasets containing more recent information.
In addition, the existing literature tends to belittle the role of technological development and does not include any relevant measures. Japan and S. Korea have both invested enormous amount of money in R&D (Japan: US$185.5 billion (3.21% of GDP) and S. Korea: US$69.7 billion (4.55% of GDP) in 2017) and belong to the top five global R&D spenders. This is also true for the electric power sector. Both countries have actively invested in the R&D of not only power generation, distribution, and transmission technologies, but also green technologies.
The two countries are also strongly interested in protecting their R&D outcomes via intellectual property rights. This is evidenced by their affiliations with IP5 (Intellectual Property 5: five major patent offices including the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), the European Patent Office (EPO), the Japan Patent Office (JPO), the Korean Intellectual Property Office (KIPO), and the National Intellectual Property Administration in China (CNIPA)).
In this regard, this study seeks to add value to the existing DEA applications to the Japanese and S. Korean electric power sectors by (a) comparing the performance of electric power companies in the two industrialized countries with similar performance base, (b) looking into more recent data after game-changing events (including financial crisis, deregulation, Fukushima Daiichi Accident, and global race for technological innovation), and (c) incorporating technological development-related measure (e.g., patents) and shedding light on the technological trajectories and portfolios of electric power companies in both countries.

3. Electric Power Industry in Japan and South Korea

3.1. Deregulation in Japan

In Japan, nine electric power companies have provided their utility services as a regional monopoly. Figure 1 lists the nine companies from north to south. They include: (a) Hokkaido Electric Power, (b) Tohoku Electric Power, (c) Chubu Electric Power, (d) Hokuriku Electric Power, (e) Kansai Electric Power, (f) Chugoku Electric Power, (g) Shikoku Electric Power, and (h) Kyushu Electric Power. We know that there is Okinawa Electric Power Company, but its business scale is much smaller than the other nine firms to be examined, so this research does not include the firm for our international comparison.
Japan has been gradually deregulating the electric power market since 1995. Although the Japanese government tried to facilitate institutional reforms, the challenge belonged to a slow process of market restructuring. The situation has advanced after the Great East Japan Earthquake on 1 March 2011. The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster occurred with the earthquake. After the disaster, a major reform started the following three plans [27].
First, Japan established the Organization for Cross-regional Coordination of Transmission Operators (OCCTO) in 2015, whose missions were to promote the development of transmission and distribution networks, both of which were necessary for cross-regional electricity uses. The organization also enhanced the nationwide function of maintaining a supply and demand balance of electricity in normal or emergency conditions.
Second, Japan implemented the full deregulation of the retail market in 2016, which gave regulated residential users eligibility to choose an electricity supplier from incumbent and new entrant firms. Licensing unbundling was also introduced in 2016, under which the electricity supply had different licenses on generation, transmission, distribution, and retail. Currently, any firm can enter the power generation by just notifying the government. Entrants into the retail sector need to register for starting their businesses. The transmission and distribution have remained in regional monopoly. The power businesses are still constrained under governmental regulation.
Finally, in 2020, the nation implemented legal unbundling between transmission and distribution from generation and retail sectors. The purpose of the separation is to secure a high level of fairness for all players in electricity generation and retail markets and to facilitate a high level of competition among players, because incumbent companies have an advantage in transmission and distribution.
Note that [16] has recently discussed a marginal effect of R&D on the deregulation of the Japanese electric power industry. The research used an econometric approach (i.e., negative binomial panel data regression) to assess the influence of R&D on the Japanese market from 1999 to 2018. Meanwhile, the purpose of this study is to compare the Japanese electric power sector with that of S. Korea. The DEA is a non-parametric approach to measure the level of operational efficiency, so different from the econometric approach utilized in [16]. The research has considered neither international comparison nor efficiency measurement. We borrow the Japanese data set from the research in [16], but we obtain the S. Korean data set by our research effort. The observed annual periods are from 2014 to 2018. The observed periods are less than those of [16], because we have difficulty in accessing a data set prior to 2014 on the S. Korean electric power industry.

3.2. Deregulation/Liberalization in South Korea

Different from Japan, to start the deregulation/liberalization process of an electric power sector that was originally monopolized by a state-owned giant, the S. Korean government has changed it by partially opening the electricity generation market. The government privatized companies for improving efficiency, cutting debt, and improved transparency. See research [29,30] that describes the process for deregulation and liberalization in S. Korea.
The process of S. Korea started from the liberalization, implying that the state-owned KEPCO has separated its power generation part into five subsidiaries: (a) Korea South-East Power, (b) Korea Midland Power, (c) Korea Western Power, (d) Korea Southern Power, and (e) Korea East-West Power. It also includes (f) Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power, which is KEPCO′s wholly-owned subsidiary. The company owns and operates the nation′s 21 nuclear power plants and produces a third of the country′s power. While there are several independent power producers, their portion is minimal when compared to the six power generation companies. In addition, the Korea Power Exchange (KPX) plays as an independent power system operator. Figure 2 visually describes the six firms in S. Korea.
In privatizing KEPCO after the financial crisis in 1997, the government attempted to increase private holdings of the company′s 40% shares, drawing on the basic plan for the restructuring of the Korean power industry in 1999, whose purposes were (a) to increase the efficiency of the power industry through competition, (b) to ensure the long-term viability of electricity supply, and (c) to promote consumer convenience and choice. However, the privatization did not prove easy, owing to the company′s size and the low price of power. Since then, the government has been discouraged from continuing its electricity market restructuring process by anti-nuclear activists, as well as labor unions and environmental issues. Today, transmission and retail services are still monopolized by KEPCO. The S. Korean government holds about 51% of the company′s shares. This aspect of shareholding is very different from Japan, where electric power companies do not have such public ownership, of course being under governmental regulation.
The government has reported that it could cap the private sector′s stake in KEPCO entities at 20% to 30% to preserve the government′s majority share. However, it may also allow renewable energy companies to sell power directly to consumers. Currently, private companies and individuals must trade and distribute power through the KEPCO.

3.3. Technology Differences between Japan and S. Korea

Appendix A of this article discusses differences in fuel mixes and industrial structures in the two nations. The discussion implies that a dwarfed portion of nuclear-based power generation may negatively influence the performance of Japanese electric power generation companies. Meanwhile, S. Korea shows a similar trajectory in the fuel mix but not in the technology portfolio (e.g., a shift from electricity to chemistry). S. Korea′s inconsistent technological innovations activities may lead to its technical regress in maintaining power generation technology. See Appendix A, which summarizes numerical analysis on the concern.

4. Methodology

4.1. Primary

Nomenclatures used in this study are summarized as follows: x i j t is the observed ith input of the jth DMU (i = 1, …, m & j = 1, …, n) at the tth period, g r j t is the observed rth output of the jth DMU (r = 1, …, s & j = 1, …, n) at the tth period, ξ is a measure of inefficiency, d i t x is an unknown slack variable of the ith input at the tth period, d r t g is an unknown slack variable of the rth output at the tth period, λ j t is an unknown intensity (or structural) variable of the jth DMU at the tth period, ε s is a prescribed small number.
Before applying the proposed DEA models, we need to specify the following data ranges on X and G:
R i x is a data range on the ith input, which is specified as:
R i x = ( m + s ) 1 { max j t ( x i j t | a l l   j   &   all   t ) min j t ( x i j t | a l l   j   &   all   t ) } .
R r g is a data range on the rth desirable output, which is specified as:
R r g = ( m + s ) 1 { max j t ( g r j t | a l l   j   &   all   t ) min j t ( g r j t | a l l   j   &   all   t ) } .
The data ranges are applied to the all DMUs (j = 1, …, n) in all periods (t = 1, …, T) in the proposed performance assessment. We use the data ranges to avoid an occurrence of zero in dual variables (i.e., multipliers). Such an occurrence implies that corresponding production factors (X and G) are not utilized in our DEA applications. However, the data restriction does not function for reducing the number of efficient DMUs.
Here, it is important to note that this study uses a DEA non-radial approach that determines the level of Operational Efficiency (OE) on the specific kth DMU at the tth period. The proposed approach has two differences from the conventional use. One of the two is that we evaluate the performance of the kth DMU to be examined. The DMU is one of all (Jt) at the tth period. The subscription (j) is used to express each DMU (j = 1, …, n) in the total set (J). Even if a DMU(s) has negative or zero in its value, the proposed approach can handle the data set. See Section 4.3 that explains our mathematical rationale. The other DEA models (i.e., radial and intermediate) do not have such a desirable property. The other difference is that the proposed approach measures the level of inefficiency in OE and then it determines the degree of efficiency by subtracting it from unity. The analytical feature cannot be found in the conventional DEA.

4.2. Operational Efficiency under Variable RTS

Using the data ranges (1) and (2), this study proposes the following formulation to measure the degree of Operational Efficiency ( O E k t v ) on the kth DMU at the tth period:
Maximize t = 1 T ( i = 1 m R i x d i t x + r = 1 s R r g d r t g ) s . t . j = 1 n x i j t λ j t + d i t x = x i k t ( i = 1 ,   ,   m   &   t = 1 , ,   T ) , j = 1 n g r j t λ jt d r t g = g rkt ( r = 1 ,   ,   s   &   t = 1 ,   ,   T ) , j = 1 n λ j t = 1   ( t = 1 ,   ,   T ) ,   λ jt 0 ( j = 1 ,   , n   &   t = 1 ,   ,   T ) , d it x 0   ( i = 1 , , m   &   t = 1 , ,   T ) &   d rt g 0   ( r = 1 , , s   &   t = 1 , ,   T ) .
The superscript (v) of O E k t v indicates variable RTS in the scale treatment.
We measure the degree of the kth DMU at the tth period by:
O E k t v = 1 ε s ( i = 1 m R i x d i t x * + r = 1 s R r g d r t g * ) ,
where the inefficiency score and all slack variables are determined on the optimality of Model (3). Thus, the equation within the parenthesis is obtained from the optimality of Model (3).
Here, it is important to note that the conventional use of an output-oriented DEA model, for example, is different from that of Model (3). The major difference is that the former maximizes τ + ε n ( i = 1 m d i t x + r = 1 s d r t g ) in the objective function, where ε n is a non-Archimedean small number. We use the very small number, but not non-Archimedean, to control the magnitude of the degree of operational efficiency. Assuming all slacks are zero, the efficiency measure is determined by 1/ τ * on optimality in the conventional use. Thus, the measurement of Model (3) is different from the previous models. Accordingly, the constraints of Model (3) need to incorporate the direction ( g rkt ) for maximization, given the observed g rkt . The conventional DEA does not have such a direction for optimal projection. As a result, it often suffers from an occurrence of multiple projections.
Next, Model (3) has the following dual formulation:
Minimize t = 1 T ( i = 1 m v i t x i k t r = 1 s u r t g r k t + σ t ) s . t . i = 1 m v i t x i j t r = 1 s u r t g r j t + σ t 0 ( j = 1 ,   , n   &   t = 1 , ,   T ) , v it ε s R i x ( i = 1 ,   ,   m   &   t = 1 , ,   T ) , u rt ε s R r g ( r = 1 ,   ,   s   &   t = 1 , ,   T ) . σ t : URS .
where v i t (i = 1, …, m) and u r t (r = 1, …, s) are all positive dual variables (i.e., multipliers, implying weights among production factors) related to the first and second groups of constraints in Model (3). The dual variable ( σ t ), representing a constant, is unrestricted (URS) in the sign.
The comparison between Models (3) and (5) provides the following three concerns: First, the objective value of Model (3) equals that of Model (5) on optimality. So, we have the following relationship:
i = 1 m R i x d i t x * + r = 1 s R r g d r t g * = t = 1 T ( i = 1 m v i t * x i k t r = 1 s u r t * g r k t + σ t * ) ,
on optimality. We measure the operational efficiency ( O E k t v ) of the kth DMU by the following equation:
O E k t v = 1 ε s ( i = 1 m v i t * x i k t r = 1 s u r t * g r k t + σ t * ) .
Second, an important feature of Model (5) is that all the dual variables, except σ t * , are positive as, formulated in (5). Thus, the information on all production factors is fully utilized as specified in the last three constraints of Model (5). Finally, each dual variable indicates an amount of change in operational inefficiency (1- O E k t v ) due to a unit change in each production factor.

4.3. Translation Invariance: Handling Zero in A Data Set

To handle zero and/or negative values in a data set, we use the property of “translation invariance”. The proposed approach has the property. This study starts with a description of specifying the following data shift on all DMUs (j = 1, …, n):
x ¯ i j t = x i j t + α i t   ( i = 1 , ,   m )   and   g ¯ r j t = g r j t + β r t   ( r = 1 , ,   s ) .
The two Greek symbols are specific positive numbers (e.g., 1 and 100) that can be subjectively selected by a user(s). As a result of the data shifts, all production factors of the jth DMU become x ¯ i j t > 0 (i = 1,…, m) and g ¯ r j t > 0 , where the inequality implies strict positivity in sign.
To examine the property of translation invariance, let us return to Model (3) and modify the two groups of constraints as follows:
j = 1 n ( x i j t + α i t ) λ j t + d i t x = x i k t + α i t   ( i = 1 , ,   m )   and   j = 1 n ( g r j t + β r t ) λ j t d r t g = g r k t + β r t   ( r = 1 , ,   s ) .
Equation (9) maintains the following conditions: j = 1 n α i t λ j t = α i t and j = 1 n β r t λ j t = β r t because of j = 1 n λ j t = 1 . Consequently, the two constraints of Equations (9) become:
j = 1 n x i j t λ j t + d i t x = x i k t   ( i = 1 , ,   m )   and   j = 1 n g r j t λ j t d r t g = g r k t   ( r = 1 , ,   s ) .
The above two groups of constraints are the same as Model (3). Thus, the proposed data shifts do not influence the constraints of Model (3).
Next, paying attention to the objective function of Model (3), the data shifts change the two types of slacks as follows:
i = 1 m R i x [ ( x i k t + α i t ) j = 1 n ( x i j t + α i t ) λ j t ] = j = 1 m R i x ( x i k t j = 1 n x i j t λ j t ) = j = 1 m R i x d i t x and r = 1 s R r g [ j = 1 n ( g r j t + β r t ) λ j t ( g r k t + β r t ) ] = r = 1 s R r g ( j = 1 n g r j t λ j t g r k t ) = r = 1 s R r g d r t g .
Equation (11) indicates the translation invariance on the objective value of (3). Thus, the proposed data shifts from zero or negative to positive do not influence the objective value of Model (3). The proposed model (3) can solve a data set with zero for our international comparison.

4.4. Multiplier Restriction

To extend Model (3) further into rank analysis and a statistical test on null hypotheses, we need to consider multiple (weights among inputs and outputs) restrictions for our empirical results. To conduct the restriction, we start describing a supporting hyperplane(s) of the kth DMU at the specific tth period that becomes as follows:
i = 1 m v i t x i t r = 1 s u r t g r t + σ t = 0 ,
where dual variables, v i t (i = 1,…, m) and u r t (r = 1,…, s) are unknown parameters for indicating the direction of the supporting hyperplane (s), and σ t indicates an intercept of the supporting hyperplane. The following equations determine these parameters:
i = 1 m v i t x i j t r = 1 s u r t g r j t + σ t = 0 ,   j R S k t ,
where R S k t stands for “a reference set” of the kth DMU at the tth period. Model (3) determines R S k t that is part of efficient DMUs.
If the supporting hyperplane is in a simple case (i.e., a single component of each production factor), Equation (12) becomes v t x t u t g t + σ t = 0 at the tth period. The ratio between factors becomes g t / x t = v t / u t . Since these factors have lower and upper bounds, the ratios are expressed by the following conditions: g t L / x t U v t / u t g t U / x t L . The superscripts (L and U) indicate Lower and Upper bounds of each production factor. Note that we determine these values on the observed production factors (x and g) at the tth period.
The extension to multiple components of X and G produces the following conditions:
g r t L / x i t U v i t / u r t g r t U / x i t L   ( i = 1 ,   ,   m ,   r = 1 ,   s   &   t = 1 ,   ,   T ) .
After incorporating (14), Model (5) becomes:
Minimize t = 1 T ( i = 1 m v i t x i k t r = 1 s u r t g r k t + σ t ) s . t . i = 1 m v i t x i j t r = 1 s u r t g r j t + σ t 0 ( j = 1 ,   , n   &   t = 1 , ,   T ) , g r t L / x i t U v i t / u r t g r t U / x i t L ( i = 1 ,   ,   m ,   r = 1 ,   s   &   t = 1 ,   ,   T ) . v it ε s R i x ( i = 1 ,   ,   m   &   t = 1 , ,   T ) , u rt ε s R r g ( r = 1 ,   ,   s   &   t = 1 , ,   T ) . σ t : URS .
The level of OE on the kth DMU at the tth period is measured by:
O E k t v = 1 ε s ( i = 1 m v i t * x i k t r = 1 s u r t * g r k t + σ t * ) .
where all dual variables (i.e., multipliers) are determined by Model (15).
Methodological contribution: For our international comparison between Japanese and S. Korean electric power industries, we used the new model (15) because it has two unique features. First, the proposed approach can handle “zero” in a dataset, as found in Model (3). The capability is important because our data set contained zero in an output (i.e., the number of patents). The proposed approach, structured by Model (3), has the property of “translation invariance” that allows us to handle zero or negative values by shifting them to positive. The data shift does not change the degree of OE. Second, we extended Model (3) to Model (15). The model incorporates an analytical capability to restrict multipliers without any prior information. The multiplier restriction has been long used as assurance region analysis [3] and cone ration [4] in the conventional DEA. However, these techniques need prior information. In contrast, Model (15) is structured by the dual formulation so that it can mathematically express a range of supporting hyperplane(s). The importance of the proposed approach is that we restrict multiplier(s) by the upper and lower bounds of the supporting hyperplane(s). As a result, multipliers are all positive in a required range. Here, the positivity of multipliers implies that all data are fully used in the proposed DEA assessment so that it reduces the number of efficient DMUs.

5. Empirical Results

5.1. Data

This study kept track of nine electric power companies in Japan and six in South Korea over five annual periods (from 2014–2018). The data set on Japanese companies was obtained from [16] and this study newly sampled the data set on Korean companies. For the comparative analysis in the framework of multiple inputs and outputs, we collected data from two common sources: (a) firms′ demographic and financial data from their annual financial reports and (b) patent publication data from PATENTSCOPE offered by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). For the amount of electricity sold in South Korea, additionally, we referred to the Electric Power Statistics Information System (EPSIS) provided by the Korea Power Exchange (KPX).
In this research, there were four inputs: the amount of total assets, the number of employees, the amount of operating expenses, and the amount of R&D expenditure. They were measured in US$ million dollars that were converted from Japanese Yen and Korean Won based on each year′s exchange rate. Here, the number of employees was measured in Full Time Equivalent (FTE). There were three outputs: the amount of sales, electricity sold, and patents. Sales were measured in US$ Million (M). The amount of electricity sold was measured in gigawatt hours (GWh). The number of patents was based on the publication date.
Table 2 and Table 3 show illustrative data sets regarding Japanese and Korean electric power companies, respectively, in 2018. The data set included four inputs and three outputs of companies in each country. Tokyo electric power company in Table 2 and Korea hydro and nuclear power firm in Table 3 are relatively larger than others in each country.
As of 2018, on average, Japanese companies sold 85,447 GWh of electricity, made US$22,270 million of sales, and created 87 patents using 21,244 employees, US$47,085 million, 21,244 million, and 80 million of assets, operation expenses, and R&D expenses, respectively (Table 2). On the other hand, Korean companies sold 66,274 GWh of electricity, made US$5767 million in sales, and created 21 patents using 4134 employees, US$17,695 million, 5488 million, and 107 million in assets, operation expenses, and R&D expenses, respectively (Table 3). The gap between Japanese and Korean companies reflects differences in Gross Domestic Product (GDP; Japan: US$4,971,323 million and South Korea: US$1,619,424 million as of 2018).
Like Table 2 and Table 3, we collected data sets from 2014 to 2018. Table 4 and Table 5 summarize descriptive statistics on Japanese and Korean electric power companies during the observed periods. Note that these descriptive statistics in Table 4 and Table 5 are related to four inputs and three outputs, as summarized in Table 2 and Table 3. Note that the business scope of Japanese power companies is larger than that of the Korean. Moreover, the number of patents in Japanese companies (87) is larger than that of the Korean one (21).

5.2. Analysis and Discussion

Table 6 summarizes the efficiency measures of Japanese and S. Korea electric power companies from 2014 to 2018. We estimated the efficiency measures by Model (3). In Japan, Tokyo Electric Power Company showed the status of efficiency in OE in the observed five years. The other Japanese firms showed the status of inefficiency (except Chugoku in 2014). Meanwhile, in S. Korea, all electric power companies exhibited efficiency in 2014, but gradually decreased in status. Figure 3 visually describes such a difference in electric power industries between the two nations. The numbers listed in Figure 3 indicate average efficiencies of these firms. An important finding in Figure 3 is that the electric power companies in S. Korea outperformed the Japanese.
Table 7 extends the computational results on OE summarized in Table 6 by incorporating multiple restrictions on dual variables. We used Model (15) to examine whether they produced difference results. This type of examination confirmed the reliability of our empirical result. As summarized in Table 7, we obtained similar results in Table 6. The Korean electric power companies outperformed the Japanese ones, as well. Figure 4 depicts such a difference in terms of their efficiency averages. As mentioned previously, the S. Korean firms have gradually decreased their average on OE measures, but the Japanese firms have not produced major changes in their measures.
Policy implication: It is necessary to note two rationales on the findings of Table 6 and Table 7 (i.e., the S. Korea companies outperformed the Japanese firms). One of the two is that the number of nuclear power plants is 60 in Japan, but only 9 plants are operating as of June 2020. After the Fukushima Daiichi disaster, almost no nuclear power plant has operated because of very strong resentment among people and local governments toward the nuclear operation. Meanwhile, 19 nuclear power plants have been operating now among 24 plants in S. Korea. It is widely known that electricity generated by nuclear energy can serve as a “base load” and is operationally efficient once the plant is established. See the research in [29] that gives a detailed description on the S. Korean operation. Thus, S. Korea has an advantage over Japan in terms of power generation, because it has had no nuclear disaster like Fukushima Daiichi. The other is that Tokyo Electric Power Company has showed the status of efficiency in its OE measurement even though the firm has suffered from the nuclear disaster. The firm became a public entity after the disaster and it has been financially supported by the Japanese government. The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, belonging to the Tokyo Electric Power Company, has produced a huge damage. The underlying policy rationale discussed by the Japanese government was “too big to make it bankrupt” at that time. The Japanese government asked the other eight electric firms to compensate Tokyo′s huge damage. As a result, the company has exhibited efficiency because of the governmental support. Such support is not given to the other utility firms in Japan. Meanwhile, the S. Korean firms do not have such a financial burden due to the nuclear operation.

6. Conclusions

This research compared the operational performance of Japanese and S. Korean electric power sectors. Both have different and similar industrial and organizational structures at the same time. For instance, they showed similar fuel mixes but it became heterogeneous after the Fukushima Daiichi Disaster. The Japanese companies have been under private ownership from the beginning, while the S. Korean ones started as public entities, but changed to public/private joint entities. To assess their operational progress, we used DEA as a measurement tool that allowed us to examine the level of simultaneous achievements on economic and technological factors. The method assessed the degree of their holistic development. The DEA-based OE measurement, including the amount of R&D expenditure (an input) and the number of patents (an output) served as a useful tool for the comparison because it can handle multiple production factors without any functional specification between multiple inputs and outputs.
The proposed approach first discussed how to handle zero in an observed data set (i.e., the number of patents) by using the property of “translation invariance”. Model (3) had the property. Then, we extended the model by restricting multipliers without any prior information so that we could reduce the number of efficient firms. Model (15) was the final model that addressed the two methodological issues (i.e., the existence of zeroes in a data set and too many efficient firms). Without addressing these issues, it was impossible for this study to conduct an empirical investigation on the comparison between Japan and S. Korea. Thus, the proposed approach documented the DEA practicality by comparing them in terms of their operational efficiencies.
Our empirical study identified two important implications. One of them was that the electric power industry of S. Korean outperformed Japan in the observed period (2014–2018). For example, Figure 4 visually documented that the OE measures of S. Korea were 100% in 2014, 99.9% in 2015, 99.2% in 2016, 97.4% in 2017, and 96.7% in 2018, which were about 5% higher than the Japanese ones (i.e., 93.9%, 94.4%, 93.0%, 93.2%, and 94.0%, respectively). We conjecture the reason from the fact that the Japanese power sector has suffered from the occurrence of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster on 11 March 2011. A rationale is that despite nuclear energy′s significant contribution to the efficient power generation, its use has been limited and it has been almost impossible to resume the power plants in Japan. As a consequence, Japan needed other energy sources, such as liquid natural gas and renewable energies. See the previous work [31] that discussed a new direction on the Japanese electric power industry.
Another implication was that the difference in performance between the two nations has gradually diminished partly because the Japanese electric power sector has been gradually recovering from the disaster. Another explanation is partly possible from the structure of heterogeneous technology portfolios. For example, S. Korea′s inconsistent technological innovation activities may lead to its technical regress. Particularly, the technological shift (including R&D expenditure and patents) from electrical engineering and instruments, which are fundamental technologies for the electric power generation sector, to chemistry may interfere with maintaining the nation′s relatively higher performance in operational efficiency.
The proposed DEA approach evidences its usefulness in the application to the electric power industry. However, it is necessary for us to overcome five empirical difficulties in future extensions. First, technology development occurs between different periods. This study needs to incorporate the analytical structure (e.g., the measurement of a frontier shift) within a time horizon. This indicates a methodological limit to be fixed in the future. Second, examination at company level may provide more detailed insights than a national level. A future extension needs to examine the company or sector-based OE measures. Third, it is necessary to explore how innovation activities (e.g., R&D expenditure) may influence corporate performance in the industry. In this case, we may need to consider a time lag between R&D and technological innovations. Fourth, another future extension needs to include more industrialized nations, such as the United States and European nations, where the deregulation of electricity was implemented before Japan and S. Korea. Such a research extension is an important future task. Finally, we have not yet investigated operational progress due to technology development (not only patents discussed in this study) on electricity among other industries and other nations. The issue is an important research concern, as well.
In conclusion, it is hoped that this study can contribute to the advancement of the electric power industry. We look forward to seeing future development as discussed in this article.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, T.S.; methodology, T.S.; software, Y.R.; validation, T.S.; formal analysis, T.S.; investigation, Y.R.; resources, Y.R.; data curation, M.G. and Y.R.; writing—original draft preparation, T.S.; writing—review and editing, T.S. and Y.R.; visualization, Y.R.; supervision, T.S.; project administration, T.S.; funding acquisition, Y.R. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

To compare both nations in fuel mix and technology portfolio, which are potential contributors to their performance, we collated data from additional sources: electricity generation data from the International Energy Agency (IEA) and patent data from PatBase. In analyzing those data, we employed two different types of distances to measure the dissimilarities of two nations in fuel mix and technology portfolio: the distance of power generation sources (fuel distance) and that of patent classifications (technological distance) between two nations over time. To do that, we borrowed the concept of technological distance [32,33] and applied it to measure the heterogeneity of the fuel mix as well.
Fuel   Distance :   F D = 1 F a F b ( F a F a ) ( F b F b ) ,
where F is a vector of fuel mix, two subscripts (a and b) are different countries or time points, and the sign (′) indicates a transposed vector in the right-hand side.
Technological   Distance :   T D = 1 T a T b ( T a T a ) ( T b T b ) ,
where T is a vector of technology portfolio in the right-hand side.
To calculate the fuel distance, we used each country′s fuel mix, that consists of coal, oil, natural gas, nuclear, hydro, biofuels, waste, solar photovoltaic (PV), wind, and other resources. For the one-on-one comparison purpose, we excluded geothermal from Japan and tide from Korea, both of which account for the minimal portion of total power generation. To compute the technological distance, we used each country′s technological portfolio, that is composed of mechanical engineering, chemistry, instruments, electrical engineering, and other sectors. Specifically, electrical engineering includes international patent classification (IPC) codes such as H01B (cables and conductors), H01F (magnets and transformers), H01H (electric switches and relays), and H04B (transmission). Mechanical engineering includes IPC codes such as F01D (steam turbines), F02C (gas-turbine plants), F23K (feeding fuel to combustion apparatus), and F28D (heat-exchange apparatus). Instruments includes IPC codes such as G01R (measuring electric and magnetic variables), G01T (measurement of nuclear or X-radiation), G06F (electric digital data processing), and G21C (nuclear reactors). Chemistry includes IPC codes such as C02F (treatment of waste water), C04B (slag and cements), C22C (alloys), and C25B (electrolytic or electrophoretic processes for the production of compounds).
Table A1 summarizes the fuel distance between Japan and S. Korea over time. Over the past two decades (2000–2018), Japan (FD = 0.1952) underwent more change in fuel mix of power generation than S. Korea (FD = 0.0912) did. Over the period of 2009–2018 (before and after the Fukushima Daiichi Disaster), particularly, there was a substantial transition of the Japanese power generation sector′s fuel mix (FD = 0.1072). In Japan, there has been a significant decrease in nuclear-based power generation (along with oil-based one), while there has been an increase in natural gas-based power generation (along with renewable energy-based). Over the same period, particularly, nuclear-based power generation has tapered to only 6% in 2018 from 30% of total power generation in 2000. S. Korea also shows a similar pattern (i.e., transition from nuclear to natural gas), but the degree of fuel mix change is much slower when compared to Japan. Due to the similar pattern and both nations′ high dependence on coal-based power generation, fuel distance between the two nations is not very high, meaning that both nations have a relatively similar fuel mix in the power generation sector.
Table A1. Fuel Distance between Japan and Korea over Time.
Table A1. Fuel Distance between Japan and Korea over Time.
YearBetween Time PointsYearBetween Countries
JapanS. KoreaJapan-S. Korea
2000–20090.01960.024720000.1011
2009–20180.10720.028520090.0935
2000–20180.19520.091220180.1100
Table A2 delineates the technological distance between Japan and S. Korea over time. Over the past two decades (2000–2018), unlike fuel distance, S. Korea (TD = 0.2547) experienced more change in the technology portfolio of power generation than Japan (TD = 0.0068) did. Over the period of 2000–2009 (before and after the deregulation of the S. Korean power generation sector), particularly, there was a substantial transition of technology portfolio in S. Korea (TD = 0.1712). In S. Korea, as shown in Figure A1 and Figure A2, there has been a significant decrease in the development of electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, and instruments, while there has been an increase in the development of chemistry. Unlike S. Korea, Japan shows consistency in the development of technology over time, with a focus on electrical engineering. Because of the dissimilar pattern, the technological distance between the two nations is relatively high, meaning that both nations have a heterogeneous technology portfolio in the power generation sector.
Table A2. Technological Distance between Japan and Korea over Time.
Table A2. Technological Distance between Japan and Korea over Time.
YearBetween Time PointsYearBetween Countries
JapanKoreaJapan − Korea
2000–20090.00240.171220000.1235
2009–20180.00400.075620090.2463
2000–20180.00680.254720180.2110
Figure A1. Fuel Mix Change in Japan and S. Korea, 2000–2018.
Figure A1. Fuel Mix Change in Japan and S. Korea, 2000–2018.
Energies 13 03968 g0a1
Figure A2. Technology Portfolio Change in Japan and S. Korea, 2000–2018.
Figure A2. Technology Portfolio Change in Japan and S. Korea, 2000–2018.
Energies 13 03968 g0a2
Drawing on the distance-based analysis, we argue that Japan’s relatively lower performance stemmed from the Fukushima Daiichi Disaster and its impacts on the dramatic change in fuel mix. Particularly, the dwarfed portion of nuclear-based power generation may negatively influence the performance of Japanese electric power generation companies. S. Korea shows a similar trajectory in the fuel mix but not in the technology portfolio. S. Korea′s inconsistent technological innovation activities may lead to its technical regress. Particularly, the technological shift from electrical engineering and instruments, which are fundamental technologies for the power generation sector, to chemistry may interfere with maintaining the nation′s relatively higher performance.

References

  1. Sueyoshi, T.; Yuan, Y.; Goto, M. A literature study for DEA applied to energy and environment. Energy Econ. 2017, 62, 104–124. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Sueyoshi, T.; Goto, M. Environmental Assessment on Energy and Sustainability by Data Envelopment Analysis; John Wiley & Sons: London, UK, 2018; pp. 1–699. [Google Scholar]
  3. Thompson, R.G.; Singleton, F.D.; Thrall, R.M.; Smith, B.A. Comparative site evaluation for locating a high-energy physics lab in Texas. Interface 1986, 16, 35–49. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Charnes, A.; Cooper, W.W.; Wei, Q.L.; Huang, Z.M. Cone ratio data environmental analysis and multi-objective programming. Int. J. Syst. Sci. 1989, 20, 1099–1118. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Goto, M.; Inoue, T.; Sueyoshi, T. Structural reform of Japanese electric power industry: Separation between generation and transmission & distribution. Energy Policy 2013, 56, 186–200. [Google Scholar]
  6. Aghdam, R.F. Dynamics of productivity change in the Australian electricity industry: Assessing the impacts of electricity reform. Energy Policy 2011, 39, 3281–3295. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Tao, Y.; Zhang, S. Environmental efficiency of electric power industry in the Yangtze River Delta. Math Comput. Model. 2013, 58, 927–935. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Al-Sunaidy, A.; Green, R. Electricity deregulation in OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) countries. Energy 2006, 31, 769–787. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Navarro, P.; Shames, M. Electricity deregulation: Lessons learned from California. Energy Law J. 2003, 24, 33–64. [Google Scholar]
  10. Lusan, D.A.; Yu, Z.; Sparrow, F.T. Market gaming and market power mitigation in deregulated electricity markets. In Proceedings of the IEEE Power Engineering Society Winter Meeting (Cat. No.99CH36233), New York, NY, USA, 31 January–4 February 1999; pp. 839–843. [Google Scholar]
  11. Asano, H. Regulatory reform of the electricity industry in Japan: What is the next step of deregulation? Energy Policy 2006, 34, 2491–2497. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Park, J.K.; Kim, Y.J. Status and perspective of electric power industry in Korea. In Proceedings of the IEEE Power Engineering Society General Meeting, San Francisco, CA, USA, 16 June 2005; pp. 2896–2899. [Google Scholar]
  13. Boccard, N. The cost of nuclear electricity: France after Fukushima. Energy Policy 2014, 66, 450–461. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  14. Hayashi, M.; Hughes, L. The policy responses to the Fukushima nuclear accident and their effect on Japanese energy security. Energy Policy 2013, 59, 86–101. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Oh, D.-H. Productivity growth, technical change and economies of scale of Korean fossil-fuel generation companies, 2001–2012: A dual approach. Energy Econ. 2015, 49, 113–121. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Goto, M.; Fujita, K.; Sueyoshi, T. Marginal effect of R&D investment and impact of market reforms: An empirical analysis of Japanese electric power companies. Energies 2020, 13, 3354. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Kim, J.H.; Lee, Y.S.; Kang, Y.Y.; Kim, Y.R. Demonstrating the Efficiency of the Korean Electric Power Industry: Analysis of Cost Function [Korean]; Korea Energy Economics Institute: Ulsan, South Korea, 2018. [Google Scholar]
  18. Park, S.-U.; Lesourd, J.-B. The efficiency of conventional fuel power plants in South Korea: A comparison of parametric and non-parametric approaches. Int. J. Prod. Econ. 2000, 63, 59–67. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Nemoto, J.; Goto, M. Measurement of dynamic efficiency in production: An application of data envelopment analysis to Japanese electric utilities. J. Prod. Anal. 2003, 19, 191–210. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Nakano, M.; Managi, S. Regulatory reforms and productivity: An empirical analysis of the Japanese electricity industry. Energy Policy 2008, 36, 201–209. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Sueyoshi, T.; Goto, M. DEA approach for unified efficiency measurement: Assessment of Japanese fossil fuel power generation. Energy Econ. 2011, 33, 292–303. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Han, J.-H. A Study on eco-efficiency in power plants using DEA analysis. J. Digit. Policy Manag. (Korean) 2013, 11, 119–133. [Google Scholar]
  23. Zhang, N.; Choi, Y. A comparative study of dynamic changes in CO2 emission performance of fossil fuel power plants in China and Korea. Energy Policy 2013, 62, 324–332. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Matsushita, K.; Asano, K. Reducing CO2 emissions of Japanese thermal power companies: A directional output distance function approach. Environ. Econ. Policy Stud. 2014, 16, 1–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Sueyoshi, T.; Goto, M. Japanese fuel mix strategy after disaster of Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant: Lessons from international comparison among industrial nations measured by DEA environmental assessment in time horizon. Energy Econ. 2015, 52, 87–103. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Patrick, G.; Marco, C.; Anna, L.; Matteo, S.; Peter, B.; Miłosz, K.; Božidar, S. Quantifying electricity supply resilience of countries with robust efficiency analysis. Energies 2020, 13, 1535. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  27. Goto, M.; Sueyoshi, T. Electricity market reform in Japan after Fukushima: Implications for climate change policy and energy market developments. Econ. Energy Environ. Policy 2016, 5, 15–30. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Sueyoshi, T.; Goto, M. Performance assessment of Japanese electric power industry: DEA measurement with future impreciseness. Energies 2020, 13, 490. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  29. Byrne, J.; Glover, L.; Lee, H.; Wang, Y.-D.; Yu, J.-M. Electricity reform at a crossroads: Problems in South Korea′s power liberalization strategy. Pac. Aff. 2004, 77, 493–516. [Google Scholar]
  30. Küfeoğlu, S.; Kim, S.W.; Jin, Y.G. History of electric power sector restructuring in South Korea and Turkey. Electr. J. 2019, 32, 106–112. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Status of Japanese Nuclear Power Plants. Available online: https://www.jaero.or.jp/sogo/detail/cat-02-02.html (accessed on 30 June 2020).
  32. Peretto, P.; Smulders, S. Technological distance, growth and scale effects. Econ. J. 2002, 112, 603–624. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  33. Gilsing, V.; Nooteboom, B.; Vanhaverbeke, W.; Duysters, G.; van den Oord, A. Network embeddedness and the exploration of novel technologies: Technological distance, betweenness centrality and density. Res. Policy 2008, 37, 1717–1731. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. Nine Electric Power companies in Japan. Source: [28].
Figure 1. Nine Electric Power companies in Japan. Source: [28].
Energies 13 03968 g001
Figure 2. Six Electric Power Companies in South Korea. Note: (a) Different colors represent each region that consists of a few provinces and metropolitan cities and plays as an economic bloc in South Korea. For instance, the Southeast Region, as an independent economic bloc, is composed of a province (i.e., Gyeongsangnam-do) and two metropolitan cities (i.e., Busan and Ulsan). (b) Each red dot represents the locations of each electric power company′s headquarters. While their power plants are spread along the coastline, their headquarters tend to concentrate in the Southeast and Chungcheong Regions, partly because they are geographically close to big ports that provide easy access to imported energy (e.g., coal, gas, and oil). Source: Created by authors.
Figure 2. Six Electric Power Companies in South Korea. Note: (a) Different colors represent each region that consists of a few provinces and metropolitan cities and plays as an economic bloc in South Korea. For instance, the Southeast Region, as an independent economic bloc, is composed of a province (i.e., Gyeongsangnam-do) and two metropolitan cities (i.e., Busan and Ulsan). (b) Each red dot represents the locations of each electric power company′s headquarters. While their power plants are spread along the coastline, their headquarters tend to concentrate in the Southeast and Chungcheong Regions, partly because they are geographically close to big ports that provide easy access to imported energy (e.g., coal, gas, and oil). Source: Created by authors.
Energies 13 03968 g002
Figure 3. Average Efficiencies of Japanese and Korean Power Companies over Time. Note: (a) The vertical coordinate indicates average operational efficiency measure of Japanese and S. Korean electric power companies. S. Korea showed a gradual declining trend due to the fact that the nation′s inconsistent technological innovation activities may lead to its technical regress. Particularly, the technological shift from electrical engineering and instruments, which are fundamental technologies for the power generation sector, to chemistry may interfere with maintaining the nation′s relatively higher performance. See Appendix A.
Figure 3. Average Efficiencies of Japanese and Korean Power Companies over Time. Note: (a) The vertical coordinate indicates average operational efficiency measure of Japanese and S. Korean electric power companies. S. Korea showed a gradual declining trend due to the fact that the nation′s inconsistent technological innovation activities may lead to its technical regress. Particularly, the technological shift from electrical engineering and instruments, which are fundamental technologies for the power generation sector, to chemistry may interfere with maintaining the nation′s relatively higher performance. See Appendix A.
Energies 13 03968 g003
Figure 4. Average Efficiencies of Japanese and Korean Power Companies: Multiplier Restriction. Note: See the bottom of Figure 3.
Figure 4. Average Efficiencies of Japanese and Korean Power Companies: Multiplier Restriction. Note: See the bottom of Figure 3.
Energies 13 03968 g004
Table 1. Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) Applications to Japanese and Korean Electric Power Sectors.
Table 1. Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) Applications to Japanese and Korean Electric Power Sectors.
Author(s)CountryLevelSummaryInputOutput
Park and Lesourd [18]KoreaPower plantThis study assessed the operating efficiencies of 64 Korean conventional fuel power plants using radial model with variable RTSFuel consumed; power installed; manpowerNet electricity output
Nemoto and Goto [19]JapanCompanyThis study analyzed the dynamic efficiencies of 9 Japanese electric power companies over the period of 1981–1995 using quasi-fixed inputsInputs: fuel; laborQuasi-fixed inputs: generation plants; transmission facilities; distribution facilitiesElectricity for commercial and industrial use; electricity for residential use
Nakano and Managi [20]JapanCompanyThis study examined the efficiency of 10 Japanese electric power companies over the period of 1978–2003 using the Malmquist productivity indexNumber of employees; fuel used; capital stockElectricity generated
Sueyoshi and Goto [21]JapanCompanyThis study shed light on the operational and environmental performance of 9 Japanese electric power companies over the period of 2004–2008 using the unified efficiency conceptGeneration capacity; number of employees; amount of coal, oil and LNGPower generated; CO2 emissions
Han [22]KoreaCompanyThis study measured the eco-efficiency scores of 6 Korean electric power companies over the period of 2002–2008 using radial modelsOperating expense; water; CO2; NOxPower generated; sales
Zhang and Choi [23]KoreaCompanyThis study compared the CO2 emission performance of state-owned fossil fuel power plants in China and Korea over the period of 2005–2010 using a series of non-radial DEA modelsCapital; fossil fuel; laborElectricity; CO2 emissions
Matsushita and Asano [24]JapanCompanyThis study explored the thermal power generation efficiency of 10 Japanese electric power companies over the period of 1990–2011 using DODF.Capacity of thermal plants; capital of generation facility; labor; energyElectricity generated; CO2 emissions
Sueyoshi and Goto [25]OECDCountryThis study looked into Japanese fuel mix strategy based on the DEA performance evaluations of 33 OECD countriesCombustible generation; hydro generation; nuclear generation; pumped hydro generation; other renewable generations (geothermal, solar, tide, and wind)Electricity generated; CO2 emissions
Patrick et al. [26]WorldCountryThis study evaluated the electricity supply resilience of 140 countries using a radial model and LP- and MCS-based robust efficiency analysisSystem Average Interruption Duration Index (SAIDI); accident risks; import dependence; average outage timeControl of corruption; political stability and absence of violence/terrorism; mix diversity; equivalent availability factor; GDP per capita; insurance penetration; government effectiveness; ease of doing business
Note: RTS: Returns to Scale, DODF: Directional Output Distance Function, LNG: liquid Natural Gas, LP: linear programming, and MCS: Monte Carlo Simulation.
Table 2. Data of Japanese Power Companies in 2018: An Illustrative Example.
Table 2. Data of Japanese Power Companies in 2018: An Illustrative Example.
Production FactorsInputOutput
CompanyTotal AssetEmployeesOperating ExpensesR&D ExpensesSalesElectricity SoldPatent Publications
(US$ M)(FTE)(US$ M)(US$ M)(US$ M)(GWh)(No.)
Hokkaido Electric Power19,17810,937696523.03737922,77410
Tohoku Electric Power41,77625,03221,19685.7722,01685,09628
Tokyo Electric Power125,14741,08659,115183.1562,179230,306222
Chubu Electric Power58,73630,32128,53897.3629,773123,60239
Hokuriku Electric Power15,4328498598516.09611126,0606
Kansai Electric Power71,19232,59730,438117.7232,447132,72245
Chugoku Electric Power31,99613,41813,316110.8513,50852,944426
Shikoku Electric Power13,2828207698036.54723232960
Kyushu Electric Power47,02821,10318,93953.5519,78872,2197
Average47,08521,24421,27580.4522,27085,44787
Table 3. Data of Korean Power Companies in 2018: An Illustrative Example.
Table 3. Data of Korean Power Companies in 2018: An Illustrative Example.
Production FactorsInputsOutputs
CompanyTotal AssetEmployeesOperating ExpensesR&D ExpensesSalesElectricity SoldPatent Publications
(US$ M)(FTE)(US$ M)(US$ M)(US$ M)(GWh)(No.)
Korea South-East Power10,1812418537547.12553164,21916
Korea Midland Power11,2372694442730.24444945,62811
Korea Western Power98512486471932.56485949,29032
Korea East-West Power87942569490430.23496350,7677
Korea Southern Power10,1872322577525.50596155,6070
Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power55,92012,3177726477.838840132,13561
Average17,69541345488107.25576766,27421
Note: M stands million, FTE indicates Full Time Equivalent, GWh is Gigawatt Hours, and No. stands for the number.
Table 4. Descriptive Statistics of Japanese Power Companies′ Data.
Table 4. Descriptive Statistics of Japanese Power Companies′ Data.
Production FactorsInputsOutputs
CompanyVariablesTotal AssetEmployeesOperating ExpensesR&D ExpensesSalesElectricity SoldPatent Publications
(Units)(US$ M)(FTE)(US$ M)(US$ M)(US$ M)(GWh)(No.)
Hokkaido Electric PowerAvg.18,63410,979689323.07718826,5577
Max.20,04511,027759725.07765029,81011
Min.17,60310,937653421.78679922,7741
S.D.1027334321.2233428364
Tohoku Electric PowerAvg.41,72224,73619,69978.1421,06576,60730
Max.45,60825,05822,21685.7724,09085,09636
Min.40,02724,28517,60066.0018,86272,00022
S.D.229033019429.60203050305
Tokyo Electric PowerAvg.131,01042,17157,821183.4162,365241,810135
Max.156,90743,33071,604192.7973,211257,046222
Min.118,78541,08649,333167.3852,138230,30667
S.D.15,221924845210.45783910,81871
Chubu Electric PowerAvg.56,09130,60327,33897.1729,289122,58637
Max.62,16930,84833,081103.1431,378124,07559
Min.52,35630,32123,86991.1927,613121,43123
S.D.419619136704.321591117414
Hokuriku Electric PowerAvg.15,2938363542315.88565927,6468
Max.16,3338498598516.76611128,66314
Min.14,5508239488213.54524926,0605
S.D.7161044301.333909794
Kansai Electric PowerAvg.72,48232,88430,606117.2232,194126,29449
Max.85,48733,53938,470132.9437,602134,49095
Min.66,30432,52727,028110.1129,134115,24426
S.D.758842745639.393255798527
Chugoku Electric PowerAvg.31,36613,65612,39170.5312,82756,043521
Max.34,29314,14913,560110.8514,34857,868670
Min.29,60213,41811,28044.5011,61452,944426
S.D.1879290105631.861136195192
Shikoku Electric PowerAvg.13,5608233666537.01692325,2525
Max.15,4698382701442.53733426,3929
Min.12,5908156606634.94630423,2960
S.D.1123914083.1444111823
Kyushu Electric PowerAvg.47,16820,92818,24161.7118,98577,6209
Max.52,82321,10321,16181.0720,68381,27915
Min.44,38420,75316,49553.5517,68172,2195
S.D.3297127193611.37131334204
Table 5. Descriptive Statistics of Korean Power Companies′ Data.
Table 5. Descriptive Statistics of Korean Power Companies′ Data.
Production FactorsInputsOutputs
CompanyVariablesTotal AssetEmployeesOperating ExpensesR&D ExpensesSalesElectricity SoldPatent Publications
(Units)(US$ M)(FTE)(US$ M)(US$ M)(US$ M)(GWh)(No.)
Korea South-East PowerAvg.91692269431336.91482165,95012
Max.10,1812418537547.12553167,76516
Min.83612103366526.75415463,9236
S.D.7031257468.3551417584
Korea Midland PowerAvg.87712480384722.54409546,5949
Max.11,2372694458530.24474050,32317
Min.66932252308416.71357142,9255
S.D.17831956445.2049034935
Korea Western PowerAvg.88312294388826.84422347,55616
Max.98512486471932.56485949,29032
Min.76222099336024.00390245,5259
S.D.8301655923.4743316309
Korea East-West PowerAvg.83222392388521.65426948,7957
Max.87942569490430.23496350,7679
Min.77962232322714.85380046,9603
S.D.3661396677.3644713902
Korea Southern PowerAvg.91272159448721.62478150,9751
Max.10,1872322577525.50596156,7272
Min.80891969338217.66394746,8190
S.D.81914611422.95100547761
Korea Hydro & Nuclear PowerAvg.50,08911,7106963388.019326150,77176
Max.55,92012,3177726477.8310,448161,466159
Min.45,87911,0036334289.708696132,13535
S.D.394162064380.1777611,86949
Table 6. Efficiencies of Japanese and Korean Power Companies.
Table 6. Efficiencies of Japanese and Korean Power Companies.
CountryCompany20142015201620172018
JapanHokkaido Electric Power0.9250.9440.9300.9340.938
Tohoku Electric Power1.0000.9110.8680.8860.930
Tokyo Electric Power1.0001.0001.0001.0001.000
Chubu Electric Power0.9241.0000.9520.9330.930
Hokuriku Electric Power0.9871.0000.9620.9720.992
Kansai Electric Power0.8800.8690.8630.8570.878
Chugoku Electric Power1.0000.9810.9830.9670.936
Shikoku Electric Power0.9250.9330.9380.9370.933
Kyushu Electric Power0.8500.8640.8780.9100.931
South KoreaKorea South-East Power1.0001.0001.0000.9941.000
Korea Midland Power1.0001.0001.0000.9890.978
Korea Western Power1.0001.0000.9950.9880.987
Korea East-West Power1.0001.0001.0000.9860.986
Korea Southern Power1.0001.0001.0000.9880.992
Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power1.0001.0000.9610.8990.864
Note: (a) Model (3) computes these operational efficiency measures. (b) The number of efficient DMUs is 26 (35%) and that of inefficient DMUs is 49 (65%).
Table 7. Efficiencies of Japanese and Korean Power Companies with Multiplier Restriction.
Table 7. Efficiencies of Japanese and Korean Power Companies with Multiplier Restriction.
CountryCompany20142015201620172018
JapanHokkaido Electric Power0.9250.9410.9300.9330.935
Tohoku Electric Power0.9650.9110.8680.8860.930
Tokyo Electric Power1.0001.0001.0001.0001.000
Chubu Electric Power0.9241.0000.9520.9330.930
Hokuriku Electric Power0.9781.0000.9610.9690.985
Kansai Electric Power0.8800.8690.8630.8570.878
Chugoku Electric Power1.0000.9810.9830.9670.936
Shikoku Electric Power0.9250.9330.9380.9370.933
Kyushu Electric Power0.8500.8640.8780.9090.930
South KoreaKorea South-East Power1.0001.0000.9980.9940.995
Korea Midland Power1.0001.0001.0000.9890.978
Korea Western Power1.0000.9950.9950.9880.987
Korea East-West Power1.0001.0001.0000.9860.986
Korea Southern Power1.0001.0001.0000.9880.992
Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power1.0001.0000.9610.8990.864
Note: (a) Model (15) computes operational efficiency measures. (b) Four firms had status transition from efficiency to inefficiency. See Tohoku Electric Power in 2014, Korea South-East Power in 2016 and 2018, and Korea Western Power in 2015 as a result of multiplier restriction. (c) The number of efficient DMUs is 22 (29%) and that of inefficient DMUs is 53 (71%).

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Sueyoshi, T.; Ryu, Y.; Goto, M. Operational Performance of Electric Power Firms: Comparison between Japan and South Korea by Non-Radial Measures. Energies 2020, 13, 3968. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13153968

AMA Style

Sueyoshi T, Ryu Y, Goto M. Operational Performance of Electric Power Firms: Comparison between Japan and South Korea by Non-Radial Measures. Energies. 2020; 13(15):3968. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13153968

Chicago/Turabian Style

Sueyoshi, Toshiyuki, Youngbok Ryu, and Mika Goto. 2020. "Operational Performance of Electric Power Firms: Comparison between Japan and South Korea by Non-Radial Measures" Energies 13, no. 15: 3968. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13153968

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop