Balancing climate action for greater transport decarbonisation: An avoid-shift-improve driven network data envelopment analysis framework

Published June 2026
  • Date (DD-MM-YYYY)

    18-06-2026 to 18-06-2027

    Available on-demand until 18th June 2027

  • Cost

    Free

  • Education type

    Publication

  • CPD subtype

    On-demand

Transport decarbonisation requires allocating limited resources across competing strategies. The Avoid–Shift–Improve framework categorises these strategies to reduce transport's reliance on fossil fuels. This study develops an Avoid–Shift–Improve driven network data envelopment analysis (DEA) framework to measure county-level progress toward transport decarbonisation. The framework also serves as a decision-support tool for allocating resources efficiently to advance transport decarbonisation. Using data from Ireland's 26 counties, we integrate DEA with a Stackelberg leader–follower game and the best–worst method. The DEA component provides an objective, mathematically defined measure of relative efficiency. The best–worst method incorporates expert judgement on the economic and environmental impact of actions within the Avoid–Shift–Improve hierarchy. This hierarchical approach, reflecting expert consensus, prioritises transformational measures that reduce travel demand (Avoid), followed by strategies that shift remaining trips to low-carbon modes (Shift), while technological improvements (Improve) play a more limited role. Results reveal disparities in county performance. Dublin leads due to its relatively well-developed public transport and active mobility infrastructure. Smaller counties such as Longford and Leitrim also perform strongly despite their rural character. By contrast, large-area counties including Cork, Mayo, and Kerry underperform, reflecting structural challenges of dispersed settlement and high car dependency. The analysis highlights that larger counties achieve lower efficiency scores, while links with emissions and expenditure are weaker, underscoring the role of spatial scale and carbon lock-in in shaping outcomes. The framework is scalable to other regional and national contexts and can support economically rational, socially inclusive climate policy.

Contact details

Education Provider

Elsevier

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