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Proceedings of the Third Meeting of the EURO Working Group on Operational Research (OR) in Agriculture and Forest Management (EWG-ORAFM)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2008

L. M PLÀ*
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, University of Lleida, 73 Jaume II, 25001Lleida, Spain
D. L SANDARS*
Affiliation:
Natural Resources Management Centre, Cranfield University, Cranfield, BedfordshireMK43 0AL, UK
*
*To whom all correspondence should be addressed. Email: lmpla@matematica.udl.cat
*To whom all correspondence should be addressed. Email: lmpla@matematica.udl.cat
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Abstract

The working group, which is concerned with operational research methods and applications to agricultural science in its broad meaning (i.e. including Forest Management and Fisheries), was formed in 2003 within the European Association of Operational Research Societies (EURO). The first meeting of the group was held at the former Silsoe Research Institute in 2004. The group intends to have regular meetings in Europe at approximately yearly intervals, usually within the EURO Conferences. However, the next meeting will be held in 2008 within the British Operational Research Society's OR50 Conference in York, followed by the EURO XXIII Conference in Bonn in 2009 and the EURO XXIV Conference in Lisbon in 2010. The third meeting of the working group, chaired by Dr L. M. Plà of the University of Lleida, with the assistance of D. L. Sandars of Cranfield University and organized as a stream within the XXII EURO Conference, was held at the University of Economics in Prague from 8 to 11 July 2007 where the following papers were read in a set of 10 sessions.

Type
Abstracts of Communications
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 Cambridge University Press

Reliable preference elicitation is a prerequisite for socially sustainable application of multi-objective decision-analysis techniques. Previous research (e.g. Belton Reference Belton1986; Pöyhönen et al. Reference Pöyhönen, Vrolijk and Hämäläinen2001; Hujala & Leskinen Reference Hujala, Leskinen and Plà2006) has shown that cognitive biases may cause conflicting results to emerge when framing the preference enquiry in alternative ways.

In an experiment with 30 individual forest owners, Hujala & Leskinen (Reference Hujala, Leskinen and Plà2006) applied different measurement scales in direct rating of preferences. The elicited ratio scale weights were transformed into interval scale and plotted with the original interval scale values. There appeared a significant pattern where ratio scale brought along bigger differences between the goal importances in the high-end than did the interval scale and vice versa (see similar results in Belton (Reference Belton1986)).

To test and refine these findings, the present authors incorporated pairwise comparisons into the preference enquiry. Experimenting with a job selection problem involving 45 forestry students resulted in a substantially milder pattern in the preference mismatch than was observed by Belton (Reference Belton1986) and Hujala & Leskinen (Reference Hujala, Leskinen and Plà2006). Nevertheless, it was discovered that changing the reference point impacts the outcome of the analysis.

Potential reasons behind the observed cognitive biases are the anchoring (Buchanan & Corner Reference Buchanan and Corner1997) and unadjustment phenomena (Pöyhönen et al. Reference Pöyhönen, Vrolijk and Hämäläinen2001). It is thus recommended to think through carefully both the graphics and the verbal statements around each preference enquiry. Simple transforming of preferences to different measurement scales may result in unintended obscurities. However, one additional viewpoint is that through combining two different weighting methods, one could obtain a reasonable estimate for the measure of preferential uncertainty by assessing the differences between the methods. This may serve as an alternative uncertainty analysis procedure in addition to using pairwise comparison techniques and related statistical models (e.g. Alho et al. Reference Alho, Kolehmainen, Leskinen, Schmoldt, Kangas, Mendoza and Pesonen2001).

A Multi-Objective Programming model is proposed to solve a timber harvest scheduling problem in Cuba. The formulation of a timber harvest plan involves important economic and sustainability criteria, amongst others. In addition, spatial considerations are also studied and included in the model through the use of integer variables and adjacency sets, so that units in the same adjacent set cannot be clear cut simultaneously. This kind of constraint will allow preservation of many important environmental aspects such as beauty of the landscape or biodiversity, and will also result in reducing soil erosion (Weintraub & Murray Reference Weintraub and Murray2006).

It would be preferable to manage different units in the forest for a given time horizon, so that the following five requirements of the decision maker are met:

  1. (i) The annual harvested volumes should be the same.

  2. (ii) Avoidance of clear cutting at early stand ages.

  3. (iii) Clear cutting of areas older than the maximum rotation duration.

  4. (iv) The Net Present Value (NPV) must be higher than a certain threshold return.

  5. (v) The area covered by each age class should be roughly the same by the end of the planning horizon.

These requirements do not mean optimization of any measure, but rather achievement of certain targets for certain aspects related to sustainable management of a forest. This is the main reason for using a Goal Programming approach, as these types of preferences can be perfectly specified in this kind of model (Gómez et al. Reference Gómez, Hernández, León and Caballero2006). The model also includes some constraints regarding the adjacency relations and lower bounds on the clear cut area and the NPV on each time period. As a result, a complex non-linear, mixed-integer, Multi-Objective Programming problem is established that cannot be solved with an exact solver, requiring the design and implementation of a multi-objective metaheuristic for its resolution.

It was applied to the case of a real forest in Pinar del Río, Cuba. This forest is managed by the Empresa Forestal Integral ‘Macurije’ and contains exclusively Pinus Caribea L., obtaining interesting and useful results regarding the optimal use of a forest in these several aspects studied.

Then, a Multi-Objective model for timber harvest scheduling was developed, taking into account not only economical aspects, but also sustainability of the forest managed. A multi-objective metaheuristic capable of solving such a complex problem efficiently was also designed and implemented.

Policy makers are concerned that contemporary arable farming practices lead to an unacceptable decline in biodiversity, such as farm-land birds.

Model-based, farm-level policy impact analysis is well established using Linear Programming (LP) approaches, for example,Audsley (Reference Audsley1981). Environmental pollution, such as the emission of nitrates into water or of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere have been included as multiple objectives to be limited or traded-off against profit (Annetts & Audsley Reference Annetts and Audsley2002). These modelling approaches are being developed to include the weeds among crops and stubbles as well as non-crop-land features such as hedges, ditches, woods, and ponds, because these features and their management have an important role as food sources and breeding habitats for birdlife.

At an aggregate level, the optimization of long-term profitability has modelled the response of farmers to changes and choices. This optimization function is being developed to include important non-profit objectives that have a role in the prediction of a rational farmer's response to biodiversity policy. For example, although encouraging greater weed numbers may offend some farmers' views of efficient farming, others may be prepared to forgo profit for less-tangible benefits.

Results show that the cost of providing habitat varies strongly with soil and rainfall and that a policy needs to be designed carefully to create more habitats efficiently.

Important open questions remain. Can the high utility of LP be preserved while recognizing that there is a non-linear relationship between the length of field boundaries, the area of fields and the subsequent performance of field machinery? Can the salient non-profit objectives be identified, quantified and modelled in the LP? Can the preferences of a sub-set of farmers for today's policy choices be used to predict the behavioural response of the wider population of farmers for future, as yet unspecified choices?

This work is currently funded by the Rural Economy and Land Use programme (RELU) of the UK Research Councils.

Outbreaks of epizootic animal diseases occur frequently in the European Union. Such outbreaks can have a large impact on producers, the agricultural sector and society as a whole. Avian influenza (AI) has the added complication that human transmission is possible, resulting in illness and sometimes death. The last decade has seen a surprising increase in outbreaks of AI throughout the world.

Three sets of actions (choice variables) can be used to manage the risk of AI: prevention, monitoring (both pre-event actions), and control (post-event action). Decision makers will need to allocate resources between these three sets of actions to minimize the impacts of AI outbreaks.

The objective of the current research is to develop an economic framework appropriate for exploring the issue of resource allocation for the management of AI at the country level. Some optimal balance must exist between pre-event and post-event actions; this balance will differ between countries and in different situations.

Within the developed framework, the decision problem is to choose the levels of prevention, monitoring and control which maximize the expected annual social welfare across two states of nature: outbreak and no-outbreak. The model consists of relationships between the three choice variables, epidemiological variables, human health variables and economic impacts on producers, consumers and government expenditure.

The framework is illustrated with a case study for the Netherlands, calibrated to a hypothetical base situation of moderate levels of prevention, monitoring and control using positive mathematical programming. Where information was available, plausible functional forms were chosen representing the Dutch situation. First model results clearly demonstrate the complexity of the decision problem; each action has very different marginal costs and benefits which fall on different stakeholders in society and which are dependent on the level of each action. Major uncertainties exist regarding the appropriate functional forms for the epidemiological and human health variables.

The developed framework proved useful to clarify and explore a complex decision problem and can be used to explore the consequences of different management strategies for AI.

Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is one of the most important infectious animal diseases in the world. FMD virus can infect pigs, cattle, goats and sheep. Export interferences are among the most important economic consequences of FMD.

Given scenarios on the scale of FMD outbreaks in Finland, our goal is to postulate a model which addresses these two questions:

  1. (i) To which extent does the disease outbreak affect the quantity of livestock production and financial losses of farmers, the processing industry and government?

  2. (ii) Would it be profitable to mitigate the spread of the disease with emergency vaccination?

The model consists of a demand model and a supply model, which jointly simulate livestock markets on a monthly basis. The demand model is a set of demand equations. They stratify (derived) demand for dairy products, beef and pig meat into domestic demand for each Finnish product, demand for non-Finnish product imported and demand for products exported. Exports are separated to EU and non-EU destinations.

The supply is modelled by solving supply decisions with a structural-form dynamic programming model (cf. Niemi et al. Reference Niemi, Lehtonen and Pietola2006). The model takes into account profit-maximizing behaviour and the dynamics of production through insemination decisions. Supply of meat and raw milk is very inelastic in the short run, whereas in the long run farmers can adjust animal stock and productivity. Dairy processing, subject to the balance of milk fat and skimmed milk in dairy products, can be adjusted.

There are distinct sector models for competitive pricing behaviour and monopoly behaviour motivated by highly concentrated processing industry in Finland.

The Bellman equation was solved by backward induction, which ensures the necessary and sufficient conditions for optimality. Emergency vaccination is analysed with real options, which is consistent with dynamic programming.

The first results suggest that economic losses due to FMD, driven by reductions in exports and domestic prices, are not easily mitigated through supply optimization, even in the case of domestic monopoly, because domestic supply and demand are relatively inelastic.

The spatial analysis of both autocorrelation (Moran's I, Geary's C and Getis and Ord's Gd(I) and Gd(II)) (Anselin Reference Anselin1995) and Bayesian (Besag et al. Reference Besag, York and Mollié1991) Conditional Auto-Regressive model scores obtained from a financial analysis is a useful tool to locate financially compromised areas in the agrarian sector (Pérez-Naranjo & García-Alonso Reference Perez-Naranjo and Garcia-Alonso2005). These areas identify the places where specific strategic groups of farms (productive strategies where the value-added rate of a crop type is dominant) might not be able to maintain their structure because of not being profitable enough (financial risk: probability of having a total net margin less than zero). Maps obtained by Kernel estimation using autocorrelation and Bayesian scores evaluating the financial risk show different, sometimes conflicting, spatial projections difficult to interpret. Potential hot-spots (darker zones) have different shapes and, due to the geographical proximity of the neighbourhoods – municipalities, Kernel estimation can misclassify some municipalities.

A Multi-Objective Evolutionary Algorithm (MOEA) has been developed and tested (Zitzler Reference Zitzler1999) in order to deal with different spatial projections to obtain a unique classification for financially compromised areas. This MOEA takes into consideration as objectives the autocorrelation and Bayesian means as well as their corresponding standard deviations. The geographical distance between municipality capitals was also included as an objective to be minimized.

Once a seed, initial solution set, is generated, MOEA processes better and better municipality groups until a set number of generations is reached or a convergence criterion (statistical error) is satisfied. Only feasible and non-dominated solutions are considered for each generation. A simple tournament has been developed to select solutions considering three different fitness functions: weighted objectives, ranking and weighted ranking. Crossover can be simple or double and, finally, mutation can be random or distance-based (the element selected to be mutated is that which shows the maximum distance from the rest in the group). Feasible and non-dominated solutions from every run are saved in a solution pool.

On analysing the financial risk of a horticultural farm sample (345 farms), results showed the existence of several financially compromised areas in Andalusia (hot-spots). The probability that each municipality has to belong to a specific hot-spot has been evaluated, represented on a map and compared to Kernel projections.

Crisis events with potentially disastrous consequences are often characterized by an unknown ‘turning moment’ after which the crisis is under control. This feature has implications for rational choice of timing for crisis intervention measures.

The current paper analyses such an issue in the control of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) epidemics. Due to its potentially disastrous damage to the national economy, FMD is one of the most feared highly contagious animal diseases, especially for export countries (Mahul & Gohin Reference Mahul and Gohin1999). In the Netherlands, the control of FMD epidemics is an important element in national crisis management.

To provide a rational basis for decision making, it is important to clearly define the consequences of an FMD crisis. Based on McInerney et al. (Reference McInerney, Howe and Schepers1992), the total expected economic loss of an epidemic is decomposed into three parts:

  1. (i) The expected loss in terms of production value.

  2. (ii) The expected expenditure of control actions.

  3. (iii) The expected costs in the worse-case scenario.

The evolution of an FMD epidemic is modelled as a process with an unknown-date event (turning moment), following closely the approach described in Gutiérrez & Ruiz-Aliseda (Reference Gutierrez and Ruiz-Aliseda2006). It is assumed that before this turning moment, the epidemic grows exponentially and afterwards the epidemic also decays exponentially, with both growth and decay rates estimated from epidemiological models. The decision problem is to choose an optimal time, t, in order to minimize the economic loss at a national level.

With epidemiological modelling, the density function of the turning moment, τ, f(.), can be estimated. As illustrated in the paper, depending on the form of the density function, f(.), this can lead to closed-form solution or the optimal timing, t*, has to be solved numerically. A numerical example is built to demonstrate the possible outcomes of the model, which is based on the Dutch situation and simulated FMD outbreaks.

It is concluded that in managing a crisis event like FMD epidemics in the Netherlands, attention should not only be paid to the speed of interventions but also to their timing, which could avoid unnecessary control costs in some situations.

The current research is part of the project ‘Discovering Real Options in the Control of Foot-and-mouth Disease’ funded by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO).

The current paper presents an optimization approach for the aggregate production planning of a Brazilian sugar and alcohol milling company. The approach involves the evaluation of different technical and economical parameters, which are used in a mixed integer linear programming model that represents the sugar, alcohol and molasses production system, including decisions on the quantity of sugarcane crushed, selection of industrial processes and inventory of final products. Computational results using actual data and the CPLEX software are reported.

The Colombian sugar companies need to produce ethanol from sugarcane without having a significant impact on sugar production. However, the impact is already notable, since the cost of sugar and food has already risen in Colombia due to production of ethanol (Klotz Reference Klotz2006). This problem can be analysed using the Theory of General Equilibrium which helps to identify the prices and quantities of equilibrium in different markets. This abstract presents a Computable General Equilibrium Model (CGE) for sugar and bioethanol production from sugar cane in Colombia.

A Social Accounting Matrix (SAM) was used to develop the model. The objective was to investigate the response to sugar production policy changes, while maintaining all other economic sectors constant, by asking, ‘what happens if … ?’(Ceteris paribus).

To build SAM the following information was collated:

  • National accounts data from the Columbian National Department of Statistics (DANE),

  • Colombian sugar sector data from the Columbian Association of Sugar Cane Growers (ASOCAÑA),

  • Ethanol demand and production data from different sources,

  • Data on household accounts, and

  • Other data from other economic institutions.

These datasets were used to identify, for each economical sector, the set of input–output accounts, which together cover the entire national economy as a combined set of input–output accounts (Cicowiez Reference Cicowiez and Di Gresia2004). The sectorial input–output accounts and their corresponding interactions form SAM. SAM was statistically calibrated before scenarios were solved using the optimization software GAMS-CPLEX (http://www.gams.com), with the objective of maximizing earnings. The solutions identify the quantitative economic impacts of a strategic change in sugar production policies and/or the economic relationships between sectors (Hosoe Reference Hosoe2004).

The main conclusion from this study is that SAM of 2004 helped in identifying that the price of ethanol has a big impact affecting sugar prices, capital investment and wages. One of the most affected sectors was the service sector.

Operational Research (OR) has been applied in multifarious fields of research and business endeavours. It includes optimization in business and industry, manufacturing, economics, engineering, transportation, distribution, strategic planning and even in the domain of the sciences.

In Malaysia, the application of OR is more dominant in the use of optimization in fertilizer usage, cross-breeding, crop yield, farm planning as well as in livestock distribution (Samik & Chwee Reference Samik and Chwee1999). However, with the government focussing on enhancing the agricultural sector, more usage in this sector is envisaged (The Economic Planning Unit 2006).

The agricultural sector is not neglected in the Malaysian development agenda, because it accounted for 0·131 of the overall workforce in 2006 (Department of Statistics, Malaysia 2007). The oil palm plantation has become the largest sector in terms of area after it surpassed the rubber plantation sector in 1997. In 2006, the total area planted with oil palm reached 4 165 215 h (Malaysian Palm Oil Board 2006).

Koperasi Johor Plantation (KJP) is one of the state agencies which embarked on the plantation of oil palm. It is a small-sized plantation which has a total area of 1100 acres (450 h). Traditionally, it uses the unsystematic way of plucking fruits by just assigning two supervisors to oversee the 30 or so workers harvesting the fruits. However, in early 2006 the manager tried to deploy the workers in a more efficient and better way. By working with the present authors, a more systematic approach has been introduced.

First, the competence or the harvesting skill level of each of the workers was determined. The workers were divided into 11 groups and KJP was divided into 11 zones. Each group constituted of three workers of almost the same level of competence. Using the assignment model, workers were assigned according to groups and zones of operations in plucking the oil palm fruits. The exercise was also performed by applying within-group assignment.

The results indicated that the group assignment increased the daily yield contribution by 6·41% as compared to a situation of no assignment. In addition to that, the assignment encouraged team-work among the workers. However, by using the within-group assignment it increased only by 2·44% as compared to a no-assignment scenario. Thus, the results of the exercise had a benevolent impact as it benefited both the workers as well as the organization.

To evaluate soil quality from soil data profiles, for agricultural production, forestry and environmental purposes, the authors started with 122 i-soils from a Survey of the Lands of Community of Madrid (CM) (Gallardo et al. Reference Gallardo, Saa, Hontoria and Almorox2005) using the Riquier et al. (Reference Riquier, Bramao and Cornet1970) system, intended for land use planning decisions.

A multi-attribute additive value function was adopted, giving a (0,1) Quality Index, QI:

(1)

The 13 j-attributes were selected from the CM study in order to be able to qualify the different scenarios and also be as independent as possible. They were: annual rain, vegetative period, USLE-C (tolerable soil losses), slope, actual erosion, drainage, permeability, stoniness, sealing and crusting risk, pH, calcium carbonate and cation exchange capacity (CEC).

For (1) the data x ij, the result of measures or categories were converted in (0,1) ‘more is better’ Attribute Quality Indexes (AQI) y ij=f j (x ij), becoming even negative to penalize some scenarios, through elicited Attribute Value Functions (AVF: f j).

The QI case study results agreed with the worst attribute Index Class SQ (I–VIII) obtained in CM Survey. They pointed out the complementary applicability of the proposed QI method that shows how well variables affect quality, separating the worst classes VI–VIII.

In the search of other criteria aggregation models (Zopounidis & Doumpos Reference Zopounidis and Doumpos2004), the authors suggest a QI–SQ-combined Quality Index (CQI) cq i, starting from q i in (1) and lowering it towards k-classes IQS values iqs(k)=0·1(10−k):

(2)

The ‘fuzzy sets’ weights αki∊(0,1) are the products,

(3)

of the j∊(1,13) factors for which δiki>q i, and the δiki are defined as going from 0 to 1 with y ij=f j (x ij), when x ij goes from a starting CQS-threshold U kj to a worse absolute V kj one, taking the higher δikj in both senses for attributes like pH. The threshold U kj and V kj will have to be elicited using Soil Science Experience.

Purchases of feed and piglets constitute almost 0·9 of the variable costs of pig fattening in Finland. Moreover, the timing of slaughter, jointly with feeding and genotype, affects the pig's carcass quality-adjusted value. Pigs are typically fed with 1–3 different feed mixtures during fattening. The pig's potential use of energy and protein in feeds change as it grows. Genetic variation causes this potential to differ between pigs. Thus, it is valuable to have information on how feeding regime and slaughter timing affect the financial return of one pig place.

The goal of the current study was to examine how the number of feeding phases and variation in pigs affect returns to capacity unit (housing capacity for one fattening pig), feeding and slaughter timing. The problem was studied with a dynamic programming model, which solves the optimal feeding and slaughter policies simultaneously as described in Niemi (Reference Niemi2006) and with Monte Carlo simulation. The models characterize growth process explicitly, taking into account weight, carcass composition and genotype of pigs, as well as interactions between feeding, genotype and quality-adjusted carcass value. The state of the pig was measured by fat content and lean mass contained in the pig, its live weight and the distribution of weight and the genotype. Variation in growth potential was simulated with the mean growth at a given state and confidence intervals of the mean growth potential. The analysis compares: (1) multi-phase feeding optimized daily; (2) multi-phase feeding optimized weekly; (3) two-phase feeding; and (4) 50% decrease in variation in genotype-specific parameters.

Feeding regime shifts towards a protein-rich diet, when switching from the two-phase to multi-phase feeding, which takes into account changes in growth potential thoroughly. When adjusting the feed according to the pig's weight, emphasis is on the weeks prior to slaughter when genotypes make distinctions. A switch from two-phase to multi-phase feeding increases returns to capacity unit by €2·4 per year, from weekly to daily adjustment by €6·9 per year and a 50% decrease in variation in pigs by €13·3 per year. In general, producers benefit from segregated management policy, but the variation in pigs can reduce returns. An increase in variation in pigs can reduce particularly the market value of pigs.

Some preliminary results of a newly started project on developing decision support on dairy farms have been given. One goal is to build a Markov Decision Process (MDP) on cow level based on in-line measurements in milk. These are readily available and the sensors register several variables. It is important that relevant traits/states of the cow can be forecasted in the MDP. This can be done using Dynamic Statistic Prediction (DSP) models which must be embedded into the MDP. General ideas on how to embed DSP models into the overall MDP have been presented. Moreover, the behaviour of the model are being shown on in-line measurement data from the project.

In general, livestock research models are based on steady state (Plà Reference Plà2007). Upton (Reference Upton1989) enumerated cases in which the use of steady state is advisable for instance in the livestock productivity assessment, evaluating systems, or in comparing alternative planned options. Different authors like Jalving et al. (Reference Jalving, Dijkhuizen and Van Arendonk1992) compared different management strategies by using steady-state models. However, this approach can produce problems during use in field conditions. Hence, the aim of the current study is the discussion about the benefits of the steady-state modelling and the practical consequences of an indiscriminate use.

Steady state in herd management attempts to keep the herd size and structure at equilibrium over time. This fact is relevant allowing the model to be a good predictor of farm performance when stability is achieved. Development of a model requires some assumptions to be employed. If these are correct, the model will be a good predictor of the farm productivity. Calculations can be performed by simulation or be derived analytically as was illustrated by Baptist (Reference Baptist1992). Analytical methods include differential equations, actuarial tables and transition matrices. Simulation requires the setting of a number of runs and steps per running in combination with some criterion of stability.

Farms are subject to variability and this may affect how to reach or maintain the steady-state situation in real instances. Therefore, transient stages cannot be neglected due to their importance in field conditions. It is concluded that models based on steady state are essential to compare different management strategies for a long time horizon. However, it is also important to develop new models to support decision in transient situations.

The problem addressed in the current work consists fundamentally of a land-management system designated for wood production. For each time period, the planner must decide which units to cut and what access roads to build in order to maximize expected net profit. A multistage Stochastic Integer Programming model is presented. It enables the planner to make more robust decisions based on a range of price scenarios over time, maximizing the expected value instead of merely analysing a single average scenario. A specialization of the Branch-and-Fix Coordination algorithmic approach is presented.

Strategic planning of resource allocation in forest companies involves several decisions that have a relevant impact over a long term due to the temporal dimensionality of forest management. A typical optimization problem in a large forest company may require 200 000 decision variables and 80 000 constraints due to the number of stands, management regimes, harvest options, type of products and length of the planning horizon. These problems were formerly solved with simplified simulation techniques that did not guarantee optimality.

To the basic forest optimization problem presented by Johnson & Scheurman (Reference Johnson and Scheurman1977) as ‘Model II’ in a linear programming (LP) form, the present authors have incorporated a set of constraints and variables to allow the configuration of more specific planning scenarios, which can be customized by the Decision Maker (DM) by means of a software application.

The design of a software platform was considered that enables the user to apply a four-phase methodology to solve the planning problem. The first phase consists of loading the database and the configuration of spatial and temporal resolution. Data validation, consistency verification and computation of economic coefficients are the main tasks in the second phase. These coefficients, Net Present Value and Soil Expectation Value, are calculated for all forests considering species, management regime, localization, site and initial age, for all possible harvest ages and for all possible situations as ending inventory. The visualization of these coefficients allows the DM a second-level validation through a comparison among different kinds of forests.

In the third phase, the LP matrix is generated and constraints chosen by the DM are activated, forming therefore the planning scenario. The geometry of non-zero data within the LP matrix is considered for a fast and efficient matrix generation. The matrix generator together with the module for configuration of the planning scenario, form a powerful and robust tool for the DM in this kind of problem, allowing him to focus his efforts on the selection of constraints that best represent the economic scenario being modelled.

Finally, in the fourth phase, a solver module from an optimization library is called, the optimal solution is loaded and decoded, and planning reports are generated.

This application is being used routinely by the main forest companies in Chile. The superior management levels rely now on a tool that guarantees optimality as well as parametric and sensitivity analysis of large-scale resource allocation problems.

TreeMetrics Ltd. has developed a laser scanning inventory technology that provides accurate stem profile and curvature information for each tree in a survey plot. A challenge facing TreeMetrics is the stem profile prediction when occlusion occurs. Traditional approaches to stem prediction are rigid and do not fully utilize the rich data available from the laser scanner. Case-based reasoning is an artificial intelligence method for solving problems by using or adapting solutions to similar past problems; we apply this method to solving the stem profile prediction task in a flexible and adaptable way.

Consider a forest to be managed for timber production, but where conditions for wildlife habitat are favoured. One typical requirement for some animals is the existence of regions of mature forests that are far away from the areas that are clear-cut, called core regions. An integer programming model is presented to maximize the value of the timber harvested, subject to minimum core area constraints. The model also includes harvest flow and ending inventory requirements. Computational results and their analysis for a simulated landscape are also presented.

In the current paper, the methodology proposed for the computation of an optimal total allowable capture quota as a planning tool in the exploitation of the Chilean Jack mackerel (Trachurus murphyi Nichols) is presented.

In Chile, the most important fishing regulation instrument is the establishment of global and individual capture quotas for each species, whose levels are based on a total allowable capture and set annually by the Ministry of Fisheries, in agreement with the legal framework. The current work and previous applications (cf. Albornoz & Canales Reference Albornoz and Canales2006) were precisely done in close cooperation with the Fisheries Development Institute (IFOP), one of whose tasks is to give the technical support to the decision making of state agencies with respect to each year's total allowable capture quota that contributes to the fishery management.

More precisely, the proposed model seeks to preserve the renewable marine resource during a long-term planning horizon with decisions that are also efficient from a bio-economic perspective. In particular, the model corresponds to a two-stage stochastic nonlinear programming model with recourse (Birge & Louveaux Reference Birge and Loveaux1997). In the model, the total allowable capture quota for the first year is defined as a first-stage decision variable that can be implemented independently of any particular scenario of the uncertain parameters. The remaining decisions variables, related to capture quotas in the next years of the planning horizon and the size of the population considering the age structure and its exploitation zones, are dependent on the different specific scenarios, defining the second-stage decision variables necessary to provide the flexibility needed to deal with uncertainty. The decisions are based on the knowledge of the population dynamic behaviour, represented through numerous mathematical equations with age structures of the population and its migratory process between the exploitation zones of the resource (Clark Reference Clark2005; Haddon Reference Haddon2001).

The results show that the use of a stochastic optimization model, combined with the use of a population dynamic model with an age structure and self-generating by means of recruiting, provides a useful methodology for the analysis, control and sustainable and efficient management of this particular fishery resource.

An ambitious project for optimizing and analysing the fishing industry in Iceland is presented. The project is twofold. The first part of the project focuses on gathering historical data and combining the data into a centralized research database. Each fishing company that participates in the project has a local database which is used to gather data for statistical analysis and to estimate input parameters for the optimization model. All participants in the project can share their data with other participants or keep their own data separate. Each participant shares data with a research database at the Icelandic Fisheries Laboratories and this centralized database will be used for research purposes.

The second part of the project is a linear optimization model that maximizes the revenue of a fishing company. The model uses the historical data gathered from leading Icelandic fishing companies to determine the optimal fishing grounds, ideal expected catch and the best processing methods for a catch over a time period, while maximizing the overall revenue of the fishing company. The optimization model includes both detailed routing of the fishing fleet and the allocation of the catch, whether to sell the catch directly on the market or to process the catch. The model also selects which products the processing should focus on, based on the expected available material. The present authors use historical data for each fishing ground and for each time of the year to estimate the quantity of each fish species that the ships are expected to catch in a specific fishing ground at a specific time of the year.

As far as is known, connecting the location and time of year of the fishing fleet and the expected catch with the revenue of a fishing company has not been done before. This is also the first time that leading Icelandic fishing companies gather their forces to create a detailed centralized database of the fishing grounds and the fish processing, which will be used for research purposes while each participant can also use the historical data for statistical analysis and to optimized planning.

In the current paper, the animal replacement problem using a Markov decision process is considered. The model represents the productive and reproductive lifespan of herd sows assuming that the population is in steady state under an infinite planning horizon. A linear programming (LP) model is employed to find the optimal policy that contributes the maximum average reward per stage (Tijms Reference Tijms1994). The objective, once the optimal policy is obtained, is to perturb some elements of the transition probabilities matrix and to evaluate their effects on the solution. Firstly, an approximation method is employed, differentiating the optimal basis of the LP model used to optimize the Markov chain. The optimality and the corresponding feasible conditions for the perturbed problem are derived. Later on, the matrix perturbation is analysed from a probabilistic viewpoint and the perturbed quantities are approximated by a first-order perturbation expansions. This permits the computation of statistics estimating the variation in the perturbed quantity and in the optimal solution of the original problem. The Frobenius norm and the stochastic norm are used to bound errors. The global purpose of this paper is to determine the existent correspondence among the classical matrix perturbation theory and the obtaining of optimal policies in the application of Markov decision programming to animal production models. To illustrate our proposal, a simple version of the sow replacement problem developed in Plà et al. (Reference Plà, Pomar and Pomar2003) is considered; the system exists in a sow farm where sows are allowed to reach nine reproductive cycles as maximum and at the end of the cycle, two actions can be taken: keep or replace. The problem is represented as a regular Markov decision process and solved using an LP model. Transition probabilities and reward values are arbitrary but near to what are observed in actual systems; the corresponding transition probabilities matrix is perturbed using the mentioned techniques and the optimal policies are characterized in terms of these. The theoretical and practical results are reported. These are promising for coping with the dimensionality problem in dynamic programming problems and sensitivity analysis.

A stochastic programming model is discussed to determine the use of the arable land in farms. The goal is to achieve certain production quantities on an a priori given probability level. The stochastic programming problem is of a new type.

In the current paper, the degree of conflict and the trade-offs between environmental and economic criteria within a context of irrigated agriculture are analysed. The proposed method is based upon multi-objective programming and goal programming. The method is applied to the ‘Monegros’ County, which is a representative area of irrigated agriculture in Spain. Monegros County currently suffers serious environmental problems, such as saline contamination of aquifers and drainage water. Some empirical findings as well as some methodological insights are presented.

Rice cultivation in Mediterranean wetlands represents a system of land management that performs important non-marketable functions, like protecting biodiversity and shaping traditionally valued landscapes (Fasola & Ruiz Reference Fasola, Ruíz, Pain and Pienkowski1997). The Albufera Natural Park, in the vicinity of Valencia (Eastern Spain), is a protected wetland area of this sort. Local rice farmers are currently benefiting from agricultural support measures and agro-environmental payments, under the European Common Agricultural Policy. But lack of financial viability could precipitate abandonment, with undesirable consequences from an environmental viewpoint.

In the current paper an analysis of the sustainability – economic, environmental and socio-cultural – of three alternative rice cultivation techniques that could be put to use in the Albufera rice fields is undertaken. The first choice is the current system, which includes some restrictions on input use and cultivation practices, in order to fulfil the park's environmental regulations. The second is an alternative conventional production system, with no environmental restrictions attached, but allowing for the physical restructuring of rice plots. The final choice is a full-fledged ecological cultivation system being considered for implementation.

All the three techniques have been evaluated and the following criteria have been considered: short- and long-term economic competitiveness, impact on air and water quality, impact on landscape and biodiversity, cultural heritage related to different hydrological systems, and ability to foster job creation and economic activity. Multi-criteria decision methods have been used before to evaluate agricultural practices (Parra et al. Reference Parra, Calatrava and De Haro2005; Karami Reference Karami2006). The current paper shows that the Analytical Network Process (ANP) method is perfectly suited to deal with the complex interrelations involved in sustainability evaluation. Using this method it is demonstrated that the ecological cultivation system is the most sustainable technique. The current system ranks second, while the conventional unrestricted system gets the third place. The computations also show that if only the economic dimension of sustainability were to be considered, the order would be reversed, with the conventional and ecological technologies changing places and the current system remaining in the second place.

Increasing environmental concerns arising from economic activities have shifted to the transportation and logistics arena in recent decades. In fact, research into transport externalities has led to the concept of sustainable mobility. Road transport is the source of 0·9 of the transportation external costs, 0·3 of which are due to road freight transport.

The current study analyses route-building procedures using a pertinent variant (in this instance called algorithm with environmental criteria (AEC)), that is, of the traditional algorithms (Clarke & Wright Reference Clarke and Wright1964; Mole & Jameson Reference Mole and Jameson1976) for the Capacitated Vehicle Routing Problem. Apart from the classic costs based on distances, this method includes others such as environmental costs.

The estimation of environmental costs is not easy, because it requires complex computations to approximate the negative environmental impact of transport activities. Moreover, environmental cost estimation must be linked to specific geographical areas, and requires data on the exact delivery policies for each vehicle (European Conference of Ministers of Transport 2003; Carlow Reference Carlow2001). Taking these considerations into account, complete solutions to ten real cases P1–P10 were found (see ETMOL study in Pintor et al. Reference Pintor, Faulin, Lera, Garcia, San Miguel and Ubeda2005). Thus, it was obtained that the consideration of environmental costs usually involves a 29% cost increase, roughly speaking, in relation to the initial scenario.

The performance of the AEC with different baseline methods for ten instances drawn from Augerat (Reference Augerat, Belenguer, Benavent, Corberán, Naddef and Rinaldi1995) with the best-known solutions are also compared. Taking into account the simplicity of the baseline methods used, the solutions generated by AEC methods are not highly accurate. The AEC method therefore generated solutions for the problems shown involving total distances that are 17·5% greater than the best-known solutions using Clarke & Wright as the baseline method and 9·95% greater taking Mole & Jameson as the baseline method. These cost increases highlight the importance of environmental costs in transport policies.

The aim of the current paper is to present a multi-criteria model for crop planning in agriculture. The approach is based on the portfolio theory. The model takes into account weather risks, market risks and environmental risks. Input data includes historical land productivity data for various crops and soil types, historical market prices data for crops, yield response to fertilizer and pesticide application, unitary costs of fertilizers and pesticides, costs for cultivation of the crops (without using fertilizers and pesticides) on the plots.

The model considers a farm which has its land divided into several plots P 1, P 2, …, P m. One assumes that if a plot is cultivated, then it is cultivated with the same crop. Also one assumes that the soil quality of a plot is homogeneous. The farmer has to choose a crop plan from n crops C 1, C 2, …, C n. In order to obtain high yields the farmer uses fertilizers and pesticides.

For each fertilizer and pesticide one considers two environmental levels: the desirable level and the maximum admissible level. Monetary penalizations for exceeding the environmental levels are considered. The environmental risk is defined as the sum of the penalties for exceeding the environmental levels.

The financial risk is defined as the variance of the return of a crop plan.

The decision variables are the matrices x=(x ij) and yij=(y ij1, y ij2, …, y ijk) i∊{1,2, …,n}, j∊{1,2, …,m}. Here, x ij is the decision variable that takes the value 1 if the crop C i is cultivated on plot P j and takes value zero if the crop C i is not cultivated on the plot P j. y ijr is the decision variable representing the quantity of fertilizer or pesticide r used for the cultivation of one unit area of plot P j with crop C i.

A multi-criteria model and four single-criteria mixed integer programming problems are formulated that are derived from the multi-criteria model:

  • the minimum environmental risk problem;

  • the minimum financial risk problem;

  • the maximum expected return problem; and

  • the risk – expected return trade-off problem.

In the minimum environmental risk problem, the manager tries to minimize the environmental risk taking into account the following restrictions:

  • the expected return is greater than a given level W;

  • the expected quantity of crop C i is greater than a given number Q i;

  • the sum invested in the production plan lies in the interval [M 1,M 2]; and

  • the financial risk is smaller than a given level τ.

Under some assumptions, it is proved that the above problem is equivalent to a mixed integer programming problem with a linear objective function and linear and quadratic constraints.

A numerical example for this problem is discussed.

A typical economic problem is that of finding an optimal policy in the sense of choosing the value of a set of policy instruments to optimize some policy objective or a social welfare function. In this case, we are concerned about the optimal design of policies in the field of agricultural activity.

Agriculture is typically a multi-dimensional activity. Some authors have pointed at the fact that agriculture performs several important social, economic and environmental functions, such as providing food and other produce, contributing to the survival of rural communities, biological diversity and so on. Moreover, different policy objectives could conflict to some extent. For example, maximizing agricultural productivity could be harmful to the environment, and increasing agricultural employment might conflict with profitability.

It can be concluded that the optimal design of agricultural policy can be seen as a genuine multi-criteria problem, although it is not common in the literature to model policy making as a Multi-Criteria Decision Making (MCDM) problem. A methodological proposal is presented to approach agricultural policy making as an MCDM problem.

The main idea is to model the decision making problem of the agricultural authority as determining the value of the policy instruments to optimize the policy objectives subject to any constraints on the policy instruments and a set of equations representing the behaviour of farmers (i.e. the response of farmers to the policy scenario). It is proposed to do this by incorporating the first-order conditions of the farmers' decision problem as constraints for the policy maker.

In order to represent the behaviour of farmers in an operational way, some elicitation of their Multi-Attribute Utility Function (MAUF) is needed. A multiplicative specification is chosen that has the advantage that the first-order conditions involve the farmers' decision variables, so that they provide relevant information for the policy maker. To elicit the parameters of the MAUF, a non-interactive method proposed by André & Riesgo (Reference André and Riesgo2007) is followed.

To illustrate the potential usefulness of this approach, an application to a Spanish agricultural sector located in the Douro basin is presented. A bi-criteria policy problem is considered involving a private objective (enable farmers to achieve the maximum value for their utility) and a public objective (minimize the environmental impact of nitrogen). Water tariffs, subsidies and nitrogen taxes are considered as agricultural policy instruments. The approach enables a measurement of the degree of conflict between both objectives with real data. In a second step, the set of efficient agricultural policies defined as those policies which are not Pareto-dominated are presented. Finally, the set of compromise agricultural policies as those policies which are closer to the ideal point according to standard L-p metrics is identified.

In the context of multilateral environmental agreements, the so-called Rio Conventions, which include the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD), have recognized the importance of establishing synergies. Yet, at local level, cooperation in the development of methodologies and tools for implementing synergies is needed (UNFCCC 2004). The current work describes a real case study of environmental decision support for the forestry sector, in the framework of the Rio Conventions, in which Multi-Criteria Decision Aid is used.

A comprehensive study of the forestry ecosystem services from the global and local point of view has been done. Different aspects, such as the implementation of a global scope at a local level, the Rio Conventions' objectives and principles, and the stakeholders involved in the process are considered. Later, from the methodological point of view, multi-criteria evaluation appears to be an adequate assessment framework for sustainability policies and a very efficient tool to implement a multi-inter-disciplinary approach (Munda Reference Munda, Figueira, Greco and Ehrgott2005).

It has been identified that policymakers were interested in evaluating international forestry projects within the framework of the Rio Conventions. Therefore, a set of forestry criteria have been developed based on the identification and selection of appropriate attributes. Consequently, a questionnaire was sent to forestry experts participating in the Rio Convention process to validate these criteria. Moreover, criteria interaction have been appreciated, so is the correlation between the importance of criteria and the provenance of participants. Later, it has been demonstrated that the multi-criteria method adopted can be a useful tool for policymakers when sorting forestry projects into predefined ordered categories. At the end, the decision-aiding process has been helpful in organising a complex and real environmental situation, converge expectations toward a direction, and in supporting the implementation of synergies among the Rio Conventions at a local level.

Historical data on yields and prices useful for farm planning under uncertainty are typically sparse due to lack of relevant records. The use of such data means that sampling bias could lead to unreliable plans. This problem is explored using Monte Carlo methods to illustrate the possible bias for a typical Norwegian mixed farm.

Initially, the Multi-Variate Kernel Density Estimate (MVKDE) method is applied to smooth historical activity gross margins (GM) (Richardson et al. Reference Richardson, Lien and Hardaker2006). It was assumed that the resultant smoothed distribution represents the true joint distribution of GMs and then sampled from this distribution in Monte Carlo experiments using two risk programming formulations, mean (i.e. expected)-variance (E-V) programming and Utility Efficient (UE) programming. In E-V programming the stochastic dependencies between enterprise returns are represented by covariances, whereas in UE programming the data are allowed to ‘speak’ via states of nature matrix.

To keep the experiment feasible, the programming models were solved with sample sizes of 5, 15, 20, 30, 50, 100 and 200, each with eight replicates, and a sample size of 10 with 100 replicates. For each obtained programming solution, the ex ante certainty equivalent (CE) of net income (NI) was evaluated.

Using E-V programming, the simulated results for CE of NI were obtained. Results show that there can be appreciable differences between solutions even with unrealistically large sample sizes, entailing considerable reduction in CEs. Comparing the E-V results with the UE results, there are few differences between the two and the differences which do occur are mainly trivial.

The current paper is focused on assessment of farms from marginal regions, in Less Favourable Area (LFA) by Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA). Farming in marginal regions does not have to be profitable, but it is necessary for social or ecological reasons. Therefore, negative values of outputs are present in the considered set of farms.

A group of 55 farms of similar characteristics is considered. As inputs, total assets, agricultural land area, man effort and fiscal assets are taken into account, and, as outputs, yields in sum and income from operations before tax.

DEA models described by Farrel (Reference Farrell1957) and Charnes et al. (Reference Charnes, Cooper and Rhodes1978) assume non-negative values of inputs and outputs. The dataset of the current paper contains negative values and therefore this condition can not be met. For this reason, the generic directional distance model proposed by Chambers et al. (Reference Chambers, Chung and Färe1996, Reference Chambers, Chung and Färe1998) are used to handle these negative data.

Consider a set of units k=1, 2, …, p, with input levels x ij, i=1, 2, …, m and output levels y jk, j=1, 2, …, n and unit ok which is to be assessed. Vector gxi(gyj) represents possible changes of input (output). The generic directional distance model is as follows:

(1)

This model (1) is valid for the case of variable returns to scale (VRS) and with input and output vectors in Rm+n. Target values of inputs (outputs) were obtained as product X (Y) and λ.

This method provides efficiency scores similar to radial efficiencies traditionally used in DEA without previous transformation of negative data. The second advantage of this model is the ability to project inefficient units onto the efficiency frontier with a selected direction. This feature is applicable to the application in the current paper, because the model provides each unit with its own path to efficiency representing its improvement potentials.

Efficiency scores are defined by Eqn (2).

(2)

Where ϕo is efficiency for assessed unit o,

  • x*io is target value of i-th input projected on efficiency frontier,

  • y*jo is target value of j-th input projected on efficiency frontier,

  • R jo=maxk{ y jk}−y jo, j=1, 2, …, n, and

  • R io=x io−mink{ x ik }, i=1, 2, …, m.

Efficient units B, D, F, G and inefficient units A, C, E are presented. Classical DEA model using radial projection recommends, for point E, raising output 1 to 4387 and output 2 to 6047. However, it is not always possible to follow this recommendation. For example, for point E output 2 cannot be changed, therefore directional vector g=(1, 0) was used. With this direction vector, output 2 remains the same and output 1 should rise to 7·5. This projection is depicted with the dotted line. Direction vectors allow restriction of changes of inputs or outputs. For unit A, a projection on efficient frontier is conducted according to direction vector g=(0, 1). Projected point for unit A would be in another place on the efficiency frontier, but the model takes into account efficiency frontier from point B to point G (not vertical and horizontal part of that). Therefore, projection of A can go through point B.

Harvesting of the forest is one of the important issues for Caspian forest management in northern Iran. The research relating to cost assessment and the efficiency of the logging systems being used dates back to 1930s, but in northern Iran it only started two decades ago. The evaluation of two mechanized logging systems in the Shafarood forests, showed that the skidding cost for whole tree system and the tree length system were 2858 Rials/m3 and 1504 Rials/m3, respectively (Feghi Reference Feghi1989). Abeli (Reference Abeli1996) compared efficiency and costs of three ground skidding machinery in Tanzania and showed that the observed difference in efficiency of the three machines depended on type and size of the machinery, skill of the operator and the natural slope of the area.

In the current study the production and cost of Timber Jack 450C wheeled skidder and Volvo BM loader were determined for Shafarood forest in northern Iran. The research was carried out in compartment number 25 of 2nd district, in Nave forest Shafarood, with the altitude ranging between 1030 and 1250 m asl. In the research, in order to estimate production and cost of a unit volume of wood, work study techniques were used.

Mathematical models of skidding and loading time predictions as functions of effective factors have been presented to help the optimized utilization of a management unit. By employing these models, the mean values of the contributing factors to the models can be determined and thus predict the operation time and cost of skidding and loading. Based on these predictions, labour requirement, number of machineries and funds can be estimated and then appropriate plans be prepared.

Mathematical equation of the skidding time as a function of effective factors

where Y=time needed for one round trip (minutes), X 1=skidding distance (m) and X 2=volume per turn (m3).

Mathematical equation of the loading time as a function of effective factors

where Y=time needed for one round trip (minutes), X=volume per log×number of logs (m3).

The results show that the mathematical model of skidding time as a dependent variable is a function of independent variables of distance and volume. Based on 99% confidence, the model proved to be valid. The mathematical model of loading time as a dependent variable is a function of independent variables of volume multiplied by numbers of logs. Based on 99% confidence, the model proved to be valid. The results show that the amount of production and costs for skidding from stump to landing are 20·9 m3/h and $5·44/m3, respectively. The amount of production and cost for loading are 61·9 m3/h and $0·61/m3, respectively. In both skidding and loading operations, delays are important parts of total operation time. Therefore, increasing delay time has a big effect on production cost and with good management, these delays could be decreased.

In the Caspian forests, most timber is extracted by different methods of ground skidding and the logging methods used are cut to length and tree length. Wheeled skidders appeared in northern Iran in the early 1970s and are now widely used. One of the most important requirements for the ground skidding operation is to have an adequate forest road network density. The results of research carried out on the efficiency of ground skidding systems in northern forests of Iran showed that skidding distance has direct and linear relationship with skidding costs (Naghdi et al. Reference Naghdi, Rafatnia, Sobhani, Jalali and Hosseini2005). The logging method is one of the important factors in determining type of roads and road network density (Lotfalian 2002). Plamondon & Favreau (Reference Plamondon and Favreau1994) stated that variables such as average production volume per hectare, road construction and repair costs and skidding costs are important factors in estimating optimum skidding distance. They evaluated four logging systems in terms of efficiency and determined the optimal skidding or forwarding distance for them by using the combined road and skidding costs model. Their findings showed that cable skidder system with road construction cost of $12 000/km had lowest total construction and skidding costs. The current study was carried out in compartment 926 of 9th district in Shafarood forest and the possible harvesting area of compartment was 58 ha. Work study techniques were used to estimate work rate and the unit costs of a volume of wood extract. Variance analysis and multi-variable regression models were used to create mathematical models of task performance time for harvesting machinery. The skidding cost model was used to estimate the skidding cost for one cubic metre of wood extracted over different skidding distances.

Mathematical equation of the skidding time as a function of effective factors

where Y=time needed for one round trip (minutes), X 1=load volume (m3), X 2=skidding distance (m), X 3=load winching distance (m) and X 4=number of logs in each trip.

The road construction costs include excavation and filling, pavement and drainage costs. The planning costs are taken as 0·10 of these costs. The cost of skidding in the ground skidding system and the road construction costs are determined for one cubic metre of wood. Using these costs, the optimum forest road network density is determined for the studied district. The results show that total work rate and skidding costs with delays are 11·43 m3/h and $7·25/m3, respectively. The road construction cost is $21 878/km, the annual road construction cost is $3535/km. After calculating road construction cost in terms of $/m3, the sum of road construction and skidding costs for different road densities are determined. Based on minimizing these two costs, the optimum forest road network density was estimated to be 7–10 m/ha. The maximum practical skidding distance is 582 m and the skid trails spacing is 140 m.

The problem addressed in the current paper is the supply chain for one of the world's largest suppliers of market pulp, Södra Cell AB. The supply chain considered starts at the supply sources or forest districts and saw mills, located in southern Sweden and then passes through production units or pulp mills and then distribution centres or terminals before ending at the customers' paper mills, located mainly in Europe. Transportation and distribution are carried out by ships, trains, lorries and barges. Decisions about production mix, terminal use and contracts are considered. The planning period is one year and different numbers of time periods are considered. A model for the entire supply chain, including both a large number of continuous variables and a set of binary variables to reflect decisions regarding which terminals to use, is presented. The model becomes large and it is necessary to be able to decompose it in order to get an acceptable solution for the entire planning period. Thus, a Lagrangian heuristic method has been developed based on Lagrangian decomposition (Näsberg Reference Näsberg, Jörnsten and Smeds1985; Guignard Reference Guignard and Kim1987). The variables concerning storage have been split and then the constraints linking together the old and new variables relaxed. The presented Lagrangian relaxation-based heuristic divides the problem into sub problems for each time period. The heuristic is based on solving the time periods in a rolling horizon, time period by time period. In addition, two variants of a simple heuristic are used in order to compare the solution to the one described. A number of cases based on real data are analysed. The proposed Lagrangian heuristic produces many solutions that can be used to initialize rolling horizon heuristics. These heuristics do, in turn, produce many high-quality solutions. In this way, the Lagrangian-based method can be viewed as an intelligent way to produce seeds for heuristics and there are many other tailor-made heuristics that can be developed using the same approach. The rate of convergence is slow in the proposed Lagrangian heuristics method. In order to improve the rate of convergence, a modified sub-gradient can be used, for example the one suggested by Crowder (Reference Crowder1976).

The software designed to support the optimal decisions in young bull fattening was composed of two modules: optimization of feeding and optimization of fattening strategy. The objective in feeding optimization was to determine the least-cost rations by means of the Linear Programming (LP) simplex algorithm. Optimization of fattening strategy, performed by Dynamic Programming (DP) value iteration, provided the user with the economically optimal sequence of daily gains (or daily gains×stage lengths) in the subsequent stages of the fattening process and the economically optimal time of replacement with a next bull-calf in cyclic fattening (Kennedy Reference Kennedy1986). The following model approaches were considered: (i) fattening to the assumed final weight, (ii) fattening with the assumed length of the planning horizon and (iii) cyclic fattening with the assumed length of the planning horizon and the replacement option.

The software was programmed in Visual Basic and the input variables and parameters were defined in Access data files. They included the feasible daily gains for the mean values in body weight class intervals, daily nutrient requirements for each combination of daily gain and mean body weight in a class interval, nutritional characteristics (IZ-INRA 2001, Board on Agriculture 2000), the availability and prices of feeds as well as the sequence of feeds to be used in the formulation of rations. Final solutions for the module of feeding optimization (characteristics of the optimal feeding rations) and the module of fattening strategy optimization along with other technical and economical results were displayed in separate output windows. The outputs can be processed in an Access database and in an Excel spreadsheet.

Independent from the kind of model approach considered, the relatively high optimal daily gains were determined at the early stages of fattening that indicates that intensive feeding of young bulls is the most efficient. Extending the assumed fattening period caused a decrease in the expected mean optimal daily gains and in economic efficiency. At higher daily costs (direct and non-direct) of fattening, the optimal daily gains usually increased, whereas the optimal slaughter weight decreased, as did the optimal length of the fattening period. The alteration of the production and economic variables considerably influenced the expected economic efficiency of fattening, but the optimal strategy was not very sensitive to the changes in the mentioned variables. It was proved that the choice of the kind of model approach should be mostly driven by technological and market considerations.

The developed software system has the potential to be successfully used for gaining insight into efficiency of young bull fattening and, consequently, to support the optimal decisions in various beef production conditions.

In response to constant changes in agricultural context, there is a need for adapting agricultural management frequently. Optimization by simulation of agricultural practices can help reach such a goal. Although many papers refer to simulation models of agricultural practices, only few deal with the issue of uncertainty in operation management problems (Bergez et al. 2001). The present paper builds on these few attempts and the problem of simulation-based optimization for generating suitable irrigation strategies is studied.

A new method dedicated to global optimization of continuous input parameters is presented. The approach is validated on an irrigation management problem that has to take into account climate factors and uncertainty attached to them.

The method is based on a stochastic simulation optimization algorithm using branching techniques (Andradóttir Reference Andradóttir, Medeiros, Watson, Carson and Manivannan1998; Fu et al. Reference Fu, Glover, April, Kuhl, Steiger, Armstrong and Joines2005). The procedure consists in a hierarchical decomposition of the parameter space by iteration of three main steps: (i) selection of a promising region, (ii) division of the selected promising region and (iii) simulation and evaluation of the resulting regions. The process is repeated until some stopping criteria are reached, thereby identifying an optimal solution (Bergez et al. Reference Bergez, Garcia and Lapasse2004).

The simulation step is performed using dynamic models of corn crop and irrigation management process. Irrigation strategies defined as decision rules including variables as temperatures, soil water deficits or irrigation amounts are optimized.

The optimization process is guided by maximization of either an expected value or a quantile of the net margin. The net margin is a weighted sum of yield, water irrigation amount and number of irrigation rounds. The quantile qα of an irrigation strategy θ is the value such that the probability to achieve the net margin J (θ)⩾qα is 1−α. The quantile is used to select interesting sub-regions.

Different options to divide and select the promising region are compared. Comparison is performed with irrigation management process having eight continuous parameters.

Expected value optimization enabled the determination of the most decisive input parameters with respect to the net margin. According to an algorithmic point of view, greedy selection techniques are a good trade-off between speed and efficiency for maximizing the net margin. The way a region is divided has significant impact on the efficiency of the algorithm. For instance dividing a region into two equal parts is interesting if time is limited, but other techniques will be more efficient if time is unlimited.

Quantile optimization showed different results providing alternative management strategies that improve quality of low and high occurrences of direct margins.

This work is a new and efficient approach to design irrigation strategies that can cope with the changing economical and environmental context of agriculture.

Rational game management is a long-term process, and its effects are only visible after many years. In Poland, the management of game has been entrusted to the Polish Hunting Association (PHA). One of the tasks of a hunting district committee is planning the size and structure of shoots in order to keep or change the game numbers in the area of management and/or improve its individual quality.

Population numbers over time are determined by many factors, the influence of which depends on region, intensity and year etc., so the determination of the optimal number of animals designated to be shot, is a very difficult task.

A dynamic model of management of the roe deer (Capreolus capreolus L.) subpopulation, which lives in West Poland, was constructed on the basis of the data collected by workers at the research station of PHA in Czempiń over 30 years.

The model enables: (1) the prediction of changes in the number of roe deer depending on different values of initial decision variables, (2) planning of the long-term strategy of harvesting in order to get the determined number and population structures, (3) verification of the plan of shooting in the case of some random factors affecting the population.

It consists of 34 modules connected to each other, which characterize such factors as age and sexual structure in the subpopulation as well as the number of fawns born and the mortality of adult and young individuals, caused mainly by: collisions with mechanical vehicles, poaching, predation by foxes and wandering dogs, mechanical crop gathering and difficult climatic conditions during the winters.

The model was constructed in several stages: (1) the choice of elements characterizing the system, (2) estimation of the parameters which describe it, (3) running many courses of the model with different initial parametric values, (4) comparison of the results from the model with the source data.

The computation in the model was done using Euler's algorithm. The following equation was used to describe the state of the system in every time step:

where N is state of subpopulation in the time ‘t’, a – an input variable, b – an output variable, dt – value of the time differential (Matwiejew Reference Matwiejew1986).

The time unit in the calculations was one year, because the plans and activities to do with game management were set up and executed annually (value of dt=1).

One of the practical conclusions from the results obtained in the model is a statement that the current Polish rules of roe deer shooting at about 0·20 of individuals (counted during spring inventory), at the present intensity of the other factors which contribute to decrease in the roe deer population is too high, and most likely would result in a steady decrease in the number of these animals.

Most of the literature related to the production process of fruit export presents optimization methods developed and applied to the improvement of activities done within packing, paying little attention to the activities carried out by the fruit growers in the orchards. The present work seeks to improve the efficiency of the harvest activities carried out in an apple orchard located in the region of Maule, Chile, through the application of p-median models.

In general, the p-median problem can be defined as ‘find the location of a fixed number of p facilities so as to minimize the weighted average distance of the system’ (Marianov & Serra Reference Marianov, Serra, Drezner and Hamacher2002).

In the analysed apple orchard, large worker displacements caused by an insufficient number of bins (containers that hold 350 kilograms, approximately) and their inefficient distribution were observed. The location of the bins was done according to the experience of those workers involved in the harvesting process. Therefore, the p-median model was applied to evaluate if such locations were optimal; when they were found to be sub-optimal, new location points were proposed.

For p-median problem formulation, p bins (potential facilities) were considered to be located in the orchard, aiming to minimize the sum of distances or the sum of time incurred by a harvester when moving from each tree to the closest bin.

Depending on the number of apple trees ready to be harvested, a different number of bins (p facilities) required locating and, therefore, several p-median models were formulated and solved. From the obtained solutions, diverse layouts were constructed.

The new layouts allowed a reduction of 10% in the average harvest time, of 15% in the average distance travelled by the harvesters and an increase of 11% in the amount harvested per (day/harvester/orchard).

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