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Effectiveness

Effectiveness is one of thepartial objectives when we look for the suitability of any option to find the optimal option. It explains in which extent the effect of any option fulfils the demands that are given by the corresponding sub-objective. For example, when we want to fell and extract trees from any harvesting site, the effectiveness is 100 % if we can extract all trees. If not, it will be worst.

Effectiveness in the decision-making model for forest harvesting operations appears under three different contexts:

·       The economic effectiveness asks whether the operation fulfils the economic demands. Like in the example above, the effectiveness describes whether everything that we want to reach will be reached. So, economic effectiveness means functionality, technical coverage

·       The ecological effectiveness deals with the ecological risks and side-effects of the operations. The drift is towards the optimal solution without any risks or side-effects. We call it ecological compatibility.

·       Also the social effectiveness deals with risks and site-effects, but in this case they are measured against the societal needs. Here we see the disturbance of people who want to recreate in the forest, who look for cultural demands and so on. We call it societal compatibility.

(See more under TDiv PR1-A03)


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