Assessment of urban built-up land green use efficiency and its
influencing mechanism in the Central Plains Urban Agglomeration
Abstract
Accurately evaluating urban built-up land green use efficiency is highly
important for the full use of land resources and high-quality
development. On the basis of statistical data from 2003–2020, this
study explores the dynamic characteristics of urban built-up land green
use efficiency dynamics in the Central Plains Urban Agglomeration (CPUA)
by applying the super-slack-based data envelopment analysis
(super-SBM–DEA) model and determines the influencing mechanism of urban
built-up land green use efficiency via a panel regression model. The
empirical results indicate the following: the average urban built-up
land green use efficiency in the cities of the urban agglomeration
presents a significant fluctuating trend, first increasing and then
decreasing from 2003–2020. The urban built-up land green use efficiency
of the CPUA is characterized by spatial imbalance. Over the studied
period, urban built-up land green use efficiency has strong economic
attributes and is positively promoted by economic development. In
contrast, the industrial structure, environmental regulation intensity
and energy consumption intensity significantly hinder urban built-up
land green use efficiency. Energy consumption intensity has the
strongest negative effect on urban built-up land green use efficiency.
Finally, several policy recommendations are proposed for promoting urban
built-up land green use efficiency on the basis of the conclusions
obtained.