“…The SAW method was used in a comparison of coal power plants with nuclear power plants with a result stating that the coal power plants with carbon capture and storage are slightly more efficient than nuclear power plants [ 52 ]. The SAW method was used in a study of the impact of anthropogenic risks on protected areas [ 53 ], in the selection of obtaining methods for small building works [ 54 ], in risk assessment and evaluation of pollution by metals in a copper sulfide mine in Iran [ 55 ], in the prioritization of criteria and indicators for the evaluation of environmental, economic, and social factors in the sustainability of national parks [ 56 ], in evaluation of ecological and human-related parameters affecting industrial zoning [ 57 ], and in the assessment of risk management capability based on accepted risk allocation principles, which were derived from qualitative data and expert knowledge [ 58 ]. Multi-criteria decision-making methods—an order preference by similarity to ideal solution – Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS) and SAW methods—were applied for the identification, customization, weighting, prioritization of criteria, and indicators of evaluation for the determination of potential of environmental, economic, and social services [ 56 ].…”