Sign in to use this feature.

Years

Between: -

Subjects

remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline

Journals

remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline

Article Types

Countries / Regions

remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline

Search Results (6,485)

Search Parameters:
Keywords = European union

Order results
Result details
Results per page
Select all
Export citation of selected articles as:
29 pages, 594 KB  
Article
Dimensions of Digitalization and SME Intra-EU Export Performance: Panel Evidence from the CEE-8 Economies
by Ismail Yusubov and Arnold Csonka
Economies 2026, 14(5), 147; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies14050147 - 22 Apr 2026
Abstract
As the foreign direct investment (FDI)-driven catch-up model of eight Central and Eastern European (CEE-8) economies approaches its limits, strengthening the export capacity of small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) may play an important role in sustaining economic convergence within the European Union (EU). [...] Read more.
As the foreign direct investment (FDI)-driven catch-up model of eight Central and Eastern European (CEE-8) economies approaches its limits, strengthening the export capacity of small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) may play an important role in sustaining economic convergence within the European Union (EU). Despite deep integration into EU production networks, domestic SME participation in international trade remains limited. In this context, digitalization is increasingly seen as a factor that may reduce information, coordination, and administrative barriers associated with SME cross-border trade. This study examines how different dimensions of digitalization relate to intra-EU export performance of SMEs in the CEE-8, conceptualizing digitalization across three distinct but interacting layers: firm-level digital adoption, societal digital usage, and the institutional digital environment. Using a balanced panel dataset covering 2018–2023, the analysis employs a one-way fixed-effects estimator with wild cluster bootstrap inference to address the small-cluster setting. Results indicate that societal digital usage and digital public services for businesses are strongly and positively associated with SME intra-EU export performance. Firm-level digitalization shows a more complex pattern: internal digital tools display delayed positive associations after a maturation period, while e-commerce participation is consistently negatively associated with aggregate export volumes. Robustness checks using Driscoll-Kraay standard errors and alternative functional forms confirm the stability of the core findings. The results suggest that strengthening digital foundations and reducing cross-border digital frictions can support more effective CEE-8 SME participation in the EU Single Market. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic Development)
Show Figures

Graphical abstract

35 pages, 1114 KB  
Review
Insect Frass as a Fertilizing Product: Composition, Agronomic Performance, Environmental Risks, and Regulatory Context
by Georgia Sarikaki, Matthaios Panou, Christina Miskaki, Ifigeneia Grigoriadou, Georgia Dimitropoulou, Ioanna Dalla, Vasiliki Tsioni and Themistoklis Sfetsas
Environments 2026, 13(5), 233; https://doi.org/10.3390/environments13050233 - 22 Apr 2026
Abstract
Insect farming generates frass as a co-product alongside insect biomass, creating interest in its valorization within circular bioeconomy strategies and in its use as a fertilizer, soil improver, or plant biostimulant. This review adopts a claim-led framework linking product classification, composition, post-treatment, microbiological [...] Read more.
Insect farming generates frass as a co-product alongside insect biomass, creating interest in its valorization within circular bioeconomy strategies and in its use as a fertilizer, soil improver, or plant biostimulant. This review adopts a claim-led framework linking product classification, composition, post-treatment, microbiological safety, environmental risks, and the evidence required to support specific agronomic claims, with particular emphasis on the EU regulatory context. Evidence from incubation, pot, greenhouse, and field studies, together with regulatory and technical sources, show that frass is a heterogeneous material whose performance depends on insect species, rearing substrate, product fraction, soil conditions, application rate, and processing history. Its relevance is increasing, particularly in regions where insect farming is expanding under established regulatory and industrial frameworks, including the European Union, North America, and parts of Asia. Across the reviewed evidence, the most scientifically and regulatorily defensible current positioning of frass is as a product-specific fertilizer or soil improver, whereas broader biostimulant or plant-protection claims require stronger product-level evidence. The review further concludes that safe and credible deployment depends on transparent characterization, appropriate hygienization and storage, contaminant screening where relevant, and claim-specific alignment with the applicable regulatory route. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

22 pages, 1178 KB  
Review
The Route of Biogenic Amines in Alcoholic Beverages: A Focus on Wine
by Luigi Esposito, Andrea Piva, Dino Mastrocola and Maria Martuscelli
Foods 2026, 15(9), 1457; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods15091457 - 22 Apr 2026
Abstract
Biogenic amines (BAs) are important qualitative indicators of quality, as they are produced by specific microbial strains and can therefore reflect the activity of specific spoilage organisms (SSOs). Their presence in food, including wine, provides valuable information on processing conditions, hygiene practices and [...] Read more.
Biogenic amines (BAs) are important qualitative indicators of quality, as they are produced by specific microbial strains and can therefore reflect the activity of specific spoilage organisms (SSOs). Their presence in food, including wine, provides valuable information on processing conditions, hygiene practices and storage management throughout the production chain. In wine, the accumulation of BAs—particularly histamine, tyramine and putrescine—is mainly associated with microbial activity during fermentation, especially malolactic fermentation, and may pose potential risks to consumer health. Despite the recognized toxicological relevance of BAs, current European Union (EU) regulations only establish limits for histamine in certain fish products, with no specific legal thresholds defined for wine. However, growing evidence on the interactions and adverse effects of BAs highlights the need to better address their occurrence in wine and to improve consumer awareness regarding safety and quality aspects. In addition to safety concerns, the implementation of good hygiene and manufacturing practices across the entire production process plays a crucial role in controlling BA levels in the final product. These factors, together with the intrinsic characteristics of wine, may influence consumer perception and choice, integrating aspects of health, production methods and product quality. Recent findings suggest a shift in perspective, where BAs are not only considered risk markers but also useful indicators for assessing wine quality and enhancing consumer safety. Full article
Show Figures

Graphical abstract

2511 KB  
Proceeding Paper
Conceptual Study of 80-Pax Fuel Cell-Driven Aircraft for Sustainable Aviation
by Diego Giuseppe Romano, Etienne Guillame Behar, Riccardo Premuni, Mattia Barbarino, Gianpiero Buzzo and Giovanni Fasulo
Eng. Proc. 2026, 133(1), 31; https://doi.org/10.3390/engproc2026133031 - 21 Apr 2026
Abstract
The growing need to reduce aviation’s carbon footprint and reliance on fossil fuels has prompted the exploration of alternative propulsion technologies. Fuel cell (FC) systems offer a sustainable solution, generating only water vapor as a by-product. This paper presents a conceptual study, focusing [...] Read more.
The growing need to reduce aviation’s carbon footprint and reliance on fossil fuels has prompted the exploration of alternative propulsion technologies. Fuel cell (FC) systems offer a sustainable solution, generating only water vapor as a by-product. This paper presents a conceptual study, focusing on subsystem integration and safety aspects, for an 80-passenger, hydrogen-powered aircraft developed within the European Union (EU) co-funded NEWBORN (NExt generation high poWer fuel cells for airBORNe applications) Project. The designed configuration incorporates wing-mounted pods housing fuel cells, an electric motor, an inverter, a Thermal Management System (TMS), and Balance of Performance (BoP). This configuration is an effort towards environmentally friendly solutions, addressing climate change and paving the way towards greener aviation. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

30 pages, 1277 KB  
Review
Global Regulatory Mandates as Drivers for Advanced Chemical Analysis in Food Safety
by Lin Guo, Xiaoxiao Dong, Heng Zhou, Zilong Liu and Xingchuang Xiong
Foods 2026, 15(8), 1454; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods15081454 - 21 Apr 2026
Abstract
The globalization of the food supply chain presents complex challenges for safety assurance within a highly fragmented regulatory landscape. This review synthesizes the frameworks of eight influential jurisdictions—including the European Union (EU), the United States, China, and Codex Alimentarius—to evaluate how legal mandates [...] Read more.
The globalization of the food supply chain presents complex challenges for safety assurance within a highly fragmented regulatory landscape. This review synthesizes the frameworks of eight influential jurisdictions—including the European Union (EU), the United States, China, and Codex Alimentarius—to evaluate how legal mandates function as regulatory drivers that guide the evolution of analytical chemistry. By examining legislation on Maximum Residue Limits (MRLs), positive list systems, and method validation guidelines (e.g., SANTE), we demonstrate that strict preventive controls have established chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC/GC-MS/MS) as the universal standard for multi-residue screening. We show that global regulatory fragmentation is not merely an administrative artifact, but is rooted in divergent toxicological philosophies and localized dietary exposure models. This regulatory heterogeneity requires analytical laboratories to adopt a posture of “defensive technological redundancy,” forcing them to continuously optimize targeted methods against the strictest global default limits (e.g., 0.01 mg/kg). We establish that this continuous methodological escalation for ultra-trace quantification has reached practical and operational limits. Consequently, we conclude that the future of food safety testing must transition from static target-list compliance toward adaptable, non-targeted chemical profiling using High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry (HRMS), enabling laboratories to proactively address emerging contaminants, food fraud, and the complexities of modern food matrices. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Food Analytical Methods)
Show Figures

Figure 1

23 pages, 2801 KB  
Article
Life Cycle Assessment of Zero-Emission Magneto-Rheological Brake with Promising Environmental Performance Compared to Conventional Disc Brake
by Flavio Calvi, Antonella Accardo, Henrique de Carvalho Pinheiro, Giovanni Imberti, Ezio Spessa and Massimiliana Carello
World Electr. Veh. J. 2026, 17(4), 220; https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj17040220 - 21 Apr 2026
Abstract
The European Union is currently focused on reducing non-exhaust emissions (NEE), a growing source of particulate matter (PM) pollution from road transport. This study presents the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) of an innovative zero-emission magneto-rheological braking system specifically designed to meet new brake [...] Read more.
The European Union is currently focused on reducing non-exhaust emissions (NEE), a growing source of particulate matter (PM) pollution from road transport. This study presents the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) of an innovative zero-emission magneto-rheological braking system specifically designed to meet new brake emission targets. Prototyped for A-segment passenger cars, the system uses magnetorheological fluids that modify their rheological properties when subjected to an external magnetic field. The environmental impacts of this innovative system are compared with those of a conventional disc brake, considering 16 environmental indicators across all life stages: raw material extraction, manufacturing, use, and end-of-life. In fact, although the system eliminates PM emissions during operation, it is crucial to assess whether it remains advantageous in terms of overall environmental impacts when the full life cycle is considered. As a prototype, this study also aims to inform design improvements that minimize environmental burdens. Results show that the innovative braking system performs better, particularly during the use and maintenance phases. Moreover, several eco-design strategies have been identified to reduce impacts related to materials and production. Overall, the magneto-rheological system demonstrates strong potential to meet future emission standards while improving the sustainability of vehicle braking technology. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy Supply and Sustainability)
Show Figures

Figure 1

35 pages, 1381 KB  
Article
Formality Requirements in the Era of Smart Contracts: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Emerging Challenges
by Nabeel Mahdi Althabhawi, Ra’ed Fawzi Aburoub, Rizal Rahman, Faris Kamil Hasan Mihna and Hazim Akram Sallal
Information 2026, 17(4), 393; https://doi.org/10.3390/info17040393 - 21 Apr 2026
Abstract
Smart contracts raise persistent challenges regarding compliance with traditional contract formalities, including writing, signature, notarization, and in certain transactions, registration. These issues are particularly significant in high-value and public-facing transactions such as real estate, where formalities determine legal validity, evidentiary sufficiency and publicity [...] Read more.
Smart contracts raise persistent challenges regarding compliance with traditional contract formalities, including writing, signature, notarization, and in certain transactions, registration. These issues are particularly significant in high-value and public-facing transactions such as real estate, where formalities determine legal validity, evidentiary sufficiency and publicity effects. While existing scholarly work has examined these challenges from either doctrinal or technological perspectives, limited attention has been given to how the functional roles of formalities interact with blockchain architecture, practitioner perceptions and institutional legal frameworks. This study addresses this gap through a mixed-methods approach combining doctrinal legal analysis with qualitative socio-legal research based on 27 semi-structured interviews with legal professionals including attorneys, judges, and academic scholars. The analysis is grounded in a civil law framework, with particular reference to the Jordanian legal system, while references to the European Union’s eIDAS Regulation are used illustratively to demonstrate regulatory approaches to digital authentication. The findings demonstrate that blockchain-based systems can effectively support the evidentiary and attribution functions of contractual formalities through cryptographic verification, consensus mechanisms, and automated execution. However, they do not independently satisfy formalities that perform cautionary, constitutive, protective or public order function, namely notarization and registration, which remain dependent on institutional validation and legal recognition. The analysis further shows that practitioner concerns reflect not only doctrinal constraints but also institutional roles and varying levels of technical familiarity. To address these limitations, the study proposes a function-based analytical framework for evaluating smart contract formalities and identifies two complementary pathways for legal adaptation: (i) institutional integration, including registry-linkage systems and hybrid contracts; and (ii) technological adaptation, including digital authentication frameworks and legal oracles that connect on-chain execution to off-chain legal conditions. The study concludes that smart contract formalities’ challenges arise not solely from technological limitations, but from the interaction between legal doctrine, institutional structures, and system design. It advances a functional framework for aligning automation with the evidentiary, protective, and publicity functions of contractual formalities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Smart Contract and Blockchain Analysis)
Show Figures

Figure 1

31 pages, 3347 KB  
Review
Second Life of Soot and Black Carbon: From Environmental Pollutant to Resource—A Review
by Edyta Waluś, Dawid Kozień and Marzena Smol
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 4099; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18084099 - 20 Apr 2026
Abstract
Soot and black carbon (BC) are typically regarded as troublesome products of incomplete combustion; however, growing interest in circular economy strategies and sustainable manufacturing highlights their potential as secondary functional carbon materials, including additive manufacturing (AM). This review synthesises the recovery, upgrading, and [...] Read more.
Soot and black carbon (BC) are typically regarded as troublesome products of incomplete combustion; however, growing interest in circular economy strategies and sustainable manufacturing highlights their potential as secondary functional carbon materials, including additive manufacturing (AM). This review synthesises the recovery, upgrading, and valorization pathways for soot/BC and recovered carbon black (rCB), with a particular focus on streams captured by mandatory emission-control systems (e.g., diesel/gasoline particulate filters, electrostatic precipitators, baghouse filters, and chimney soot) and the requirements for transforming these heterogeneous residues into reproducible AM feedstocks. A two-stage approach was applied, combining (i) an analysis of the European Union regulatory context (waste classification, end-of-waste routes, and chemical safety obligations, including REACH) with (ii) a structured literature review of studies published in 2017–2026 indexed in the Web of Science and Scopus, culminating in a qualitative synthesis of 152 papers. Evidence indicates that scale-up is primarily constrained by strong compositional variability and contaminant burdens (ash, metals, and PAHs), which affect dispersion, rheology, and property reproducibility, necessitating robust standardisation and risk assessment. This review maps key preparation and upgrading strategies (e.g., classification, ash/metal reduction, and control of organic fractions) and discusses their relevance across AM routes such as FDM/FFF, SLS, DLP, and DIW. Overall, realising credible waste-to-value pathways requires aligning technical performance targets with regulatory compliance and developing consistent characterisation protocols to enable the safe and predictable use of soot/rCB-derived fillers in AM. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

23 pages, 1321 KB  
Article
Potential Public Health and Economic Impact of the Next-Generation COVID-19 Vaccine mRNA-1283 in The Netherlands
by Simon van der Pol, Ekkehard Beck, Tjalke Westra, Maarten Postma and Cornelis Boersma
Vaccines 2026, 14(4), 364; https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines14040364 - 20 Apr 2026
Abstract
Background: COVID-19 remains a substantial public health challenge in the Netherlands. Next-generation COVID-19 vaccine, mRNA-1283, is approved in the European Union, with potential for higher relative vaccine efficacy compared with originally licensed COVID-19 vaccines. Methods: The potential public health and economic impact of [...] Read more.
Background: COVID-19 remains a substantial public health challenge in the Netherlands. Next-generation COVID-19 vaccine, mRNA-1283, is approved in the European Union, with potential for higher relative vaccine efficacy compared with originally licensed COVID-19 vaccines. Methods: The potential public health and economic impact of mRNA-1283 in adults ≥ 60 years and high-risk adults aged 18–59 years was modeled versus no vaccination and originally licensed mRNA-1273 and BNT162b2, adapting a published static Markov model with a 1-year time horizon. COVID-19 burden reflected two full post-pandemic seasons. Vaccine efficacy versus mRNA-1273 was based on pivotal phase 3 NextCOVE trial data; efficacy versus BNT162b2 was derived from an indirect treatment comparison. The economically justifiable price (EJP) of mRNA-1283 versus no vaccination and price premiums over existing vaccines were determined at a willingness-to-pay threshold of €50,000/quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained. Results: Without COVID-19 vaccination, an estimated 460,000 infections, 23,800 hospitalizations, and 5300 deaths would occur. With current coverage, mRNA-1283 was estimated to prevent 68,000 infections, 5400 hospitalizations, and 1200 deaths, saving 9667 QALYs and over €66.5 million in treatment costs. The EJP was €238 versus no vaccination. Compared with mRNA-1273 and BNT162b2, mRNA-1283 was estimated to prevent additional burden (e.g., 1309 and 1679 hospitalizations, respectively) and was cost-effective at an incremental EJP of €62 versus mRNA-1273 and €80 versus BNT162b2. Conclusions: The results support continued COVID-19 vaccination to mitigate the ongoing health and societal burden of SARS-CoV-2 in the Netherlands. The comparative analyses indicate that mRNA-1283 may be associated with substantial health benefits over originally licensed mRNA vaccines; consequently, its use may further improve health outcomes and economic efficiency within COVID-19 vaccination programs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section COVID-19 Vaccines and Vaccination)
Show Figures

Figure 1

25 pages, 568 KB  
Article
Sustainability Under Pressure: Evaluating the Effect of Short-Term Inhibition of EU CBAM on the ESG-Based Environmental Performance of China’s High-Carbon Industries
by Shengwen Zhu, Yicen Lu, Xiyu Zhou and Luhan Zhang
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 4067; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18084067 - 20 Apr 2026
Viewed by 130
Abstract
The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), the world’s first system to impose tariffs on the carbon emissions of imported products, commenced its transition period in October 2023 and is scheduled for full implementation in January 2026. This mechanism exerts a profound [...] Read more.
The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), the world’s first system to impose tariffs on the carbon emissions of imported products, commenced its transition period in October 2023 and is scheduled for full implementation in January 2026. This mechanism exerts a profound impact on the global trade landscape and corporate environmental management practices. Taking the CSI All Share Index constituent companies as a research sample, this paper empirically evaluates the impact of the CBAM transition period on the environmental scores of Chinese export enterprises utilizing the Propensity Score Matching Difference-in-Differences (PSM-DID) method. The results indicate that the CBAM transition period significantly inhibits the short-term environmental performance of regulated enterprises. Mechanism analysis reveals that increased financing constraints serve as a core mediating channel, wherein escalated compliance costs and compressed cash flows crowd out resources for low-carbon investments. Furthermore, heterogeneity analysis demonstrates that the negative impact is more pronounced among state-owned enterprises, firms with lower audit quality, and firms with a higher proportion of female executives. Accordingly, the study recommends establishing targeted green transition financing mechanisms, accelerating domestic carbon market reforms, and strengthening international technical harmonization to build corporate resilience against global climate governance shocks and promote sustainable growth. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

34 pages, 2425 KB  
Article
Economic and Institutional Convergence in Europe (2004–2023): EU Core, New Members, and the Western Balkans
by Goran Lalić and Dragana Trifunović
Economies 2026, 14(4), 142; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies14040142 - 19 Apr 2026
Viewed by 183
Abstract
This paper examines economic and institutional convergence between EU Core, EU New, and Western Balkan countries over the period 2004–2023 using a comprehensive panel dataset and multiple convergence frameworks. Evidence of absolute β-convergence is found, although at a slow pace, while conditional specifications [...] Read more.
This paper examines economic and institutional convergence between EU Core, EU New, and Western Balkan countries over the period 2004–2023 using a comprehensive panel dataset and multiple convergence frameworks. Evidence of absolute β-convergence is found, although at a slow pace, while conditional specifications show that structural and institutional factors explain growth differences; institutional quality appears to affect growth primarily through direct effects rather than through significant interaction-based β-convergence. A Principal Component Analysis-based Institutional Index (PC1) explains 90% of the variance in institutional quality, highlighting its role in shaping cross-country growth differentials rather than directly influencing convergence speed. Group-specific models reveal heterogeneous convergence paths across European regions. EU Core economies exhibit relatively stable convergence patterns, reflecting their proximity to steady-state income levels. In contrast, EU New and Cohesion Economies do not display statistically significant β-convergence, suggesting that catch-up processes are uneven and not uniformly driven by initial income differences. Western Balkan economies show weak and limited convergence patterns, reflecting persistent structural and institutional constraints. Robustness tests (FE/RE, Hausman, VIF, Breusch–Pagan, residual diagnostics) confirm the validity of the results. Findings suggest an important role of institutional quality in supporting long-term growth and the accession process of the Western Balkans. Policy implications highlight the importance of governance reforms, human capital development, and EU integration mechanisms in accelerating convergence. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic Development)
Show Figures

Figure 1

36 pages, 1257 KB  
Article
Artificial Intelligence in European Union Tax Administrations: A Comparative Assessment
by Angel Angelov
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2026, 19(4), 295; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm19040295 - 19 Apr 2026
Viewed by 257
Abstract
The study aims to examine trends in the integration of artificial intelligence within the operational processes of tax administrations across the Member States of the European Union. It explores both the functional domains in which AI can be deployed and the institutional, ethical, [...] Read more.
The study aims to examine trends in the integration of artificial intelligence within the operational processes of tax administrations across the Member States of the European Union. It explores both the functional domains in which AI can be deployed and the institutional, ethical, regulatory and technological constraints that shape its deeper integration. The analysis relies on publicly available data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), complemented by information from other open sources. Based on this dataset, the study develops a Tax AI Index (TAI) to provide a comparative quantitative assessment of the extent to which AI systems have been operationally integrated into EU tax administrations. The index is constructed from four subindices capturing (1) the use of artificial intelligence in communication between tax administrations and economic agents (TAIIS); (2) the integration of artificial intelligence in data management systems (TAIDS); (3) the application of algorithmic systems in tax enforcement, compliance control and administrative decisions (TAIRES); and (4) mechanisms for accountability, transparency and ethical oversight in the use of artificial intelligence (TAIGS). The empirical results indicate significant heterogeneity in the levels of digital transformation among the EU-27 Member States. In most countries, the adoption of artificial intelligence remains at an experimental or pilot stage, suggesting that its broader operational application is still evolving. To place these findings in a broader context, the analysis is complemented by an external measure of digital government development, allowing for a comparative assessment between AI adoption in tax administrations and overall public sector digital maturity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainability and Finance)
Show Figures

Figure 1

44 pages, 2921 KB  
Review
Sustainability of the European Energy System: The Evolution of the Energy Transition, Renewable Energy, and Energy Conservation
by Eugen Iavorschi, Laurențiu Dan Milici, Ioan Taran and Zvika Israeli
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 4046; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18084046 - 19 Apr 2026
Viewed by 97
Abstract
Energy efficiency improvement represents a central strategic objective of the European Union (EU), essential for mitigating climate change and facilitating the transition toward a sustainable energy system. In 2023, renewable energy sources generated approximately 46% of the electricity produced in the EU, becoming [...] Read more.
Energy efficiency improvement represents a central strategic objective of the European Union (EU), essential for mitigating climate change and facilitating the transition toward a sustainable energy system. In 2023, renewable energy sources generated approximately 46% of the electricity produced in the EU, becoming the dominant component of the regional energy mix. This progress has been supported by coherent public policies, dedicated investment programs, and regulatory mechanisms aimed at accelerating the adoption of sustainable technologies. However, the existing literature highlights a research gap regarding the relationship between the dynamics of the European energy transition, the operational challenges generated by the rapid increase in the share of renewable energy sources, and the potential for energy savings in the residential sector through non-technological interventions. This paper analyzes the structural transformations of the European energy mix, the limitations of energy systems in the context of accelerated renewable energy integration, and the role of behavioral interventions in supporting the stability of the energy system. The study examines the dynamics of residential energy consumption, behavioral determinants of energy use, and the effectiveness of instruments such as information campaigns, real-time feedback, dynamic pricing, and demand response programs. The results indicate that these interventions can reduce peak loads, increase consumption flexibility, and alleviate pressure on energy networks under conditions of variable renewable energy generation. The integration of energy storage systems and the implementation of low-cost behavioral measures can act as complementary instruments for maintaining the dynamic stability of the energy system and for achieving the EU’s sustainability and climate neutrality objectives. Full article
17 pages, 1496 KB  
Article
Risk of Exposure to Mineral and Asbestos Fibres at a Municipal Solid Waste Landfill: Findings from Systematic Monitoring
by Markéta Škrabalová, Dana Adamcová and Vladimír Král
Environments 2026, 13(4), 223; https://doi.org/10.3390/environments13040223 - 18 Apr 2026
Viewed by 97
Abstract
Municipal solid waste (MSW) landfills are seldom regarded as potential sources of airborne mineral fibres, notwithstanding the possible presence of legacy asbestos-containing materials within mixed waste streams. Prolonged exposure to asbestos fibres is well established as causally associated with severe adverse health outcomes, [...] Read more.
Municipal solid waste (MSW) landfills are seldom regarded as potential sources of airborne mineral fibres, notwithstanding the possible presence of legacy asbestos-containing materials within mixed waste streams. Prolonged exposure to asbestos fibres is well established as causally associated with severe adverse health outcomes, prompting stringent regulatory measures across the European Union, most recently reinforced by Directive (EU) 2023/2668 amending Directive 2009/148/EC on the protection of workers from the risks related to asbestos exposure. This study presents systematic annual monitoring of airborne mineral fibres (MinFib), including asbestos fibres (AsbFib), conducted between 2019 and 2025 at an MSW landfill in the Czech Republic. Personal air sampling targeted heavy equipment operators as the most exposed occupational group and was conducted in accordance with established occupational hygiene principles. Fibre identification and quantification were carried out using Scanning Electron Microscopy coupled with Energy-Dispersive X-ray analysis (SEM/EDX) according to accredited laboratory internal standard operating procedures (SOPs). Across all monitoring campaigns, asbestos fibre concentrations remained below the analytical detection limits, including during handling of asbestos-containing materials. However, the analytical sensitivity appears to be within the range relevant to the current EU occupational exposure limit (0.01 fibres/cm3), potentially limiting the ability to identify very low-level exposures. These findings indicate that occupational exposure under routine operational conditions was below analytical detection limits, suggesting a low exposure potential. However, non-detectable results should be interpreted as method-limited rather than as indicating that exposure did not occur. Continued monitoring using more sensitive analytical approaches is therefore warranted. Full article
26 pages, 1687 KB  
Systematic Review
Stakeholders in Tax Literacy and Tax Education in the European Union: Schools, Communities, and Public Institutions in Relation to Tax Morale and Voluntary Tax Compliance—A Systematic Review
by Narcis Eduard Mitu, George Teodor Mitu and Mihaela Zglavoci
Soc. Sci. 2026, 15(4), 256; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15040256 - 17 Apr 2026
Viewed by 304
Abstract
The European Union (EU) relies heavily on voluntary tax compliance, yet evidence on how tax literacy (TL) and tax education (TE) relate to tax morale (TM) and voluntary tax compliance or compliance intentions (VTC) remains fragmented across partly disconnected strands of the literature. [...] Read more.
The European Union (EU) relies heavily on voluntary tax compliance, yet evidence on how tax literacy (TL) and tax education (TE) relate to tax morale (TM) and voluntary tax compliance or compliance intentions (VTC) remains fragmented across partly disconnected strands of the literature. This systematic review examined EU-relevant evidence on the stakeholder contexts in which TL/TE are discussed in relation to TM and VTC, with particular attention to schools, communities, and public institutions. Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) 2020, searches in Scopus and Web of Science (2000–2025) applied two complementary query streams focused on TL/TE and TM/VTC-related mechanisms. The searches identified 1327 records; after deduplication and screening, 402 studies were included. Based on structured coding of titles, abstracts, and author keywords, the review maps patterns of emphasis and framing rather than causal effects. Public-institutional and education-related contexts were the most frequently signposted stakeholder environments, while digital and outreach-oriented delivery cues were more visible than classroom-based cues. Trust and fairness/justice dominated the explanatory vocabulary. Overall, the review supports an ecosystem-oriented interpretation of stakeholder coordination in EU tax literacy research. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

Back to TopTop