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26 pages, 4419 KB  
Article
Regulatory Gap in Fenestration Thermal Performance: Integrating Linear Thermal Transmittance into Energy Codes
by Muhammad Tayyab Naqash and Antonio Formisano
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6111; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126111 (registering DOI) - 14 Jun 2026
Abstract
Fenestration systems play a critical role in building thermal performance, particularly in cooling-dominated climates where envelope inefficiencies directly amplify electricity demand. In Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, cooling accounts for the majority of building energy consumption. Nevertheless, the facade [...] Read more.
Fenestration systems play a critical role in building thermal performance, particularly in cooling-dominated climates where envelope inefficiencies directly amplify electricity demand. In Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, cooling accounts for the majority of building energy consumption. Nevertheless, the facade and insulated glass industries are experiencing rapid market expansion. Despite this technological evolution, prevailing regulatory frameworks, including the Saudi Building Code Energy Conservation Requirements (SBC 601), ASHRAE 90.1, and the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC), primarily rely on area-weighted U-values and solar heat gain coefficients (SHGCs) without explicitly integrating multidimensional thermal bridge effects such as linear thermal transmittance (ψ). This paper examines the omission of ψ from current energy compliance systems, evaluates its implications in cooling-dominated climates, and proposes a phased regulatory integration pathway aligned with sustainability objectives under Vision 2030. Literature reports indicate that thermal bridges may increase cooling loads by up to 25% and total building energy use by 5–30%, depending on climate severity and façade configuration. The findings highlight the need to transition from simplified prescriptive compliance toward a physics-informed governance capable of addressing evolving facade complexity in hot-arid environments. The proposed framework offers a systematic pathway for integrating linear thermal transmittance requirements while supporting regional sustainability goals and advancing high-performance building technologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Engineering and Science)
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27 pages, 908 KB  
Article
Oil-Price Volatility and Renewable-Energy Transition in the Gulf Cooperation Council Countries: Does Financial Development Mitigate Energy Transition Risk?
by Noura Ben Mbarek
Energies 2026, 19(12), 2780; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19122780 - 10 Jun 2026
Viewed by 207
Abstract
Oil-price volatility represents a major challenge for hydrocarbon-dependent economies pursuing renewable-energy transition. In GCC countries, fluctuations in global oil markets may influence renewable-energy deployment through their effects on fiscal revenues, investment conditions, and long-term energy planning. While previous studies have largely examined the [...] Read more.
Oil-price volatility represents a major challenge for hydrocarbon-dependent economies pursuing renewable-energy transition. In GCC countries, fluctuations in global oil markets may influence renewable-energy deployment through their effects on fiscal revenues, investment conditions, and long-term energy planning. While previous studies have largely examined the direct effects of oil prices, renewable energy, and financial development separately, limited evidence exists on whether financial development can mitigate the adverse implications of oil-market uncertainty for renewable-energy transition in GCC economies. Using annual data for six GCC countries over the period 1990–2024, this study investigates the links among oil-price volatility, financial development, and renewable-energy transition within a second-generation panel econometric framework that accounts for cross-sectional dependence and heterogeneity. The analysis employs Pesaran cross-sectional dependence tests, CIPS unit-root tests, Westerlund cointegration, common correlated effects mean group (CCE-MG), augmented mean group (AMG), and error-correction modeling. The results support the existence of a stable long-run relationship among the variables. Oil-price volatility is negatively associated with renewable-energy consumption, with a long-run coefficient of approximately −0.21. Financial development exhibits a positive association with renewable-energy transition, while the interaction between oil-price volatility and financial development remains positive and statistically significant. This finding suggests that stronger financial systems may partially reduce the adverse effects of oil-market instability. The short-run estimates also support the presence of a stable adjustment process toward long-run equilibrium. Robustness checks based on alternative financial-development proxies, lagged regressors, Driscoll–Kraay estimations, leave-one-out country analysis, and alternative volatility measures confirm the stability of the main findings. The findings suggest that financial development may strengthen the resilience of renewable-energy transition strategies in GCC economies exposed to volatile energy-market conditions. Full article
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27 pages, 2270 KB  
Article
Environmental Quality, Renewable Energy, and Life Expectancy in Gulf Cooperation Council Countries
by Ihsen Abid
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(6), 750; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23060750 - 3 Jun 2026
Viewed by 188
Abstract
Life expectancy is a key indicator of public health and sustainable development in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, where rapid economic growth, urbanization, and fossil-fuel dependence create environmental and health challenges. This study examines the determinants of life expectancy in six Gulf Cooperation [...] Read more.
Life expectancy is a key indicator of public health and sustainable development in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, where rapid economic growth, urbanization, and fossil-fuel dependence create environmental and health challenges. This study examines the determinants of life expectancy in six Gulf Cooperation Council countries from 2000 to 2023, focusing on death rates, renewable energy consumption, gross domestic product (GDP) per capita growth, government health expenditure, and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. The empirical strategy combines cross-sectional dependence and slope heterogeneity tests, second-generation panel unit root tests, panel cointegration analysis, and a dynamic System Generalized Method of Moments (System GMM) estimator, with Driscoll–Kraay fixed-effects estimates used for robustness. The results show that higher death rates significantly reduce life expectancy, whereas renewable energy consumption and government health expenditure improve longevity. GDP per capita growth has a modest positive effect, while CO2 emissions negatively affect life expectancy, confirming the adverse public health consequences of environmental degradation. Robustness checks support the reliability of the main findings. Overall, the evidence highlights the need for integrated policies that combine clean energy transition, stronger environmental regulation, preventive healthcare investment, and sustainable urban development to improve long-term health outcomes in resource-dependent economies in the region. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Health)
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6 pages, 172 KB  
Proceeding Paper
The Effect of Economic Diversification on GDP per Capita: Insights from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait
by Rola Mourdaa
Proceedings 2026, 142(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2026142002 - 2 Jun 2026
Viewed by 194
Abstract
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, heavily reliant on oil revenues, have long aimed to diversify their economies to mitigate the volatility of global oil prices and foster sustainable growth. Two countries, Saudi Arabia, representing the biggest economy, and Kuwait, the third biggest [...] Read more.
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, heavily reliant on oil revenues, have long aimed to diversify their economies to mitigate the volatility of global oil prices and foster sustainable growth. Two countries, Saudi Arabia, representing the biggest economy, and Kuwait, the third biggest economy in the GCC, were chosen based on their promising economic visions, while being considered as the more historically conservative countries. Both countries represent case studies to reflect on the effectiveness of their diversification measures on GDP/capita as one of the main macroeconomic indicators for prosperity. The paper aims to use time series data over the period 2000–2024 for both countries to reflect the diversification efforts on GDP per capita. A straightforward multivariate regression model is employed, utilizing the value-added contributions of the three primary sectors—industry, agriculture, and services—to examine whether recent economic transformations and policy reforms have influenced GDP per capita and to identify in which country reforms exerted the greatest impact. Findings are expected to reflect a bigger impact of diversification aims on GDP/capita in Saudi Arabia due to the pace of reforms that have been implemented. This research shall provide valuable insights for policymakers, highlighting the need to promote policy reforms to foster sustainable economic growth. The outcome of this study will provide hydrocarbon-dependent GCC economies with an updated, replicable methodological framework to support a better formulation of policy and strategy connecting digital transformation and sustainability agendas in line with efforts related to the Saudi Vision 2030 and Kuwait Vision 2035, which shall present a benchmark that can be applicable for the other GCC economies. Full article
18 pages, 611 KB  
Article
Value-Based Encroachment Strategy for Electric and Autonomous Vehicles: Evidence from Kuwait
by Sam Toglaw, Ahmad Al Ahmad and Ziad Salem
World Electr. Veh. J. 2026, 17(6), 292; https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj17060292 - 30 May 2026
Viewed by 191
Abstract
Despite the global movement toward sustainable mobility, the adoption of electric and autonomous vehicles (EVs/AVs) in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries is shaped by unique socio-cultural and structural contingencies. This study provides a significant theoretical contribution by exploring market entry strategies through a [...] Read more.
Despite the global movement toward sustainable mobility, the adoption of electric and autonomous vehicles (EVs/AVs) in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries is shaped by unique socio-cultural and structural contingencies. This study provides a significant theoretical contribution by exploring market entry strategies through a multidimensional value framework that captures symbolic and contextual dimensions overlooked by traditional models such as TAM and UTAUT. Drawing on in-depth interviews, focus groups, and participant observations, the research utilizes Kuwait as a case study to delineate the multidimensional construct of perceived value through Osterwalder’s Value Proposition Canvas (VPC). The findings reveal that consumer adoption is influenced not only by utility and efficiency but also by social, emotional, epistemic, conditional, and cost values. Dealers, in turn, demonstrate how these values guide entry strategies for non-conventional vehicles by aligning product offerings with specific “Pain relievers”, “Gain creators”, and “Jobs to be done” (JTBD). The study identifies distinct encroachment pathways: high-end entry for battery electric vehicles (BEVs) and low-end entry for hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs). Notably, a dual-encroachment strategy is identified for high-tech Chinese brands, which are aggressively disrupting emerging markets by leveraging manufacturing efficiencies to dominate the mid-market while simultaneously deploying premium models to challenge luxury incumbents. Finally, despite the structural constraints on public AV deployment, the research highlights vital applications for autonomous systems within “industrial sandboxes” such as aviation, seaports, military, and oil sectors. While centered on Kuwait, the findings offer potentially transferable strategic insights for the broader GCC region. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Marketing, Promotion and Socio Economics)
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16 pages, 305 KB  
Review
Family Medicine in Gulf Cooperation Council Countries: Perspectives, Directions, and Future Opportunities; A Narrative Review
by Asma Said Hamed Al Shidhani, Maisa Hamed Al Kiyumi, Buthaina Ahmed Al Zaabi, Badriya Saleh Al Farsi, Faisal A. Alnaser and Abdulaziz Al Mahrezi
Healthcare 2026, 14(11), 1514; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14111514 - 29 May 2026
Viewed by 476
Abstract
Family medicine has attracted increasing policy and institutional support across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries through health system reform, expansion of the healthcare workforce, and sustained public investment. Nevertheless, important challenges continue to affect the strength of primary healthcare systems, access to [...] Read more.
Family medicine has attracted increasing policy and institutional support across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries through health system reform, expansion of the healthcare workforce, and sustained public investment. Nevertheless, important challenges continue to affect the strength of primary healthcare systems, access to care, and the management of non-communicable diseases. The aim of the narrative review is to identify future trends, directions, perspectives, and opportunities that can strengthen implementation of family medicine across GCC countries and improve healthcare delivery. This review is based on a structured search of major databases such as PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar. The focus was evaluation of literature associated with family medicine and primary healthcare development in GCC countries. Regional priorities now include improving medical education and training, expanding the family medicine workforce, strengthening links with communities, promoting more equitable access to healthcare, and managing treatment costs through workforce development and digital health initiatives. Family medicine practice across the GCC is being supported increasingly by electronic health records, telemedicine, and interprofessional education. Policy directions in the region also suggest growing interest in value-based research, international collaboration, multidisciplinary care, and innovation in healthcare delivery. The future of development of family medicine in the GCC will depend on better integration of digital health, more effective use of data in planning and policy, continued investment in training, and broader adoption of patient-centred models of care. In general, strengthening family medicine through sustained investment in workforce development, primary healthcare infrastructure, research capacity, and digital health integration is essential for achieving resilient, equitable, and patient-centered healthcare systems across the GCC. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Healthcare Organizations, Systems, and Providers)
13 pages, 249 KB  
Article
Energy Consumption, Economic Growth, and CO2 Emissions in GCC Countries: Panel Evidence and the Environmental Kuznets Curve
by Ines Ben Salah, Houda Arouri, Emna Klibi and Houcem Smaoui
Sustainability 2026, 18(10), 5196; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18105196 - 21 May 2026
Viewed by 266
Abstract
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries consistently rank among the highest per capita CO2 emitters globally, yet rigorous empirical analysis of the structural drivers of these emissions in the post-Paris Agreement era remains scarce. This study investigates the determinants of CO2 [...] Read more.
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries consistently rank among the highest per capita CO2 emitters globally, yet rigorous empirical analysis of the structural drivers of these emissions in the post-Paris Agreement era remains scarce. This study investigates the determinants of CO2 emissions per capita across six GCC economies—Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates—over the period 2015–2022, using pooled ordinary least squares (OLSs) and country fixed effects (FEs) panel regression models with country-clustered standard errors. The focal explanatory variable is energy use per capita, complemented by GDP per capita, trade openness, urbanization, foreign direct investment (FDI), and industry value added as controls. A quadratic income term explicitly tests the environmental Kuznets curve (EKC) hypothesis. Results consistently show that energy use is the dominant driver of emissions. The EKC hypothesis is supported in the FE framework. The implied turning point of approximately USD 85,500 per capita (constant 2015 USD) is already exceeded by Qatar (panel mean: USD 114,835) and approached by the UAE (USD 71,434), while Bahrain (USD 55,681), Kuwait (USD 51,531), Saudi Arabia (USD 61,232), and Oman (USD 38,591) remain on the EKC’s rising slope, consistent with their continued emissions’ growth trajectories. Urbanization exerts a significant positive within-country effect on emissions. Trade openness reduces emissions in cross-sectional specifications, while FDI is systematically insignificant. These findings support energy efficiency reforms, renewable energy expansion, and low-carbon urban planning as the most effective policy levers for GCC decarbonization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability)
18 pages, 295 KB  
Article
Asymmetric Effects of Digital Trade on Environmental Sustainability: Evidence from GCC Economies
by Safia Omer, Manal Elhaj and Jawaher Binsuwadan
Sustainability 2026, 18(10), 5139; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18105139 - 20 May 2026
Viewed by 176
Abstract
Rapid digital transformation is reshaping global trade and raising important questions about its environmental impact, particularly in energy-intensive GCC economies. Despite growing interest, existing evidence remains inconclusive and often overlooks potential nonlinear effects. This study explores how digital trade influences environmental sustainability in [...] Read more.
Rapid digital transformation is reshaping global trade and raising important questions about its environmental impact, particularly in energy-intensive GCC economies. Despite growing interest, existing evidence remains inconclusive and often overlooks potential nonlinear effects. This study explores how digital trade influences environmental sustainability in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries over the period 2010–2024. Using a balanced panel dataset for the six economies, the analysis applies a fixed-effects approach with Driscoll–Kraay standard errors to account for cross-sectional dependence and other econometric concerns. To better capture the complexity of the relationship, the study also adopts an asymmetric framework that distinguishes between positive and negative changes in digital trade. The findings show that digital trade does not have a significant effect in the linear model. However, once asymmetry is considered, a clearer pattern emerges. Increases in digital trade are associated with lower CO2 emissions, while decreases tend to raise emissions. Energy consumption remains the primary driver of emissions, while technological readiness helps reduce environmental pressure. Urbanization and political stability, on the other hand, are linked to higher emissions, reflecting ongoing structural challenges in the region. Overall, the results highlight the importance of sustaining digital trade growth and strengthening technological capabilities to support environmental sustainability in GCC economies. Full article
22 pages, 489 KB  
Article
Renewable Energy, Natural Resource Rents, and Environmental Quality in GCC Countries
by Noura Ben Mbarek
Resources 2026, 15(5), 69; https://doi.org/10.3390/resources15050069 - 18 May 2026
Viewed by 294
Abstract
Environmental implications of resource dependence remain a central concern for hydrocarbon-based economies undergoing energy transition. Using panel data for GCC countries over 1990–2024 and second-generation econometric techniques that account for cross-sectional dependence and heterogeneity, this study identifies a stable long-run relationship between natural [...] Read more.
Environmental implications of resource dependence remain a central concern for hydrocarbon-based economies undergoing energy transition. Using panel data for GCC countries over 1990–2024 and second-generation econometric techniques that account for cross-sectional dependence and heterogeneity, this study identifies a stable long-run relationship between natural resource rents, renewable energy, and CO2 emissions. The results show that a 1% increase in natural resource rents is linked to a 0.21% rise in CO2 emissions, highlighting the persistence of carbon-intensive economic structures. By contrast, renewable energy is associated with a 0.15% reduction in emissions, although its environmental contribution remains modest. The interaction effect is negative (−0.048) but only partially robust, indicating that renewable energy weakens, but does not fully offset, the environmental pressure associated with resource dependence. These findings suggest that energy transition in GCC economies remains gradual and structurally constrained, requiring not only renewable expansion but also deeper transformation of hydrocarbon-based growth models. Full article
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17 pages, 1127 KB  
Article
Measles in the Post-COVID Era: Incidence Trends, Vaccination Coverage, Demographic and Subnational Distribution in Saudi Arabia, 2015–2024
by Lama Alzamil
Vaccines 2026, 14(5), 445; https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines14050445 - 16 May 2026
Viewed by 392
Abstract
Background/Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted routine immunisation globally. Saudi Arabia presents a unique epidemiological context for measles, combining high vaccination coverage with mass pilgrimages and a large expatriate workforce. This study examined measles incidence trends, vaccination coverage, and demographic and geographic burden distribution [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted routine immunisation globally. Saudi Arabia presents a unique epidemiological context for measles, combining high vaccination coverage with mass pilgrimages and a large expatriate workforce. This study examined measles incidence trends, vaccination coverage, and demographic and geographic burden distribution in Saudi Arabia (2015–2024), with comparative analysis against GCC countries, the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR), and global data. Methods: Annual incidence and vaccination coverage data were obtained from the WHO Global Health Observatory and WHO/UNICEF WUENIC; monthly, regional, age- and nationality-stratified data from the Saudi Ministry of Health Annual Statistical Book (2015–2024). Incidence was expressed per 1,000,000 population across three epochs: pre-COVID-19 (2015–2019), pandemic disruption (2020–2021), and post-COVID-19 rebound (2022–2024). Descriptive analyses included period means, percentage changes, rate ratios, and rate differences. Results: Pre-COVID-19 incidence (mean 19.7/1,000,000) remained below EMR and global averages. The pandemic produced near-complete suppression (−96.6% to 1.1/1,000,000 in 2020), exceeding global (−82.2%) and EMR (−61.2%) declines. A marked rebound occurred in 2023 (67.8/1,000,000), surpassing the pre-pandemic peak despite MCV1/MCV2 coverage above 96%. Non-Saudi nationals bore disproportionate burden in 2021 (20.7 vs. 1.1/1,000,000) and 2023 (70.4 vs. 64.8/1,000,000). Children under 15 accounted for 71.6–90.6% of annual cases, with the 5–<15-year group’s contribution rising from 12.7% (pre-COVID mean) to 27.7% in 2024. Geographic burden shifted annually with no consistently dominant region. Conclusions: Saudi Arabia’s post-pandemic rebound despite high national coverage implicates sub-population susceptibility gaps among non-national residents and school-age children, alongside importation risks from mass pilgrimage. Targeted strategies addressing demographic and geographic heterogeneity are essential to meet WHO 2030 elimination targets. Full article
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21 pages, 3411 KB  
Article
Evaluation of Impacts of Historical and Future Climates on Designing Residential Buildings—Case Study of GCC Region
by Aysha Ramadhan, Joe Huang and Moncef Krarti
Energies 2026, 19(9), 2235; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19092235 - 5 May 2026
Viewed by 524
Abstract
This paper explores the impact of various historical and future climate periods on the energy performance of residential buildings across the GCC. Specifically, five representative climate periods, Historic-1 (1991–2005), Historic-2 (2006–2018), Present (2010–2024), and Future-1 (2040–2050) and Future-2 (2080–2090), are considered to assess [...] Read more.
This paper explores the impact of various historical and future climate periods on the energy performance of residential buildings across the GCC. Specifically, five representative climate periods, Historic-1 (1991–2005), Historic-2 (2006–2018), Present (2010–2024), and Future-1 (2040–2050) and Future-2 (2080–2090), are considered to assess the energy performance for four design configurations of residential buildings in six GCC representative cities. The four building configurations encompass (i) baseline design defined by common traditional construction practices in most GCC countries using uninsulated walls and roofs with minimal air conditioning system efficiencies; (ii) code-compliant design using each GCC country’s current energy efficiency code requirements; (iii) optimized life cycle cost design using proven and cost-effective energy efficiency technologies; and (iv) net-zero energy design integrating the optimal set of energy efficiency strategies with rooftop PV systems. The analysis results have indicated that the energy performance of various designs depends closely on the climate periods, with the annual energy use of a today code-compliant typical residential building expected to increase by 20% in 2050 and 25% 2090. Moreover, larger PV systems by up to 25% need to be deployed for GCC homes designed with the present climatic conditions to continue achieving net-zero energy performance beyond 2050. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section B1: Energy and Climate Change)
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29 pages, 7853 KB  
Article
Governance, Energy Systems, and Carbon Efficiency: A Time–Frequency Analysis of GCC and Emerging Economies
by Nagwa Amin Abdelkawy and Angham Ben Brayek
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 4062; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18084062 - 19 Apr 2026
Viewed by 571
Abstract
Governance is often treated as a slow-moving background condition in energy transition research, even though institutional reform and implementation capacity shape outcomes over long horizons. This study adopts a time–frequency perspective to examine how institutional quality aligns with energy-system and carbon-efficiency transition dynamics [...] Read more.
Governance is often treated as a slow-moving background condition in energy transition research, even though institutional reform and implementation capacity shape outcomes over long horizons. This study adopts a time–frequency perspective to examine how institutional quality aligns with energy-system and carbon-efficiency transition dynamics using multivariate wavelet coherence. Unlike mean-based regression approaches, the multivariate design allows assessment of whether governance aligns with carbon efficiency through three distinct systems—external integration, energy transition with resource rents, and governance coherence—using carbon intensity of GDP (CIGDP) as a common anchor. Using annual data for a comparative sample of GCC economies and non-GCC emerging economies over the period 1996–2022, we examine the evolution of coherence among governance indicators, energy use, renewable energy consumption, external economic exposure, and carbon efficiency, with emissions-related measures explicitly incorporated into the wavelet systems. Environmental implications are therefore interpreted only for systems that directly include carbon-efficiency indicators. The results indicate that institutional quality is most strongly associated with transition dynamics at low frequencies, pointing to persistent long-run alignment rather than short-run adjustment. Across GCC economies, low-frequency coherence is stronger and more continuous, while medium-term weakening appears as time-specific episodes that do not disrupt the underlying long-run structure. In non-GCC emerging economies, long-run coherence remains evident but is less continuous, and medium-horizon fragmentation is more frequent and more prolonged. At high frequencies, coherence is generally weak across countries, suggesting that short-run variation appears more closely associated with external shocks and market conditions than with structural or institutional alignment. Overall, the findings position institutional quality as a stabilising and conditioning factor in energy and carbon-efficiency transitions, operating primarily through long-run coherence and resilience. Systematic differences across governance regimes reflect variation in the continuity and stability of alignment across time horizons, rather than differences in the relevance of governance itself. Full article
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27 pages, 387 KB  
Review
Seasonal Influenza Vaccine Uptake, Acceptance and Willingness to Vaccinate in Post-COVID-19 Vaccine Era Among Adult High-Risk Groups in Gulf Cooperation Council Countries (GCC): A Narrative Review of the Literature
by Moath Aljohani
Vaccines 2026, 14(4), 351; https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines14040351 - 15 Apr 2026
Viewed by 722
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Reports on seasonal influenza vaccine (SIV) coverage in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries showed lower than targeted coverage among high-risk populations both before and after the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent COVID-19 vaccine release. This narrative review aims to synthesise SIV coverage following [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Reports on seasonal influenza vaccine (SIV) coverage in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries showed lower than targeted coverage among high-risk populations both before and after the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent COVID-19 vaccine release. This narrative review aims to synthesise SIV coverage following the introduction of COVID-19 vaccines among at-risk groups in the GCC region. Methods: Database searches included PubMed and Google Scholar for articles assessing SIV uptake, acceptance, hesitancy, and intention to vaccinate among adults in high-risk groups in GCC countries, with data collected after the introduction of COVID-19 vaccines. Results: SIV uptake ranged from 1.8% among pregnant women to 64.1% among dialysis patients in Saudi Arabia. Healthcare workers (HCWs) demonstrated the highest overall coverage, reaching 64.5% for annual uptake in Bahrain, with 79% of HCWs in Saudi Arabia intending to vaccinate. Prevalent barriers included low risk perception and consideration of influenza as a mild disease not necessitating SIV uptake, as well as vaccine effectiveness and safety concerns. Previous vaccination, physician advice, and policy or mandates for HCWs were identified as frequent facilitators of uptake. Conclusion: Suboptimal uptake was reported among most high-risk groups in GCC countries. Health Belief Model components and physician involvement appear to have a significant impact on vaccine uptake among the intended population. More emphasis should be directed toward effective risk communication and action cues methods to enhance uptake among high-risk groups. Future research is needed to cover understudied areas like the elderly aged ≥ 65 years, cancer and other high-risk groups, in addition to further studies for GCC countries other than Saudi Arabia in the post-COVID-19 vaccine period. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Vaccines and Public Health)
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21 pages, 383 KB  
Article
Digital Transformation, Employment, and Productivity in GCC Countries
by Moez Ben Tahar and Sarra Ben Slimane
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 3863; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18083863 - 14 Apr 2026
Viewed by 1001
Abstract
This study examines the impacts of digital transformation on employment and labor productivity in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries from 2000 to 2022 using a composite Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI) and a panel ARDL model. The results reveal a productivity [...] Read more.
This study examines the impacts of digital transformation on employment and labor productivity in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries from 2000 to 2022 using a composite Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI) and a panel ARDL model. The results reveal a productivity paradox: digitalization is negatively related to labor productivity, despite significant investments in ICT and widespread digital adoption. In contrast, overall employment increases, driven by growth in the industrial sector, while employment in the agriculture and service sectors is found to decline. These findings highlight the mixed effects of digitalization—creating jobs without corresponding productivity gains—and emphasize the need for policies that improve skills, encourage organizational innovation, and support sectoral adaptation to fully harness digital technologies for sustainable economic growth. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability)
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20 pages, 295 KB  
Article
Energy Transition and Carbon Decoupling in GCC Economies (2008–2023)
by Abdelrhman Meero
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 3798; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18083798 - 11 Apr 2026
Viewed by 432
Abstract
Hydrocarbon-dependent economies face a critical challenge: sustaining economic growth while reducing carbon emissions. This study examines whether structural energy transition has begun to weaken the growth–emissions relationship in four Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) economies: Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and Bahrain, over [...] Read more.
Hydrocarbon-dependent economies face a critical challenge: sustaining economic growth while reducing carbon emissions. This study examines whether structural energy transition has begun to weaken the growth–emissions relationship in four Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) economies: Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and Bahrain, over the period 2008–2023. The analysis integrates three complementary approaches: Tapio elasticity-based decoupling analysis, a composite Energy Transition Performance Index (ETPI), and fixed-effects panel regression. This multi-method framework distinguishes between short-term cyclical decoupling and longer-term structural transition dynamics. The results show that strong decoupling is concentrated during crisis periods (2009 and 2020), indicating that emissions reductions are often cyclical rather than structural. More consistent, though moderate, weak decoupling emerges after 2015, coinciding with gradual improvements in renewable energy adoption and carbon efficiency. However, persistent fossil fuel dependence and rising electricity demand continue to constrain bigger structural change. The ETPI reveals significant cross-country variation, with the UAE demonstrating relatively stronger transition performance. Panel regression results indicate that renewable energy expansion is associated with lower carbon intensity, but its impact remains constrained by fossil-based energy systems and demand-side pressures. Overall, the findings suggest that energy transition in GCC economies is progressing but remains partial and uneven, requiring deeper structural reforms to achieve sustained decoupling. Full article
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