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Keywords = agriculture green patents

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71 pages, 8428 KiB  
Article
Bridging Sustainability and Inclusion: Financial Access in the Environmental, Social, and Governance Landscape
by Carlo Drago, Alberto Costantiello, Massimo Arnone and Angelo Leogrande
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2025, 18(7), 375; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm18070375 - 6 Jul 2025
Viewed by 663
Abstract
In this work, we examine the correlation between financial inclusion and the Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) factors of sustainable development with the assistance of an exhaustive panel dataset of 103 emerging and developing economies spanning 2011 to 2022. The “Account Age” variable, [...] Read more.
In this work, we examine the correlation between financial inclusion and the Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) factors of sustainable development with the assistance of an exhaustive panel dataset of 103 emerging and developing economies spanning 2011 to 2022. The “Account Age” variable, standing for financial inclusion, is the share of adults owning accounts with formal financial institutions or with the providers of mobile money services, inclusive of both conventional and digital entry points. Methodologically, the article follows an econometric approach with panel data regressions, supplemented by Two-Stage Least Squares (2SLS) with instrumental variables in order to control endogeneity biases. ESG-specific instruments like climate resilience indicators and digital penetration measures are utilized for the purpose of robustness. As a companion approach, the paper follows machine learning techniques, applying a set of algorithms either for regression or for clustering for the purpose of detecting non-linearities and discerning ESG-inclusion typologies for the sample of countries. Results reflect that financial inclusion is, in the Environmental pillar, significantly associated with contemporary sustainability activity such as consumption of green energy, extent of protected area, and value added by agriculture, while reliance on traditional agriculture, measured by land use and value added by agriculture, decreases inclusion. For the Social pillar, expenditure on education, internet, sanitation, and gender equity are prominent inclusion facilitators, while engagement with the informal labor market exhibits a suppressing function. For the Governance pillar, anti-corruption activity and patent filing activity are inclusive, while diminishing regulatory quality, possibly by way of digital governance gaps, has a negative correlation. Policy implications are substantial: the research suggests that development dividends from a multi-dimensional approach can be had through enhancing financial inclusion. Policies that intersect financial access with upgrading the environment, social expenditure, and institutional reconstitution can simultaneously support sustainability targets. These are the most applicable lessons for the policy-makers and development professionals concerned with the attainment of the SDGs, specifically over the regions of the Global South, where the trinity of climate resilience, social fairness, and institutional renovation most significantly manifests. Full article
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26 pages, 389 KiB  
Article
From Greenwashing to Sustainability: The Mediating Effect of Green Innovation in the Agribusiness Sector on Financial Performance
by Zhongping Wang and Xiaoying Tian
Agriculture 2025, 15(12), 1316; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15121316 - 19 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 527
Abstract
This study analyses the impact of agricultural greenwashing on financial performance via green innovation. To this end, it employs data from Chinese A-share agribusinesses from 2012 to 2022. The study indicates the following results: (1) the practice of greenwashing (ESG disclosure–performance gap, GW) [...] Read more.
This study analyses the impact of agricultural greenwashing on financial performance via green innovation. To this end, it employs data from Chinese A-share agribusinesses from 2012 to 2022. The study indicates the following results: (1) the practice of greenwashing (ESG disclosure–performance gap, GW) has a significant negative impact on ROA, particularly in non-state firms; (2) green innovation (patents, GI) partially mediates this relationship, with a percentage of 9.09%, as GW diverts research and development resources toward image management. Robustness checks are employed to confirm the results obtained using ROE and lagged models. Property rights moderate the effects: non-state firms are more adversely affected by innovation dependency, while state firms are protected by policies. The “double-edged” mechanism elucidates GW’s short-term legitimacy gains in contrast to long-term innovation suppression and financial decline. The report calls for the establishment of standardised ESG metrics (for example, the disclosure of pesticide residue) and targeted green incentives (for example, SME R&D subsidies) to be aligned with UN SDGs 9.4 (green tech) and 12.6 (responsible production). The present study offers insights into the governance of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) matters within the context of agriculture in China. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
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14 pages, 786 KiB  
Article
The Role of Green Patents in Innovation: An fsQCA Study of Chinese Listed Agricultural Enterprises
by Yangyang Zhao, Bojun Gu, Xin Xu and Dingding Yang
Sustainability 2025, 17(5), 2317; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17052317 - 6 Mar 2025
Viewed by 1024
Abstract
This study employs a comparative fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) to examine the combined effects of traditional factors and green patents on innovation performance in Chinese listed agricultural enterprises, offering insights into sustainability in agriculture through innovation. By analyzing 84 valid cases from [...] Read more.
This study employs a comparative fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) to examine the combined effects of traditional factors and green patents on innovation performance in Chinese listed agricultural enterprises, offering insights into sustainability in agriculture through innovation. By analyzing 84 valid cases from 107 agricultural companies, we conduct two fsQCA analyses to compare innovation pathways with and without green patents as a conditional factor. The first analysis investigates the impacts of five factors—firm size, executives’ educational background, return on net assets, ownership concentration, and government subsidies—on non-green innovation performance, identifying four distinct pathways: executive-dispersed, employee-financed, executive-centralized, and executive-profitable. In the second analysis, green patents are introduced as an independent variable. The overall solution coverage remains stable, but the configurational landscape shifts, with two original pathways persisting and two new pathways emerging—both involving green patents. The findings suggest that the impact of green patents on innovation is condition-dependent rather than universally beneficial. Green patents amplify innovation performance only when supported by strong managerial education, financial stability, and policy incentives, particularly in the executive green synergy pathway, where raw coverage reaches 0.41, underscoring their role as a conditional multiplier in sustainable innovation. These results provide theoretical and empirical evidence for balancing economic benefits with environmental responsibility in agricultural enterprises and emphasize the need for targeted policy subsidies, enhanced managerial education, and optimized shareholder structures to drive sustainable innovation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Agriculture)
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14 pages, 254 KiB  
Article
A Study on the Efficiency of Green Technology Innovation in Listed Chinese Water Environment Treatment Companies
by Ying Wang, Yahan Shi, Xiaofeng Xu and Yunjie Zhu
Water 2024, 16(3), 510; https://doi.org/10.3390/w16030510 - 5 Feb 2024
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 2679
Abstract
With the continuous advancement of the economy, the issues of resource scarcity and environmental damage are becoming increasingly severe. For example, in terms of water resources, the problems of environmental pollution and ecological imbalance in the water caused by industrial and agricultural wastewater [...] Read more.
With the continuous advancement of the economy, the issues of resource scarcity and environmental damage are becoming increasingly severe. For example, in terms of water resources, the problems of environmental pollution and ecological imbalance in the water caused by industrial and agricultural wastewater are becoming more serious. In order to reduce water pollution, protect water resources, promote ecological balance, and reduce environmental risks, it is necessary to strengthen water environment management. This study uses the Malmquist DEA model to conduct a study on the green technology innovation efficiency (GTIE) of 24 water environment governance companies from 2019 to 2022. Corporate Research & Development investment and employee compensation are used as the input indicators, while the number of color patents obtained and operating income are employed as the output indicators. The evaluation criteria include pure technical efficiency, comprehensive technical efficiency, scale efficiency, and total factor productivity. The results show that there is significant room for improvement in the GTIE of the listed Chinese water environment governance enterprises, and there are considerable differences among different enterprises. The GTIE is significantly influenced by technological progress, the enterprise size, and the equity ratio. Therefore, water environment management enterprises should enhance their efforts in technological research and development and talent training, optimize resource allocation, improve the efficiency of green technology innovation, and effectively fulfill their social responsibilities. These measures will promote the efficient utilization of ecological water, the restoration of the water environment, and the establishment of a clean ecological environment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Insights into Wastewater Reclamation and Reuse)
18 pages, 1085 KiB  
Article
The Impact of the Digital Economy on Carbon Emissions from Cultivated Land Use
by Jie Li, Zhengchuan Sun, Jie Zhou, Yaya Sow, Xufeng Cui, Haipeng Chen and Qianling Shen
Land 2023, 12(3), 665; https://doi.org/10.3390/land12030665 - 11 Mar 2023
Cited by 14 | Viewed by 3500
Abstract
Is digitalization conducive to promoting carbon reduction in cultivated land use while empowering high-quality socio-economic development and intelligent territorial spatial planning? Derived from China’s provincial panel data from the period 2011 to 2019, in this paper, we employ a fixed-effect model to study [...] Read more.
Is digitalization conducive to promoting carbon reduction in cultivated land use while empowering high-quality socio-economic development and intelligent territorial spatial planning? Derived from China’s provincial panel data from the period 2011 to 2019, in this paper, we employ a fixed-effect model to study the impact of the digital economy on carbon emissions from cultivated land use and apply an intermediary-effect model to estimate the impact that the structure of the digital economy has on carbon emissions from cultivated land use. The results indicate the following: (1) The expansion of the digital economy can significantly decrease the carbon emissions caused by cultivated land use. This conclusion is still valid after considering endogenous issues and conducting a series of robustness tests. (2) Green technical renovation has played a significant intermediary role in the effect the digital economy has on the amount of carbon emissions from cultivated land use. (3) Digital economy development has significantly promoted innovation in green technology by increasing the size of green invention patent applications and authorizations, thus effectively curbing carbon emissions from cultivated land use and achieving the carbon emission reduction effect of the digital economy. However, some suggestions are put forward, including speeding up the deep integration of digital technology and cultivated land use planning, strengthening the application of green technical renovation achievements in the agricultural field, and enhancing the government’s function in the institutional guarantee of the growth of the digital economy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Land Use Effects on Carbon Storage and Greenhouse Gas Emissions)
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17 pages, 3060 KiB  
Article
A Bibliometric and Word Cloud Analysis on the Role of the Internet of Things in Agricultural Plant Disease Detection
by Rutuja Rajendra Patil, Sumit Kumar, Ruchi Rani, Poorva Agrawal and Sanjeev Kumar Pippal
Appl. Syst. Innov. 2023, 6(1), 27; https://doi.org/10.3390/asi6010027 - 9 Feb 2023
Cited by 25 | Viewed by 4148
Abstract
Agriculture has observed significant advancements since smart farming technology has been introduced.The Green Movement played an essential role in the evolution of farming methods. The use of smart farming is accelerating at an unprecedented rate because it benefits both farmers and consumers by [...] Read more.
Agriculture has observed significant advancements since smart farming technology has been introduced.The Green Movement played an essential role in the evolution of farming methods. The use of smart farming is accelerating at an unprecedented rate because it benefits both farmers and consumers by enabling more effective crop budgeting. The Smart Agriculture domain uses the Internet of Things, which helps farmers to monitor irrigation management, estimate crop yields, and manage plant diseases. Additionally, farmers can learn about environmental trends and, as a result, which crops to cultivate and how to apply fungicides and insecticides. This research article uses the primary and subsidiary keywords related to smart agriculture to query the Scopus database. The query returned 146 research articles related to the keywords inputted, and an analysis of 146 scientific publications, including journal articles, book chapters, and patents, was conducted. Node XL, Gephi, and VOSviewer are open-source tools for visualizing and exploring bibliometric networks. New facets of the data are revealed, facilitating intuitive exploration. The survey includes a bibliometric analysis as well as a word cloud analysis. This analysis focuses on publication types and publication regions, geographical locations, documents by year, subject area, association, and authorship. The research field of IoT in agricultural plant disease detection articles is found to frequently employ English as the language of publication. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Artificial Intelligence)
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18 pages, 2728 KiB  
Article
Exploring the Technological Changes of Green Agriculture in China: Evidence from Patent Data (1998–2021)
by Ruifeng Hu and Weiqiao Xu
Sustainability 2022, 14(17), 10899; https://doi.org/10.3390/su141710899 - 31 Aug 2022
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 3365
Abstract
China views the development of sustainable agriculture as a crucial aspect of agricultural development. Using green agriculture patents from 1998 to 2021, this paper analyzes the spatial and temporal distribution of patent numbers and investigates the IPC co-occurrence network. The findings are as [...] Read more.
China views the development of sustainable agriculture as a crucial aspect of agricultural development. Using green agriculture patents from 1998 to 2021, this paper analyzes the spatial and temporal distribution of patent numbers and investigates the IPC co-occurrence network. The findings are as follows. First, the number of patents for green agriculture in mainland China has increased significantly. From 2010 to 2015, the number of patents reached its highest point. Second, the spatial distribution of green agriculture patents is quite uneven, particularly in Heilongjiang province, which has the largest grain production and the lowest patent output level. Third, while the majority of IPC subclasses are well-developed, some are unevenly developed. In China, popular fields include seed breeding, planting, and organic fertilizers. This research aims to present empirical evidence for the future layout of green agriculture in China and the development of green agriculture in other developing countries. Full article
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