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25 pages, 627 KB  
Article
The Role of Manufacturing in Economic Growth in the Countries of the Andean Community of Nations (ACN), 1993–2019
by Diego Alejandro Ochoa Jiménez, Alexis Polibio Gaona Albito and Christian Fernando Pereira Jaramillo
Economies 2026, 14(6), 221; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies14060221 - 11 Jun 2026
Viewed by 146
Abstract
Whether Kaldor’s three growth laws still operate in commodity-dependent middle-income economies—and through what transmission mechanism—is an open empirical question after three decades of trade liberalisation, financial opening, and the 2002–2014 commodity super-cycle. This paper provides the first bloc-level panel test of the three [...] Read more.
Whether Kaldor’s three growth laws still operate in commodity-dependent middle-income economies—and through what transmission mechanism—is an open empirical question after three decades of trade liberalisation, financial opening, and the 2002–2014 commodity super-cycle. This paper provides the first bloc-level panel test of the three laws for the Andean Community of Nations (ACN—Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru) over 1993–2019, combining static feasible generalised regressions with dynamic Arellano–Bond difference-GMM and long-run multipliers. The predictions are as follows: manufacturing growth is positively associated with aggregate output (long-run multiplier 0.91), the Verdoorn coefficient is positive and significant at 0.42, and labour reallocation from non-manufacturing activities is associated with rising aggregate productivity over the time. The headline finding, however, is a decomposition failure: the Verdoorn and employment elasticities coefficients sum up to 0.35 rather than 1 as required by the accounting identity, leaving a residual of 0.65. We term this “jobless manufacturing growth” (capital-deepening). This suggests that the Kaldorian regime in the ACN has neither collapsed nor remained intact, but has mutated into a capital-intensive, labour-saving form consistent with Dutch-disease. Thus, industrial policy alone would deepen the jobless pattern: structural transformation in these economies requires pairing subsidy plans with the macroeconomic management of commodity-dependent exchange rates. Full article
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19 pages, 354 KB  
Review
Effective Strategies for Promoting Pro-Environmental Behaviors: A Comprehensive Comparison of Financial Incentives and Educational Campaigns
by Tomás Matos Frois, Filipe Gonçalves Cardoso, Maryam Abbasi and Filipe Madeira
Standards 2026, 6(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/standards6020025 - 8 Jun 2026
Viewed by 99
Abstract
Global environmental challenges—ranging from climate change to resource depletion—require not only technological innovation but also sustained shifts in household behavior. Two principal policy tools have emerged to promote such shifts in residential communities: financial incentives (e.g., subsidies, rebates, dynamic pricing) and educational campaigns [...] Read more.
Global environmental challenges—ranging from climate change to resource depletion—require not only technological innovation but also sustained shifts in household behavior. Two principal policy tools have emerged to promote such shifts in residential communities: financial incentives (e.g., subsidies, rebates, dynamic pricing) and educational campaigns (e.g., information provision, social norms messaging, feedback systems); yet rigorous comparative evidence on their relative intervention effectiveness —defined here as the magnitude of behavioral change achieved—remains fragmented. The aim of this review is to systematically compare the effectiveness of financial incentives and educational campaigns for promoting pro-environmental behaviors in residential communities, and to identify the conditions under which each approach performs best. This systematic review addresses: How do financial incentives compare to educational campaigns in promoting pro-environmental behaviors in residential communities? Through PRISMA 2020 methodology, synthesizing 51 studies including 5 major meta-analyses (2015–2024), comparative intervention effectiveness evidence is provided. Financial incentives achieve modest reductions (1.8–6.0%, g = 0.36) with rapid adoption but substantial rebound effects (35–60% offset) and poor persistence post-removal. Educational campaigns show higher variability (g = 0.23 to 0.93), with targeted approaches achieving up to 8% reductions, better persistence (57% effect retention at 24 months), and lower rebounds (15–30%). Combined approaches demonstrate the largest effects (g = 0.64) and optimal cost-effectiveness. Context determines effectiveness: financial incentives excel for high-cost technology adoption; and educational campaigns for habitual behaviors. Technology-mediated delivery (smart meters, mobile apps) enhances both approaches. The principal contribution of this review is a comprehensive umbrella synthesis to directly compare both intervention paradigms while simultaneously accounting for rebound effects, moral licensing, age-specific moderators, and cost-effectiveness, offering practitioners an integrated evidence base for intervention selection. We conclude with evidence-based recommendations for intervention selection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Standards in Environmental Sciences)
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33 pages, 2993 KB  
Article
Techno-Economic Assessment and Capacity Optimization of Residential PV Self-Consumption Systems: An Approach Applied in Emerging Contexts
by Fredy A. Sepúlveda-Vélez, Gustavo Nofuentes, Leonardo Micheli and Diego L. Talavera
Electronics 2026, 15(11), 2472; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15112472 - 4 Jun 2026
Viewed by 160
Abstract
This study proposes a comprehensive techno-economic methodology to assess the economic viability and optimal sizing of grid-connected residential photovoltaic (PV) self-consumption systems without storage in emerging economies. The model uses net present value (NPV) as the optimization criterion and estimates internal rate of [...] Read more.
This study proposes a comprehensive techno-economic methodology to assess the economic viability and optimal sizing of grid-connected residential photovoltaic (PV) self-consumption systems without storage in emerging economies. The model uses net present value (NPV) as the optimization criterion and estimates internal rate of return (IRR) and discounted payback time (DPBT) as complementary profitability indicators. It integrates hourly PV generation, synthesized hourly demand profiles, local tariff structures, surplus-energy remuneration, investment and operating costs, inflation, performance losses, and discount-rate assumptions, while explicitly accounting for context-specific limitations related to data availability, storage-free operation, and financing assumptions. The methodology is applied to 30 Colombian residential scenarios, covering five cities and six socioeconomic strata, and is complemented with a replicability case in Jaén, Spain. In Colombia, PV self-consumption is economically viable in all cases, but profitability is highly uneven: maximized NPV ranges from 2.8 € in the least favorable low-income case to 2816 € in the best high-income case, IRR ranges from 5.0% to 14.7%, and DPBT ranges from 8 to 24 years. From an energy-justice perspective, tariff subsidies improve affordability but may reduce PV attractiveness for low-income users, highlighting the need for capital grants, low-interest loans, or community solar schemes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Trends in Energy Saving, Smart Buildings and Renewable Energy)
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19 pages, 3031 KB  
Article
Urban Filter vs. Natural Refuge: Divergent Diptera Community Assembly Mechanisms—Evidence from Beijing, China
by Boyu Fang, Zihao Zhang, Yuwei Ding, Jiaxuan Cheng, Jun Yang, Jingyu Zhai, Xiaole Chen, Ayman Khamis Elsayed, Makoto Tokuda, Ding Yang, Yunhui Liu, Rudolf Meier, Qinggang Wang and Xuankun Li
Biology 2026, 15(11), 865; https://doi.org/10.3390/biology15110865 - 30 May 2026
Viewed by 409
Abstract
Urbanization can act as a powerful ecological filter, restructuring biodiversity through species loss, replacement, and altered resource pathways. While urban green spaces (UGS) are recognized as potential biodiversity refuges, the effectiveness and mechanisms for conserving insect diversity across the urban-to-natural gradient remain poorly [...] Read more.
Urbanization can act as a powerful ecological filter, restructuring biodiversity through species loss, replacement, and altered resource pathways. While urban green spaces (UGS) are recognized as potential biodiversity refuges, the effectiveness and mechanisms for conserving insect diversity across the urban-to-natural gradient remain poorly understood. Here, we combine full-season Malaise trapping (April–November) with MinION-based DNA barcoding to test two predictions about how urbanization reshapes Diptera communities across five sites in Haidian District, Beijing, ranging from residential areas and urban parks to a nearby shallow mountain reserve (BWM). Based on 5528 barcoded individuals, we identified 686 putative species from 39 families. As predicted, β-diversity between urban and mountain sites was overwhelmingly driven by species turnover rather than nestedness, demonstrating that cities do not simply receive subsets of the surrounding fauna but actively reassemble communities. This filtering effect was, however, trophic-guild specific. Detritivores showed the highest replacement, consistent with a shift from natural to anthropogenic resource subsidies, while predators/parasitoids exhibited significant nested loss, aligning with their hypothesized sensitivity at higher trophic levels. Vegetation structure further clarified these patterns: vegetation density, not plant species richness, was the primary bottom-up driver for herbivore and predator/parasitoid diversity, whereas detritivores were decoupled from living plant biomass. These findings demonstrate that urban and near-natural habitats maintain distinct species pools via guild-specific assembly pathways, highlighting the need for guild-specific conservation strategies for urban biodiversity conservation. Extending beyond compositional analysis, we propose a temporal-abundance framework, classifying species by persistence and abundance, as a diagnostic tool for assessing ecological integrity and guiding conservation in urbanizing landscapes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Conservation Biology and Biodiversity)
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22 pages, 4367 KB  
Article
Sustainable Governance of Photovoltaic Desert Control from the Perspective of Evolutionary Game Theory: A Case Study in Xinjiang, China
by Xin Zhang, Anming Bao, Siyu Chen and Shaobo Cai
Land 2026, 15(6), 905; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15060905 - 24 May 2026
Viewed by 414
Abstract
Photovoltaic desert control (PVDC), an innovative model integrating clean energy development and desertification control, faces complex coordination challenges among local governments, local communities, and photovoltaic enterprises. This study constructs a tripartite evolutionary game model to identify the conditions that drive PVDC toward coordinated [...] Read more.
Photovoltaic desert control (PVDC), an innovative model integrating clean energy development and desertification control, faces complex coordination challenges among local governments, local communities, and photovoltaic enterprises. This study constructs a tripartite evolutionary game model to identify the conditions that drive PVDC toward coordinated governance. The model defines a three-dimensional strategy space: government regulatory intensity (Strong vs. Lax), community willingness to cooperate (Active Cooperation vs. Passive Resistance), and enterprise ecological integration (Active Ecological Integration vs. Passive Land Occupation). Replicator dynamic equations are derived to characterize nonlinear interactions, and the stability conditions of eight pure-strategy equilibrium points are identified through Jacobian matrix eigenvalue analysis. Numerical simulations are conducted using a baseline parameter set that satisfies the Evolutionary Stable Strategy conditions for the ideal equilibrium E8, namely Strong Regulation, Active Cooperation, and Active Ecological Integration. The results show that the system can converge to E8 when higher-level rewards cover government regulation, subsidy, and community-support costs; when community cooperation benefits exceed livelihood opportunity costs and compensation incentives from resistance; and when enterprises’ effective ecological integration costs are lower than the combined benefits of subsidies, avoided fines, and long-term returns. Sensitivity analysis further indicates that government subsidies, fines, community support, cooperation income, and enterprise long-term benefits are key drivers of system evolution, while excessive regulation costs, high opportunity costs, and high ecological integration costs may hinder coordination. Qualitative evidence from four PVDC-related cases in Xinjiang provides practical illustrations broadly consistent with the model mechanisms. This study offers a dynamic analytical framework for designing incentive-compatible governance mechanisms in PVDC and similar multi-stakeholder ecological restoration projects. Full article
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28 pages, 4755 KB  
Article
Bargaining and Pricing in Recycling Supply Chains for Construction and Demolition Waste as a Substrate
by Jiaqi Lei, Huixin Chen and Xingwei Li
Buildings 2026, 16(11), 2061; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16112061 - 22 May 2026
Viewed by 203
Abstract
The high-value utilization of construction and demolition waste is critical for sustainable development in the building sector. However, in construction and demolition waste (CDW) recycling supply chains, existing studies lack a systematic analysis of pricing mechanisms for such recycled CDW as substrate products, [...] Read more.
The high-value utilization of construction and demolition waste is critical for sustainable development in the building sector. However, in construction and demolition waste (CDW) recycling supply chains, existing studies lack a systematic analysis of pricing mechanisms for such recycled CDW as substrate products, particularly regarding interest coordination and the quantification of green value. To reveal the bargaining mechanism between farmers as recyclers and processors and supermarkets as retailers under an asymmetric bargaining structure, this study applies Nash bargaining theory to construct a dynamic game model. The study revealed that (1) when the green degree of a product reaches a certain level, it can obtain a sustainable market premium and create a stable income space for both parties. (2) The relative strength of the bargaining power between the two sides significantly affects the impact of market base scale changes on profit distribution. When the bargaining power of the supermarket is lower than the threshold and the bargaining power of the farmers is higher than the threshold, the difference in profit between the farmers and the supermarket is negatively correlated with the market base scale of the CDW as a substrate. (3) The green sensitivity level of consumers affects the difference in profit of the main body with the government subsidy to farmers. This level is determined by the value of the green sensitivity coefficient of consumers and presents a differentiated adjustment effect in different value ranges, which in turn affects the transmission direction of government subsidies to profit distribution. (4) When the green sensitivity coefficient and the green communication intensity of farmers and the investment level are lower than the corresponding critical values, the difference in social welfare with or without subsidies is positively correlated with the amount of the subsidy. This study provides decision support for farmers and supermarkets in designing rational bargaining strategies and offers insights for improving coordination and sustainability in construction and demolition waste recycling supply chains. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Study on Urban Environment by Big Data Analytics)
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24 pages, 1122 KB  
Article
Macro-Level Correlates of Indigenous Community Well-Being in Canada: Implications for Northern Indigenous Food Security and Well-Being
by Amzad Hossain, Ying Kong, Md. Hasan and Jennie Wastesicoot
Sustainability 2026, 18(9), 4616; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18094616 - 6 May 2026
Viewed by 910
Abstract
Indigenous communities in northern Canada experience severe household food insecurity rates ranging from 21.8% to 70%. However, the relationship between national-level economic and environmental indicators and Indigenous Community Well-being (ICWB) remains inadequately understood. This study examines national-level correlates of ICWB from 1991 to [...] Read more.
Indigenous communities in northern Canada experience severe household food insecurity rates ranging from 21.8% to 70%. However, the relationship between national-level economic and environmental indicators and Indigenous Community Well-being (ICWB) remains inadequately understood. This study examines national-level correlates of ICWB from 1991 to 2021, analyzing relationships between ICWB scores and agricultural production volumes (canola, corn, wheat, soybeans), their commodity prices, and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, with a particular focus on the role of traditional food systems. The study uses data from the Government of Canada, Statistics Canada, and Environment Canada, supplemented by secondary literature on Indigenous traditional food systems. Three documented mechanisms provide a framework for interpreting how national indicators may affect northern communities: commodity price transmission through integrated markets, federal policy responses calibrated to national economic data, and supply chain dependencies linking southern production to northern availability. Correlation analysis reveals significant positive associations between ICWB and production volumes of canola, corn, and soybeans, as well as the prices of wheat, corn, canola, and soybeans. Regression analysis that accounts for temporal trends reveals that soybean and canola prices are negatively associated with ICWB, indicating that increasing prices may reduce community well-being, potentially reflecting increased economic pressure or reduced affordability. GHG emissions correlate positively with ICWB, likely reflecting confounding by economic development rather than direct environmental benefits. These national-level correlates have potential implications for northern Indigenous food security and well-being through recognized transmission mechanisms. The paradoxical positive correlation between rising commodity prices and ICWB is consistent with an adaptive response: as market food costs increase, communities may strengthen traditional food harvesting and local production, though higher equipment and resource prices may constrain these efforts, making food sovereignty enhancement a complex challenge. Findings suggest that northern communities participate in national economic systems through price, policy, and supply chain pathways, but may yet retain adaptive capacity through traditional food systems if persistent multi-stage supports are provided. Policy implications include indexing northern food subsidies to commodity price volatility, prioritizing funding for Indigenous-led food sovereignty initiatives that integrate traditional knowledge with modern techniques, and investing in infrastructure to reduce supply chain vulnerabilities. Future research should examine community-specific responses to national economic patterns and identify local factors that strengthen nature-led traditional food systems in northern Indigenous contexts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Impacts of Climate Change and Extreme Events on Global Food Security)
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18 pages, 494 KB  
Article
Diet Cost and Affordability in Queensland: A Two-Year Cross-Sectional Study
by Renae Earle, Tessa Kenney, Kora Uhlmann, Meron Lewis, Nicola Malone, Martin O’Flaherty and Simone Nalatu
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(4), 535; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23040535 - 20 Apr 2026
Viewed by 751
Abstract
Diet affordability is a critical determinant of food security, health and wellbeing. However, the cost and affordability of diets have not been routinely measured in Queensland (Australia) in over a decade. This study assessed the cost and affordability of healthy (based on national [...] Read more.
Diet affordability is a critical determinant of food security, health and wellbeing. However, the cost and affordability of diets have not been routinely measured in Queensland (Australia) in over a decade. This study assessed the cost and affordability of healthy (based on national healthy eating guidelines) and habitual (less healthy, based on national reported intake) diets across six Queensland regions. Data were collected in 35 communities, over two years (2023 and 2024), using the evidence-based Healthy Diets Australian Standardised Affordability and Pricing protocol. Data were analyzed relative to a six-person intergenerational Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander reference household. Results indicate that, across Queensland, healthy diet costs are above the threshold for food stress in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander households. On average, healthy diets were 30% cheaper than the habitual diet (which include alcohol and takeaway foods) but cost at least 26% of household income (above the 25% threshold for food stress). In 2023, healthy diets were on average 31% more expensive in remote communities compared to urban and regional centers. In 2024, the cost of a healthy diet in remote communities decreased significantly by 24%, narrowing diet cost differences between remote and non-remote regions. This shift could be associated with the implementation of a freight subsidy in remote Queensland, or other influences on remote food pricing. Findings highlight diet-related cost-of-living challenges for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families, underscore the need for ongoing monitoring and provide insight for policy interventions (such as targeted subsidies) to improve diet affordability and reduce nutrition-related health inequity. Full article
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17 pages, 2168 KB  
Article
The Potential of Landscape Plants Photinia × fraseri and Pittosporum tobira as Refuge for Natural Enemies of Pest Insects in Rice–Wheat Rotation Systems
by Qianwen Yang, Qiang Li, Xiaowei Liu, Yajun Yang, Yongming Ruan, Pingyang Zhu, Zhongxian Lu, Chuanwang Cao and Yanhui Lu
Insects 2026, 17(4), 428; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects17040428 - 16 Apr 2026
Viewed by 535
Abstract
The rice–wheat rotation is a predominant cropping pattern in China, frequently challenged by pests such as aphids in wheat, and Chilo suppressalis and Cnaphalocrocis medinalis in rice. This study investigates the potential of two common landscape plants, Photinia × fraseri and Pittosporum tobira [...] Read more.
The rice–wheat rotation is a predominant cropping pattern in China, frequently challenged by pests such as aphids in wheat, and Chilo suppressalis and Cnaphalocrocis medinalis in rice. This study investigates the potential of two common landscape plants, Photinia × fraseri and Pittosporum tobira, as functional plants for conserving natural enemies across crop cycles. Arthropod communities were systematically monitored using Malaise traps during the wheat, wheat–rice transition, and rice seasons from 2023 to 2024. Results revealed that both species successfully conserved a diverse natural enemy community, though their structural differentiation was strongly driven by seasonal variation, as confirmed by Heatmap and principal component analysis (PCA) (P. × fraseri: PC1 = 46.3%, PC2 = 23%; P. tobira: PC1 = 40.2%, PC2 = 25%). During the wheat season, both plants synergistically supported rich functional guilds, including predatory guilds (e.g., Episyrphus balteatus, Gnathonarium dentatum, and Harmonia axyridis) and parasitic guilds (e.g., Microplitis tuberculifer and Cotesia spp.). Notably, during the critical wheat-to-rice transition, these shrubs functioned as “habitat anchors,” where P. × fraseri demonstrated superior retention capacity for functional groups like Aphidius gifuensis, mitigating post-harvest habitat fragmentation. During the rice season, distinct functional complementarity emerged: P. × fraseri appeared to function as a habitat-type plant, potentially providing stable shelter for predatory groups (e.g., spiders and lady beetles), while P. tobira appeared to act as a resource-type plant, potentially attracting a significant rebound of parasitoids (e.g., Xanthopimpla flavolineata) in August. This mid-summer rebound on P. tobira was primarily attributed to its dense evergreen foliage providing a microclimatic refuge, rather than an active flowering resource. Analysis of shared dominant taxa (H. axyridis, Cotesia spp., and E. balteatus) showed highly significant seasonal fluctuations, with peak conservation during the wheat season. This study confirms that P. × fraseri and P. tobira have cross-cycle potential as a “natural enemy bank” in rice–wheat rotation agricultural systems. Their synergistic effects—integrating stable structural shelter with seasonal nutritional subsidies—support the conservation of diverse natural enemy communities throughout the annual crop cycle and significantly enhance the sustained pest control capacity of farmland ecosystems, identifying them as exemplary functional plants for ecological engineering in rice–wheat landscapes and providing a foundation for future studies on biological control efficacy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Role of Beneficial Insects in Pest Control)
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25 pages, 11208 KB  
Article
Assessing Flood Resilience in West Virginia Communities Using Socioeconomic and Physical Vulnerability Indicators: Implications for Sustainable Planning
by Annie Mahmoudi, Michael J. Dougherty, Peter M. Butler and Michael P. Strager
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3321; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073321 - 29 Mar 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 680
Abstract
Flooding is one of the most persistent and destructive natural hazards in West Virginia. However, community-scale assessments that connect social vulnerability with physical flood vulnerability are still limited. Existing floodplain management plans often focus on infrastructure and hydrology, overlooking how socioeconomic disparities shape [...] Read more.
Flooding is one of the most persistent and destructive natural hazards in West Virginia. However, community-scale assessments that connect social vulnerability with physical flood vulnerability are still limited. Existing floodplain management plans often focus on infrastructure and hydrology, overlooking how socioeconomic disparities shape resilience. This study assesses flood resilience in West Virginia communities by connecting socioeconomic vulnerability with physical flood vulnerability. Using data from the American Community Survey (ACS) and state floodplain maps, we developed a Socioeconomic Vulnerability Index (SEVI) and combined it with physical indicators, such as the percentage of residential buildings in the 100-year floodplain, the share of mobile homes in flood-prone areas, the presence of essential facilities and community assets within flood zones, and the proportion of roads submerged by at least one foot of water. Incorporated and unincorporated communities were analyzed separately to reflect differences in governance and service capacity. The results reveal that high flood vulnerability areas often coincide with high socioeconomic vulnerability, especially in the southern and southeastern counties, where long-term economic decline has increased risks. Communities like McDowell and Mingo face a combined challenge of social and physical vulnerability, adding pressure to populations already dealing with limited resources. These findings emphasize the importance of integrated resilience planning that combines physical protection with social support. Considering the increasing intensity of extreme precipitation events associated with climate change, these findings also highlight the importance of incorporating long-term climate considerations into flood resilience planning. Policy suggestions include expanding targeted flood insurance subsidies for low-income households, prioritizing the relocation or retrofitting of mobile homes and essential facilities, investing in green and open spaces, and encouraging community-based mitigation strategies. Together, these actions can lower long-term flood risks while addressing structural inequalities that make certain populations more vulnerable. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Hazards and Sustainability)
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32 pages, 3465 KB  
Article
Economic Analysis and Policy Reform Strategies for Decentralized Solar PV in Rural Electrification
by Hameedullah Zaheb, Ahmad Reshad Bakhtiary, Milad Ahmad Abdullah, Mikaeel Ahmadi, Nisar Ahmad Rahmany, Obaidullah Obaidi and Atsushi Yona
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3275; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073275 - 27 Mar 2026
Viewed by 625
Abstract
Electrification is vital for economic growth, poverty reduction, and improved quality of life. Over 80% of Afghanistan’s rural population lacks electricity. Despite increasing interest in decentralized energy systems, there remains a lack of site-specific studies that jointly assess the technical, economic, and policy [...] Read more.
Electrification is vital for economic growth, poverty reduction, and improved quality of life. Over 80% of Afghanistan’s rural population lacks electricity. Despite increasing interest in decentralized energy systems, there remains a lack of site-specific studies that jointly assess the technical, economic, and policy feasibility of decentralized solar PV for rural electrification in Afghanistan. This study addresses that gap through a mixed-method case study of Syahgel, Ghazni, combining a household survey of 30 households, PVsyst-based system sizing, economic evaluation, and policy analysis. The study compares multi-tier Solar Home Systems (SHSs) with a community microgrid under local demand and affordability conditions. The results show that SHSs, with entry-level costs starting from USD 95, are more suitable for small, dispersed settlements, while microgrids remain relevant for larger or more concentrated communities. Financing mechanisms, including subsidies and interest-free loans, can improve affordability by up to 75%, while electrification can reduce annual fuelwood expenditure by approximately USD 51.5 per household and generate broader health, educational, and livelihood benefits. The findings highlight the need for integrated policy reform, targeted financial support, and context-sensitive system design to support sustainable and inclusive rural electrification in Afghanistan. Full article
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42 pages, 4272 KB  
Article
A Tripartite Evolutionary Game Analysis for Developing Sustainable Rural Cold Chain Logistics
by Xiaohu Xing, Meiqi Zhang and Xinqiang Chen
Sustainability 2026, 18(6), 2989; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18062989 - 18 Mar 2026
Viewed by 441
Abstract
Achieving sustainability in rural cold chain logistics requires resolving inherent conflicts among participating agents. This paper develops an evolutionary game theory framework to examine the dynamic interactions between government regulators, cold chain enterprises, and agricultural producers. The model identifies three evolutionarily stable strategies [...] Read more.
Achieving sustainability in rural cold chain logistics requires resolving inherent conflicts among participating agents. This paper develops an evolutionary game theory framework to examine the dynamic interactions between government regulators, cold chain enterprises, and agricultural producers. The model identifies three evolutionarily stable strategies (ESS) under different policy environments. Numerical simulations, using parameters calibrated from industry data and survey results, quantify the impact of key policy variables: (1) Subsidy intensity has a diminishing marginal effect on green technology adoption, with an optimal range between 12–18% of project cost; (2) Monitoring probability exhibits a threshold effect, needing to exceed 60% to deter non-compliance effectively; (3) Farmer organization reduces system stabilization time by approximately 30%. Our results challenge the conventional focus on single-policy solutions and instead demonstrate the necessity of integrated approaches that simultaneously address economic viability, operational efficiency, and community engagement. These insights offer evidence-based guidance for designing multi-stakeholder governance mechanisms in resource-constrained rural settings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Agriculture)
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14 pages, 3056 KB  
Article
Efficiency and Sustainability of Local Public Budgets in Romanian Urban Areas—A Statistical–Territorial Approach
by Marinela Istrate and Ionel Muntele
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(3), 143; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10030143 - 9 Mar 2026
Viewed by 852
Abstract
Against the backdrop of self-financing difficulties, an effect of the transition from a centralized to a market economy, Romanian cities are marked by significant differences in the way local public finances are used. The difficulties generated by insufficient income, complemented by subsidies from [...] Read more.
Against the backdrop of self-financing difficulties, an effect of the transition from a centralized to a market economy, Romanian cities are marked by significant differences in the way local public finances are used. The difficulties generated by insufficient income, complemented by subsidies from the centralized budget, create strong disparities that manifest themselves both vertically within the urban hierarchy (small towns are the most affected) and spatially along development axes. The influence of social, economic, and cultural factors can explain these cleavages, but also expresses the excessive centralization of governance in Romania. The statistical processing of information on budget execution for the years 2019–2023, at the level of the 319 official urban centers in Romania, provides an image of the structure of local budgets through the prism of their self-financing capacity and their supplementation with community funds or government subsidies. The descriptive analysis, which highlights specific structural patterns, is complemented by a multivariate analysis aimed at examining the relationships between self-financing capacity and a set of explanatory variables. The study’s results demonstrate the need to implement programs to reduce urban administrative units’ dependence on the centralized budget and to streamline their own revenue collection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Urban Economy and Industry)
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24 pages, 1356 KB  
Article
The Impact of Fiscal and Tax New Media on the Sustainable Spirit of Green Entrepreneurs: Evidence from China
by Huixin Ling and Jianmin Liu
Sustainability 2026, 18(5), 2602; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18052602 - 6 Mar 2026
Viewed by 384
Abstract
Fiscal and tax new media has emerged as a new channel for government-enterprise engagement, linking policy communication with firms’ sustainability-oriented decisions. This study hand-collects the launch status of official microblog accounts for finance and taxation departments in China’s prefecture-level cities. This paper combines [...] Read more.
Fiscal and tax new media has emerged as a new channel for government-enterprise engagement, linking policy communication with firms’ sustainability-oriented decisions. This study hand-collects the launch status of official microblog accounts for finance and taxation departments in China’s prefecture-level cities. This paper combines these data with firm-level observations on China’s green enterprises from 2008 to 2022, and clearly defines the sample of green enterprises. Defining the sustainable spirit among green entrepreneurs from the perspective of entrepreneurship and innovation. This is to estimate how government communication and policy signaling shape firms’ sustainability-oriented behavior. Treating the introduction of official fiscal and tax new media as a quasi-natural experiment, we apply a staggered difference-in-differences design to identify its effect on green entrepreneurs’ sustainable spirit. The study finds that launching official fiscal and tax new media significantly stimulates the sustainable spirit of green entrepreneurs. Mechanism tests suggest that the effect operates through improvements in information infrastructure and governance capacity, including higher internet penetration, reduced fiscal and tax irregularities, and stronger digital governance. Particularly in regions with weaker government–business relations, more integrated administrative systems, lower fiscal pressure, and higher government subsidies, the promoting effect is more significant. Overall, the findings offer policy implications for strengthening the effectiveness of public digital communication and for fostering green entrepreneurs’ sustainable spirit. Full article
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9 pages, 663 KB  
Proceeding Paper
From Policy Failure to Collective Self-Consumption: The Penthéréaz Agrivoltaic Energy Community in Switzerland
by Sabrina BenGhida, Sonia BenGhida, Djamil BenGhida and Riad BenGhida
Biol. Life Sci. Forum 2025, 54(1), 22; https://doi.org/10.3390/blsf2025054022 - 13 Feb 2026
Viewed by 380
Abstract
Policy instability and regulatory barriers remain key obstacles to the long-term viability of agriphotovoltaics (APV) deployment. The Penthéréaz case in Switzerland provides empirical evidence of how cooperative governance and collective self-consumption can restore project feasibility after subsidy withdrawal. Using a single-case study and [...] Read more.
Policy instability and regulatory barriers remain key obstacles to the long-term viability of agriphotovoltaics (APV) deployment. The Penthéréaz case in Switzerland provides empirical evidence of how cooperative governance and collective self-consumption can restore project feasibility after subsidy withdrawal. Using a single-case study and process-tracing approach based on cooperative documentation and regulatory records, the analysis explains how Penthéréaz Énergie Photovoltaïque S.A. cooperative (PEP)., initially structured as a subsidy-dependent venture, transitioned into a resilient collective self-consumption network supported by a private micro-grid. Following the withdrawal of federal feed-in tariffs, the project faced major economic risk and responded through decentralized financial restructuring, including community-funded debt at a 2% interest rate. The installation comprises 1180 photovoltaic panels with an installed capacity of 283 kWp, producing approximately 290,000 kWh per year while providing water-tightness and light permeability for agricultural infrastructure. The findings further indicate that operational success contributed to Swiss regulatory adjustments, enabling private distribution networks to cross public roads and secure geographic continuity for local energy sharing. With a reported self-consumption rate of 40% across a diversified user base including agri-food and residential consumers, the case demonstrates the operational value of local load-matching. The findings propose six context-dependent lessons derived from a single case, emphasizing governance capacity, tariff risk management, regulatory adaptability, and demand-oriented system design. Full article
(This article belongs to the Proceedings of The 3rd International Online Conference on Agriculture)
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