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Keywords = financial support for agriculture

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38 pages, 3712 KB  
Article
A Framework for Profitability-Focused Land Use Transitions Between Agriculture and Forestry: A Case Study of Latvia
by Kristine Bilande, Una Diana Veipane, Aleksejs Nipers and Irina Pilvere
Land 2026, 15(2), 204; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15020204 - 23 Jan 2026
Viewed by 116
Abstract
Understanding when and where to shift land from agriculture to forestry is essential for designing sustainable land use strategies that align with climate, biodiversity, and rural development goals. However, traditional profitability comparisons rely on long-term discounting, which is highly sensitive to assumptions and [...] Read more.
Understanding when and where to shift land from agriculture to forestry is essential for designing sustainable land use strategies that align with climate, biodiversity, and rural development goals. However, traditional profitability comparisons rely on long-term discounting, which is highly sensitive to assumptions and often misaligned with the shorter-term decision-making horizons that are relevant for policymakers. This study presents a deposit-based framework that interprets annual timber biomass growth as accumulating economic value, enabling direct, per-hectare comparisons with yearly agricultural profits. The framework integrates parcel-level spatial data, land quality indicators, national statistics, and expert inputs to produce high-resolution maps of annual profitability for both agriculture and forestry. Applied to the case of Latvia, the results show strong spatial variation in agricultural returns, particularly in low-quality areas where profits are marginal or negative. By contrast, forestry provides more stable, though modest, economic gains across a wide range of biophysical conditions. These insights help identify where afforestation becomes a financially viable land use alternative. The framework is designed to be transferable to other regions by substituting local data on land quality, prices and growth. It complements policy instruments such as performance-based CAP payments and afforestation support, offering a future-oriented tool for spatially explicit and economically grounded land use planning. Full article
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21 pages, 785 KB  
Article
Carbon Farming in Türkiye: Challenges, Opportunities and Implementation Mechanism
by Abdüssamet Aydın, Fatma Köroğlu, Evan Alexander Thomas, Carlo Salvinelli, Elif Pınar Polat and Kasırga Yıldırak
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 891; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020891 - 15 Jan 2026
Viewed by 330
Abstract
Carbon farming represents a strategic approach to enhancing agricultural sustainability while reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. In Türkiye, agriculture accounted for approximately 14.9% of national GHG emissions in 2023, dominated by methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O). By increasing [...] Read more.
Carbon farming represents a strategic approach to enhancing agricultural sustainability while reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. In Türkiye, agriculture accounted for approximately 14.9% of national GHG emissions in 2023, dominated by methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O). By increasing carbon storage in soils and vegetation, carbon farming can improve soil health, water retention, and climate resilience, thereby contributing to mitigation efforts and sustainable rural development. This study reviews and synthesizes international and national evidence on carbon farming mechanisms, practices, payment models, and adoption enablers and barriers, situating these insights within Türkiye’s agroecological and institutional context. The analysis draws on a systematic review of peer-reviewed literature, institutional reports, and policy documents published between 2015 and 2025. The findings indicate substantial mitigation potential from soil-based practices and livestock- and manure-related measures, yet limited uptake due to low awareness, capacity constraints, financial and administrative barriers, and regulatory gaps, highlighting the need for region-specific approaches. To support implementation and scaling, the study proposes a policy-oriented, regionally differentiated and digitally enabled MRV framework and an associated implementation pathway designed to reduce transaction costs, enhance farmer participation, and enable integration with emerging carbon market mechanisms. Full article
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26 pages, 2226 KB  
Article
Exploring the Pathways to High-Quality Development of Agricultural Enterprises from an Institutional Logic Perspective: A Systemic Configurational Analysis
by Xianyun Wu, Xihao Chang and Shihui Yu
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 853; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020853 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 129
Abstract
High-quality development of agricultural enterprises is essential for China’s rural revitalization, yet the institutional conditions that support it remain poorly understood. Drawing on institutional logics and configuration theory, this study adopts a holistic systems perspective to examine how government, market, and social institutions [...] Read more.
High-quality development of agricultural enterprises is essential for China’s rural revitalization, yet the institutional conditions that support it remain poorly understood. Drawing on institutional logics and configuration theory, this study adopts a holistic systems perspective to examine how government, market, and social institutions interact to shape enterprise performance. Using provincial data (2013–2023) matched with firm-level data for 119 listed agricultural enterprises, we estimate total factor productivity as the core outcome and apply dynamic fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (dynamic fsQCA) to identify equifinal institutional pathways. The results reveal that high-quality development is an emergent property of complex institutional systems; instead, high-quality development emerges from several distinct configurations combining policy support, marketization, financial development, Agricultural Infrastructure Index, market stability, and urban–rural integration. Two contrasting configurations are associated with non-high-quality development, characterized by financial scarcity and infrastructure deficits or by fragmented policy support under weak regulation. Dynamic analysis further reveals clear temporal and spatial heterogeneity: some market–finance driven paths lose robustness over time, while policy–urbanization and regulation–infrastructure based configurations become increasingly stable. These findings extend institutional configuration research to the agricultural sector, demonstrate the value of dynamic fsQCA for capturing temporal effects, and offer differentiated policy implications for optimizing institutional environments to foster the high-quality development of agricultural enterprises. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Agriculture)
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24 pages, 1036 KB  
Article
Financialisation of Food Industry Enterprises
by Joanna Pawłowska-Tyszko and Jadwiga Drożdż
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 824; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020824 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 185
Abstract
Financialisation has an increasing influence on the functioning of non-financial enterprises. It is therefore important to examine whether and to what extent food sector enterprises are subject to the process of financialisation. The research objective was to determine the level of financialisation of [...] Read more.
Financialisation has an increasing influence on the functioning of non-financial enterprises. It is therefore important to examine whether and to what extent food sector enterprises are subject to the process of financialisation. The research objective was to determine the level of financialisation of food industry enterprises in Poland in relation to the whole industry sector. To achieve this objective, the following research hypothesis was formulated: the process of financialisation of food industry enterprises proceeds similarly to the analogous process undergoing in industrial enterprises but varies across different sectors of the food industry. The research was conducted on the basis of statistical data from Statistics Poland (SP) published in various statistical studies. Financial data from 2010 to 2023 were analysed. For this purpose, research tools used in the paper are referred to in the literature as measures of the level of financialisation, so-called balance sheet indicators. The main limitation of the research is that the results can only be applied to countries with similar economic conditions, especially post-communist countries, and that balance sheet indicators are used to measure financialisation, which, although widely used, are limited in their effectiveness because they focus only on balance sheet data. The results support the research hypothesis. The companies in the analysed industries are characterised by a low level of financialisation. The process of financialisation of food industry companies is similar to the one in industrial companies and is more intense in beverage production than in other food industry sectors. There is room for a sustainable financing policy. The results indicate that there is room for higher financing of food industry enterprises in Poland, but excessive financing may lead to excessive concentration and monopolisation of enterprises and even to speculation on agricultural markets. To maintain financial stability, it will be important to pursue a stable monetary policy, limit the risk of food price volatility, improve communication and coordination in international monetary policy, and increase national food self-sufficiency. This study fills a research gap in understanding the process of financialisation, assessing its degree of advancement and diversity in the main sectors of food processing enterprises. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Sustainable Development of Rural Areas and Agriculture)
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29 pages, 3941 KB  
Article
Multidimensional Vulnerabilities and Delisting Risk of China’s Agricultural Listed Firms: Implications for Agricultural Industry Resilience and Sustainability
by Anmeng Liu, Linlin Zhu and Yongmiao Yang
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 700; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020700 - 9 Jan 2026
Viewed by 225
Abstract
Agricultural listed companies are key nodes in the agricultural industry chain, providing capital, technology and market access to upstream producers and downstream processors. When these firms face delisting risk, the resilience and sustainability of the industry chain are threatened. Using data from 897 [...] Read more.
Agricultural listed companies are key nodes in the agricultural industry chain, providing capital, technology and market access to upstream producers and downstream processors. When these firms face delisting risk, the resilience and sustainability of the industry chain are threatened. Using data from 897 observations of Chinese A-share listed companies in the agriculture, forestry, animal husbandry, and fishery sector over 2010–2021, this study links multidimensional firm vulnerability to subsequent delisting risk. We construct 30 internal and external indicators covering financial performance, innovation input, supply chain concentration, government support and market competitiveness. Clustering method is applied to capture heterogeneity in firms’ multidimensional structural, gradient boosting models are used to predict ST (Special Treatment) status within three years, and SHAP analysis is used to identify the main risk. The results show that a small subset of firms with high leverage, tight liquidity, weak profitability, insufficient innovation, and highly concentrated key customers and suppliers accounts for most ST cases. Strengthening capital buffers, diversifying critical supply-chain relationships, and maintaining stable innovation investment are thus crucial for reducing delisting risk and enhancing the resilience of agricultural listed companies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability)
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7 pages, 362 KB  
Proceeding Paper
Adoption of Sustainable Olive Farming Practices: A Gendered Perspective from Crete-Greece
by Hadil Rbib, Maria Partalidou and Ioannis Livieratos
Proceedings 2026, 134(1), 33; https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2026134033 - 7 Jan 2026
Viewed by 198
Abstract
Women play a key role in Greek olive cultivation, a sector at the heart of local economies currently facing increasing pressures from climate change. This study explores gender roles, responsibilities, and access to resources shaping the adoption of sustainable agriculture practices. Through in-depth [...] Read more.
Women play a key role in Greek olive cultivation, a sector at the heart of local economies currently facing increasing pressures from climate change. This study explores gender roles, responsibilities, and access to resources shaping the adoption of sustainable agriculture practices. Through in-depth interviews with female farmers on the island of Crete, the results show that women face limited access to training and financial services as well as gender-based discrimination and the hidden caregiving and house working tasks. However, they manifest a strong openness towards sustainable practices, driven by environmental values, even among those lacking decision-making authority. Despite these challenges, women show a positive attitude toward learning and innovation, calling for more institutional support and training opportunities. This study sheds light on the need for recognition of women’s roles in agriculture, particularly in the context of climate adaptation, and offers practical recommendations to improve gender roles within the olive sector. Full article
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23 pages, 317 KB  
Article
Corporate Financialization and Agricultural Supply Chain Resilience: Evidence from Agricultural Listed Companies
by Lingling Zhang, Yufeng Wang, Xiangshang Yuan and Rui Chen
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 617; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020617 - 7 Jan 2026
Viewed by 204
Abstract
Against the backdrop of heightened global economic uncertainty and increasingly frequent risks in agricultural supply chains, enhancing agricultural supply chain resilience has become a critical issue for safeguarding national food security and promoting high-quality agricultural development. As key actors within agricultural supply chains, [...] Read more.
Against the backdrop of heightened global economic uncertainty and increasingly frequent risks in agricultural supply chains, enhancing agricultural supply chain resilience has become a critical issue for safeguarding national food security and promoting high-quality agricultural development. As key actors within agricultural supply chains, the impact of financialization—defined as the shift of resources to non-core financial assets—among agricultural listed firms on supply chain resilience warrants systematic examination. Using panel data from 165 Chinese agricultural listed firms (2010–2022), this study empirically investigates the impact of corporate financialization on agricultural supply chain resilience and its underlying mechanisms. An entropy-weighted composite index based on 16 parameters is used to assess agricultural supply chain resilience. It is composed of three dimensions: resistance capability, recovery capacity, and renewal capacity. The results show that: Financialization significantly undermines supply chain resilience, with the most substantial negative effect on recovery capacity, followed by renewal capacity, and the weakest on resistance capacity. Heterogeneity analyses show more pronounced negative effects among non-state-owned enterprises, non-primary sector firms, and capital-intensive enterprises. Financing constraints and capital expenditures partially mediate the negative relationship between financialization and resilience, while profitability persistence exacerbates the crowding-out effect. These findings suggest that policymakers should strike a compromise between reducing excessive financialization and strengthening agricultural supply chains. While prudently guiding agricultural firms’ financial asset allocation, greater emphasis should be placed on developing a diverse and coordinated industrial support system, thereby diverting financial capital away from crowding out core operations and toward effectively serving the real economy, ultimately contributing to national food security and agricultural modernization. Full article
23 pages, 1593 KB  
Article
Research on the Coupling Coordination Degree and Obstacle Factors of Digital Inclusive Finance and Digital Agriculture in Rural China
by Lunqiu Huang, Jun Wen, Junzeng Liu and Dong Han
Agriculture 2026, 16(2), 144; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16020144 - 6 Jan 2026
Viewed by 305
Abstract
In the context of advancing agricultural and rural modernization in China, digital agriculture has gained significant governmental attention. However, existing research has predominantly focused on examining the relationship from digital inclusive finance to digital agriculture, while in-depth investigations into their bidirectional coupled coordination, [...] Read more.
In the context of advancing agricultural and rural modernization in China, digital agriculture has gained significant governmental attention. However, existing research has predominantly focused on examining the relationship from digital inclusive finance to digital agriculture, while in-depth investigations into their bidirectional coupled coordination, spatiotemporal evolution, and underlying obstacle factors remain limited. To address this research gap, this study aims to construct innovative evaluation index systems for both domains and to establish a coupling coordination degree model alongside an obstacle degree model. This methodological framework is designed to examine the bidirectional coupled coordination, reveal its spatiotemporal evolution patterns, and identify key obstacle factors across 30 Chinese provinces. Results indicate a consistent annual improvement in the coupling coordination level across provinces. Many regions have progressed from moderate or mild dysfunction to marginal or primary coordination, with coordination degrees ranging between 0.5 and 0.6 by 2022. Specifically, the eastern region recorded 0.586, the central region 0.562, and the western region 0.531. Regional disparities are identified as the primary source of variation. Key obstacles include insufficient support from digital finance to agriculture, the east–west development gap, low actual usage of digital financial services, volatility in agricultural production price indices, and high agricultural carbon emissions. Recommendations focus on bridging regional gaps, strengthening financial support, and addressing these impediments, which are crucial for promoting sustainable development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
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30 pages, 2017 KB  
Article
Financial Risk Management and Resilience of Small Enterprises Amid the Wartime Crisis
by Valeriia Shcherbak, Oleksandr Dorokhov, Liudmyla Dorokhova, Kseniia Vzhytynska, Valentyna Yatsenko and Oleksii Yermolenko
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2026, 19(1), 37; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm19010037 - 5 Jan 2026
Viewed by 454
Abstract
This study examines the financial resilience of small enterprises in Ukraine during the wartime crisis, addressing the lack of quantitative evidence on how regional military risks and adaptive strategies jointly shape SME stability. The analysis is based on a sample of 30 small [...] Read more.
This study examines the financial resilience of small enterprises in Ukraine during the wartime crisis, addressing the lack of quantitative evidence on how regional military risks and adaptive strategies jointly shape SME stability. The analysis is based on a sample of 30 small agricultural enterprises from the eastern, central, and western regions of Ukraine using annual data for 2022–2024. To capture multidimensional resilience patterns, the study applies factor analysis, cluster analysis, and taxonomic assessment methods to evaluate financial performance, operational adaptability, and access to external resources. The findings show that resilience variation across the sample is strongly associated with enterprises’ ability to sustain revenue flows, control operating costs, and maintain a balanced capital structure. Three distinct resilience profiles were identified: high resilience in western regions (KT = 0.89), moderate resilience in central regions (KT = 0.81), and low resilience in eastern frontline regions (KT = 0.49). These results indicate substantial regional asymmetry linked to differentiated exposure to military threats. Building on these empirical insights, the study proposes a hybrid risk-management approach that integrates digitalization of financial operations, diversification of funding sources, and enhanced social engagement as mechanisms supporting adaptation under prolonged instability. The novelty of the research lies in combining regional risk exposure with multidimensional financial indicators to develop an evidence-based framework for assessing SME resilience in wartime conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Role of Digitization in Corporate Finance)
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28 pages, 2185 KB  
Review
Four Agricultural GHG Emission Mitigation Pathways in Morocco: Roadmaps from 2024 CCPI High-Performers
by Asmaâ Hajib, Mustapha Naimi and Mohamed Chikhaoui
Agriculture 2026, 16(1), 124; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16010124 - 3 Jan 2026
Viewed by 382
Abstract
Morocco ranked 9th in the 2024 Climate Change Performance Index (CCPI), placing it among the world’s top 10 performers in climate action. Building on this leadership, our review outlines practical and real-world steps to strengthen Morocco’s agricultural efforts to curb greenhouse gases. We [...] Read more.
Morocco ranked 9th in the 2024 Climate Change Performance Index (CCPI), placing it among the world’s top 10 performers in climate action. Building on this leadership, our review outlines practical and real-world steps to strengthen Morocco’s agricultural efforts to curb greenhouse gases. We base our analysis on a comparison of national communications, updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), and findings from peer-reviewed research. We identified four main areas where Morocco can boost its impact: advanced livestock methane reduction, systematic soil carbon monitoring, precision nitrogen management, and integrated renewable energy systems. To inform these levers, we studied best practices from other six high-performing countries in the 2024 CCPI—Denmark, Sweden, India, Estonia, the Netherlands, and the Philippines—and considered how their strategies could be adapted to Morocco’s semi-arid, smallholder-dominated farming context. This study delivers four concrete, multi-phase implementation roadmaps spanning 2025–2035. These roadmaps outline the technical steps, regulatory changes, and financial mechanisms. They also specified emissions reduction targets associated with each pillar: 15–30% for livestock methane, 0.3–0.8 tons of carbon per hectare per year for soil carbon sequestration, 18% for precision nitrogen management, and fossil fuel displacement through five renewable energy initiatives. The roadmaps are designed to inform the next update of Morocco’s Generation Green strategy and support the country’s 2030 NDC goal of a 45.5% emission reduction. Full article
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19 pages, 1118 KB  
Article
How Do Livelihood Assets Affect Subjective Well-Being Under Different Livelihood Strategies? Evidence from Tibetan Rural Households in China
by Di Lei, Jianjun Jin, Xin Qiu, Dan Liu and Chenyang Zhang
Agriculture 2026, 16(1), 55; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16010055 - 26 Dec 2025
Viewed by 314
Abstract
Evaluating rural households’ subjective well-being (SWB) and identifying its determinants is crucial for rural sustainable development. This study takes Diqing Prefecture in the Tibetan region of China as a case, aiming to address two key research questions: (1) How do livelihood assets affect [...] Read more.
Evaluating rural households’ subjective well-being (SWB) and identifying its determinants is crucial for rural sustainable development. This study takes Diqing Prefecture in the Tibetan region of China as a case, aiming to address two key research questions: (1) How do livelihood assets affect subjective well-being (SWB)—directly or indirectly—through the mediating role of the agricultural-income proportion? (2) Do these effects vary across different livelihood strategies? A questionnaire survey was administered to 489 randomly selected rural households in mid-2022. Two index systems were constructed: one for livelihood assets based on the Sustainable Livelihood Framework and another for SWB based on the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. A subgroup Tobit regression model was utilized to analyze the heterogeneous effects. The results revealed deficiencies in SWB regarding basic material for a good life and health. Human, financial, and social assets are positively associated with SWB. However, natural assets directly negatively impact SWB across dimensions of basic material, security, and freedom, although the negative effect is masked by the mediating effect of farming livelihood strategies. Notably, human assets’ positive influence significantly strengthens with the agricultural income proportion rising. Whether physical, financial, and social assets positively affect SWB depends on farm work participation. These evidence-based findings contribute to a better understanding of the heterogeneous role of sustainable livelihoods in affecting rural households’ subjective well-being and highlight the need for policymakers to design diverse, targeted policies to support rural development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
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13 pages, 958 KB  
Article
Coexistence of Humans and Hamadryas Baboons in Al-Baha Region, Saudi Arabia—Emotional, Social, and Financial Aspects
by Salihah Alghamdi, Dietmar Zinner, Mansour AlMalki, Seham Salamah, Saleh Al-Ghamdi, Mohammed Althubyani, Abdullah Al-Ghamdi, Wael Alzahrani, Abdulaziz Alzahrani and Ghanem Al-Ghamdi
Animals 2026, 16(1), 47; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16010047 - 24 Dec 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 532
Abstract
Human–wildlife conflicts arise from increasing human populations and the growing demand for land for agriculture and urban development. In Saudi Arabia, these dynamics have increased the impact of baboons on human communities, as expanding settlements encroach upon the natural habitats of baboons, while [...] Read more.
Human–wildlife conflicts arise from increasing human populations and the growing demand for land for agriculture and urban development. In Saudi Arabia, these dynamics have increased the impact of baboons on human communities, as expanding settlements encroach upon the natural habitats of baboons, while rising baboon populations increasingly invade urban areas in search of food, shelter, and water. We aimed to assess the effects of human–baboon coexistence on residents in the Al-Baha region, Saudi Arabia. From October 2021 to April 2022, we administered a 43-item semi-structured online questionnaire addressing emotional, social, environmental and financial impacts of nearby baboons. A total of 318 residents of the Al-Baha region completed the survey and shared their experiences regarding interactions with hamadryas baboons (Papio hamadryas) near human properties. In addition, three semi-structured life interviews with residents aged over 70 explored historical perceptions. Respondents attributed increased baboon presence to urban expansion, accessible waste, and intentional feeding and strongly supported government-led mitigation plans. Human–baboon interactions in Al Baha produce emotional stress, social disruption, and economic burdens for residents. Findings support integrated management combining public education, improved waste management, non-lethal deterrents, and carefully planned population control measures, developed with community consultation. Limitations of the study include convenience online sampling and reliance on self-reported impacts; future work should quantify baboon abundance and objectively measure economic losses. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Human-Animal Interactions, Animal Behaviour and Emotion)
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34 pages, 552 KB  
Article
Research on the Impact Effects and Mechanisms of the Coupling Synergy Between Sci-Tech Finance and Green Finance on Rural Revitalization
by Yongshuang Bai and Mancang Wang
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 181; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010181 - 24 Dec 2025
Viewed by 349
Abstract
Rural revitalization constitutes a vital strategic initiative in advancing China’s socialist modernization. At the 2023 Central Economic Work Conference, the objective of building China into a financial powerhouse was formally articulated, thereby establishing higher benchmarks for financial support of rural revitalization. A critical [...] Read more.
Rural revitalization constitutes a vital strategic initiative in advancing China’s socialist modernization. At the 2023 Central Economic Work Conference, the objective of building China into a financial powerhouse was formally articulated, thereby establishing higher benchmarks for financial support of rural revitalization. A critical question arising from this agenda is how to simultaneously advance agricultural technological innovation while effectively implementing green development principles. Accordingly, it is essential to investigate the role of the integrated development of sci-tech finance and green finance in promoting rural revitalization. Against this backdrop, this study employs provincial-level panel data from China spanning the period from 2011 to 2021. A two-way fixed effects model is adopted to examine the impact of the integrated development of sci-tech finance and green finance on rural revitalization. The analysis identifies three primary transmission mechanisms: financial supply, green agricultural development, and linkages between smallholder farmers and modern agriculture. Furthermore, the study explores heterogeneity across different financial environments from two dimensions: the level of digital inclusive finance development and the intensity of financial regulation. The empirical results indicate that (1) the integrated development of sci-tech finance and green finance significantly promotes rural revitalization, exhibiting a nonlinear effect whereby its catalytic impact intensifies markedly once the coupling coordination between the two surpasses a critical threshold; (2) such integration alleviates rural financing constraints, enhances agricultural green total factor productivity, and facilitates rural revitalization through the establishment of green agricultural cooperatives; and (3) the enhanced impact of this holistic progress is particularly noticeable in areas with advanced digital financial inclusion and robust financial oversight. In light of these results, this research puts forth three policy suggestions. First, institutional and policy preparations for integrating green finance and sci-tech finance should be accelerated through coordinated government policies, financial product innovation, and financial market reforms. Second, the channels through which sci-tech finance and green finance support rural revitalization should be strengthened by expanding agricultural credit, improving the coverage of rural financial institutions, and fostering specialized green agricultural cooperatives. Third, the financial ecosystem should be optimized by prioritizing investment in digital infrastructure and reinforcing financial supervision throughout the development of digital inclusive finance, particularly in rural regions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability)
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52 pages, 3912 KB  
Review
Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Agricultural Crops and Management Practices: The Impact of the Integrated Crop Emission Mitigation Framework on Greenhouse Gas Reduction
by Agampodi Gihan S. D. De Silva, Zainulabdeen Kh. Al-Musawi, Asish Samuel, Shyama Malika Malwalage, Thusyanthini Ramanathan, István Mihály Kulmány and Zoltán Molnár
Agronomy 2026, 16(1), 5; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy16010005 - 19 Dec 2025
Viewed by 944
Abstract
Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural crops remain a critical challenge for climate change mitigation. This review synthesizes evidence on cropland management interventions and global N2O mitigation potential. Agricultural practices such as cover cropping, agroforestry, reduced tillage, and diversification show promise in [...] Read more.
Greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural crops remain a critical challenge for climate change mitigation. This review synthesizes evidence on cropland management interventions and global N2O mitigation potential. Agricultural practices such as cover cropping, agroforestry, reduced tillage, and diversification show promise in reducing CO2, CH4, and N2O emissions, yet uncertainties in measurement, verification, and socio-economic adoption persist. This review highlights that biochar application reduces N2O emissions by 16.2% (95% CI: 9.8–22.6%) in temperate systems, demonstrating greater consistency compared to no-till agriculture, which shows higher variability (11% reduction, 95% CI: −19% to +1%). Legume-based crop rotations reduce N2O emissions by up to 39% through improved nitrogen efficiency and increase soil organic carbon by up to 18%. However, reductions in synthetic fertilizer use (65% lower in legume vs. cereal systems) can be offset by the effects of biological nitrogen fixation. Optimized nitrogen fertilization, when combined with enhanced-efficiency fertilizers, can reduce N2O emissions by 55–64%. Complementing this, global-scale analysis underscores the dominant role of optimized nitrogen fertilization in curbing N2O emissions while sustaining yields. To bridge gaps between practice-level interventions and global emission dynamics, this paper introduces the ICEMF, a novel approach combining field-based management strategies with spatially explicit emission modeling. Realistic implementation currently achieves 25–35% of technical potential, but bundled interventions combining financial incentives, training, and institutional support can increase adoption to 40–60%, demonstrating ICEMF’s value through integrated, context-adapted approaches. Only peer-reviewed articles published in English between 1997 and 2025 were selected to ensure recent and reliable findings. This review highlights knowledge gaps, evaluates policy and technical trade-offs, and proposes ICEMF as a pathway toward scalable and adaptive mitigation strategies in agriculture. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agroecology Innovation: Achieving System Resilience)
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23 pages, 656 KB  
Article
Can the Reconstruction of Agro-Pastoral Relations Optimize the Capacity for Sustainable Agricultural Development? Evidence from Jilin Province, China
by He Xu and Qinghai Guo
Sustainability 2025, 17(24), 11329; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172411329 - 17 Dec 2025
Viewed by 284
Abstract
The long-standing separation of agro-pastoral relations has adversely affected the agricultural economy and ecology, hindering sustainable agricultural development. The process of reconstructing agro-pastoral relations involves moving from separation to reintegration. To further verify the scientific validity of reconstructing agro-pastoral relations to improve economic [...] Read more.
The long-standing separation of agro-pastoral relations has adversely affected the agricultural economy and ecology, hindering sustainable agricultural development. The process of reconstructing agro-pastoral relations involves moving from separation to reintegration. To further verify the scientific validity of reconstructing agro-pastoral relations to improve economic and ecological benefits and enhance the capacity for sustainable agricultural development in the major corn-producing areas of Northeast China, this study used survey data from 521 sample farmers in Jilin Province, China, collected during the agricultural production cycle from 2020 to 2022. Using an endogenous switching regression (ESR) model and a counterfactual scenario, the integrated crop–livestock family farm (ICFF) model was shown to have a comparative advantage in improving economic and ecological benefits. The ICFF model can serve as a foundation for reconstructing agro-pastoral relations, thereby enhancing sustainable agricultural development capacity. Heterogeneity analysis indicates that larger-scale cultivated land, intensive cultivated land management, and higher education have a more significant impact on farmers’ choice of the ICFF model. To promote the restructuring of agro-pastoral relations through the ICFF model, farmers should be encouraged and supported to standardize the transfer of farmland, engage in livestock farming according to the principle of land-based livestock management, implement large-scale and intensive management, improve agricultural production technologies and improved varieties, strengthen publicity on the positive role of integrated crop-livestock management, and improve the financial support system. Full article
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