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Keywords = interstate cooperation

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37 pages, 7224 KB  
Article
Coordinated Optimization of Multi-EVCS Participation in P2P Energy Sharing and Joint Frequency Regulation Based on Asymmetric Nash Bargaining
by Nuerjiamali Wushouerniyazi, Haiyun Wang and Yunfeng Ding
Energies 2026, 19(5), 1269; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19051269 - 3 Mar 2026
Viewed by 235
Abstract
To address the challenges of insufficient frequency regulation capability of individual stations, poor collaborative economic performance, and unfair benefit allocation caused by fluctuations in photovoltaic (PV) output and variations in electric vehicle (EV) connectivity during vehicle-to-grid (V2G) interactions under high-penetration PV integration, this [...] Read more.
To address the challenges of insufficient frequency regulation capability of individual stations, poor collaborative economic performance, and unfair benefit allocation caused by fluctuations in photovoltaic (PV) output and variations in electric vehicle (EV) connectivity during vehicle-to-grid (V2G) interactions under high-penetration PV integration, this paper proposes a coordinated optimal operation strategy for peer-to-peer (P2P) energy sharing and joint frequency regulation among multiple electric vehicle charging stations (EVCSs). First, a collaborative framework for P2P energy sharing and joint frequency regulation among EVCSs is constructed to describe the operational mechanism of inter-station energy mutual support and coordinated response to frequency regulation signals. Subsequently, an aggregate model of the dispatchable potential for EV clusters within each station is established based on Minkowski Summation (M-sum), characterizing the charging and discharging power boundaries and frequency regulation potential of the EV clusters. Meanwhile, distributionally robust chance constraints (DRCC) based on the Kullback–Leibler (KL) divergence are introduced to handle the uncertainty of PV power generation within the EVCS. On this basis, a dynamic frequency regulation output model for EV clusters and a multi-station P2P energy sharing model are designed, with the optimization objective of minimizing the total operating cost. Finally, to quantify the differential contributions of each EVCS in the collaborative operation, an asymmetric Nash bargaining benefit allocation mechanism is proposed, which incorporates a comprehensive contribution index considering both energy sharing and joint frequency regulation, The model is solved in a distributed manner using the alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM). Simulation results demonstrate that, compared to non-cooperative operation, the frequency regulation completeness rates of the EVCSs after cooperation increase by 5.7%, 5.2%, and 4.4%, respectively; meanwhile, the total operating cost drops from CNY 16,187.61 under non-cooperative operation to CNY 15,997.47, achieving a reduction of 1.18%. The proposed strategy not only meets grid frequency regulation demands but also enhances the economic efficiency of multi-station collaborative operation and the fairness of benefit distribution. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optimized Energy Management Technology for Electric Vehicle)
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27 pages, 1193 KB  
Review
A Survey of Emerging DDoS Threats in New Power Systems
by Fan Luo, Siqin Fan and Guolin Shao
Sensors 2026, 26(4), 1097; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26041097 - 8 Feb 2026
Viewed by 421
Abstract
Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks remain the most pervasive and operationally disruptive cyber threat and are routinely weaponized in interstate conflict (e.g., Russia–Ukraine and Stuxnet). Although attack-chain models are standard for Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) analysis, they have seldom been applied to DDoS, which [...] Read more.
Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks remain the most pervasive and operationally disruptive cyber threat and are routinely weaponized in interstate conflict (e.g., Russia–Ukraine and Stuxnet). Although attack-chain models are standard for Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) analysis, they have seldom been applied to DDoS, which is often framed as a single-step volumetric assault. However, ubiquitous intelligence and ambient connectivity increasingly enable DDoS campaigns to unfold as multi-stage operations rather than isolated floods. In parallel, large language models (LLMs) create new opportunities to strengthen traditional DDoS defenses through richer contextual understanding. Reviewing incidents from 2019 to 2024, we propose a three-phase DDoS attack chain—preparation, development, and execution—that captures contemporary tactics and their dependencies on novel hardware, network architectures, and application protocols. We classify these patterns, contrast them with conventional DDoS, survey current defenses (anycast and scrubbing, BGP Flowspec, programmable data planes, adaptive ML detection, API hardening), and outline research directions in cross-layer telemetry, adversarially robust learning, automated mitigation orchestration, and cooperative takedown. Full article
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52 pages, 8374 KB  
Article
Trends in Atmospheric Emissions in Central Asian Countries Since 1990 in the Context of Regional Development
by Saken Kozhagulov, Ainagul Adambekova, Jose Carlos Quadrado, Vitaliy Salnikov, Aina Rysmagambetova and Ainur Tanybayeva
Climate 2025, 13(9), 176; https://doi.org/10.3390/cli13090176 - 27 Aug 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2234
Abstract
In Central Asian countries (CACs) atmosphere pollution is increasing due to population growth, economic growth, agricultural development, energy consumption and climate change. The countries of the region developed climate change adaptation strategies—Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change [...] Read more.
In Central Asian countries (CACs) atmosphere pollution is increasing due to population growth, economic growth, agricultural development, energy consumption and climate change. The countries of the region developed climate change adaptation strategies—Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). At the same time, regional integration, which should be a necessary condition for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the solving of general environmental problems, is not involved. This article shows the importance of a comprehensive analysis of greenhouse gas (GHG) and non-greenhouse emissions into the atmosphere for the entire Central Asian region as a single ecosystem. The energy intensity of national economies structure was chosen as the main factor determining the level of pollution. The analysis shows that over the past 30 years, the main part of the commodity exports (73.6–81.4%) of Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan has been fossil natural resources. There is a strong economic dependence on coal and other types of fuel, which leads to atmospheric emissions. The analysis shows that limited financial resources, lack of effective systemic monitoring and control of air quality that meets modern international requirements and standards, leads to absence of tangible changes in practice yet. Over 30 years in CACs, the share of CO2 emissions associated with fuel combustion has not decreased and amounts to 78%. The key mechanisms for reducing atmospheric emissions are significantly increase investments in the transformation of the economies in the context of regional development, interstate cooperation, the introduction of environmental norms, standards harmonized with world ones, green technologies based on alternative energy, sustainable transport and logistics infrastructure. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Climate and Environment)
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17 pages, 306 KB  
Article
Public Willingness to Pay for Interstate Cooperation to Preserve the Ecological Integrity of the Han River Estuary in Korea
by Min-Ki Hyun, Jungho Nam and Seung-Hoon Yoo
Sustainability 2024, 16(9), 3572; https://doi.org/10.3390/su16093572 - 24 Apr 2024
Viewed by 2431
Abstract
The Han River Estuary (HRE), Yellow Sea, forms part of the border between South Korea and North Korea, and these two countries are militarily hostile. Since the HRE has quite excellent ecological integrity, the task of preserving it well is emerging as important. [...] Read more.
The Han River Estuary (HRE), Yellow Sea, forms part of the border between South Korea and North Korea, and these two countries are militarily hostile. Since the HRE has quite excellent ecological integrity, the task of preserving it well is emerging as important. Thus, the South Korean Government is attempting to preserve the ecological integrity of the HRE through interstate cooperation. By employing contingent valuation, this study delves into South Korean households’ willingness to pay (WTP) for this preservation. One thousand households nationwide were sampled and surveyed through face-to-face individual interviews. Annual household income tax was selected as the payment vehicle. Dichotomous choice questioning was chosen as the WTP induction method. A spike model was selected as a method for modelling a WTP of zero. The main results showed statistical significance. Annual WTP per household and national WTP were obtained as KRW 4487 (USD 3.92) and KRW 125.75 billion (USD 109.83 million), respectively. When a 10-year payment period and a 4.5% discount rate were adopted, the value was KRW 766.14 billion (USD 669.12 million). South Korean households placed considerable value on the preservation of the ecological integrity of the HRE through interstate cooperation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Coastal and Estuary Management)
6 pages, 163 KB  
Review
Status, Needs, and Perspectives on the Practice of Endourology in Africa: A Continental Survey of 21 Reference Centers
by Saleh Abdelkerim Nedjim, Ziba Ouima Justin Dieudonné, Hagguir Hissein, Kaleab Habtemichael Gebreselassie, Douglas Arthur, Mahamane Salissou, Mahamat Ali Mahamat, Abdullahi Khalid, Emmanuel Muhawenimana, Cléhaude Dibingue, Thoto Shabani Marebo, Gnimdou Botcho, Daniel Danai,  Rimtebaye Kimassoum, Choua Ouchemi, Mamadou Barry, Odzebe Anani Wenceslas Sévérin,  Kasonde Bowa,  Berthé Honoré, John Lazarus, Coulibaly Noël, Alain Khassim Ndoye and Aboutaieb Rachidadd Show full author list remove Hide full author list
Soc. Int. Urol. J. 2023, 4(6), 480-485; https://doi.org/10.48083/EYBS1051 - 30 Nov 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1819
Abstract
Endourology occupies an important place in modern urological practice. Compared with conventional surgery, it offers improved safety and patients experience less severe postoperative effects. Its use requires a certain level of equipment and technical skills. In many developed countries, it has been established [...] Read more.
Endourology occupies an important place in modern urological practice. Compared with conventional surgery, it offers improved safety and patients experience less severe postoperative effects. Its use requires a certain level of equipment and technical skills. In many developed countries, it has been established for years and its practice has become routine. In Africa, it is still not very practical or even non-existent in certain reference centers. This survey conducted among the heads of urology departments or training coordinators in African referral centers defines the current practice of endourology. According to the needs and perspectives identified, it is important, if not essential, to create services or reference centers specializing in endourology. The role of these centers will be to take care of patients and train urologists in technical skills. The creation of a sub-regional and international network could contribute to the development of this practice. Multi-stakeholder cooperation (inter-state, with non-governmental organizations, companies or corporations) is also necessary. Full article
18 pages, 887 KB  
Article
Desalination and Transboundary Water Conflict and Cooperation: A Mixed-Method Empirical Approach
by Maureen Walschot and David Katz
Water 2022, 14(12), 1925; https://doi.org/10.3390/w14121925 - 15 Jun 2022
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 4113
Abstract
The impact of the adoption of desalination on relations between parties in transboundary settings is unclear. The previous literature has indicated that the effect of desalination on conflict and cooperation is an empirical matter. By reducing scarcity and variability, the adoption of desalination [...] Read more.
The impact of the adoption of desalination on relations between parties in transboundary settings is unclear. The previous literature has indicated that the effect of desalination on conflict and cooperation is an empirical matter. By reducing scarcity and variability, the adoption of desalination is likely to reduce the potential for conflict, though it may also create new conflicts, for instance, over water of marginal quality or over issues of equity. Its effect on cooperation is even more ambiguous, as it both offers parties more flexibility, which is likely to increase cooperation, but can be implemented unilaterally, which may reduce the need for cooperation. The little empirical work that has been published investigating these impacts has been largely based on anecdotal evidence or individual case studies. This paper presents a more systematic look at these impacts, using a mixed-method (quantitative and qualitative) analysis of interstate interactions before and after the adoption of large-scale seawater desalination. The results support the contention that while desalination has the potential to reduce conflict and increase cooperation, the impact of desalination on hydropolitics cannot be assumed a priori. Rather, it is largely context-dependent, and as such, it should not be viewed as a technological fix for transboundary water relations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Water Conflict Prevention)
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15 pages, 1433 KB  
Article
Water Allocation Using the Bankruptcy Model: A Case Study of the Missouri River
by Heshani Manaweera Wickramage, David C. Roberts and Robert R. Hearne
Water 2020, 12(3), 619; https://doi.org/10.3390/w12030619 - 25 Feb 2020
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 4972
Abstract
This research applies cooperative game theory—specifically, the bankruptcy model—to address conflicts arising from the scarcity of water resources shared by multiple agents. This case study addresses potential outcomes of five allocation rules applied to the apportionment of water between two agents in the [...] Read more.
This research applies cooperative game theory—specifically, the bankruptcy model—to address conflicts arising from the scarcity of water resources shared by multiple agents. This case study addresses potential outcomes of five allocation rules applied to the apportionment of water between two agents in the Missouri River. Currently, there is no interstate compact to apportion Missouri River and frequent disputes between upstream and downstream states occur. Upstream states favor managing reservoir water levels to support reservoir recreation and downstream states want water for the downstream navigation channel. The five allocation rules studied are (1) Proportional Sharing, (2) Constrained Equal Awards, (3) Constrained Equal Losses, (4) Sequential Sharing based on Proportional Sharing, and (5) a proposed Modified Constrained Equal Awards rule. The results of the analysis of apportionment during four dry years in the 2000s show that the best approaches are the proposed Modified Constrained Equal Awards Rule and the Proportional Sharing Rule. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Water Resources Management, Policy and Governance)
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15 pages, 222 KB  
Article
Multiple Dynamic Mechanisms of Globalization: Alternatives to Capitalism
by Yu Huang, Yuejing Ge and Wei Hu
Sustainability 2019, 11(19), 5344; https://doi.org/10.3390/su11195344 - 27 Sep 2019
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 10970
Abstract
As one of the most striking topics in the contemporary world economy, the discussion on globalization seems to take capitalism as the main dynamic mechanism for its practice process, i.e., capital-driven globalization. Although many researchers have proposed other alternative solutions that are crucial [...] Read more.
As one of the most striking topics in the contemporary world economy, the discussion on globalization seems to take capitalism as the main dynamic mechanism for its practice process, i.e., capital-driven globalization. Although many researchers have proposed other alternative solutions that are crucial to the development of globalization, relevant research is still very insufficient. Based on this point, this study aims to explore the driving forces, action mechanisms, manifestations, and influences of the contemporary globalization process in a more comprehensive way, particularly focusing on the dynamic mechanisms of globalization other than capitalism, and trying to explain the interaction between various dynamic mechanisms. Overall, this paper summarizes three major (but not all) dynamic mechanisms of the contemporary globalization: capital-driven, state-driven, and inter-state cooperation-driven. These three dynamic mechanisms act on different spaces in different ways, exert different influences, and have profound interactive relations on the process of globalization. By showing a more comprehensive picture of globalization, this study attempts to explain the existing alternatives to capital-driven globalization, and encourages a more in-depth discussion of anti-globalization and regional integration as alternative options for globalization from the perspective of internal operation mechanism. Full article
17 pages, 608 KB  
Article
Modeling Competition between Countries in the Development of Arctic Resources
by Pavel Konyukhovskiy, Victoria Holodkova and Aleksander Titov
Resources 2019, 8(1), 49; https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8010049 - 6 Mar 2019
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 5075
Abstract
The article is devoted to the approaches that can be applied in the distribution of Arctic resources between the main reference countries of this region. The objective economic nature of the problems that arise in this region makes it possible to characterize them [...] Read more.
The article is devoted to the approaches that can be applied in the distribution of Arctic resources between the main reference countries of this region. The objective economic nature of the problems that arise in this region makes it possible to characterize them as a competition of claims for a limited and potentially dynamically changing resource. At a formal level, this problem has a general nature and it is typical for many areas of modern economy. At the same time, it is impossible to deny its specifics, which imposes significant restrictions on possible methods of solution. In recent years, problems in the sphere of interstate cooperation under conditions of limited resources have significantly increased. In such a situation, scientific and practical research in the field of mechanisms for regulating the relations between the parties (economic entities) becomes interesting. In analyzing the mechanisms of distribution of limited resources, one can use the theory of cooperative games, mathematical models of resource rationing, as well as works on the study of problems of equitable distribution (s.c. Fair Divisions). In the framework of such tasks, the range of applicants for limited resources can be limited to countries or regions directly adjacent. The process can be include of “external players” who have sufficient investment potential. The subsequent development and analysis of the problems of regulating intercountry interaction are associated with mathematical formalization. Such formalization presupposes a description of the situation of competitive interaction between countries in the form of a stochastic cooperative game. An analysis of possible concepts for the solution of this game will lead to meaningful conclusions about specific schemes (mechanisms) of rationing. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Management of Comprehensive Development of the Arctic Territory)
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