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Search Results (127)

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24 pages, 1204 KB  
Article
The Social Aspects of Energy System Transformation in Light of Climate Change—A Case Study of South-Eastern Poland in the Context of Current Challenges and Findings to Date
by Magdalena Kowalska, Ewa Chomać-Pierzecka, Maciej Kuboń and Małgorzata Bogusz
Energies 2026, 19(2), 286; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19020286 - 6 Jan 2026
Viewed by 312
Abstract
The energy sector is counted among the environmentally unfriendly branches in many global economies, including in Poland. However, it has been pivoting towards alternatives to traditional, high-emission energy generation from non-renewable sources for years. Renewable energy sources, or renewables, are a responsible response [...] Read more.
The energy sector is counted among the environmentally unfriendly branches in many global economies, including in Poland. However, it has been pivoting towards alternatives to traditional, high-emission energy generation from non-renewable sources for years. Renewable energy sources, or renewables, are a responsible response to today’s expectations concerning country-level sustainable development, driving the global green energy transition. However, the success of increasing the share of renewables in energy mixes hinges to a large extent on the public perceptions of the changes. In the broadest perspective, research today focuses on global energy transition policy and its funding, problems with the availability of energy carriers, and the adequacy of specific energy production and transfer systems from a technical and technological point of view. Academics tend to concentrate slightly less on investigating the public opinion regarding the challenges of energy transition. This aligns with a relevant research gap for Poland, particularly in rural areas. Therefore, the present article aims to analyse public opinion on environmental protection challenges and the ensuing need to improve energy sourcing to promote the growth of renewable energy in rural Poland, with a case study of five districts in Małopolskie Voivodeship, to contribute to the body of knowledge on these issues. The goal was pursued through a survey of 300 randomly selected inhabitants of the five districts in Malopolska, conducted using Computer-Assisted Personal Interviewing (CAPI) in 2024. The results were analysed with quantitative techniques and qualitative instruments. The detailed investigation involved descriptive statistics and tests proposed by Fisher, Shapiro–Wilk, and Kruskal–Wallis, using IBM SPSS v.25. The use of the indicated methodological approach to achieve the adopted goal distinguishes the study from the approach of other authors. The primary findings reveal acceptance of the ongoing transition processes among the rural population. It is relatively well aware of the role of renewables, but there is still room for improvement, therefore it is necessary to disseminate knowledge in this area and monitor changes in sustainable awareness. We have also established that, overall, educational background is not a significant discriminative feature in rural perceptions of the energy transition. The conclusions can inform policy models to promote green transformation processes, enabling their adaptation to the current challenges and needs of rural residents. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Energy Transition Towards Carbon Neutrality)
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25 pages, 421 KB  
Article
Policy Instruments Against Climate Change: A Panel Data Analysis of Carbon Taxation and Emissions Trading in OECD Countries
by Nergis Feride Kaplan Donmez
Economies 2026, 14(1), 12; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies14010012 - 3 Jan 2026
Viewed by 441
Abstract
Since the Industrial Revolution, the increase in greenhouse gas emissions has led to a significant rise in global temperatures compared to the pre-industrial period. This development has heightened the importance of carbon pricing policies in combating climate change. This study aims to examine [...] Read more.
Since the Industrial Revolution, the increase in greenhouse gas emissions has led to a significant rise in global temperatures compared to the pre-industrial period. This development has heightened the importance of carbon pricing policies in combating climate change. This study aims to examine the effects of carbon pricing instruments, carbon taxes and emissions trading systems (ETS) on carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in OECD countries. A panel data analysis covering the period 2002–2023 was conducted, taking into account structural differences across countries as well as shared economic dynamics. The findings indicate that both carbon taxes and ETS mechanisms are effective in reducing CO2 emissions in the long run. Moreover, while increased industrial activity contributes to higher emissions, a greater share of renewable and nuclear sources in the energy mix is found to support emission reduction. The study demonstrates that carbon pricing policies exert limited short-term effects but generate structural and lasting impacts in the long term. The findings are consistent with the existing literature and theoretical framework. Achieving permanent reductions in emissions requires a comprehensive policy approach that not only implements carbon pricing, but also strengthens energy efficiency and fuel substitution in the industrial sector while continuously increasing the share of clean sources in the energy supply. The analysis shows that carbon taxes and emissions trading systems (ETS) are effective in reducing emissions over the long run in OECD countries, and that their success varies depending on countries’ energy profiles and policy designs. These results underline that a well-designed and complementary carbon pricing framework is critical for achieving a sustainable transition. Full article
27 pages, 487 KB  
Article
Sustainable Financing and Eco-Innovation as Drivers of Low-Carbon Transition: Empirical Evidence from Tunisia
by Faten Chibani and Jamel Eddine Henchiri
Economies 2026, 14(1), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies14010010 - 30 Dec 2025
Viewed by 234
Abstract
Many emerging economies seek to lower carbon intensity while remaining heavily dependent on fossil fuels. This paper examines how sustainable finance, eco-innovation, and the energy mix shape Tunisia’s low-carbon transition. We use quarterly data for 2000–2023 and an econometric environmental-impact model that links [...] Read more.
Many emerging economies seek to lower carbon intensity while remaining heavily dependent on fossil fuels. This paper examines how sustainable finance, eco-innovation, and the energy mix shape Tunisia’s low-carbon transition. We use quarterly data for 2000–2023 and an econometric environmental-impact model that links carbon intensity to green finance, innovation, renewable and fossil energy, openness, income, and demographic factors. The results show that sustainable finance consistently reduces carbon intensity across all emission states, with stronger effects when emissions are high. The energy mix is crucial: a larger share of renewable energy lowers carbon intensity, while higher fossil energy use increases it and reinforces fossil carbon lock-in. Eco-innovation has its strongest mitigation effects in high-intensity situations, suggesting delayed effects linked to limited absorptive capacity and technology diffusion. Openness and demographic pressure tend to raise emissions through scale and consumption channels. Overall, the findings depict a finance-anchored but energy-constrained transition. They indicate that Tunisia and similar MENA economies can accelerate decarbonization by scaling credible sustainable finance instruments, speeding up renewable deployment, and strengthening the innovation and governance framework that supports green investment, innovation policy, and energy sector reform in semi-industrialized economies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Macroeconomics, Monetary Economics, and Financial Markets)
18 pages, 951 KB  
Article
Assessing the Performance and Evolution of China’s Quality Policies from a Value Co-Creation Perspective
by Jing Jiang, Hanting Zhou, Wenhe Chen, Longsheng Cheng and Suli Zheng
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 323; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010323 - 29 Dec 2025
Viewed by 226
Abstract
This study develops a value co-creation-oriented analytical framework to evaluate the performance and evolutionary dynamics of China’s national-level quality policies from 1979 to 2023. A comprehensive categorization and scoring system is established to measure policy intensity, coordination, and comprehensiveness. Policy texts are systematically [...] Read more.
This study develops a value co-creation-oriented analytical framework to evaluate the performance and evolutionary dynamics of China’s national-level quality policies from 1979 to 2023. A comprehensive categorization and scoring system is established to measure policy intensity, coordination, and comprehensiveness. Policy texts are systematically coded through content analysis, and indicator weights are determined using the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP). The resulting composite effect values are further analyzed through punctuated-equilibrium testing, breakpoint analysis, and a Vector Autoregression (VAR) model to estimate the temporal lag of policy implementation. Based on 10,962 policy documents retrieved from the Peking University Law Database, the results reveal clear evolutionary stages and cyclical upward trends in policy performance since the reform and opening-up, while the insufficient supply of demand-side policies remains a long-term structural weakness. The overall evolution path shows a transition from unilateral government provision centered on public value to dual government–market regulation driven by mixed commercial value, and finally toward pluralistic quality governance under value co-creation. Empirical evidence also indicates that quality policies act as short-term stimulus instruments that generate positive but sectorally differentiated effects across the three major industries. These findings highlight the need to expand policy coverage, enhance coordination and comprehensiveness, and rebalance the supply structure. Strengthening short-term stimulus effects while promoting inclusive, co-governed, and sustainable quality policy systems can further improve long-term effectiveness and provide useful insights for international discussions on value co-creation-based governance. Full article
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20 pages, 578 KB  
Article
Enhancing the Function of Country Parks to Facilitate Rural Revitalization: A Case Study of Shanghai
by Hongyu Du
Land 2026, 15(1), 47; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15010047 - 26 Dec 2025
Viewed by 333
Abstract
Country parks are an important instrument for implementing China’s strategies on ecological civilization and integrated urban–rural development. This study conducted field surveys in seven country parks of Shanghai. Meanwhile, stakeholder seminars were organized with local residents and park authorities. To assess visitor satisfaction, [...] Read more.
Country parks are an important instrument for implementing China’s strategies on ecological civilization and integrated urban–rural development. This study conducted field surveys in seven country parks of Shanghai. Meanwhile, stakeholder seminars were organized with local residents and park authorities. To assess visitor satisfaction, a questionnaire survey was administered both on-site and online. Through case analysis and a policy review, this study systematically identifies key challenges in leveraging country parks for rural revitalization. The findings indicate that visitors highly value the ecological qualities of the parks, and basic infrastructure like roads and resting facilities generally meets expectations. However, shuttle services and smart guiding systems remain notable shortcomings that hinder the overall visitor experience. Moreover, gaps in service quality, local cultural representation, and the depth of nature education constitute the primary weaknesses affecting visitor satisfaction. Regarding rural revitalization, this study identifies four main limitations in the contribution of country parks: (1) Inadequate functional positioning and weak integration with surrounding resources; (2) Low land use efficiency and an unbalanced provision of supporting facilities; (3) Homogenized industrial formats with limited innovation and integration capacity; and (4) Restricted participation of local farmers and underdeveloped multi-stakeholder governance mechanisms. To address these issues, this study proposes four strategic recommendations: (1) Develop distinctive local brands and strengthen synergies with surrounding resources; (2) Promote mixed land use and enhance supporting service facilities; (3) Foster diversified business formats and facilitate the value realization of ecological products; and (4) Expand income-generation channels for farmers and improve multi-stakeholder governance frameworks. The research demonstrates that optimizing the functions of country parks can improve ecological and recreational services and help establish an integrated “ecology–industry–community” framework through industrial chain extension and community participation, thereby supporting rural revitalization. Full article
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18 pages, 542 KB  
Article
Perceptions of the Sexual and Reproductive Rights of Indigenous Women in Northern Colombia
by Dailyng Boom-Cárcamo, Kelly Anaya-Cuello, Josefina Cuello-Daza and Efrain Boom-Cárcamo
Societies 2026, 16(1), 5; https://doi.org/10.3390/soc16010005 - 23 Dec 2025
Viewed by 240
Abstract
This study examines the perceptions and experiences of Indigenous Kankuamo women in northern Colombia regarding their sexual and reproductive rights (SRR), exploring how cultural traditions and public policies shape their exercise. The main objective was to understand the tensions between ancestral values, community [...] Read more.
This study examines the perceptions and experiences of Indigenous Kankuamo women in northern Colombia regarding their sexual and reproductive rights (SRR), exploring how cultural traditions and public policies shape their exercise. The main objective was to understand the tensions between ancestral values, community leadership, and internationally recognized rights. A mixed-methods approach (qualitative–quantitative) was employed, based on semi-structured interviews conducted with 30 women. The instrument included closed Likert-type questions and open-ended items addressing perceptions, cultural practices, access to health services, and government programs. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Spearman correlations, and content analysis through thematic development. The findings revealed a strong correlation between trust in health services, accessibility, cultural compatibility, and the frequency of adolescent pregnancies. Divided perceptions regarding the role of community leaders were identified, along with a recurring demand for education and awareness-raising on sexuality and rights. Participants also noted limitations in state programs, mainly due to their limited cultural relevance. Kankuamo women face ongoing tensions between cultural preservation and sexual autonomy. Strengthening education, inclusive leadership, and policies with an ethnic and gender perspective is recommended to ensure the full exercise of their SRR. Full article
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27 pages, 2179 KB  
Review
The Nearshoring Loop: A Review of Triggers, Location Choice, and Captured Outcomes
by Alejandro Platas-López and Oliverio Cruz-Mejía
Logistics 2026, 10(1), 1; https://doi.org/10.3390/logistics10010001 - 22 Dec 2025
Viewed by 1052
Abstract
Background: Nearshoring has risen after shocks and policy shifts. We synthesize evidence in a compact loop linking triggers (trade frictions, supply-chain risk, new agreements) to location choices mediated by multidimensional proximity (geographic, institutional, organizational, social, cognitive, functional) to components (manufacturing footprint, Foreign Direct [...] Read more.
Background: Nearshoring has risen after shocks and policy shifts. We synthesize evidence in a compact loop linking triggers (trade frictions, supply-chain risk, new agreements) to location choices mediated by multidimensional proximity (geographic, institutional, organizational, social, cognitive, functional) to components (manufacturing footprint, Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), employment) and outcomes (spillovers, productivity, innovation) conditioned by absorptive capacity and institutions. Methods: We conducted a literature review using major bibliographic databases. A staged screening pipeline (deduplication, pre-eligibility, and title–abstract screening) preceded full-text coding aligned with the review framework (triggers, proximity, components, outcomes, mediators). Studies were appraised with a five-criterion checklist, and themes were consolidated with basic bibliometric checks. Results: Evidence is North Atlantic and manufacturing-centric. Supply-chain disruptions dominate triggers; non-geographic proximity strongly moderates relocation. FDI anchors ecosystems, while employment effects are lagged and compositional. Strong capability and policy mixes yield broader spillovers; otherwise, benefits remain enclave-like. Sustainability and transformative outcomes are rarely assessed. Conclusions: The loop clarifies feedback from outcomes to future siting. Firms should build proximity beyond geography and pair early FDI with supplier and skills upgrading; policymakers should align instruments to governance, capability formation, and logistics. Research should expand Global South coverage and integrate environmental and inclusion metrics. Full article
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34 pages, 418 KB  
Article
The Role of Climate-Oriented Funding in Advancing Renewable Energy Transition Across the EU
by Gheorghița Dincă, Ioana-Cătălina Netcu and Camelia Ungureanu
Energies 2025, 18(24), 6616; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18246616 - 18 Dec 2025
Viewed by 282
Abstract
The shift to renewable energy is a key goal for the European Union as it aims for climate neutrality; however, the effectiveness of climate-focused funding instruments varies significantly across member states. This research investigates the influences of mitigation investments, R&D spending, environmental tax [...] Read more.
The shift to renewable energy is a key goal for the European Union as it aims for climate neutrality; however, the effectiveness of climate-focused funding instruments varies significantly across member states. This research investigates the influences of mitigation investments, R&D spending, environmental tax revenues, subsidies, GDP growth, and capital formation on renewable energy expansion within the EU-27, placing particular emphasis on the structural differences between Old Member States (OMS) and New Member States (NMS). The study utilizes robust long-run estimation techniques alongside causality analysis over a span of 13 years, from 2010–2023. The findings highlight notable distinctions among the EU-27, OMS, and NMS regions. While the EU-27 and OMS show that funds designated for climate mitigation and R&D are critical drivers of the clean energy transition, in the NMS, environmental taxes, subsidies, innovation, and gross fixed capital formation play vital roles in advancing this transition. Furthermore, economic development shows mixed results in achieving sustainable objectives, underscoring the necessity for climate-oriented funding and initiatives. Therefore, policy measures should focus on mitigation finance and innovation across the EU, while the design of subsidies and environmental tax structures must be tailored to each region to ensure a fair and expedited transition. Full article
14 pages, 244 KB  
Article
Integrating Formal and Non-Formal Learning: A Qualitative and Quantitative Study of Innovative Teaching Strategies in Secondary Schools
by Gianluca Gravino, Davide Di Palma, Fabiola Palmiero, Generoso Romano and Maria Giovanna Tafuri
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(12), 1649; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15121649 - 6 Dec 2025
Viewed by 434
Abstract
This study explores the impact of integrating formal and non-formal learning in secondary school education through a mixed-methods experimental design. A total of 120 students (aged 14–16) from two secondary schools were randomly assigned to an experimental group (n = 60) and a [...] Read more.
This study explores the impact of integrating formal and non-formal learning in secondary school education through a mixed-methods experimental design. A total of 120 students (aged 14–16) from two secondary schools were randomly assigned to an experimental group (n = 60) and a control group (n = 60). The experimental group participated in a twelve-week interdisciplinary programme that combined traditional curricular subjects with non-formal educational practices such as sports, theatre, art, and community engagement, supported by digital learning platforms. Quantitative data were collected through validated instruments, while qualitative data were gathered through observations, focus groups, and semi-structured interviews with students, teachers, and parents. Statistical analyses (t-tests and ANOVA) revealed significant improvements in intrinsic motivation, psychological well-being, and sense of belonging among students in the experimental group compared to the control group. Thematic analysis of qualitative data confirmed these findings, highlighting increased collaboration, engagement, and inclusion. The results indicate that integrating formal and non-formal education fosters holistic learning, strengthens community ties, and promotes emotional and cognitive development. These findings provide empirical support for policies and pedagogical practices aimed at developing flexible, participatory, and sustainable educational models. Full article
24 pages, 684 KB  
Article
“What Do You Need?” Formative Research to Develop a Comprehensive Maternal Needs Assessment Tool for Infant and Young Child Nourishment and Care in the United States
by Mercy Eloho Sosanya, Laura Birgit Mueller, Caleb Martin and Jennifer L. Temple
Nutrients 2025, 17(24), 3825; https://doi.org/10.3390/nu17243825 - 6 Dec 2025
Viewed by 408
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Despite substantial healthcare spending, U.S. mothers encounter fragmented support systems for infant feeding, care, and maternal mental health. While existing needs assessment instruments target parents of ill or preterm infants, no validated tool captures the full range of informational, psychosocial, and structural [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Despite substantial healthcare spending, U.S. mothers encounter fragmented support systems for infant feeding, care, and maternal mental health. While existing needs assessment instruments target parents of ill or preterm infants, no validated tool captures the full range of informational, psychosocial, and structural needs among mothers of healthy, full-term infants. This formative mixed-methods study sought to identify and prioritize maternal needs across multiple socioecological levels to guide the development of a comprehensive Maternal Needs Assessment Tool (MNAT). Methods: Guided by the socioecological model, six virtual focus groups were conducted with U.S. mothers of healthy infants < 2 years (analytic sample = 28). Thematic analysis in ATLAS.ti (Version 25) identified key needs, which informed the creation of a 10-domain Maternal Needs Assessment Ranking Questionnaire (MNARQ). Participants (n = 22) rated each domain’s importance on a five-point scale; weighted mean ranks were calculated in SPSS (Version 30). Results: Seven overarching themes across ten domains emerged: infant and young child feeding and care, maternal psychosocial wellbeing, parenting knowledge and skills, interpersonal and community support, institutional assistance, and work-policy environments. The highest-ranked domains of need were complementary feeding, child development, care and health, social norms, networking and support, maternal mental health, and breastfeeding guidance. Mothers described pervasive informational confusion, inadequate professional and peer support, and institutional barriers such as limited postpartum follow-up, inflexible daycare policies, and WIC hurdles in formula substitution for infants with allergies. Conclusions: Maternal needs encompass intersecting personal, social, and structural factors. Findings will inform the development and validation of a national Maternal Needs Assessment Tool to guide integrated maternal and child health programs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Infant and Toddler Feeding and Development)
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20 pages, 422 KB  
Article
Institutional Stimulants for Low-Carbon Transport: The Case of the Fleet Electrification in the Polish Logistics Industry
by Anna Wronka, Marta Raźniewska, Agata Rudnicka and Grażyna Kędzia
Energies 2025, 18(23), 6339; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18236339 - 2 Dec 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 293
Abstract
The aim of the paper is to recognize the role of external institutions in supporting the Transport, Shipping, and Logistics (TSL) sector in the transformation towards sustainable and low-emission operations in Poland. In the context of the EU’s decarbonization agenda and accelerating climate [...] Read more.
The aim of the paper is to recognize the role of external institutions in supporting the Transport, Shipping, and Logistics (TSL) sector in the transformation towards sustainable and low-emission operations in Poland. In the context of the EU’s decarbonization agenda and accelerating climate challenges, the study explores how regulatory, financial, and normative mechanisms affect the electrification of transport fleets. A mixed-methods approach was applied, combining qualitative content analysis of European and national policy frameworks with a quantitative CATI survey among logistics enterprises. The results reveal that legal and normative instruments remain the dominant institutional drivers of fleet electrification, while fiscal incentives—subsidies and tax reliefs—play a supportive but still secondary role. Sectoral and financial pressures from banks and market stakeholders are emerging as new, complementary forces of change. Firm size, ownership structure, and market scope significantly moderate these perceptions. The paper contributes to institutional and innovation-diffusion theory and offers policy insights for designing coherent and multi-level frameworks. Full article
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21 pages, 951 KB  
Article
From Challenges to Opportunities: Strengthening Local Agri-Food Markets for Sustainable Rural Development
by Aleksandr V. Semenov, Aleksandra Figurek and Elena I. Semenova
Economies 2025, 13(12), 351; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies13120351 - 1 Dec 2025
Viewed by 475
Abstract
Local agri-food markets are a key link in the sustainability and resilience of rural communities, as they merge producers and consumers, create jobs and ensure food security. This paper analyzes the state and perspectives of the development of local markets in rural regions [...] Read more.
Local agri-food markets are a key link in the sustainability and resilience of rural communities, as they merge producers and consumers, create jobs and ensure food security. This paper analyzes the state and perspectives of the development of local markets in rural regions of Russia, relying on demographic, economic, structural and innovation indicators. The results show marked regional differences: in urbanized areas the share of the rural population is low and markets are weak, while in Siberia and the Far East, local markets remain vital, albeit under pressure from depopulation. Structural shifts in favor of plant production, along with worsening price parity, indicate reduced profitability of small producers, but also open opportunities for diversification through processing and branding. Analysis of production concentration shows that sectors with more dispersed production (vegetables, milk) enable greater flexibility and resilience of local markets. Highly concentrated sectors remain vulnerable to market shocks. The findings confirm that local markets can be not only guardians of tradition, but also drivers of modernization and growth. The work thereby makes an empirical contribution to the understanding of the sustainability of rural markets and shows that, with targeted policies that link demographic stability, economic incentives, digital tools and ecological practices, local markets can become a pillar of sustainable development and a significant instrument for strengthening the resilience of the agri-food sector in Russia and beyond. Methodologically, the article applies a mixed approach: (i) quantitative analysis of several sets of statistical data (Rosstat, supplementary FAO/OECD/Eurostat) through descriptive indicators and indices (incl. input/output price parity), as well as cluster typology of regions; and (ii) qualitative mapping of findings to contemporary policies and practices. This framework allows structural trends to be directly linked to implications for local food markets. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Agri-Food Sector and the Development of Local Markets)
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22 pages, 7571 KB  
Article
Analysis of the Technical and Commercial Factors That Influence the Acquisition of Hybrid Vehicles in the City of Guayaquil
by Emerson Altamirano-Cañizares, Esneyder Bazurto-Murillo, Roberto López-Chila and Carlos Roche-Intriago
World Electr. Veh. J. 2025, 16(12), 656; https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj16120656 - 30 Nov 2025
Viewed by 512
Abstract
Urban air pollution and emission reduction commitments have stimulated interest in cleaner vehicle technologies in Latin America, yet hybrid vehicle penetration in Ecuador, particularly in Guayaquil, remains limited. This study analyzes technical and commercial determinants of purchase intention using a mixed-methods design that [...] Read more.
Urban air pollution and emission reduction commitments have stimulated interest in cleaner vehicle technologies in Latin America, yet hybrid vehicle penetration in Ecuador, particularly in Guayaquil, remains limited. This study analyzes technical and commercial determinants of purchase intention using a mixed-methods design that combines a survey of 384 consumers with interviews of 20 dealership representatives. Within this male-dominated sample, Spearman’s rank correlation coefficients (ρ) (all two-sided tests yielded p<0.001) indicate that technical attributes show stronger associations with purchase intention than commercial variables: technology and performance (ρ=0.65) and maintenance (ρ=0.61) are the most influential, followed by Social Influence (ρ=0.53); public policies (ρ=0.48) and purchase price (ρ=0.45) display moderate effects. Overall, 51.5% of respondents report a favorable intention to purchase a hybrid vehicle in the short to medium term. Interviews confirm an information gap on tax incentives at the point of sale and underscore the potential of financing schemes to mitigate upfront cost barriers. Findings suggest that, in this market, narratives emphasizing long-term operating savings and reliability are more persuasive than generic sustainability messages. We discuss implications for dealership communication, targeted credit programs, and public policy instruments with information campaigns to accelerate sustainable mobility transitions in urban Ecuador. While price is widely cited as decisive (84.2%), variation in technical attributes explains more of the variation in stated purchase intention than price within our sample. The survey sample was collected at an auto show and dealerships and is predominantly male (87.5%). Thus, results describe a male-skewed subset of potential buyers and should not be generalized to households or the broader consumer base. Full article
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22 pages, 348 KB  
Article
Agroecological Adoption Pathways in Europe: Drivers, Barriers, and Policy Implication Opportunities in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Portugal
by Apolka Ujj, Kinga Nagyné Pércsi, Fernanda Ramos-Diaz, Jana Budimir-Marjanović, Lanka Horstink, Rita Queiroga-Bento, Chisenga Emmanuel Mukosha, Jan Moudrý, Koponicsné Györke Diána and Paulina Jancsovszka
Agriculture 2025, 15(23), 2414; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15232414 - 24 Nov 2025
Viewed by 674
Abstract
Agroecology offers a transformative pathway toward sustainable food systems by integrating ecological, economic, and social dimensions of farming. While its conceptual and policy foundations are increasingly recognized in European Union (EU) strategies, the practical adoption of agroecological principles at the farm level remains [...] Read more.
Agroecology offers a transformative pathway toward sustainable food systems by integrating ecological, economic, and social dimensions of farming. While its conceptual and policy foundations are increasingly recognized in European Union (EU) strategies, the practical adoption of agroecological principles at the farm level remains uneven, particularly in socio-economically peripheral Member States. This article investigates the enabling and constraining factors of agroecological uptake in three EU countries—Czech Republic, Hungary, and Portugal, using a mixed qualitative approach that combined literature review, policy mapping, and 42 in-depth farmer interviews conducted in 2020–2021. Data were analyzed through a shared coding framework, iterative team discussions, and a standardized comparative matrix to ensure cross-country validity. The results reveal shared barriers, including limited institutional coordination, subsidy dependency, and structural land inequalities, alongside country-specific dynamics such as farmer-to-farmer learning in Portugal, family-farm identity in Czechia, and trust-based advisory relations in Hungary. The findings underscore that systemic constraints, rather than conceptual gaps, impede agroecological transitions, and highlight the need for context-sensitive policy instruments, advisory reforms, and training programs aligned with agroecological principles. The paper contributes to the literature by providing empirical insight into farmer attitudes and practices in Central and Southern Europe and by offering actionable recommendations for designing policies and training. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Agroecological Transition in Sustainable Food Systems)
35 pages, 7205 KB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Evolution and Drivers of the Carbon Footprint and Embodied Carbon Transfer in the Advanced Manufacturing Industry: Case Study of the Western Region in China
by Yan Zou, Yinlong Li and Zhijie Han
Sustainability 2025, 17(22), 10272; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172210272 - 17 Nov 2025
Viewed by 422
Abstract
Motivated by the policy urgency of China’s dual-carbon goals and the practical obstacle that official input–output (IO) and MRIO tables are sparse and non-consecutive, this study investigates how to generate credible, mechanism-aware provincial–sector forecasts of carbon footprints and embodied transfers for Western China—a [...] Read more.
Motivated by the policy urgency of China’s dual-carbon goals and the practical obstacle that official input–output (IO) and MRIO tables are sparse and non-consecutive, this study investigates how to generate credible, mechanism-aware provincial–sector forecasts of carbon footprints and embodied transfers for Western China—a region with pronounced structural heterogeneity. We develop a regionalized forecasting pipeline that fuses balance-constrained MRIO completion (RAS–CE) with a Whale-optimized Grey Neural Network (WOA–GNN), bridging the data gap (2007–2017 reconstruction) and delivering 2018–2030 projections at province–sector resolution. The novelty lies in integrating RAS–CE with a meta-heuristic grey learner and layering explainable network analytics—Grey Relational Analysis (GRA) for factor ranking, complex-network measures with QAP regressions for driver identification, and SHAP for post hoc interpretation—so forecasts are not only accurate but also actionable. Empirically, (i) energy mix/intensity and output scale are the dominant amplifiers of footprints, while technology upgrading (process efficiency, electrification) is the most robust mitigator; (ii) a structural sectoral hierarchy persists—S2 (non-metallic minerals) remains clinker/heat-intensive, S3 (general/special equipment) operates as a mid-chain hub, and S6/S7 (electrical machinery/instruments) maintain lower, more controllable intensities as the grid decarbonizes; (iii) by 2030, the embodied carbon network becomes denser and more centralized, with Sichuan–Chongqing–Guizhou–Guangxi forming high-betweenness corridors; and (iv) QAP/SHAP converge on geographic contiguity (D) and economic differentials (E) as the strongest positive drivers (openness Z and technology gaps T secondary; energy-mix differentials F weakly dampening). Policy-wise, the framework points to green-power contracting and trading for hubs, deep retrofits in S2/S3 (low-clinker binders, waste-heat recovery, efficient drives, targeted CCUS), technology diffusion to lagging provinces, and corridor-level governance—demonstrating why the RAS–CE + WOA–GNN coupling is both necessary and impactful for data-constrained regional carbon planning. Full article
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