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Keywords = regulatory frameworks for green innovation

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23 pages, 926 KB  
Review
Acrylamide in Food: From Maillard Reaction to Public Health Concern
by Gréta Törős, Walaa Alibrahem, Nihad Kharrat Helu, Szintia Jevcsák, Aya Ferroudj and József Prokisch
Toxics 2026, 14(2), 110; https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics14020110 - 23 Jan 2026
Abstract
Acrylamide is a heat-induced food contaminant that can be formed through the Maillard reaction between reducing sugars and asparagine in carbohydrate-rich foods. It is recognized as having carcinogenic, neurotoxic, and reproductive risks, prompting global regulatory and research attention. This review synthesizes recent advances [...] Read more.
Acrylamide is a heat-induced food contaminant that can be formed through the Maillard reaction between reducing sugars and asparagine in carbohydrate-rich foods. It is recognized as having carcinogenic, neurotoxic, and reproductive risks, prompting global regulatory and research attention. This review synthesizes recent advances (2013–2025) in understanding acrylamide’s formation mechanisms, detection methods, mitigation strategies, and health implications. Analytical innovations such as LC–MS/MS have enabled detection at trace levels (≤10 µg/kg), supporting process optimization and compliance monitoring. Effective mitigation strategies combine cooking adjustments, ingredient reformulation, and novel technologies, including vacuum frying, ohmic heating, and predictive modeling, which can achieve up to a 70% reduction in certain food categories. Dietary polyphenols and fibers also hold promise, lowering acrylamide formation and bioavailability through carbonyl trapping and enhanced detoxification. However, significant gaps remain in bioavailability assessment, analysis of metabolic fate (glycidamide conversion), and standardized global monitoring. This review emphasizes that a sustainable reduction in dietary acrylamide requires a multidisciplinary framework integrating mechanistic modeling, green processing, regulatory oversight, and consumer education. Bridging science, industry, and policy is essential to ensure safer food systems and minimize long-term public health risks. Full article
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35 pages, 4895 KB  
Article
Circular Design for Made in Italy Furniture: A Digital Tool for Data and Materials Exchange
by Lorenzo Imbesi, Serena Baiani, Sabrina Lucibello, Emanuele Panizzi, Paola Altamura, Viktor Malakuczi, Luca D’Elia, Carmen Rotondi, Mariia Ershova, Gabriele Rossini and Alessandro Aiuti
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 1061; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18021061 - 20 Jan 2026
Viewed by 110
Abstract
Despite European and international regulatory frameworks promoting circular economy principles, sustainability in the furniture sector is still challenged by the limited access to reliable information about circular materials for designers, manufacturers, and waste managers in the Made-in-Italy furniture ecosystem. This research develops a [...] Read more.
Despite European and international regulatory frameworks promoting circular economy principles, sustainability in the furniture sector is still challenged by the limited access to reliable information about circular materials for designers, manufacturers, and waste managers in the Made-in-Italy furniture ecosystem. This research develops a digital infrastructure to address these information gaps through mixed methodology, combining desk research on regulatory frameworks and existing platforms; field research involving stakeholder mapping and interviews with designers, manufacturers, and waste managers; and the experimental development of AI-enhanced digital tools. The result integrates a web-based platform for circular materials with a CAD plugin supporting real-time sustainability assessment. As AI-assisted data entry showed a reduced form completion time while maintaining accuracy through human verification, testing also revealed how the system effectively bridges knowledge gaps between stakeholders operating in currently siloed value chains. The platform is a critical step in enabling designers to incorporate circular materials during the early design stages, while providing manufacturers access to verified punctual sustainability data compliant with mandatory Green Public Procurement criteria. Beyond the development of an innovative digital tool, the study outlines a corresponding operational model as a practical framework for strengthening the transition toward a circular economy in the Italian furniture industry. Full article
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31 pages, 1225 KB  
Article
Cryptocurrency Expansion, Climate Policy Uncertainty, and Global Structural Breaks: An Empirical Assessment of Environmental and Financial Impacts
by Alper Yilmaz, Nurdan Sevim and Ahmet Ozkul
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 951; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020951 - 16 Jan 2026
Viewed by 355
Abstract
This study examines the environmental implications of energy-intensive cryptocurrency mining activities within the broader sustainability debate surrounding blockchain technologies. Focusing specifically on Bitcoin’s proof-of-work–based mining process, the analysis investigates the long-run relationship between greenhouse gas emissions, network-specific technical variables, and climate policy uncertainty [...] Read more.
This study examines the environmental implications of energy-intensive cryptocurrency mining activities within the broader sustainability debate surrounding blockchain technologies. Focusing specifically on Bitcoin’s proof-of-work–based mining process, the analysis investigates the long-run relationship between greenhouse gas emissions, network-specific technical variables, and climate policy uncertainty using advanced cointegration and asymmetric causality techniques. The findings reveal a stable long-run association between mining-related activity and emissions, alongside pronounced asymmetries whereby positive shocks amplify environmental pressures more strongly than negative shocks mitigate them. Importantly, these results pertain to the mining process itself rather than to blockchain technology as a whole. While blockchain infrastructures may support sustainable applications in areas such as green finance, transparency, and energy management, the evidence presented here highlights that energy-intensive mining remains a significant environmental concern. Accordingly, the study underscores the need for active regulatory frameworks—such as carbon pricing and the polluter-pays principle—to reconcile the environmental costs of crypto mining with the broader sustainability potential of blockchain-based innovations Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Energy and Environment: Policy, Economics and Modeling)
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21 pages, 378 KB  
Article
Can Climate Transition Risks Enhance Enterprise Green Innovation? An Analysis Employing a Dual Regulatory Mechanism
by Liping Cao and Fengqi Zhou
Climate 2026, 14(1), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/cli14010018 - 15 Jan 2026
Viewed by 144
Abstract
In the context of the global pursuit of the ‘carbon neutrality’ objective, Chinese enterprises are proactively advancing green development and low-carbon transformation. Among these efforts, climate transition risks have emerged as a crucial factor affecting strategic enterprise decisions and long-term competitiveness. This study [...] Read more.
In the context of the global pursuit of the ‘carbon neutrality’ objective, Chinese enterprises are proactively advancing green development and low-carbon transformation. Among these efforts, climate transition risks have emerged as a crucial factor affecting strategic enterprise decisions and long-term competitiveness. This study utilizes a sample comprising Chinese A-share listed enterprises over the period from 2012 to 2024 to construct an enterprise climate transition risk index using text analysis methods. It empirically investigates this index’s impact on enterprise green innovation by adopting panel data analysis method to construct a fixed effects model and further examines the moderating roles of institutional investors’ shareholding and enterprise environmental uncertainties in response to climate transition risks. The research findings indicate the following: First, climate transition risks significantly enhance enterprise green innovation. The validity of this conclusion persists following a series of robustness and endogeneity tests, including replacing the explained variable, lagging the explanatory variable, controlling for city-level fixed effects, and applying instrumental variable methods. Second, both institutional investors’ shareholding and enterprise environmental uncertainties exert a significant positive regulatory effect on the relationship between climate transition risk and green innovation, indicating that external monitoring and heightened risk perception jointly enhance enterprises’ responsiveness in driving green innovation. Thirdly, heterogeneity analysis indicates that the positive impact of climate transition risks on green innovation is notably amplified within non-state-owned enterprises and manufacturing enterprises. By examining the dual regulatory mechanisms of ‘external monitoring’ and ‘risk perception’, this study broadens the study framework on the relationship between climate risks and enterprise green innovation, offering new empirical evidence supporting the applicability of the ‘Porter Hypothesis’ within the context of climate-related challenges. Furthermore, it provides valuable implications for policymakers in refining climate information disclosure policies and assists enterprises in developing forward-looking green innovation strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Climate Change Adaptation Costs and Finance)
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26 pages, 863 KB  
Article
How Green HRM Enhances Sustainable Organizational Performance: A Capability-Building Explanation Through Green Innovation and Organizational Culture
by Moges Assefa Legese, Shenbei Zhou, Wudie Atinaf Tiruneh and Haihua Ying
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 764; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020764 - 12 Jan 2026
Viewed by 229
Abstract
This study examines how Green Human Resource Management (GHRM) is linked to sustainable organizational performance, encompassing environmental, economic, and social outcomes through the capability-building mechanisms of green innovation (GI) and green organizational culture (GOCL) in emerging manufacturing systems. Drawing on the Resource-Based View [...] Read more.
This study examines how Green Human Resource Management (GHRM) is linked to sustainable organizational performance, encompassing environmental, economic, and social outcomes through the capability-building mechanisms of green innovation (GI) and green organizational culture (GOCL) in emerging manufacturing systems. Drawing on the Resource-Based View and capability-based sustainability perspectives, GHRM is conceptualized as a strategic organizational capability that enables firms in developing economies to beyond short-term regulatory compliance toward measurable and integrated sustainability performance outcomes. Survey data were collected from 446 managerial and technical respondents in Ethiopia’s garment and textile industrial parks, one of Africa’s fastest-growing industrial sectors facing significant sustainability challenges. Using Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling (PLS-SEM) with bootstrapping-based mediation analysis, the results show that GHRM is positively associated with sustainable organizational performance, with GI and GOCL operating as key mediating mechanisms that translate HR-related practices into measurable sustainability outcomes. The findings highlight the role of GHRM in strengthening firms’ adaptive and developmental sustainability capabilities by fostering pro-sustainability mindsets and innovation-oriented behaviors, which are particularly critical in resource-constrained and weak-institutional contexts. The study contributes to sustainability and management literature by explicitly linking Green HRM to triple-bottom-line performance through a capability-building framework and by providing rare firm-level empirical evidence from a low-income emerging economy. Practically, the results provide guidance for managers and policy makers to design, monitor, and evaluate HRM systems that intentionally cultivate human, cultural, and innovative capabilities to support long-term organizational sustainability transitions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Management)
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24 pages, 1418 KB  
Review
A Review of Gender-Inclusive Green Microfinance Business Models in Tunisia: A Business Model Canvas Perspective
by Nadia Mansour
Int. J. Financial Stud. 2026, 14(1), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs14010019 - 9 Jan 2026
Viewed by 232
Abstract
This paper presents a systematic review of Tunisian stakeholders’ perceptions of integrating gender into green microfinance business models, analyzed through the lens of the Business Model Canvas (BMC). This systematic review of 32 studies indicates a dual perception of women as both vulnerable [...] Read more.
This paper presents a systematic review of Tunisian stakeholders’ perceptions of integrating gender into green microfinance business models, analyzed through the lens of the Business Model Canvas (BMC). This systematic review of 32 studies indicates a dual perception of women as both vulnerable victims and active agents in the ecological transition. The BMC-based analysis reveals major weaknesses in the value proposition, distribution channels, and cost structures of gendered green microfinance offerings. Furthermore, we highlight the underexplored role of regulatory frameworks as levers for business model innovation. This study offers an original analytical framework that links gender, environmental sustainability, and microfinance business models, providing actionable insights for policymakers and microfinance institutions seeking to foster inclusive and sustainable financial ecosystems in Tunisia and similar contexts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Sustainable and Green Finance)
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30 pages, 1428 KB  
Review
Greening the Bond: A Narrative and Systematic Literature Review on Advancing Sustainable and Non-Toxic Adhesives for the Fiberboard Industry
by Prosper Mensah, Rafael Rodolfo de Melo, Alexandre Santos Pimenta, James Amponsah, Gladys Tuo, Fernando Rusch, Edgley Alves de Oliveira Paula, Humphrey Danso, Juliana de Moura, Márcia Ellen Chagas dos Santos Couto, Giorgio Mendes Ribeiro and Francisco Leonardo Gomes de Menezes
Adhesives 2026, 2(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/adhesives2010002 - 8 Jan 2026
Viewed by 360
Abstract
The fiberboard industry remains heavily reliant on synthetic, formaldehyde-based adhesives, which, despite their cost-effectiveness and strong bonding performance, present significant environmental and human health concerns due to volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions. In response to growing sustainability imperatives and regulatory pressures, the development [...] Read more.
The fiberboard industry remains heavily reliant on synthetic, formaldehyde-based adhesives, which, despite their cost-effectiveness and strong bonding performance, present significant environmental and human health concerns due to volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions. In response to growing sustainability imperatives and regulatory pressures, the development of non-toxic, renewable, and high-performance bio-based adhesives has emerged as a critical research frontier. This review, conducted through both narrative and systematic approaches, synthesizes current advances in green adhesive technologies with emphasis on lignin, tannin, starch, protein, and hybrid formulations, alongside innovative synthetic alternatives designed to eliminate formaldehyde. The Evidence for Policy and Practice Information and Coordinating Centre (EPPI) framework was applied to ensure a rigorous, transparent, and reproducible methodology, encompassing the identification of research questions, systematic searching, keywording, mapping, data extraction, and in-depth analysis. Results reveal that while bio-based adhesives are increasingly capable of approaching or matching the mechanical strength and durability of urea–formaldehyde adhesives, challenges persist in terms of water resistance, scalability, cost, and process compatibility. Hybrid systems and novel crosslinking strategies demonstrate particular promise in overcoming these limitations, paving the way toward industrial viability. The review also identifies critical research gaps, including the need for standardized testing protocols, techno-economic analysis, and life cycle assessment to ensure the sustainable implementation of these solutions. By integrating environmental, economic, and technological perspectives, this work highlights the transformative potential of green adhesives in transitioning the fiberboard sector toward a low-toxicity, carbon-conscious future. It provides a roadmap for research, policy, and industrial innovation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Bio-Based Wood Adhesives)
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26 pages, 903 KB  
Essay
Do Low-Carbon City Pilots Promote Corporate Environmental Investment? Evidence from China
by Xiaohuan Shi, Yurou Zhang, Yizhen Wu, Zhongxian Ding, Sanying Zhao, Baochang Xu and Meng Qin
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 540; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010540 - 5 Jan 2026
Viewed by 224
Abstract
As a pivotal instrument for fostering sustainable development and climate goals, low-carbon city pilot policies (LCCPs) motivate firms to increase environmental investments, thereby harmonizing economic growth with emission reduction. This study employs a difference-in-differences (DID) design to empirically investigate the effects and underlying [...] Read more.
As a pivotal instrument for fostering sustainable development and climate goals, low-carbon city pilot policies (LCCPs) motivate firms to increase environmental investments, thereby harmonizing economic growth with emission reduction. This study employs a difference-in-differences (DID) design to empirically investigate the effects and underlying mechanisms of LCCPs on firms’ environmental investment in China. The results demonstrate that LCCPs lead to a significant increase in corporate environmental investment of approximately 36.5% (with a core coefficient of 0.365, significant at the 1% level) when compared to non-pilot cities. This impact primarily occurs through five channels: technology transformation, environmental regulation compliance, financial support, talent attraction, and policy alignment. Heterogeneity tests further reveal that the effect is stronger for enterprises in the eastern and western regions, non-entrepreneurial boards and non-financial entities, larger firms, and those facing financing constraints and operating in low-industry competitive environments. This study offers evidence for the importance of LCCPs in driving corporate environmental investments, providing valuable policy implications for enhancing regulatory frameworks and fostering green innovation to support carbon neutrality and sustainable economic transitions. Full article
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25 pages, 513 KB  
Article
Regulatory Risk in Green FinTech: Comparative Insights from Central Europe
by Simona Heseková, András Lapsánszky, János Kálmán, Michal Janovec and Anna Zalcewicz
Risks 2026, 14(1), 8; https://doi.org/10.3390/risks14010008 - 4 Jan 2026
Viewed by 388
Abstract
Green fintech merges sustainable finance with data-intensive innovation, but national translations of EU rules can create regulatory risk. This study examines how such risk manifests in Central Europe and which policy tools mitigate it. We develop a three-dimension framework—regulatory clarity and scope, supervisory [...] Read more.
Green fintech merges sustainable finance with data-intensive innovation, but national translations of EU rules can create regulatory risk. This study examines how such risk manifests in Central Europe and which policy tools mitigate it. We develop a three-dimension framework—regulatory clarity and scope, supervisory consistency, and innovation facilitation—and apply a comparative qualitative design to Hungary, Slovakia, Czechia, and Poland. Using a common EU baseline, we compile coded national snapshots from primary legal texts, supervisory documents, and recent scholarship. Results show material cross-country variation in labelling practice, soft-law use, and testing infrastructure: Hungary combines central-bank green programmes with an innovation hub/sandbox; Slovakia aligns with ESMA and runs hub/sandbox, though the green-fintech pipeline is nascent; Czechia applies a principles-based safe harbour and lacks a national sandbox; and Poland relies on a virtual sandbox and binding interpretations with limited soft law. These choices shape approval timelines, retail penetration, and cross-border portability of green-labelled products. We conclude with a policy toolkit: labelling convergence or explicit safe harbours, a cross-border sandbox federation, ESRS/ESAP-ready proportionate disclosures, consolidation of recurring interpretations into soft law, investment in suptech for green-claims analytics, and inclusion metrics in sandbox selection. Full article
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24 pages, 571 KB  
Article
Sustainable Innovation and Energy Efficiency: Quantile MMQR Insights from the G20 Economies
by Mohammed Moosa Ageli
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 478; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010478 - 2 Jan 2026
Viewed by 424
Abstract
This study examines the determinants of energy efficiency in G20 economies over the period of 2000–2024 using the method of moments quantile regression (MMQR) to analyze the variation in the impacts of green innovation, green investment, green finance, the strength of energy policy, [...] Read more.
This study examines the determinants of energy efficiency in G20 economies over the period of 2000–2024 using the method of moments quantile regression (MMQR) to analyze the variation in the impacts of green innovation, green investment, green finance, the strength of energy policy, and trade openness across different levels of energy intensity. The results reveal that these variables do not affect all countries equally; their effects vary with the maturity of institutional and technological structures. Economies with strong regulations benefit more from green innovation and expanded environmental financial instruments, whereas countries with limited ready-made institutions struggle to turn these variables into tangible gains. This study also showed that energy policy was the most stable factor across all levels, while innovation, finance, and investment became more impactful in countries that had made significant progress in energy intensity. This study proposes a differential policy that responds to various institutional readiness levels. Low-intensity energy economies should prioritize strengthening regulatory frameworks and improving energy governance, medium-performing countries should expand green finance opportunities and direct investments toward clean technology, and developed countries should focus on deepening innovation and broadening the base of technology transfer to promote long-term sustainability. Overall, the results confirm that the green shift in the G20 economies requires specialized strategies rather than uniform policies that overlook economic structural differences. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy Sustainability)
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44 pages, 2076 KB  
Review
Unpacking the Internal Sustainability Drivers for Enhanced Performance of Construction Firms
by Funmilayo Ebun Rotimi, Roohollah Kalatehjaria, Taofeeq Durojaye Moshood and Zahra Jalali
Buildings 2026, 16(1), 145; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16010145 - 28 Dec 2025
Viewed by 253
Abstract
Construction firms struggle to implement sustainable practices, delivering triple bottom line benefits despite growing environmental pressures. While research examines isolated sustainability drivers, the understanding of how organizational factors integrate to enable successful implementation remains fragmented. This systematic literature review synthesizes 249 articles (2010–2025) [...] Read more.
Construction firms struggle to implement sustainable practices, delivering triple bottom line benefits despite growing environmental pressures. While research examines isolated sustainability drivers, the understanding of how organizational factors integrate to enable successful implementation remains fragmented. This systematic literature review synthesizes 249 articles (2010–2025) to develop an integrated framework explaining how internal capabilities drive sustainable innovation and performance in construction. This thematic synthesis reveals three critical insights. First, successful sustainability requires integrated configuration across green innovation capabilities, organizational learning, environmental governance responses, and performance measurement, not isolated initiatives. Second, construction’s project-based discontinuity, fragmented supply chains, and regulatory heterogeneity require capability configurations absent from manufacturing-focused sustainability theories. Third, cross-domain synergies create reinforcing feedback loops where capabilities enable compliance, measurement accelerates innovation, and governance catalyses development. This research provides practitioners an actionable framework identifying critical capability investments and interdependencies for sustainability implementation. Theoretically, we extend the Natural Resource-Based View and the Dynamic Capability View through three construction-specific mechanisms: temporal knowledge discontinuity paradox, distributed capability configuration, and regulatory complexity multipliers. These extensions advance sustainability theory beyond manufacturing, providing a foundation for understanding sustainable competitive advantage in project-based, fragmented industries. Full article
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39 pages, 2259 KB  
Review
Innovations in the Delivery of Bioactive Compounds for Cancer Prevention and Therapy: Advances, Challenges, and Future Perspectives
by Carlos A. Ligarda-Samanez, Mary L. Huamán-Carrión, Jackson M’coy Romero Plasencia, Dante Fermín Calderón Huamaní, Bacilia Vivanco Garfias, Jenny C. Muñoz-Saenz, Maria Magdalena Bautista Gómez, Jaime A. Martinez-Hernandez and Wilber Cesar Calsina-Ponce
Pharmaceuticals 2026, 19(1), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/ph19010060 - 27 Dec 2025
Viewed by 479
Abstract
Naturally occurring bioactive compounds represent a promising option for cancer prevention and therapy due to their ability to modulate apoptosis, angiogenesis, inflammation, oxidative stress, and cell signaling. However, their clinical impact is limited by low bioavailability, chemical instability, rapid metabolism, and poor tumor [...] Read more.
Naturally occurring bioactive compounds represent a promising option for cancer prevention and therapy due to their ability to modulate apoptosis, angiogenesis, inflammation, oxidative stress, and cell signaling. However, their clinical impact is limited by low bioavailability, chemical instability, rapid metabolism, and poor tumor microenvironment accumulation. Innovative delivery platforms, including lipid and polymeric nanoparticles, liposomes, micelles, nanoemulsions, hydrogels, and stimulus-responsive systems, have been developed to improve stability, absorption, tumor specificity, and therapeutic efficacy. This review integrates molecular mechanisms, preclinical and clinical evidence, and recent technological advances, highlighting both potential and limitations. Although several compounds show encouraging results in cell and animal models, only a small number have progressed to early clinical trials, where outcomes remain heterogeneous and often fail to replicate preclinical magnitudes. Regulatory barriers, a lack of formulation standardization, and the absence of predictive biomarkers persist. Sustainability is also addressed through the valorization of agrifood by-products and green extraction processes. This review provides an integrative framework linking molecular mechanisms, advanced delivery technologies, clinical translation, and sustainability, offering a broader perspective than conventional reviews. Future perspectives emphasize multicenter trials, comparative designs, and the development of regulatory guidelines for nanoformulated bioactive compounds. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Multi-Targeted Natural Products as Therapeutics, 2nd Edition)
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38 pages, 1672 KB  
Systematic Review
A Comprehensive and Multidisciplinary Framework for Advancing Circular Economy Practices in the Packaging Sector: A Systematic Literature Review on Critical Factors
by Mariarita Tarantino, Enrico Maria Mosconi, Francesco Tola, Mattia Gianvincenzi and Anna Maria Delussu
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 192; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010192 - 24 Dec 2025
Viewed by 593
Abstract
The packaging sector is undergoing a significant transformation driven by increasing environmental challenges and new European regulatory frameworks. The Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR), following the European Green Deal and Circular Economy Action Plan, introduces five strategic priorities: waste prevention, recyclability, recycled [...] Read more.
The packaging sector is undergoing a significant transformation driven by increasing environmental challenges and new European regulatory frameworks. The Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR), following the European Green Deal and Circular Economy Action Plan, introduces five strategic priorities: waste prevention, recyclability, recycled content, compostable materials, and reusable systems. This framework aims to systematically review the current state of academic research in relation to these five intervention areas, assessing the extent to which the scientific literature supports the regulation’s circular economy objectives. The PPWR sets guidelines for key aspects such as packaging treatment, recycling targets, Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) and material optimization. These aspects are strongly linked to market dynamics, driving innovation and new developments in packaging design. This study aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the industry’s evolution, with a focus on the crucial role of the circular economy in addressing the persistent issue of packaging waste. By conducting a systematic literature review using the PRISMA method, the research explores the relationship between the regulation’s structural design and the European Commission’s priority areas. The results reveal that waste prevention and reusability are the most researched areas, particularly concerning environmental assessments and regulatory tools like EPR. Additionally, while recyclability has been studied from technical and environmental perspectives, there is still a lack of research on how it connects with supply chain and material market trends. Strengthening these connections could significantly enhance recycling efficiency and improve the sustainability of packaging systems. Furthermore, financial incentives and policy strategies could play a key role in facilitating the transition to a circular economy. Addressing these gaps will foster a more integrated understanding of sustainable packaging solutions. Full article
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18 pages, 822 KB  
Article
Evaluating Green Finance: Investment Patterns and Environmental Outcomes
by Lala Rukh, Shakir Ullah, Ijaz Sanober, Umar Hayat and Sangeen Khan
Int. J. Financial Stud. 2025, 13(4), 245; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs13040245 - 18 Dec 2025
Viewed by 513
Abstract
This study aims to investigate the impact of green finance on corporate sector investments and their associated environmental outcomes. The authors collected cross-sectional survey data with a sample of four hundred firms selected from the five green-relevant industries in an emerging economy. The [...] Read more.
This study aims to investigate the impact of green finance on corporate sector investments and their associated environmental outcomes. The authors collected cross-sectional survey data with a sample of four hundred firms selected from the five green-relevant industries in an emerging economy. The results indicate that, over the last three years, seventy percent of firms have accessed at least one green instrument. Overall, the firms under study indicate that PKR 3.4 million is being allocated to green finance, and PKR 2.7 million is spent on CAPEX. However, each million PKR is associated with a ten percent capital expenditure, which exhibits the highest adoption of the renewable energy sector, while the manufacturing sector has the lowest adoption. Regression results depict that Greenhouse gas reduction is only achievable if expenditure on R&D is ensured for environmental gains. This study indicates a declining incremental impact when green finance exceeds PKR 5.00 million, suggesting that firms’ limitations in utilizing the additional amount may be a factor. Financially constrained firms achieve stronger environmental goals, confirming that strict criteria to finance projects show more responsibility and discipline in executing projects. However, small- and medium-sized firms are confronted with barriers, such as lack of information and transaction costs. The findings of this study highlight the need for a multi-layered regulatory framework, innovation-driven incentives, and fintech integration to fully realize the potential of green finance. The outcome enables financial institutions, sustainability practitioners, and regulators to connect financial markets, national climate, and development goals. Full article
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67 pages, 1015 KB  
Review
Digital Twins Under EU Law: A Unified Compliance Framework Across Smart Cities, Industry, Transportation, and Energy Systems
by Bo Nørregaard Jørgensen and Zheng Grace Ma
Electronics 2025, 14(24), 4881; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14244881 - 11 Dec 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 948
Abstract
Digital Twins are becoming central enablers of Europe’s digital and green transitions, yet their data-intensive and autonomous nature exposes them to one of the most complex regulatory environments in the world. This article presents a comprehensive scoping review of how six principal European [...] Read more.
Digital Twins are becoming central enablers of Europe’s digital and green transitions, yet their data-intensive and autonomous nature exposes them to one of the most complex regulatory environments in the world. This article presents a comprehensive scoping review of how six principal European digital laws—the General Data Protection Regulation, Data Governance Act, Data Act, Artificial Intelligence Act, NIS2 Directive, and Cyber Resilience Act—jointly govern the design, deployment, and operation of Digital Twin systems. Building on the PRISMA-ScR methodology, the study constructs a Unified Digital Twin Compliance Framework (UDTCF) that consolidates overlapping obligations across data governance, privacy, cybersecurity, transparency, interoperability, and ethical responsibility. The framework is operationalised through a Digital Twin Compliance Evaluation Matrix (DTCEM) that enables qualitative assessment of compliance maturity in research and innovation projects. Applying these tools to representative European cases in Smart Cities, Industrial Manufacturing, Transportation, and Energy Systems reveals strong convergence in data governance, security, and interoperability, but also persistent gaps in the transparency, explainability, and accountability of AI-driven components. The findings demonstrate that European digital legislation forms a coherent yet fragmented ecosystem that increasingly requires integration through compliance-by-design methodologies. The article concludes that Digital Twins can act not only as regulated technologies but also as compliance infrastructures themselves, embedding legal, ethical, and technical safeguards that reinforce Europe’s vision for trustworthy, resilient, and human-centric digital transformation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Industrial Electronics)
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