Cleaner production (CP) has evolved from a regulatory obligation into a strategic management approach that supports firms’ transition toward sustainable competitiveness. This study examines how cleaner production practices move beyond compliance-oriented environmental management to become strategic capabilities associated with stronger innovation orientation, operational efficiency, and corporate legitimacy. Drawing on the Natural Resource-Based View (NRBV) and the Porter Hypothesis, this research employs a multiple-case qualitative content analysis of six energy-intensive firms—Enerjisa, Tüpraş, Şişecam, Enel, E.ON, and TotalEnergies—for the 2020–2024 reporting period. The findings identify a three-stage evolutionary trajectory of cleaner production integration: compliance-driven, efficiency-driven, and strategy-driven. Firms that move toward strategic integration tend to exhibit stronger dynamic and organisational capabilities and clearer strategic positioning in sustainability-oriented decision-making. European multinationals demonstrate more holistic and mature integration due to stable policy frameworks and access to sustainable finance, whereas emerging-economy firms primarily leverage cleaner production for efficiency gains and regulatory compliance. The study contributes to theory by conceptualising cleaner production as a dynamic strategic capability rather than a technical or operational tool and by providing comparative qualitative evidence consistent with the innovation-competitiveness mechanisms proposed by the Porter Hypothesis across diverse institutional contexts. In practice, the findings offer actionable insights for managers and policymakers seeking to design regulatory, financial, and organisational enablers that accelerate the transition from compliance to strategy, thereby positioning cleaner production as a central pathway through which firms may build sustainable competitiveness. Given the qualitative and document-based design, the study does not claim causal proof but identifies patterned associations across cases and institutional contexts.
This study developed a sustainability-based governance model for Village-Owned Enterprises (VOEs) to support the acceleration of sustainable development at the village level. Weak governance structures, limited human resource capacity, and insufficient integration of sustainability values continue to constrain VOE effectiveness as drivers of local economic development. Having used the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP), this study evaluated five governance criteria: Human resource capacity and quality, transparency and accountability, collaboration and partnership, environmental commitment, as well as community participation and empowerment, across six sustainability-oriented VOEs. The results indicated that human resource capacity and quality constituted the highest priority (weight 0.3333), followed by transparency and accountability (0.2667) and cross-sector collaboration (0.2000). Although environmental commitment and community participation received lower priority weights, evidence from a qualitative study demonstrated that these dimensions played a critical role in strengthening socio-ecological resilience. Empirical cases from Ponggok and Kenteng VOEs showed that water conservation initiatives and waste management innovations were essential to sustaining long-term economic performance. Overall, the findings suggested that effective VOE governance extended beyond administrative functions toward a transformative model that integrated institutional capacity, social legitimacy, and environmental stewardship. This governance framework positions VOEs as socio-ecological actors contributing to the achievement of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), thus highlighting sustainability-oriented governance as a strategic prerequisite for resilient village development in the context of green transition.
High operating temperatures are a major limitation for photovoltaic (PV) systems, as they reduce electrical efficiency and long-term reliability. Effective thermal regulation is therefore essential to maintain stable performance under strong solar irradiation. In this study, a numerical investigation is conducted to examine the thermal performance of a PV panel integrated with a paraffin-based cooling system positioned beneath the module. To improve the low thermal conductivity of paraffin, ternary nanoparticles together with metal foam are introduced into the phase change material (PCM). This hybrid enhancement significantly improves heat transfer, increases thermal diffusion, and accelerates the melting process. The transient melting behavior is modeled using the Galerkin finite element method, which ensures accurate prediction of temperature variation and phase change dynamics. The liquid fraction (LF) is increased by about 68.93%, indicating faster melting and improved energy absorption. In addition, the temperature distribution inside the PCM is enhanced by approximately 5.71%. Compared with a conventional uncooled PV system, the proposed configuration reduces the PV panel temperature ($T_{\mathrm{PV}}$) by 8.53%, while increasing electrical efficiency by 17.16%. Overall, the study demonstrates that combining ternary nanoparticles with metal foam inside PCM provides a strong synergistic cooling effect. This integrated approach offers a more effective thermal management strategy than traditional single-enhancement methods, leading to improved PV performance, higher efficiency, and better thermal stability under real operating conditions.
Driver drowsiness is one of the major reasons behind road accidents, emphasizing the need for accurate and efficient fatigue detection systems that can help monitor practical in-vehicle environments. While significant progress has been made in visual fatigue detection based on deep learning, many previous studies have been performed using a single dataset for training or controlled environments for testing. In this paper, we examine the reliability of lightweight driver-monitoring architectures for vision-based driver drowsiness detection based on three heterogeneous public datasets, i.e., Yawning Detection Dataset (YawDD), Driver Drowsiness Dataset (DDD), and National Tsing Hua University Drowsy Driving Dataset (NTHU-DDD), which cover different lighting conditions, facial characteristics, and head poses as encountered in driving scenarios. Among the considered architectures, Single Shot Detector (SSD)-MobileNetV2 was the most consistent, yielding an accuracy of 92%, precision of 93%, recall of 92%, and F1-score of 92% while also being computationally lighter than the other considered architectures. Reliability of the proposed architecture was statistically validated using the McNemar Test and 95% Confidence Intervals (CI). Our results show that SSD-MobileNetV2 could be a promising baseline for future lightweight driver-monitoring systems for heterogeneous driving environments.
Evaluating technological innovation performance in regional public hospitals requires balancing multiple policy objectives, including operational efficiency, distributive equity, and innovation value creation. Conventional evaluation methods often rely on fixed indicator weights, which inadequately capture trade-offs among competing objectives and limit their usefulness for strategic resource allocation. To address this limitation, this study develops a multi-objective decision optimization framework that reformulates innovation performance evaluation as a constrained decision-making problem under fiscal, institutional, and policy conditions. A multi-objective linear programming model is constructed to jointly optimize efficiency, fairness, and innovation value. Using three-year panel data from regional public hospitals, the framework is validated through comparative evaluation, sensitivity analysis, and statistical testing. The results show that the optimized weighting structure improves institutional performance balance, reduces inter-regional disparities in innovation capacity, and strengthens the contribution of research investment to technological output and knowledge transformation. Human capital composition, research funding intensity, and technology commercialization capability are identified as key variables shaping the innovation performance frontier. Scenario analysis further shows that institutional performance varies under different policy preferences, highlighting the need for adaptive weighting mechanisms. The findings provide a practical and interpretable framework for evidence-based innovation performance evaluation and public hospital governance.
Despite increasing attention to inclusive education, sustainability transitions under the Industry 5.0 paradigm remain constrained by the limited integration of socio-cultural barriers affecting marginalised groups. This study examines how harmful cultural practices (HCPs) and socio-economic conditions are associated with education access among 467 ethnic minority youth engaged in agri-startups, contributing theoretically by linking social norms and human capital perspectives within sustainability transition frameworks. A mixed-methods approach combining regression analysis and the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) is employed to capture both statistical relationships and priority-setting mechanisms. The regression results indicate that early marriage (-0.171), gender bias (-0.199), and restrictive religious norms (-0.127) are associated with lower education access, while household income shows a significant positive association (0.722); the model is statistically significant with acceptable explanatory power (R² = 0.315; Adjusted R² = 0.280). The AHP results, based on expert evaluation, demonstrate consistent judgments (CR = 8.120%) and identify personal factors (0.341), particularly HCP awareness, as the highest priority, followed by socio-economic conditions (0.310), education and skills (0.212) and cultural–community factors (0.141). These findings suggest that although economic capacity is a dominant enabling factor, individual agency and behavioural change are critical for reducing harmful practices and improving access to education. However, education access reflects both actual and perceived opportunities due to infrastructural constraints in remote areas. Although the study is limited to data from marginalised youth in agri-startups, the findings highlight that education functions as a key enabling condition linking cultural transformation and livelihood improvement, offering policy-relevant insights for designing inclusive, human-centred education systems to support future-oriented Industry 5.0 transitions.
The aim of the submitted scientific article is to identify significant predictors of the sense of safety at the university and to compare their differences between the male and female populations of respondents. The empirical research was conducted in 2024 at Alexander Dubček University of Trenčín, with the participation of 358 respondents. Data were collected through an online questionnaire containing statements rated on a 5-point Likert scale, examining factors associated with informational influences, subjective concerns, and reflection on the Prague incident of December 2023. Descriptive statistics, correlation analysis, and multiple linear regression methods were used for analytical processing at a significance level of α = 0.05. The results showed that among women in this sample, the sense of safety was significantly associated with concerns about potential threats (X3) and the role of the incident at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University in Prague (X5). Among men in this sample, only factor X5 was confirmed as a key determinant, with its association being stronger than in women. Correlation analysis also indicated different patterns of perception—female respondents in this sample showed a higher sensitivity to subjective concerns, whereas male respondents in this sample appeared to respond more strongly to external security events. These findings confirm the importance of gender differences in shaping the sense of safety in the academic environment and highlight the need for targeted communication and security measures on the part of universities.
Treatment of hydrazine-containing wastewater remains challenging due to the combined constraints of high energy demand, operational complexity, and the risk of secondary pollution. An integrated treatment system coupling boron-doped diamond Electrocatalytic Oxidation (ECO) with Disc-Tube Reverse Osmosis (DTRO) was developed, with particular attention to thermal regulation and system-level performance. The study departs from conventional equipment-oriented design by addressing the interplay between structural reliability, process integration, and heat dissipation during operation. The mechanical integrity of the supporting framework, welded joints, and lifting components was evaluated through finite element analysis under static and transport-induced loading conditions. In parallel, the thermal behavior of the reactor was examined through the design of an internal cooling system, enabling controlled removal of heat generated during electrochemical reactions. The results demonstrate that the optimized configuration satisfies strength requirements while maintaining stable thermal conditions within the reactor. The incorporation of internal salt circulation further reduces auxiliary input and contributes to more stable process operation. The proposed system provides a technically feasible approach for the treatment of hydrazine-containing wastewater, while offering a design framework in which structural performance and thermal management are addressed in a unified manner.
Renewable Energy Communities (RECs) are increasingly recognized as decentralized energy systems capable of improving renewable energy integration, enhancing local self-consumption, and supporting the transition toward low-carbon energy infrastructures. However, the effective deployment of RECs still faces significant challenges related to the integration of spatial analysis, energy modelling, operational optimization, and socio-economic assessment within a unified framework. This study investigates an integrated multi-objective framework for the design, evaluation, and operational support of RECs through the combination of geospatial analysis, energy performance modelling, and digital decision-support tools developed within the ENEA Smart Energy Communities (SEC) platform. The proposed methodology was developed by integrating spatially explicit territorial datasets, renewable resource assessments, electricity demand profiles, and multidimensional key performance indicators (KPIs) within a coordinated analytical framework. Three complementary tools were implemented and evaluated: the geoCER geoportal for territorial-scale renewable energy planning and REC scenario modelling, the DHOMUS platform for residential load monitoring and self-consumption optimization, and the Local Token Economy (LTE) system for token-based user engagement and energy-aware behavioral incentives. The results showed that the integrated framework effectively supported the assessment of REC configurations under different territorial and operational conditions. In the Anguillara Sabazia case study, the REC configuration increased the Self-Consumption Index (SCI) from 30% to 65% and the Self-Sufficiency Index from 36% to 79%, while reducing the Energy Surplus Index from 70% to 35%. In the Sardinia case study, the scenario-based analysis demonstrated that renewable energy integration and coordinated energy sharing significantly improved territorial self-sufficiency under optimized REC configurations. The geospatial modelling approach also enabled the identification of suitable renewable deployment scenarios while considering environmental and territorial constraints. The results indicate that the integration of energy modelling, digital monitoring systems, and spatially explicit planning tools provides an effective pathway for improving the operational performance, flexibility, and scalability of RECs. The proposed framework offers practical support for decentralized energy planning, distributed renewable energy management, and data-driven decision-making processes in future community-based energy systems.
This study addresses the growing role of Renewable Energy Communities (RECs) in supporting decentralized renewable energy integration and improving local energy self-sufficiency within the European energy transition framework. The work aimed to evaluate the technical and economic feasibility of a municipal REC in Pattada, a small municipality located in Sardinia, Italy, through an energy balance analysis based on distributed photovoltaic generation and shared electricity consumption. A techno-economic assessment framework was developed by combining the estimated electricity production of municipally owned photovoltaic systems with the load profiles of municipal, commercial, and residential users participating in the REC. The photovoltaic energy production was estimated using the Photovoltaic Geographical Information System (PVGIS) simulation platform, while the shared energy within the REC was evaluated by considering the simultaneity between electricity generation and demand under different residential participation scenarios. The results showed that the municipal photovoltaic systems achieved an annual electricity production of approximately 506.41 MWh, while direct physical self-consumption remained limited to 3.10 MWh/year due to the mismatch between municipal demand and photovoltaic generation profiles. The analysis further showed that the REC reached an energy equilibrium condition with the participation of 285 residential users, corresponding to nearly 23% of the households within the municipality, allowing virtually shared energy to reach 425.92 MWh/year. The economic evaluation demonstrated that the municipal administration obtained the highest share of the overall economic return, mainly driven by electricity exported to the grid and incentive revenues associated with shared energy. The results indicate that the integration of municipally owned photovoltaic systems within REC configurations provides an effective approach for improving local energy sharing and enhancing the economic viability of distributed renewable energy systems in small municipalities. The proposed framework offers practical support for local administrations in planning renewable energy investments and optimizing REC configurations under real operating conditions.
Renewable Energy Communities (RECs) play an increasingly important role in decentralized energy systems by improving local renewable energy utilization, enhancing energy flexibility, and supporting low-carbon energy transitions. However, the integration of distributed energy resources (DERs), flexible electrical loads, and energy sharing mechanisms continues to create operational and management challenges for REC-based systems. This study investigates the energy management and optimization of a residential REC in Italy composed of photovoltaic (PV) generation, battery storage systems, and flexible air-conditioning loads. A detailed optimization framework was developed to coordinate DERs and flexible demand with the objective of maximizing shared energy utilization and related economic incentives while maintaining user comfort and avoiding additional electricity costs. The regulatory framework and operational structure of RECs in Europe and Italy were also examined to support the development of the proposed management strategy. The optimization process was conducted under different operating conditions to evaluate the influence of coordinated load management on REC performance. The results showed that the coordinated control of battery storage systems and air-conditioning units improved shared renewable energy utilization and increased the economic return associated with energy sharing. The optimized operation strategy also reduced electricity costs for users while improving the operational efficiency of the community energy system. The findings indicate that advanced energy management and load coordination strategies provide an effective approach for enhancing the performance of distributed renewable energy systems and supporting the practical implementation of REC-based energy infrastructures.