Research articles

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  • Renewable energy costs have declined in the past but things could change with increasing interest rates. This study shows that in Germany, if interest rates increased to pre-financial crisis levels in 5 years, the levelized cost of solar photovoltaics and onshore wind could rise by 11 and 25%, respectively.

    • Tobias S. Schmidt
    • Bjarne Steffen
    • Ottmar Edenhofer
    Analysis
  • Toxic heavy metal ions need to be removed from drinking water to protect public health. In this article, the authors demonstrated pressure-free removal of positively and negatively charged heavy metal ions from water using 2D MXene-based films.

    • Xiuqiang Xie
    • Chi Chen
    • Yi-Jun Xu
    Article
  • Agrivoltaics can achieve synergistic benefits by growing agricultural plants under raised solar panels. In this article, the authors showed that growth under solar panels reduced tomato and pepper drought stress and increased production, while simultaneously reducing photovoltaic panel heat stress.

    • Greg A. Barron-Gafford
    • Mitchell A. Pavao-Zuckerman
    • Jordan E. Macknick
    Article
  • Public understandings of how economic, environmental and social aspects relate in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) varies. A large-sample study finds how some emphasize the trade-offs between them, and others view that the SDGs address all aspects simultaneously.

    • Paul G. Bain
    • Pieter M. Kroonenberg
    • Joonha Park
    Article
  • While renewable energy has often included hydropower, dams present their own environmental harms. This Analysis not only projects how much land would be needed for solar power to replace US hydropower, but also provides a model for further analyses in other countries.

    • John Waldman
    • Shailesh Sharma
    • Balázs Fekete
    Analysis
  • Moving livestock is essential to the industry, but such mobility can spread disease. Considering three livestock diseases in the UK, this study finds that movement controls should be matched to the consequences of a disease and, crucially, that optimal movement bans are often far shorter than allowed under existing policy.

    • M. J. Tildesley
    • S. Brand
    • M. J Keeling
    Article
  • The diffusion of economic shocks from earthquakes is simulated at the firm level in Japan, using an agent-based model and the supply chains of nearly one million firms. Indirect losses to production are significantly larger and more persistent than direct ones.

    • Hiroyasu Inoue
    • Yasuyuki Todo
    Article
  • Floating treatment wetlands can improve wastewater treatment plant performance. In this Analysis, the authors conducted a three-year study of full-scale floating treatment wetlands in stabilization ponds and showed substantially improved water quality and reduced heavy metal concentrations.

    • Muhammad Afzal
    • Muhammad Arslan
    • Qaiser M. Khan
    Analysis
  • The number of environmental activists and defenders killed per week around the world over the past 15 years has doubled. Countries with the most corruption and weakest rule of law have the highest correlation with deaths but environmental rights face threats even in industrialized countries.

    • Nathalie Butt
    • Frances Lambrick
    • Anna Renwick
    Article
  • The Amazon exemplifies conflicts between extractive resource use and conservation goals. This study finds lead in livers of Amazonian game comparable to levels in industrialized nations and that lead ammunition and oil-related pollution are key sources.

    • Mar Cartró-Sabaté
    • Pedro Mayor
    • Antoni Rosell-Melé
    Article
  • Chinese commitments under the Paris Agreement are premised on a peak in CO2 emissions by 2030. Using the Kuznets curve and emissions and gross domestic product data from 50 cities in the country, this Analysis predicts that emissions in China could peak between 2021 and 2025, well ahead of the Paris target.

    • Haikun Wang
    • Xi Lu
    • Michael B. McElroy
    Analysis
  • Dietary changes to reduce environmental impacts depend on behavioural factors. By linking a behavioural diet shift model to an integrated assessment model, this study shows the role of social norms and self-efficacy as main drivers of widespread dietary changes.

    • Sibel Eker
    • Gerhard Reese
    • Michael Obersteiner
    Article
  • Groundwater wells in the United States are under more stress than ever before due to drought conditions and rising demand, but the extensive nature of deeper drilling has been unreported. This analysis compiles nearly 12 million groundwater wells across the United States to determine water vulnerability and sustainability.

    • Debra Perrone
    • Scott Jasechko
    Analysis
  • The growing prevalence of drought conditions across the world means that mitigation and adaptation will require accounting for feedback loops between water availability and interventions. The Willamette River Valley in Oregon serves as a case study for how to use coupled human–natural systems to mitigate drought.

    • William K. Jaeger
    • Adell Amos
    • Andrew J. Plantinga
    Article
  • Climate change will affect Himalayan water resources. This study quantifies the importance of snow and glacier melt for agriculture on the Indo-Gangetic plain, finding that 129 million farmers depend on it, especially for rice and cotton, and that meltwater supports crops feeding 38 million people.

    • H. Biemans
    • C. Siderius
    • W. W. Immerzeel
    Article
  • Predators, including prawns, can suppress schistosomiasis by eating snail hosts. This modelling study finds that two prawn species in sub-Saharan Africa can reduce snail hosts and help control schistosomiasis at densities that maximize profits of associated aquaculture—a potential win–win.

    • Christopher M. Hoover
    • Susanne H. Sokolow
    • Giulio A. De Leo
    Article