Collection
Progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals
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- Open
The year 2023 marks the mid-point of the 15-year period envisaged to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, targets for global development adopted in September 2015 by all United Nations Member States. To help track where we are on this journey, and to amplify success stories, in this Collection we present studies that assess progress or that showcase interventions that have made a difference. We include articles that focus on at least one of the Sustainable Development Goals, at the local, regional or global scale, and we are pleased to invite submissions of studies framed in a similar way. With a growing overview of where we stand and which measures make a difference, we can generate momentum on a sustainable pathway towards improved human lives and a healthier planet.
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News and Comment
Big data analytics in food industry: a state-of-the-art literature review
- Aftab Siddique
- Ashish Gupta
- Amit Morey
Common misconceptions of ‘other effective area-based conservation measures’ (OECMs) and implications for global conservation targets
The commitment to protect 30% of the Earth’s terrestrial, inland water, coastal and marine areas by 2030 under the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework has seen growing attention paid to ‘other effective area-based conservation measures’ (OECMs) to help achieve this target. However, there are a number of misconceptions of OECMs that commonly arise. We explore these misconceptions to aid in ensuring that OECMs are employed to meet their full potential.
- James A. Fitzsimons
- Carolina Hazin
- Joanna L. Smith
Advanced machine learning for regional potato yield prediction: analysis of essential drivers
- Dania Tamayo-Vera
- Morteza Mesbah
- Xiuquan Wang
Breaking biases and building momentum for transforming agricultural research for development practices: recommendations and research opportunities
- Erin McGuire
- Hanna Ewell
- Michel Kabirigi
It is time to reevaluate the lard in glucose homeostasis and diabetes pathogenesis
Most modern dietary guidelines recommend limiting lard and animal fats due to their potential link to metabolic diseases. Nevertheless, emerging evidence suggests that lard may not significantly contribute to diabetes and that moderate lard intake could even benefit lipid metabolism. This commentary suggests a reevaluation of lard’s classification as a “bad actor” in the context of diabetes, urging colleagues to give greater consideration to and empirically validate this intriguing hypothesis.
- Fangrui Guo
- Xiaoran wu
- Ji wang
Why the EU must reset its Green Deal — or be left behind
The world has changed since Europe’s ambitious climate package was designed. Here’s how the agreement should evolve.
- Rabah Arezki
- Jean-Pierre Landau
- Rick van der Ploeg
CommentNatureSearching for high pathogenicity avian influenza virus in Antarctica
- Begoña Aguado
- Lineke Begeman
- Meagan Dewar
CorrespondenceNature MicrobiologyMicrobial solutions must be deployed against climate catastrophe
This paper is a call to action. By publishing concurrently across journals like an emergency bulletin, we are not merely making a plea for awareness about climate change. Instead, we are demanding immediate, tangible steps that harness the power of microbiology and the expertise of researchers and policymakers to safeguard the planet for future generations.
- Raquel Peixoto
- Christian R. Voolstra
- Jack A. Gilbert
CommentNature MicrobiologyThe scale of the biodiversity crisis laid bare
An eloquent requiem for nature risks leaving the reader feeling helpless rather than energized.
- Julia P. G. Jones
Book ReviewNatureProtection over restoration to ensure water sustainability
Plastics pollution, persistent chemical contamination and inadequately treated wastewater are three key aspects that hinder access to safe and affordable water for all. This Comment argues that a strong priority on pollution avoidance, research for remediation, and tighter regulation and monitoring must be implemented to make progress.
- Filomena Silva
- Ramia Al Bakain
- Patrick Allard
A nationally determined contribution framework for energy transition minerals
A framework for governments to define their domestic energy transition mineral needs, sources, and contributions to the global energy transition can improve domestic policies around the world and enable greater national and global coordination to avoid supply crises and resource conflicts.
- Julie Michelle Klinger
- Gwendolyn K. Murphy
- Coryn Wolk
CommentNature EnergyThe Biodiversity Credit Market needs rigorous baseline, monitoring, and validation practices
The nascent Biodiversity Credit Market (BCM) aims to boost biodiversity funding but mirrors the flawed carbon credit market. To ensure success, BCM should (1) use dynamic baselines with control sites, (2) monitor the populations dynamics of a large array of vertebrate and invertebrate species, and (3) assign credits through an independent, transparent, and cost-effective validation process.
- T. Mitchell Aide
Conservation policies must address an overlooked issue: how war affects the environment
The impacts of armed conflict on biodiversity have long been neglected. A United Nations meeting hosted by Colombia is a golden opportunity to begin changing that.
- Doug Weir
- Sarah M. Durant
- Sara Fernandes Elizalde
CommentNatureNanotechnology solutions for the climate crisis
Climate change is one of humankind’s biggest challenges, leading to more frequent and intense climate extremes, including heatwaves, wildfires, hurricanes, ocean acidification, and increased extinction rates. Nanotechnology already plays an important role in decarbonizing critical processes. Still, despite the technical advances seen in the last decades, the International Energy Agency has identified many sectors that are not on track to achieve the global climate mitigation goals by 2030. Here, a multi-stakeholder group of nanoscientists from the public, private, and philanthropic sectors discuss four high-potential application spaces where nanotechnologies could accelerate progress: batteries and energy storage; catalysis; coatings, lubricants, membranes, and other interface technology; and capture of greenhouse gases. This Comment highlights opportunities and current gaps for those working to minimize the climate crisis and provides a framework for the nanotechnology community to answer the call to action on this global issue.
- Maria Fernanda Campa
- Craig M. Brown
- James A. Warren
CommentNature NanotechnologyGeodiversity challenges for a sustainable future
- Jack Matthews
- Lucie Kubalíková
- Helena Tukiainen
CorrespondenceNature GeoscienceInconsistent measurement calls into question progress on electrification in sub-Saharan Africa
Electricity access statistics used to track progress against the Sustainable Development Goal 7.1 set by the United Nations have significant uncertainties, which may bring into question the electrification status of at least 87.2 million people in sub-Saharan Africa. Consequently, we call for a re-evaluation of the definitions of electricity access used by international organizations and the methodologies applied to calculate them.
- Stephanie Hirmer
- Julia Tomei
- Martin Stringer
CommentNature EnergyData on SDGs are riddled with gaps. Citizens can help
The UN wants to put communities at the heart of its data-collection efforts in support of the Sustainable Development Goals. Now governments must step up.
- Yongyi Min
- Haoyi Chen
- Francesca Perucci
CommentNatureBeyond COP28: Brazil must act to tackle the global climate and biodiversity crisis
Extreme weather has made 2023 virtually certain to be the warmest year on record, signaling unprecedented climate and biodiversity crises. Brazil, the world’s most biodiverse country, with two hotspots and complex social and economic layers, has experienced escalating environmental degradation over the past years. Alarming rates of native vegetation loss, wildfires, severe and prolonged droughts, and heatwaves have adversely impacted several Brazilian ecosystems and societies. Despite the country’s decisive role in global carbon neutrality, bridging the gap between Brazil’s discourse on the international stage and its concrete actions at home remains a significant challenge. This correspondence, a collective plea from scientists across various sectors, underscores the urgent imperative for national engagement and commitment to halt and mitigate these crises. We aim to catalyze a robust international public debate, influencing Brazilian decision-makers to chart a concrete sustainable pathway. Aligned with global initiatives, we emphasize the crucial interplay between national and international efforts in combating climate change and the conservation of biodiversity and socio-biodiversity.
- Flávia de Figueiredo Machado
- Marcela C. N. S. Terra
- Fernando M. Pelicice
Extending the Sustainable Development Goals to 2050 — a road map
The world should redouble its efforts on the SDGs, not abandon them. Here’s how to progress the United Nations’ agenda towards 2050.
- Francesco Fuso Nerini
- Mariana Mazzucato
- Jeffrey Sachs
CommentNatureEstimation of economic loss by earthquakes in Taiwan Region
- Yang Shi
- Yilong Li
- Zhenguo Zhang
Animal capital: a new way to define human-animal bond in view of global changes and food insecurity
- Cédric Sueur
- Éric Fourneret
- Romain Espinosa
Stronger commitment and faster action against antimicrobial resistance
As the United Nations convenes its second High-Level Meeting on antimicrobial resistance, urgent global action is needed. This Focus issue draws attention to pressing challenges of bacterial antimicrobial resistance and underscores the need for fast and coordinated international efforts.
EditorialNature Reviews MicrobiologyChallenges and strategies for addressing antibacterial drug resistance in LMICs
Antibacterial drug resistance is a critical global health issue that affects countries across all economic levels, though it disproportionately affects populations in low- and middle-income countries. Infection and resistance rates vary considerably, necessitating tailored interventions to meet the specific demands of each area. This underscores the need for global solidarity and national accountability in effectively addressing antibacterial drug resistance.
- Ursula Theuretzbacher
CommentNature Reviews MicrobiologyAchieving sustainable access to antibiotics is more than just a last mile challenge
Improving access to antibiotics will save lives and reduce the rise and spread of drug-resistant infections. Instead of traditional ‘last mile’ global health solutions, global leaders need to support efforts to develop suitable antibiotics and their rational use, ensuring that countries have the capacity to make them available.
- Manica Balasegaram
- Viviana Muñoz Tellez
CommentNature Reviews MicrobiologyTowards an effective obstetric nephrology care: the Mansoura experience
For women with kidney disease of childbearing age, kidney care should feature discussions of pregnancy, including informed counseling and support. Health disparities between regions with different levels of income are undeniable, but special care programs aimed at the early identification and management of patients at risk can greatly decrease the magnitude of the problem.
- Rasha Shemies
World ViewNature Reviews NephrologyThe future of climate-resilient development is local
Climate-resilient development provides a framework to address the interlinked challenges of climate change, biodiversity conservation and sustainable development. We discuss how these global goals can be translated to the local scale so that local governments, businesses, communities and citizens can help to implement them.
- Aromar Revi
- Ketaki Ghoge
CommentNature Human BehaviourI want universities to put breastfeeding on their gender pay gap agenda
Unsupportive university policies force parents to make choices about how to feed their baby. Ernestine Gheyoh Ndzi, an expert in employment law and advocate for parental rights in the UK, tells us why this needs to change.
- Ernestine Gheyoh Ndzi
World ViewNature Human BehaviourWhy scientific integrity matters now more than ever
This year, 49% of the world will go to the polls. Political support for science-informed policy is not a given. Maria Caffrey, a whistleblower who defended scientific integrity under the Trump administration, offers advice on media engagement during this time.
- Maria A. Caffrey
World ViewNature Human BehaviourThe gap between academic research on proton exchange membrane water electrolysers and industrial demands
Driven by carbon neutral targets, proton exchange membrane water electrolysis is becoming a hot technology due to its capability to convert fluctuating power into green hydrogen. Unfortunately, despite tremendous resources invested in fundamental research, only very few research outcomes have successfully translated into the development of industrial-scale electrolysers.
- Hua Bing Tao
- Han Liu
- Nanfeng Zheng
CommentNature NanotechnologyOpen science — embrace it before it’s too late
A UNESCO report laments the lack of progress in making science more collaborative. Greater awareness could aid efforts to achieve the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
EditorialNatureMy cell is better than yours
Scientists encounter pressure to validate their research work, leading to varied benchmarks and methods for performance assessment in the broad energy research field. Interlaboratory studies help highlight discrepancies in reported figures of merit, underscoring the need for standardized protocols, transparent reporting, and detailed analysis for fair comparisons. Here, we discuss this topic, focusing on battery materials.
- Nella M. Vargas-Barbosa
CommentNature NanotechnologyA critical feminist study of mothers raising a child on the autism spectrum in Iran
- Ansar Khougar
- Parisa Ahadi
- Mahsa Ahadi
Neglecting sex and gender in research is a public-health risk
The data are clear: taking sex and gender into account in research and using that knowledge to change health care could benefit billions of people.
- Sue Haupt
- Cheryl Carcel
- Robyn Norton
CommentNatureForestry social science is failing the needs of the people who need it most
Rich nations’ fixation on forests as climate offsets has resulted in the needs of those who live in or make a living from these resources being ignored. A broader view and more collaboration between disciplines is required.
EditorialNatureAdvancing ocean equity at the nexus of development, climate and conservation policy
Achieving inclusive and sustainable ocean economies, long-term climate resilience and effective biodiversity conservation requires urgent and strategic actions from local to global scales. We discuss fundamental changes that are needed to allow equitable policy across these three domains.
- Joachim Claudet
- Jessica Blythe
- Josheena Naggea
CommentNature Ecology & EvolutionWill AI accelerate or delay the race to net-zero emissions?
As artificial intelligence transforms the global economy, researchers need to explore scenarios to assess how it can help, rather than harm, the climate.
- Amy Luers
- Jonathan Koomey
- Eric Horvitz
CommentNatureWe must protect the global plastics treaty from corporate interference
A United Nations-backed agreement to end plastic pollution is within reach — but only if scientists, civil society and businesses unite against powerful vested interests.
- Martin Wagner
World ViewNatureUN plastics treaty: don’t let lobbyists drown out researchers
Tackling plastic pollution needs scientists to be in the negotiating room at upcoming talks.
EditorialNatureLeveraging epidemic network models towards wildfire resilience
Wildfires have increased in frequency and intensity due to climate change and have had severe impacts on the built environment worldwide. Moving forward, models should take inspiration from epidemic network modeling to predict damage to individual buildings and understand the impact of different mitigations on the community vulnerability in a network setting.
- Hussam Mahmoud
CommentNature Computational ScienceQuantifying forest degradation requires a long-term, landscape-scale approach
Forests are spatially and temporally dynamic, such that forest degradation is best quantified across whole landscapes and over the long term. The European Union’s forest degradation policy, which focuses on contemporary primary forest conversion to plantations, ignores other globally prevalent forestry practices that can flip forests into a degraded state.
- Matthew G. Betts
- Zhiqiang Yang
- Sean P. Healey
CommentNature Ecology & EvolutionChallenges and ways forward for sustainable weather and climate services in Africa
Sustainability of African weather and climate information can only be ensured by investing in improved scientific understanding, observational data, and model capability. These requirements must be underpinned by capacity development, knowledge management; and partnerships of co-production, communication and coordination.
- Benjamin Lamptey
- Salah SAHABI ABED
- Erik W. Kolstad
The Global Biodiversity Framework’s ecosystem restoration target requires more clarity and careful legal interpretation
- Justine Bell-James
- Rose Foster
- James A. Fitzsimons
CorrespondenceNature Ecology & EvolutionHow to achieve safe water access for all: work with local communities
Four scientists reflect on how to foster a more sustainable relationship between water and society amid complex and wide-ranging challenges.
- Farhana Sultana
- Tara McAllister
- Michael D. Blackstock
CommentNatureWhy the world cannot afford the rich
Equality is essential for sustainability. The science is clear — people in more-equal societies are more trusting and more likely to protect the environment than are those in unequal, consumer-driven ones.
- Richard G. Wilkinson
- Kate E. Pickett
CommentNatureAcademic workplaces are still failing Black women; they must do better
Black women at universities are seldom heard. Institutions need to listen and take action.
- Nicola Rollock
World ViewNatureEndocrine disrupting chemicals are a threat to hormone health: a commentary on behalf of the ESE
The European Society of Endocrinology (ESE), representing 20,000 endocrinologists, is concerned about the effect of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) on endocrine health, particularly thyroid and gonadal function. The policy strategies of the ESE aim to minimize overall exposure of humans to EDCs and to stimulate funding for research at the level of the European Union.
- Martin Reincke
- Wiebke Arlt
- Jerome Bertherat
CommentNature Reviews EndocrinologyA spotlight on the tuberculosis epidemic in South Africa
Tuberculosis is the leading cause of death from a single infectious agent, with over 25% of these occurring in the African region. Multi-drug resistant strains which do not respond to first-line antibiotics continue to emerge, putting at risk numerous public health strategies which aim to reduce incidence and mortality. Here, we speak with Professor Valerie Mizrahi, world-leading researcher and former director of the Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine at the University of Cape Town, regarding the tuberculosis burden in South Africa. We discuss the challenges faced by researchers, the lessons that need to be learnt and current innovations to better understand the overall response required to accelerate progress.
A 2023 hurricane caught Mexico off guard: we must work together to prepare better
Hurricane Otis yields lessons for researchers and policymakers on how to reduce risks in the face of inequality.
- Gian C. Delgado-Ramos
- Simone Lucatello
- Miguel Imaz-Lamadrid
CommentNatureCities matter to the world’s future — science must serve them better
From governance to climate impacts, the world’s urban environments face many difficulties. A new journal,Nature Cities, aims to bring together researchers who are rising to the challenge.
EditorialNatureDevelopment of zeolite adsorbents for CO2 separation in achieving carbon neutrality
- Zeyu Tao
- Yuanmeng Tian
- Jin Shang
Reward whistleblowers who expose environmental crimes
- Masaki Iwasaki
CorrespondenceNature Human BehaviourCervical cancer kills 300,000 people a year — here’s how to speed up its elimination
Without rapid change, the World Health Organization’s goals for tackling cervical cancer by 2030 will be missed. Four experts share ways to move the needle.
- Lynette Denny
- Ishu Kataria
- Kathleen M. Schmeler
CommentNatureTo curb plastic pollution, industry and academia must unite
Collaboration is key to making plastic use greener as soon as possible. Our experience yields tips on how to set up industry–academic partnerships.
- Collin P. Ward
- Christopher M. Reddy
- Steven T. Perri
CommentNatureReorienting water and sanitation narratives towards sustainability transformations
Transformation narratives in water and sanitation emphasize public health and gender equality, yet miss a critical foundational perspective: planetary sustainability.
- Naomi Carrard
World ViewNature WaterPlace-based reflexivity for just energy social science
Where host communities are marginalized by industry practices, energy social science researchers must ensure that their research does not doubly exacerbate extractive practices. Place-based reflexivity provides a set of principles and concrete practices for researchers to avoid extractive relations with host communities and promote contextually relevant and democratic processes in pursuit of a just transition.
- Patrick Devine-Wright
- Stacia Ryder
CommentNature EnergyBeyond integrated care for older adults
Health systems have adopted models of integrated care to better align services around the needs of aging populations. The results are encouraging, but inconsistent. Although they are untested, recent approaches — such as the WHO’s ‘Integrated Care for Older People’ — that are explicitly person-centered suggest that more-radical reform may be possible.
- John R. Beard
CommentNature AgingBoosting microbiome science worldwide could save millions of children’s lives
Studies of the microbes living on and in our bodies are conducted mainly in a few rich countries, squandering opportunities to improve the health of people globally.
- Hilary P. Browne
- Najeeha Talat Iqbal
- Samuel Kariuki
CommentNatureGlobal agendas aim for equity but instead push people behind
The Sustainable Development Goals promise to leave no one behind. Yet recent global actions have pushed disadvantaged groups further behind, writes Magda Robalo Correia e Silva.
- Magda Robalo Correia e Silva
World ViewNature Human BehaviourLong-term care insurance and the future of healthy aging in China
China faces urgent challenges associated with population aging. In this Comment, we summarize China’s adoption of long-term care insurance and underscore its importance for social and economic wellbeing. We provide recommendations for a future of sustainable and healthy aging in China.
- Simiao Chen
- Linye Li
- Chen Wang
CommentNature AgingThe contribution of human conflict to the development of antimicrobial resistance
Pallett et al. discuss the impact of human conflict on development of antimicrobial resistance. They overview approaches to limit the spread of antimicrobial resistance, using the ongoing conflict in Ukraine as an example of the challenges and opportunities.
- Scott J. C. Pallett
- Sara E. Boyd
- Emma J. Hutley
Make global biodiversity information useful to national decision-makers
Participants in the Convention on Biological Diversity’s processes for implementing the Kunming-Montréal Global Biodiversity Framework need clarity on what makes biodiversity information useful to national decision-makers. Here we present seven preconditions of useful biodiversity information and describe how these can be supported through regional support centres and south–south cooperation.
- Falko T. Buschke
- Claudia Capitani
- Amrei von Hase
CommentNature Ecology & EvolutionClimate researchers need support to become scientist-communicators
Scientific institutions must create roles so that researchers can provide the deep public engagement necessary to respond effectively to the escalating impacts of climate change.
- Daniel Swain
World ViewNatureApproaching 1.5 °C: how will we know we’ve reached this crucial warming mark?
Assessing global mean temperature rise using the average warming over the previous one or two decades will delay formal recognition of when Earth breaches the Paris agreement’s 1.5 °C guard rail. Here is what’s needed to avoid the wait.
- Richard A. Betts
- Stephen E. Belcher
- Peter A. Stott
CommentNatureThis is how the world finally ends the HIV/AIDS pandemic
Putting the specific needs of individuals and communities at the heart of HIV/AIDS care, by harnessing behavioural science, is key to building on the progress already been made.
- John Nkengasong
- Mike Reid
- Ingrid T. Katz
CommentNatureChina and California are leading the way on climate cooperation. Others should follow
California governor Gavin Newsom’s delegation is building on existing research and policy initiatives with China, showing that effective climate action can happen below the national level.
- Fan Dai
World ViewNatureChemistry is inaccessible: how to reduce barriers for disabled scientists
From classrooms to laboratories and conferences, working in chemistry presents huge challenges to disabled, chronically ill and neurodivergent people. Some simple fixes can help to shift the dial.
- Blaine G. Fiss
- Laena D’Alton
- Naumih M. Noah
CommentNatureClimate loss-and-damage funding: how to get money to where it’s needed fast
Finance for coping with the harms of climate change must be disbursed swiftly and pragmatically. The world’s largest existing climate fund for supporting climate mitigation and adaptation provides lessons.
- Laura Kuhl
- Istiakh Ahmed
- Saleemul Huq
CommentNatureClimate loss-and-damage funding: a mechanism to make it work
Compensating for the devastating impacts of heatwaves, hurricanes and floods after they occur is too slow. With climate risks accelerating, the world must predict who needs funds and when.
- Richard H. Clarke
- Noah J. Wescombe
- Domenico Lombardi
CommentNatureDisaster early-warning systems can succeed — but collective action is needed
From floods to wildfires, and tsunamis to volcanic eruptions, early-warning systems can stop natural hazards becoming human disasters. But more joined-up thinking is urgently needed.
- Andrew C. Tupper
- Carina J. Fearnley
CommentNatureThe world’s chemical-weapons stockpiles are gone — but a new challenge looms
Continued efforts to maintain the ban on chemical weapons depend on nations sharing information to further build trust and global safety.
- Peter J. Hotchkiss
World ViewNatureProtect the ‘right to science’ for people and the planet
Upholding human rights can ensure that environmental policy is driven by facts and evidence, not denialism, greed and profit.
- Volker Türk
World ViewNatureMission Energy Access for a just and sustainable future for all
Access to clean energy is essential to sustainable human development. We thus have a responsibility and an opportunity to meet the global goal of ending energy poverty by 2030. We propose the creation of a new Mission Energy Access programme to support this aim.
- Ambuj D. Sagar
- Ajay Mathur
- Achim Steiner
CommentNature EnergyEquitable access to kidney transplants for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Australia
First Nations peoples in Australia face systemic inequities in access to kidney transplantation. The National Indigenous Kidney Transplant Taskforce was established to address these. It has provided support to clinicians to implement and evaluate innovative practices and developed strategies to address biases in the structures and models of care that create barriers to wait-listing.
- Stephen P. McDonald
- Katie Cundale
- Jaquelyne T. Hughes
CommentNature Reviews Nephrology‘I wrote my first piece of code at seven’: women share highs and lows in computer science for Ada Lovelace Day
Ada Lovelace was a visionary who first recognized the potential of computer programming. Almost two centuries on, six women in computer science and technology reflect on their experiences in the field.
- Janet Abbate
- Shobhana Narasimhan
- Verena Rieser
CommentNatureNipah virus is deadly — but smart policy changes can help quell pandemic risk
Repeated outbreaks increase the risk of a Nipah strain emerging that is better at spreading.
- Thekkumkara Surendran Anish
World ViewNaturePriorities for progress towards Sustainable Development Goal 14 ‘Life below water’
This year marks the mid-point for the implementation of the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its 17 Sustainable Development Goals, including Sustainable Development Goal 14 (‘Life below water’). We asked a range of researchers working across marine science, conservation, policy and implementation to reflect on priorities for action on ocean health and biodiversity over the next seven years.
- Jane Lubchenco
- Emma F. Camp
- Harriet Harden-Davies
ViewpointNature Ecology & EvolutionPriorities for progress towards Sustainable Development Goal 15 ‘Life on land’
This year marks the mid-point for the implementation of the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its 17 Sustainable Development Goals, including Sustainable Development Goal 15 ‘Life on land’. We asked a range of researchers, working across biodiversity science, conservation, policy and implementation, to reflect on priorities for action on conserving terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems over the next seven years.
- H. David Cooper
- Musonda Mumba
- Jon Paul Rodríguez
ViewpointNature Ecology & Evolution‘Benevolent’ patent extensions could raise billions for R&D in poorer countries
Research into vaccines, crop seeds and other innovations for low- or middle-income nations could be rewarded by offering longer patent coverage for profitable, non-essential inventions.
- Christopher B. Barrett
CommentNatureGenetic modification can improve crop yields — but stop overselling it
With a changing climate and a growing population, the world increasingly needs more-productive and resilient crops. But improving them requires a knowledge of what actually works in the field.
- Merritt Khaipho-Burch
- Mark Cooper
- Edward S. Buckler
CommentNatureGlobal stocktake and the SDG midterm review as opportunities for integration
Better integration of climate action and sustainable development can help enhance the ambition of the next nationally determined contributions, as well as implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals. Governments should use this year as an opportunity to emphasize the links between climate and sustainable development.
- Lukas Hermwille
- Adis Dzebo
- Wolfgang Obergassel
CommentNature Climate ChangeConsiderations for addressing bias in artificial intelligence for health equity
- Michael D. Abràmoff
- Michelle E. Tarver
- William H. Maisel
Transforming sanitation to combat the global water crisis
Improving sanitation technology and service is imperative for everyone, in every country.
- Doulaye Kone
World ViewNature WaterDigital determinants of health: opportunities and risks amidst health inequities
Digital transformation offers unprecedented opportunities for advancing healthcare, but also raises complex ethical and legal challenges. Emerging drivers of health disparity termed ‘digital determinants of health’ call for purposeful, equity-focused strategies to ensure that technological innovation benefits all without exacerbating disparities.
- Jack Gallifant
- Leo Anthony Celi
- Robin L. Pierce
CommentNature Reviews NephrologyThe sustainability paradox of processing plant proteins
The production of sustainable plant-based foods is not simply a question of which process has the lowest environmental impact in the food chain. We have to consider that different degrees of processing might result in different degrees of plant protein nutritional quality in the final food product.
- Patrícia Duque-Estrada
- Iben Lykke Petersen
Water for sustainable development
The alarmingly slow progress on water-related goals and targets jeopardizes the entire sustainable development agenda. In March 2023, the United Nations (UN) convened the first UN Water Conference in nearly 50 years to create momentum and accelerate progress. The outcome of the conference will feed into the High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF), which will be held in New York on July 10–19, 2023.Nature Water asked five experts about the challenges to meet the goals and where we need to go from here.
- Karin Sjöstrand
Q&ANature WaterWith the arrival of El Niño, prepare for stronger marine heatwaves
Record-high ocean temperatures, combined with a confluence of extreme climate and weather patterns, are pushing the world into uncharted waters. Researchers must help communities to plan how best to reduce the risks.
- Alistair J. Hobday
- Michael T. Burrows
- Thomas Wernberg
CommentNatureMobilizing domestic support for international vaccine solidarity – recommendations for health crisis communication
- Dirk Leuffen
- Pascal Mohamed Mounchid
- Sebastian Koos
Current status of monkeypox vaccines
- Marion F. Gruber
The Sustainable Development Goals should be reset to prioritize poverty, health and climate
The UN SDGs will only improve human health if they are accompanied by systemic change that addresses global power imbalances.
- Ilona Kickbusch
- Ayoade Alakija
CommentNature MedicineUsing computational tools to monitor and improve access to quality food and water
Progress towards universal access to safe drinking water and nutritious food has been moving forward at a slower than desired rate. Computational tools can help accelerate progress towards these goals, but solutions need to be open source, and designed, developed and implemented in a participatory manner.
- Elisa Omodei
CommentNature Computational ScienceReducing disaster risk for the poor in tomorrow’s cities with computational science
Rapid urban expansion presents a major challenge to delivering the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Urban populations are forecast to increase by 2.2 billion by 2050, and business as usual will condemn many of these new citizens to lives dominated by disaster risk. This need not be the case. Computational science can help urban planners and decision-makers to turn this threat into a time-limited opportunity to reduce disaster risk for hundreds of millions of people.
- John McCloskey
- Mark Pelling
- Roberto Gentile
CommentNature Computational ScienceThe next seven years
As we approach the half-way point in the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals, we discuss how computational science could help in reaching some of these goals by 2030.
EditorialNature Computational ScienceWhat scientists need to do to accelerate progress on the SDGs
Drilling down into why the UN Sustainable Development Goals are so hard to achieve, and showing policymakers pathways to follow, will help the planet and save lives.
- Shirin Malekpour
- Cameron Allen
- Kaltham Al-Ghanim
CommentNatureDo you really know the way the world is heading? Take this quiz on plans to save humanity
The United Nations has ambitious aims to end poverty and clean up the planet by 2030. See whether you know how the world is faring on the Sustainable Development Goals.
- Ehsan Masood
- Richard Van Noorden
News FeatureNatureThe world’s goals to save humanity are hugely ambitious — but they are still the best option
Not one of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals looks set to be achieved by 2030. But deadlines can help focus the mind, and scientists should double down on their work to support the goals.
EditorialNatureBucking the system: the extraordinary story of how the SDGs came to be
Behind the UN Sustainable Development Goals is a stirring tale of people overcoming huge odds against hostile institutions.
- Ehsan Masood
Book ReviewNatureReturning to core principles to advance the 2030 Agenda
Principles underpinning the 2030 Agenda — indivisibility, integration and universality — can safeguard against inaction or unsustainable practices but have not yet come into effect. We propose measures to strengthen alignment with them as the world gears up to accelerate implementation at the 2023 SDG Summit.
- Nina Weitz
- Henrik Carlsen
- Åsa Persson
CommentNature SustainabilityGender equality: the route to a better world
Health outcomes, ending poverty and greening the environment are boosted when power is shared between the genders.
EditorialNatureA new model for public health in Africa can become a reality
As Africa emerges from the COVID pandemic, combating infectious diseases must be a priority — along with treating non-communicable and mental health conditions.
- Jean Kaseya
World ViewNatureHypocrisy is threatening the future of the world’s oceans
A few powerful nations are undermining progress towards global ocean sustainability. Scientists can help hold them to account.
EditorialNatureHow do we solve a problem like tuberculosis?
Investment in a new tuberculosis vaccine is a landmark step forward, but continued efforts to advance treatments, diagnostics and biosocial issues are needed to meet targets to end the epidemic by 2035.
EditorialNature MicrobiologyThe science is clear: sustainable development and climate action are inseparable
Sustainability cannot be achieved without climate action, and vice versa. What’s needed is a fight on both fronts.
EditorialNatureEnhancing sustainable development through plant genetics
In April 2023, leading experts met with members of US Congress to discuss strategies to ensure global food security. Following on from this, Pamela Ronald emphasizes the role that plant genetics has in achieving these goals.
- Pamela C. Ronald
CommentNature Reviews GeneticsTackle ever-growing consumption to safeguard sustainability gains
The world is consuming more efficiently, but still using more stuff. More-concerted efforts to change both consumer and producer behaviour are needed.
EditorialNatureWant a sustainable future? Then look to the world’s cities
In a rapidly urbanizing world, what happens in cities matters — and sustainability success stories show what can be achieved when researchers and policymakers work together.
EditorialNatureReducing inequality benefits everyone — so why isn’t it happening?
Those urging world leaders to take action on inequality should study why earlier efforts did not translate to changes in policy.
EditorialNatureBeyond greenwashing: how to make business and finance genuinely sustainable
Researchers have a big role in unlocking funds for sustainability and ensuring that companies’ pledges are credible.
EditorialNatureGDP at 70: why genuinely sustainable development means settling a debate at the heart of economics
Researchers advocating reform of the world’s main measure of growth have an opportunity to participate in the process that sets the rules.
EditorialNatureClean energy can fuel the future — and make the world healthier
Research challenges the myth that clean energy acts as a brake on global economic development.
EditorialNatureIndigenous youth must be at the forefront of climate diplomacy
Holistic approaches to water and land management practised by Indigenous communities worldwide hold the key to a more sustainable future, say co-organizers of the Global Indigenous Youth Summit on Climate Change.
- Temitope Olawunmi Sogbanmu
- Heather Sauyaq Jean Gordon
- Adeyemi Oladapo Aremu
CommentNatureWater crisis: how local technologies can help solve a global problem
Climate change is making water stress worse for billions worldwide. Scaling up both new and traditional solutions must be a priority.
EditorialNatureMillions of jobs in food production are disappearing — a change in mindset would help to keep them
Halting the loss of jobs and knowledge from small-scale producers requires investing in rural sustainability, addressing poverty and inequity and ensuring the economic gains stay local. The benefits would be shared globally.
- Eduardo S. Brondizio
- Stacey A. Giroux
- Beate Henschel
CommentNatureMicroorganisms, climate change, and the Sustainable Development Goals: progress and challenges
The forthcoming UN summit marks the halfway point to 2030 and presents an important milestone in global efforts to address various challenges, including those related to climate change and environmental preservation. The UN SDGs include several related to microorganisms and climate change. Microbiology research is key to understanding and mitigating climate change, and in maintaining the health of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems (SDGs 13, 14 and 15).
- Janet K. Jansson
CommentNature Reviews MicrobiologyThe path to successful hepatitis C elimination in Spain
Strong multidisciplinary support and political commitment have helped Spain become one of the countries most likely to eliminate hepatitis C. In this Comment, we set out six key elements of the Spanish elimination effort that can serve as a model elsewhere and the remaining barriers to overcome.
- Javier Crespo
- Joaquín Cabezas
- Jeffrey V. Lazarus
Accelerated reduction in global cardiovascular disease is essential to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals
Cardiovascular health is essential to achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly SDG3.4. Barriers include inequalities and a lack of political will and prioritization. A comprehensive approach is needed to reduce the global burden of cardiovascular disease and to achieve SDG3.4. The World Heart Federation addresses the determinants of cardiovascular disease and mobilizes the global community through roadmaps, roundtables and advocacy.
- Daniel J. Piñeiro
- Elisa Codato
- Jagat Narula
CommentNature Reviews CardiologyHow to educate the world: prioritize funding and data
Data gaps are hindering progress on the Sustainable Development Goal for education and lifelong learning. Modest funding will help to fill them.
EditorialNatureInfectious diseases and the Sustainable Development Goals: progress, challenges and future directions
Infectious diseases markedly influence progress towards the SDGs. Pandemics and global inequity have hindered progress towards the health targets, highlighting humanity’s interconnectedness and shared vulnerability to new infectious agents. Enhanced global collaboration and partnerships in training, surveillance, research and innovation are essential to reach the health SDGs by 2030.
- Quarraisha Abdool Karim
- Salim S. Abdool Karim
CommentNature Reviews MicrobiologyPrinciples for the prevention and control of non-communicable disease
Non-communicable diseases in low- and middle-income countries can be tackled with integrated health systems interventions that consider multimorbidity, supported by patient involvement and new technologies.
- Sailesh Mohan
- Kamlesh Khunti
- Dorairaj Prabhakaran
CommentNature MedicineThe poorest and most vulnerable communities should be the first to be vaccinated
Eighteen million children have received no routine vaccines — prioritizing them will save lives and build health infrastructure.
- Seth Berkley
World ViewNature MedicineWhy Wellcome is tackling the health impacts of climate change
Climate change must be embedded in funding strategies and medical curricula, with research being best conducted in the countries most affected.
- Alan Dangour
World ViewNature MedicineBuilding healthy populations one community at a time
Tailored community engagement led or co-led by the community can build trust with underserved communities to deliver health equity.
- Folakemi T. Odedina
- Rafaela Alves Pacheco
- Marcia C. Castro
CommentNature MedicineThe best medicine for improving global health? Reduce inequality
The COVID pandemic knocked back progress towards improving public health. Without addressing the underlying social and economic causes of ill health, it could completely stall.
EditorialNatureHow to build a circular economy for rare-earth elements
Rare-earth elements that are crucial for clean-energy technologies are jealously fought over. Policies and programmes to encourage recycling and recovery could reduce tensions.
- Yong Geng
- Joseph Sarkis
- Raimund Bleischwitz
CommentNaturePublic health leaders must confront the power imbalances that harm global health
- David McCoy
- Rajat Khosla
CorrespondenceNature MedicineEngaging the tropical majority to make ocean governance and science more equitable and effective
How can ocean governance and science be made more equitable and effective? The majority of the world’s ocean-dependent people live in low to middle-income countries in the tropics (i.e., the ‘tropical majority’). Yet the ocean governance agenda is set largely on the basis of scientific knowledge, funding, and institutions from high-income nations in temperate zones. These externally driven approaches undermine the equity and effectiveness of current solutions and hinder leadership by the tropical majority, who are well positioned to activate evidence-based and context-specific solutions to ocean-sustainability challenges. Here, we draw together diverse perspectives from the tropics to propose four actions for transformational change that are grounded in perspectives, experiences, and knowledge from the tropics: 1. Center equity in ocean governance, 2. Reconnect people and the ocean, 3. Redefine ocean literacy, and 4. Decolonize ocean research. These actions are critical to ensuring a leading role for the tropical majority in maintaining thriving ocean societies and ecosystems.
- Ana K. Spalding
- Kirsten Grorud-Colvert
- Rebecca Vega Thurber
The G20 should forge a pact to support nations’ shifts to a low-carbon future
Fossil fuels should be used sparingly, in the areas where they contribute most to human welfare.
- Navroz K. Dubash
World ViewNatureHunger and famine are not accidents — they are created by the actions of people
Hundreds of millions of people are going hungry as conflicts affect food supplies. There is also growing evidence that food producers are exploiting the situation to increase their profits.
EditorialNatureA decades-long decline in extreme poverty has gone into reverse — here’s how to fix things
Factors ranging from COVID-19 to Russia’s war in Ukraine are increasing extreme poverty. Finding effective solutions starts with agreeing on how to measure what poverty means.
EditorialNatureA mission-driven approach for converting research into climate action
With each IPCC report, the science basis around climate change increases extensively in terms of scope, depth, and complexity. In converting this knowledge into societal climate action, research organisations face the challenge of reforming the ways they structure themselves, generate solutions, and communicate scientific findings to stakeholders. Here we present a mission-driven approach to guide those efforts.
- Daniel Adshead
- Haluk Akay
- Francesco Fuso Nerini
Current conservation policies risk accelerating biodiversity loss
Three approaches that aim to cut the harms of agriculture — land sharing, rewilding and organic farming — risk driving up food imports and causing environmental damage overseas. An alternative approach is both effective and cheaper.
- Ian Bateman
- Andrew Balmford
CommentNatureThe world’s plan to make humanity sustainable is failing. Science can do more to save it
There is no planet B, and the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals are heading for the rocks. Researchers around the world must do their bit to change that.
EditorialNatureThe human microbiome, global health and the Sustainable Development Goals: opportunities and challenges
The human microbiome has a crucial role in global health, with implications for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Understanding and harnessing the potential of the microbiome, while recognizing its link to the global ecosystem, can drive innovative strategies for improved public health, and promote sustainable development.
- Paul W. O’Toole
- Max Paoli
CommentNature Reviews MicrobiologyNanotechnology for coral reef conservation, restoration and rehabilitation
The mounting environmental pressure on coral reefs calls for a rapid push towards innovative actions. Nanotechnology could help understand and protect present-day reefs to ensure their survival.
- Liza Roger
- Nastassja Lewinski
- Daniel Wangpraseurt
CommentNature NanotechnologySexual and reproductive health and rights must be enshrined in universal healthcare
These interventions for women and girls improve population health and boost the economy.
- Natalia Kanem
World ViewNature MedicineNano-enabled strategies to enhance biological nitrogen fixation
Increasing the capacity of biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) is an effective strategy to enhance food security while simultaneously reducing the carbon and nitrogen footprint of agriculture. Nanotechnology offers several pathways to enhance BNF successfully.
- Mingshu Li
- Li Gao
- Peng Zhang
CommentNature NanotechnologyIndigenous knowledge is key to sustainable food systems
Agricultural sciences have for too long ignored traditional and local knowledge about crop plants and how best to grow them. That must change if the world is to ensure future food security.
- Alexandre Antonelli
CommentNatureDegrowth can work — here’s how science can help
Wealthy countries can create prosperity while using less materials and energy if they abandon economic growth as an objective.
- Jason Hickel
- Giorgos Kallis
- Diana Ürge-Vorsatz
CommentNatureThe path to equitable HIV prevention
HIV remains a major global health issue, with the burden of the epidemic disproportionately falling on low- and middle-income countries. Progress in HIV prevention, most notably pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), has been slow to reach those most in need.
- John Alechenu Idoko
- Beatriz Grinsztejn
- Nittaya Phanuphak
At COP 27, support poorest for climate loss and damage
Wealthy countries must take responsibility for the people most injured by climate change.
- Madeleine Diouf Sarr
World ViewNatureHuman and planetary health on fire
Wildfires are increasing globally, with several recent catastrophic wildfires linked to climate change. Here, we consider the negative impact of the toxic contaminants arising from these fires on the immune system, with a focus on how wildfire pollution can exacerbate inflammatory diseases.
- Cezmi A. Akdis
- Kari C. Nadeau
CommentNature Reviews ImmunologyRelevance of international partnerships in the implementation of the UN Sustainable Development Goals
Sustainable Development Goal 17 focuses on partnerships that can enable the achievement of other SDGs. In this comment the authors examine the obstacles to the success of SDG 17 and suggest measures to overcome these.
- Walter Leal Filho
- Tony Wall
- Julianna Ramirez
Ocean sustainability for all requires deeper behavioural research
Behavioural science can enhance ocean sustainability by providing insights into illegal fishing. Current enforcement criminalizes small-scale fishers and fails to address root causes, letting large-scale illegal fishing off the hook. Efforts to address illegal fishing would benefit from more holistic behavioural research.
- Dyhia Belhabib
- Philippe Le Billon
- Nathan J. Bennett
CommentNature Human BehaviourSustainable social development: tackling poverty to achieve kidney health equity
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a rapidly growing public health problem, especially in disadvantaged populations. Major political interventions are required to mitigate the social and socioeconomic inequities that contribute to the development and progression of CKD and its disproportionate impact on low and middle-income countries.
- M. R. Moosa
- K. C. Norris
CommentNature Reviews Nephrology
Stocktake of progress
The scale of the biodiversity crisis laid bare
An eloquent requiem for nature risks leaving the reader feeling helpless rather than energized.
- Julia P. G. Jones
Book ReviewNatureProtection over restoration to ensure water sustainability
Plastics pollution, persistent chemical contamination and inadequately treated wastewater are three key aspects that hinder access to safe and affordable water for all. This Comment argues that a strong priority on pollution avoidance, research for remediation, and tighter regulation and monitoring must be implemented to make progress.
- Filomena Silva
- Ramia Al Bakain
- Patrick Allard
A nationally determined contribution framework for energy transition minerals
A framework for governments to define their domestic energy transition mineral needs, sources, and contributions to the global energy transition can improve domestic policies around the world and enable greater national and global coordination to avoid supply crises and resource conflicts.
- Julie Michelle Klinger
- Gwendolyn K. Murphy
- Coryn Wolk
CommentNature EnergyThe Biodiversity Credit Market needs rigorous baseline, monitoring, and validation practices
The nascent Biodiversity Credit Market (BCM) aims to boost biodiversity funding but mirrors the flawed carbon credit market. To ensure success, BCM should (1) use dynamic baselines with control sites, (2) monitor the populations dynamics of a large array of vertebrate and invertebrate species, and (3) assign credits through an independent, transparent, and cost-effective validation process.
- T. Mitchell Aide
Conservation policies must address an overlooked issue: how war affects the environment
The impacts of armed conflict on biodiversity have long been neglected. A United Nations meeting hosted by Colombia is a golden opportunity to begin changing that.
- Doug Weir
- Sarah M. Durant
- Sara Fernandes Elizalde
CommentNatureNanotechnology solutions for the climate crisis
Climate change is one of humankind’s biggest challenges, leading to more frequent and intense climate extremes, including heatwaves, wildfires, hurricanes, ocean acidification, and increased extinction rates. Nanotechnology already plays an important role in decarbonizing critical processes. Still, despite the technical advances seen in the last decades, the International Energy Agency has identified many sectors that are not on track to achieve the global climate mitigation goals by 2030. Here, a multi-stakeholder group of nanoscientists from the public, private, and philanthropic sectors discuss four high-potential application spaces where nanotechnologies could accelerate progress: batteries and energy storage; catalysis; coatings, lubricants, membranes, and other interface technology; and capture of greenhouse gases. This Comment highlights opportunities and current gaps for those working to minimize the climate crisis and provides a framework for the nanotechnology community to answer the call to action on this global issue.
- Maria Fernanda Campa
- Craig M. Brown
- James A. Warren
CommentNature NanotechnologyGeodiversity challenges for a sustainable future
- Jack Matthews
- Lucie Kubalíková
- Helena Tukiainen
CorrespondenceNature GeoscienceInconsistent measurement calls into question progress on electrification in sub-Saharan Africa
Electricity access statistics used to track progress against the Sustainable Development Goal 7.1 set by the United Nations have significant uncertainties, which may bring into question the electrification status of at least 87.2 million people in sub-Saharan Africa. Consequently, we call for a re-evaluation of the definitions of electricity access used by international organizations and the methodologies applied to calculate them.
- Stephanie Hirmer
- Julia Tomei
- Martin Stringer
CommentNature EnergyData on SDGs are riddled with gaps. Citizens can help
The UN wants to put communities at the heart of its data-collection efforts in support of the Sustainable Development Goals. Now governments must step up.
- Yongyi Min
- Haoyi Chen
- Francesca Perucci
CommentNatureBeyond COP28: Brazil must act to tackle the global climate and biodiversity crisis
Extreme weather has made 2023 virtually certain to be the warmest year on record, signaling unprecedented climate and biodiversity crises. Brazil, the world’s most biodiverse country, with two hotspots and complex social and economic layers, has experienced escalating environmental degradation over the past years. Alarming rates of native vegetation loss, wildfires, severe and prolonged droughts, and heatwaves have adversely impacted several Brazilian ecosystems and societies. Despite the country’s decisive role in global carbon neutrality, bridging the gap between Brazil’s discourse on the international stage and its concrete actions at home remains a significant challenge. This correspondence, a collective plea from scientists across various sectors, underscores the urgent imperative for national engagement and commitment to halt and mitigate these crises. We aim to catalyze a robust international public debate, influencing Brazilian decision-makers to chart a concrete sustainable pathway. Aligned with global initiatives, we emphasize the crucial interplay between national and international efforts in combating climate change and the conservation of biodiversity and socio-biodiversity.
- Flávia de Figueiredo Machado
- Marcela C. N. S. Terra
- Fernando M. Pelicice
Extending the Sustainable Development Goals to 2050 — a road map
The world should redouble its efforts on the SDGs, not abandon them. Here’s how to progress the United Nations’ agenda towards 2050.
- Francesco Fuso Nerini
- Mariana Mazzucato
- Jeffrey Sachs
CommentNatureWHO International Standards for antibodies to HPV6 HPV11 HPV31 HPV33 HPV45 HPV52 and HPV58
- Troy J. Kemp
- Gitika Panicker
- the collaborative study participants
Quantitative assessment of The Group of Seven’s collaboration in sustainable development goals
Wang and colleagues assess the G7’s collaboration in achieving the SDGs from 2000–2020. They find that all G7 members contribute positively economics-related SDGs, but performance on environmental goals shows less collaboration and discrepancies in contributions.
- Kai Liu
- Ali Raisolsadat
- Quan Van Dau
Real-life intrinsic capacity screening data from the ICOPE-Care program
The Integrated Care for Older People (ICOPE) program was developed to promote a function-centered and individualized approach to healthy aging, but it is not yet widely implemented. In this study, de Souto Barreto et al. used early-stage ICOPE data collected in primary healthcare from more than 20,000 older adults to characterize patterns of intrinsic capacity impairment and associated odds of frailty and disability.
- Philipe de Souto Barreto
- Emmanuel Gonzalez-Bautista
- Bruno Vellas
ArticleNature AgingThe enduring world forest carbon sink
Data from boreal, temperate and tropical forests over the past three decades reveal that the global forest carbon sink has remained steady during that time, despite considerable regional variation.
- Yude Pan
- Richard A. Birdsey
- Daniel Murdiyarso
ArticleNatureHealthcare system resilience and adaptability to pandemic disruptions in the United States
A natural experiment reports that US healthcare systems have substantial adaptability but only a moderate level of resilience to disruptions due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Lu Zhong
- Dimitri Lopez
- Jianxi Gao
ArticleNature MedicineAdherence to the planetary health diet and cognitive decline: findings from the ELSA-Brasil study
Using longitudinal data from the ELSA-Brasil study, Gonçalves et al. report that income is a barrier to how adherence to the sustainable planetary health diet is linked to slower cognitive decline.
- Natalia Gomes Gonçalves
- Leandro Teixeira Cacau
- Claudia Kimie Suemoto
ArticleNature AgingA scalable big data approach for remotely tracking rangeland conditions
Rangelands in Mongolia suffered a marked decline in grazing conditions between 1986 and 2020, according to an approach which combines satellite big data with statistical modeling to remotely assess rangeland sustainability and management strategies
- Zunyi Xie
- Edward T. Game
- Eve McDonald-Madden
Safeguarding China’s long-term sustainability against systemic disruptors
The challenging prospect of achieving the Sustainable Development Goals faces various disruptors in China. Li et al. quantify the disruptors’ effects and explore integrated policy portfolios for safeguarding China’s long-term sustainability
- Ke Li
- Lei Gao
- Brett A. Bryan
Healthy aging meta-analyses and scoping review of risk factors across Latin America reveal large heterogeneity and weak predictive models
Ibanez et al. performed a scoping review and meta-analysis of healthy aging studies across Latin America and report substantial heterogeneity in how risk factors affect cognitive and functional ability, underscoring the need for further regional research.
- Agustin Ibanez
- Marcelo Maito
- Hernando Santamaria-Garcia
Prudent carbon dioxide removal strategies hedge against high climate sensitivity
A prudent strategy on carbon dioxide removal can minimize the risk of overestimating its potential and reduce mitigation costs, according to an integrated assessment model analysis of the relationship between uncertainties in carbon dioxide removal feasibility and climate sensitivity.
- Theresa Schaber
- Tommi Ekholm
- Antti-Ilari Partanen
Setting a shared development agenda: prioritizing the sustainable development goals in the Dominican Republic with fuzzy-LMAW
- Luis A. Fernández-Portillo
- Gülay Demir
- Francisco Santos-Carrillo
Inland navigation and land use interact to impact European freshwater biodiversity
An analysis of fish and macroinvertebrate communities in European rivers over 32 years shows that inland ship traffic is associated with declining taxonomic richness, diversity and trait richness and with increased taxonomic evenness.
- Aaron N. Sexton
- Jean-Nicolas Beisel
- Alienor Jeliazkov
ArticleNature Ecology & EvolutionSystematic review and meta-analysis of ex-post evaluations on the effectiveness of carbon pricing
Carbon pricing policies are adopted in many countries around the world to mitigate climate change. This systematic review shows that significant emission reductions of between 5 and 21% are achieved by at least 17 out of 21 reviewed policy schemes.
- Niklas Döbbeling-Hildebrandt
- Klaas Miersch
- Jan C. Minx
The environmental sustainability of digital content consumption
The average Internet user spends over 40% of their waking hours online, yet the environmental footprint remains poorly understood. This study suggests that digital content consumption could exacerbate the pressure on the finite Earth’s carrying capacity.
- Robert Istrate
- Victor Tulus
- Gonzalo Guillén-Gosálbez
Influence of COVID-19 on trust in routine immunization, health information sources and pandemic preparedness in 23 countries in 2023
A survey of 23,000 adults in 23 countries in 2023 reports that the pandemic experience reduced participants’ willingness to be vaccinated for COVID-19 and receive routine vaccinations and reduced trust in recommendations from public health authorities.
- Jeffrey V. Lazarus
- Trenton M. White
- Ayman El-Mohandes
A climate-induced tree species bottleneck for forest management in Europe
Species distribution modelling for 69 European tree species under current climate conditions and projected conditions to 2100 (in decadal steps) demonstrates that, for climate suitability to be maintained throughout a tree’s lifespan, many fewer tree species are available to forest managers than are currently used.
- Johannes Wessely
- Franz Essl
- Rupert Seidl
ArticleNature Ecology & EvolutionOwnership of battery electric vehicles is uneven in Norwegian households
The type of vehicles owned by Norwegians depends on household size, income and work commute, and battery electric vehicle ownership is concentrated in the wealthier part of the population, according to an analysis of socio-economic data of 2.4 million households from 2005 to 2022.
- Davood Qorbani
- Hubert P. L. M. Korzilius
- Stein-Erik Fleten
Risk factors associated with heatwave mortality in Chinese adults over 65 years
In a prospective cohort of Chinese participants aged 65 years and older, heatwaves doubled the risk of mortality, especially in adults with functional impairments and dependency on daily living activities.
- Di Xi
- Linxin Liu
- John S. Ji
ArticleNature MedicineMammal responses to global changes in human activity vary by trophic group and landscape
Analysing camera-trap data of 163 mammal species before and after the onset of COVID-19 lockdowns, the authors show that responses to human activity are dependent on the degree to which the landscape is modified by humans, with carnivores being especially sensitive.
- A. Cole Burton
- Christopher Beirne
- Roland Kays
US oil and gas system emissions from nearly one million aerial site measurements
We integrate approximately one million aerial site measurements into regional emissions inventories for six regions in the USA, finding methane emission intensities that vary by more than a factor of ten.
- Evan D. Sherwin
- Jeffrey S. Rutherford
- Adam R. Brandt
ArticleNatureMarine fishes experiencing high-velocity range shifts may not be climate change winners
Abundance data for marine fish populations show that those shifting poleward rapidly due to climate change experience substantial population declines, suggesting that rapid range shifts are not sufficient to maintain stable populations.
- Shahar Chaikin
- Federico Riva
- Jonathan Belmaker
ArticleNature Ecology & EvolutionBiodiversity–production feedback effects lead to intensification traps in agricultural landscapes
Conventional agricultural intensification can lead to ‘traps’ where production actually declines because of biodiversity loss. By integrating case study archetypes, literature review and simulations, the authors show what systems are at risk of traps and how these risks can be limited.
- Alfred Burian
- Claire Kremen
- Ralf Seppelt
Climate threats to coastal infrastructure and sustainable development outcomes
Increasing exposure to climate hazards under climate change will disproportionately impact poor communities. This study shows that disruptions to infrastructure service threaten progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals in coastal Bangladesh, but impacts can be mediated through adaptation.
- Daniel Adshead
- Amelie Paszkowski
- Jim W. Hall
Impact of extreme weather events on healthcare utilization and mortality in the United States
Analysis of 42 severe weather disasters (floods, storms and cyclones) in the United States between 2011 and 2016 reported associations with increased emergency department utilization and mortality in affected counties for up to 6 weeks.
- Renee N. Salas
- Laura G. Burke
- Ashish K. Jha
ArticleNature MedicineA triple increase in global river basins with water scarcity due to future pollution
Here the authors find one third of global sub-basins will face severe clean water scarcity in 2050. Nitrogen pollution aggravates water scarcity in >2,000 sub-basins thus 3 billion more people will be posed with severe water scarcity in 2050.
- Mengru Wang
- Benjamin Leon Bodirsky
- Maryna Strokal
Rapid groundwater decline and some cases of recovery in aquifers globally
Analysis of about 170,000 monitoring wells and 1,693 aquifer systems worldwide shows that extensive and often accelerating groundwater declines are widespread in the twenty-first century, but that groundwater levels are recovering in some cases.
- Scott Jasechko
- Hansjörg Seybold
- James W. Kirchner
Modelling six sustainable development transformations in Australia and their accelerators, impediments, enablers, and interlinkages
Global research has identified six critical transformations to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030. Here, Allen et al model all six transformations in a national context and discuss implications for accelerating progress on the goals.
- Cameron Allen
- Annabel Biddulph
- Shirin Malekpour
Monitoring of species’ genetic diversity in Europe varies greatly and overlooks potential climate change impacts
Comparing data on genetic monitoring efforts across Europe with the distributions of areas at species’ climatic niche margins, the authors show that monitoring efforts should be expanded to populations at trailing niche margins to include genetic variation that may prove important for adaptation to ongoing climate warming.
- Peter B. Pearman
- Olivier Broennimann
- Michael Bruford
Geographies of regulatory disparity underlying Australia’s energy transition
In Australia, remote settlements and Indigenous settlements are respectively 18% and 15% more likely to be underserved across five categories of electricity retail legal protections. These settlements are therefore likely to enter the energy transition on an uneven footing.
- Lee V. White
- Bradley Riley
- Vanessa Napaltjari Davis
Global transboundary synergies and trade-offs among Sustainable Development Goals from an integrated sustainability perspective
Domestic attempts to advance the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in a country can have synergistic and/or trade-off effects on the advancement of SDGs in other countries. Here the authors demonstrate that while high-income countries make up only 14% of the global population, they drive over 60% of worldwide SDG interactions.
- Huijuan Xiao
- Sheng Bao
- Jianguo Liu
Benefits, costs and enabling conditions to achieve ‘water for all’ in rural and remote Australia
Australia will not achieve SDG 6.1 (water for all) without improving drinking water quality in small, rural and remote communities. Australians are willing to pay AU$1.2–4.7 billion yr−1 to ensure good-quality drinking water, and the cost would be AU$0.2–1.3 billion.
- Ana Manero
- Wiktor Adamowicz
- R. Quentin Grafton
African savanna raptors show evidence of widespread population collapse and a growing dependence on protected areas
A compilation of survey data from pre- and post-2000 for 42 raptor species across parts of West, Central, East and southern Africa shows 88% of species in population decline and reveals trends across regions, protected areas and species size.
- Phil Shaw
- Darcy Ogada
- Simon Thomsett
Satellite mapping reveals extensive industrial activity at sea
Satellite imagery, vessel GPS data and deep-learning models are used to map industrial fishing vessel activities missing from public tracking systems and changes in offshore energy infrastructure in the world’s coastal waters during 2017–2021.
- Fernando S. Paolo
- David Kroodsma
- Patrick Halpin
Revealed versus potential spatial accessibility of healthcare and changing patterns during the COVID-19 pandemic
Gligorić, Kamath, Weiss et al. evaluate revealed versus potential travel times to healthcare facilities in over 100 countries using anonymized smartphone location history data. The authors study the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on travel times and correlate travel times with key population health indicators.
- Kristina Gligorić
- Chaitanya Kamath
- Evgeniy Gabrilovich
Identifying protective factors for gender diverse adolescents’ mental health
- Melissa K. Holt
- Katharine B. Parodi
- Brian Koenig
Health effects associated with exposure to intimate partner violence against women and childhood sexual abuse: a Burden of Proof study
A meta-analysis using the burden of proof risk function identified consistent evidence supporting harmful associations between the exposure to intimate partner violence against women and childhood sexual abuse on health outcomes.
- Cory N. Spencer
- Mariam Khalil
- Emmanuela Gakidou
High strength bio-concrete for the production of building components
- Maiia Smirnova
- Christoph Nething
- Lucio Blandini
Nutritional-environmental trade-offs in potato storage and processing for a sustainable healthy diet
- Aubin Payne
- Ebenezer M. Kwofie
- Jamie I. Baum
Sustainable healthy diet modeling for a plant-based dietary transitioning in the United States
- Raphael Aidoo
- Vincent Abe-Inge
- Stan Kubow
Aligning climate scenarios to emissions inventories shifts global benchmarks
Aligning the IPCC-assessed mitigation pathways with the national greenhouse gas inventories shows that key global mitigation benchmarks become harder to achieve, requiring achieving earlier net-zero and lower cumulative emissions.
- Matthew J. Gidden
- Thomas Gasser
- Keywan Riahi
Integrated global assessment of the natural forest carbon potential
Analysis of ground-sourced and satellite-derived models reveals a global forest carbon potential of 226 Gt outside agricultural and urban lands, with a difference of only 12% across these modelling approaches.
- Lidong Mo
- Constantin M. Zohner
- Thomas W. Crowther
Attributing Venice Acqua Alta events to a changing climate and evaluating the efficacy of MoSE adaptation strategy
- Davide Faranda
- Mireia Ginesta
- Marco Anzidei
Framework for sustainable building design and construction using off-cut wood
- Boyuan Yu
- Jianing Luo
- Lei Zhang
A digital solution framework for enabling electric vehicle battery circularity based on an ecosystem value optimization approach
- Amit Kumar
- Pierre Huyn
- Ravigopal Vennelakanti
Climate sensitivity controls global precipitation hysteresis in a changing CO2 pathway
- Se-Yong Song
- Sang-Wook Yeh
- Hyo-Seok Park
Emission pathways and mitigation options for achieving consumption-based climate targets in Sweden
Combining advanced mitigation technologies with behavioural changes could achieve the lowest carbon emissions per capita in Sweden, suggest scenario analyses combining bottom-up simulations for passenger travel, construction and housing, and food, and top-down analyses for remaining consumption.
- Johannes Morfeldt
- Jörgen Larsson
- Ida Karlsson
Location is a major barrier for transferring US fossil fuel employment to green jobs
This study tests the case for the absorption of current fossil fuel workers in emerging green jobs from the perspective of their skills and location. It finds location to be a barrier in a Just Transition for these workers.
- Junghyun Lim
- Michaël Aklin
- Morgan R. Frank
Global iron and steel plant CO2 emissions and carbon-neutrality pathways
A CO2 emissions inventory of 4,883 individual iron and steel plants along with their technical characteristics is described, allowing the identification and guidance of the most appropriate emissions mitigation and decarbonization pathways for each plant.
- Tianyang Lei
- Daoping Wang
- Dabo Guan
ArticleNatureGlobal population exposure to landscape fire air pollution from 2000 to 2019
The global population is increasingly exposed to daily landscape fire-sourced air pollution but there are socioeconomic disparities, with this pollution four times higher in low-income countries than in high-income countries during the period 2000–2019.
- Rongbin Xu
- Tingting Ye
- Shanshan Li
Air quality related equity implications of U.S. decarbonization policy
U.S. federal climate policies can reduce air pollutant emissions and associated health impacts from fine particulate matter. However, near-term CO2 reductions alone are insufficient to address racial/ethnic disparities in pollution exposure.
- Paul Picciano
- Minghao Qiu
- Noelle E. Selin
Increased risk of flash droughts with raised concurrent hot and dry extremes under global warming
- Zhaoqi Zeng
- Wenxiang Wu
- Quansheng Ge
Applying federated learning to combat food fraud in food supply chains
- Anand Gavai
- Yamine Bouzembrak
- Hans J. P. Marvin
ENSO skewness hysteresis and associated changes in strong El Niño under a CO2 removal scenario
- Chao Liu
- Soon-Il An
- Soong-Ki Kim
Potential benefits of limiting global warming for the mitigation of temperature extremes in China
- Junhong Guo
- Xi Liang
- Lvliu Liu
Sub-Saharan Africa will increasingly become the dominant hotspot of surface water pollution
Surface water quality is impacted by climate change and human activities. This study identifies Sub-Saharan Africa as a major future hotspot of surface water pollution by applying a high-resolution global surface water quality model up to 2100.
- Edward R. Jones
- Marc F. P. Bierkens
- Michelle T. H. van Vliet
ArticleNature WaterGlobal risk assessment of compound hot-dry events in the context of future climate change and socioeconomic factors
- Hossein Tabari
- Patrick Willems
Rapidly increasing likelihood of exceeding 50 °C in parts of the Mediterranean and the Middle East due to human influence
- Nikolaos Christidis
- Dann Mitchell
- Peter A. Stott
The prevalence of vision impairment and blindness among older adults in India: findings from the Longitudinal Ageing Study in India
The prevalence and consequences of vision impairment are increasing due to population growth and aging. This study finds that in India, one in three older adults has distance visual impairment or is blind, which may impact not only how they see the world, but also their overall health and well-being.
- Joshua R. Ehrlich
- Arunika Agarwal
- David E. Bloom
LetterNature AgingElder abuse prevalence and risk factors: findings from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging
One in ten older adults in Canada are victims of elder abuse each year. Older adults with lower physical, mental or cognitive health or history of child maltreatment have elevated risk, while greater social support is protective against this issue.
- David Burnes
- Karl Pillemer
- Lynn McDonald
LetterNature AgingProjected decline in European bumblebee populations in the twenty-first century
A quantitative study of past, present and future ecological suitability of Europe for bumblebees finds that for 38–76% of species now considered non-threatened, suitable territory could decrease by at least 30% by 2061–2080.
- Guillaume Ghisbain
- Wim Thiery
- Simon Dellicour
ArticleNatureEarly-childhood linear growth faltering in low- and middle-income countries
A pooled analysis of longitudinal studies in low- and middle-income countries identifies the typical age of onset of linear growth faltering and investigates recurrent faltering in early life.
- Jade Benjamin-Chung
- Andrew Mertens
- The Ki Child Growth Consortium
Child wasting and concurrent stunting in low- and middle-income countries
An analysis of longitudinal cohort data across diverse populations suggests that the incidence of wasting between birth and 24 months is higher than previously thought, and highlights the role of seasonal factors that affect child growth.
- Andrew Mertens
- Jade Benjamin-Chung
- The Ki Child Growth Consortium
Causes and consequences of child growth faltering in low-resource settings
Analysis of data from 33 longitudinal cohorts from low- and middle-income countries indicates that conditions during pre-conception, pregnancy and the first few months of life are crucial in determining the risk of growth faltering in young children.
- Andrew Mertens
- Jade Benjamin-Chung
- The Ki Child Growth Consortium
Adjusting 1.5 degree C climate change mitigation pathways in light of adverse new information
Emerging limitations on climate and low-carbon technology would require adjusting our 15.C climate change mitigation pathways. However, this could increase average annual emissions reductions to around 3GtCO2/year using a broad portfolio of mitigation measures.
- Ajay Gambhir
- Shivika Mittal
- Jason A. Lowe
Measuring sustainable urban development in residential areas of the 20 biggest Finnish cities
- Sanna Ala-Mantila
- Antti Kurvinen
- Aleksi Karhula
Environmental sanitation and undernutrition among China’s children and adolescents from 1989 to 2011
China’s history of large-scale water, sanitation and clean energy investments offers promising insights into the development of new interventions to reduce linear growth faltering among children and adolescents.
- Leigh C. Hamlet
- Suman Chakrabarti
- Jessica Kaminsky
AnalysisNature WaterFactors associated with healthy aging in Latin American populations
Machine learning models showed that social disparities, cardiometabolic disease and mental health were the main predictors of aging in Latin American populations, with these factors being more pronounced in low- and middle-income compared to high-income Latin American countries.
- Hernando Santamaria-Garcia
- Agustín Sainz-Ballesteros
- Agustin Ibanez
How climate policy commitments influence energy systems and the economies of US states
In the US, states vary in their efforts to address climate change. Stronger state climate policies reduce CO2 emissions without harming the economy, but these reductions are unlikely to meet the goals in the Paris Climate Accord.
- Parrish Bergquist
- Christopher Warshaw
Global air pollution exposure and poverty
This study shows that 716 million of the world’s lowest income people live in areas with unsafe levels of air pollution, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. With limited access to healthcare, they are especially vulnerable.
- Jun Rentschler
- Nadezda Leonova
Responses to the COVID-19 pandemic have impeded progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals
Government responses to the COVID-19 pandemic have reduced overall progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals by 8.2% between 2020 and 2023, according to an analysis of global and national SDG scores based on the global adaptive multi-regional input–output model.
- Cai Li
- Zhongci Deng
- Brett A. Bryan
Plastic pollution on the world’s coral reefs
Plastics were found in 77 out of 84 coral reefs surveyed in the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian oceans, including in deeper reefs and remote and near-pristine reefs, such as in uninhabited central Pacific atolls.
- Hudson T. Pinheiro
- Chancey MacDonald
- Luiz A. Rocha
ArticleNaturePlastic debris in lakes and reservoirs
Analysis of plastic debris found in surface waters shows that lakes and reservoirs in densely populated and urbanized regions, as well as those with elevated deposition areas, are particularly vulnerable to plastic contamination.
- Veronica Nava
- Sudeep Chandra
- Barbara Leoni
ArticleNatureGlobal forest fragmentation change from 2000 to 2020
Forest losses and gains are highly dynamic processes. Here, the authors present a forest fragmentation index to map distribution and temporal changes of forest fragments globally, revealing major trends and patterns during the first two decades of the 21st century.
- Jun Ma
- Jiawei Li
- Jiajia Liu
Does climate action bring peace? Assessing the geopolitics of renewables using global investment data
- Juergen Braunstein
- Andreas C. Goldthau
- Konstantin Veit
Heat-related mortality in Europe during the summer of 2022
This ecological analysis using the Eurostat database estimated that summer 2022, the hottest summer on record, was associated with over 61,000 heat-related deaths across 35 countries in Europe, with the highest mortality rates in countries near the Mediterranean Sea.
- Joan Ballester
- Marcos Quijal-Zamorano
- Hicham Achebak
Avoidable heat-related mortality in China during the 21st century
- Guwei Zhang
- Zhaobin Sun
- Shilu Tong
Spatial association of surface water quality and human cancer in China
- Zixing Wang
- Wentao Gu
- Jingmei Jiang
A warming-induced reduction in snow fraction amplifies rainfall extremes
The recent and projected future increase in rainfall extremes in high-elevation areas of the Northern Hemisphere is due to a warming-induced shift from snow to rain.
- Mohammed Ombadi
- Mark D. Risser
- Charuleka Varadharajan
ArticleNatureProgress towards the Sustainable Development Goals has been slowed by indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic has set back progress on the Sustainable Development Goals more severely through cascading interactions between the SDGs than through the direct initial disruptions, according to an analysis of national performance data on progress towards the SDGs.
- Haixia Yuan
- Xiaoming Wang
- Yi Gao
A multimodel analysis of post-Glasgow climate targets and feasibility challenges
Although many countries have strengthened their emissions reduction pledges, their ability to limit the warming outcomes is still in question. A multimodel analysis demonstrates that these trajectories are in line with the 2 °C target but countries probably face feasibility challenges to achieve them.
- Dirk-Jan van de Ven
- Shivika Mittal
- Alexandros Nikas
AnalysisNature Climate ChangeIncreased heat risk in wet climate induced by urban humid heat
An analysis of data from urban and rural areas shows that in wet climates the net effect of temperature and humidity in urban areas is an increase in heat stress.
- Keer Zhang
- Chang Cao
- Xuhui Lee
ArticleNatureIncident type 2 diabetes attributable to suboptimal diet in 184 countries
Modeling analysis from the Global Dietary Database estimated that 70% of new global cases of type 2 diabetes are attributable to suboptimal intake of 11 dietary factors, with substantial differences in dietary risks across world regions and nations.
- Meghan O’Hearn
- Laura Lara-Castor
- Global Dietary Database
Diminishing benefits of urban living for children and adolescents’ growth and development
The advantage of living in cities compared with rural areas with respect to height and BMI in children and adolescents has generally become smaller globally from 1990 to 2020, except in sub-Saharan Africa.
- NCD Risk Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC)
A big data approach to assess progress towards Sustainable Development Goals for cities of varying sizes
A neural network approach, which utilises open-source big data, can help assess sustainable development in smaller cities across China which have limited data availability and may be further behind in reaching Sustainable Development Goals than their larger counterparts
- Yu Liu
- Bo Huang
- Jianguo Liu
Tropical deforestation causes large reductions in observed precipitation
A pan-tropical analysis using satellite, station-based and reanalysis datasets shows that deforestation causes reduced precipitation, and demonstrates that the effect increases with spatial scale.
- C. Smith
- J. C. A. Baker
- D. V. Spracklen
Oceanic climate changes threaten the sustainability of Asia’s water tower
Weakening blocking effect of the High Mountain Asia on the westerlies-carried deficit in precipitation minus evaporation from the southeast North Atlantic is demonstrated, leading to persistent northward expansion of terrestrial water storage deficit in the Tibet Plateau.
- Qiang Zhang
- Zexi Shen
- Gang Wang
The ethnically and racially uneven role of water infrastructure spending in rural economic development
Local government investment in water infrastructure is associated with rural economic development in the United States. Through the use of interactional models, the economic benefits are shown to be ethnically and racially uneven.
- J. Tom Mueller
- Stephen Gasteyer
ArticleNature WaterA global-scale framework for hydropower development incorporating strict environmental constraints
The development of hydropower offers a renewable energy source that can help reduce society’s dependence on fossil fuels. A global assessment of the unused profitable hydropower potential can be performed by incorporating strict constraints to identify hydropower station locations with reduced environmental and societal impacts.
- Rongrong Xu
- Zhenzhong Zeng
- Eric. F. Wood
AnalysisNature WaterNation-wide mapping of tree-level aboveground carbon stocks in Rwanda
The authors conduct a national inventory on individual tree carbon stocks in Rwanda using aerial imagery and deep learning. Most mapped trees are located in farmlands; new methods allow partitioning to any landscape categories, effective planning and optimization of carbon sequestration and the economic benefits of trees.
- Maurice Mugabowindekwe
- Martin Brandt
- Rasmus Fensholt
Women are credited less in science than men
The difference between the number of men and women listed as authors on scientific papers and inventors on patents is at least partly attributable to unacknowledged contributions by women scientists.
- Matthew B. Ross
- Britta M. Glennon
- Julia I. Lane
Comprehensive evidence implies a higher social cost of CO2
Coupling advances in socioeconomic projections, climate models, damage functions and discounting methods yields an estimate of the social cost of carbon of US$185 per tonne of CO2—triple the widely used value published by the US government.
- Kevin Rennert
- Frank Errickson
- David Anthoff
Evidence of multidimensional gender inequality in energy services from a large-scale household survey in India
Improved energy access can bring socio-economic benefits, yet these may not be evenly distributed within the household. Zhang et al. conduct a large-scale survey in India and find gender-based disparities in energy services within households.
- Alice Tianbo Zhang
- Sasmita Patnaik
- Johannes Urpelainen
ArticleNature EnergyA stakeholder group assessment of interactions between child health and the sustainable development goals in Cambodia
Helldén et al. apply the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Synergies approach to investigate interactions between SDGs and child health in Cambodia in an interdisciplinary Cambodian stakeholder group. They identify SDGs that positively influence child health and show that progress on child health also promotes the achievement of most other goals.
- Daniel Helldén
- Thy Chea
- Tobias Alfvén
The heterogeneous role of energy policies in the energy transition of Asia–Pacific emerging economies
Measuring the impact of energy policies towards emissions reduction and other sustainability goals is critical for designing effective future policy. Meng et al. assess the impact of energy policies in 42 Asia–Pacific countries and find that strategies are more effective than laws or regulations.
- Peipei Chen
- Yi Wu
- Dabo Guan
ArticleNature EnergyGlobal plant diversity as a reservoir of micronutrients for humanity
Thousands of plants are known to be edible, yet we lack nutritional data for many of them. This study predicts the B-vitamin profiles for edible plants and finds many have the potential to help alleviate deficiencies and should be conservation priorities.
- Aoife Cantwell-Jones
- Jenny Ball
- Samuel Pironon
ArticleNature PlantsAir pollution exposure disparities across US population and income groups
Different racial/ethnic populations and income groups are found to have been exposed to different levels of air pollution in the USA during the years 2000 to 2016.
- Abdulrahman Jbaily
- Xiaodan Zhou
- Francesca Dominici
ArticleNatureAssessing regional performance for the Sustainable Development Goals in Italy
- Idiano D’Adamo
- Massimo Gastaldi
- Piergiuseppe Morone
Implementing the material footprint to measure progress towards Sustainable Development Goals 8 and 12
Despite the wide acceptance of the role of the material footprint indicator in sustainability, no reporting facility at present provides sufficient information on countries’ material footprints. This study presents a new research platform that regularly provides detailed global material footprint accounts.
- Manfred Lenzen
- Arne Geschke
- Heinz Schandl
AnalysisNature SustainabilityRepresentation and participation across 20 years of plant genome sequencing
Analyses of plant genomes sequenced in the past 20 years, the species taxonomic distribution and national participation reveal that genome quality has increased but substantial taxonomic gaps exist, and that the field has been dominated by the Global North.
- Rose A. Marks
- Scott Hotaling
- Robert VanBuren
A meta-analysis of projected global food demand and population at risk of hunger for the period 2010–2050
Across 57 global food security projection and quantitative scenario studies that have been published in the past two decades, the total global food demand is expected to rise from +35% to +56% between 2010 and 2050, and the population at risk of hunger is expected to change by −91% to +8%. Both ranges are substantially lower than previous projections.
- Michiel van Dijk
- Tom Morley
- Yashar Saghai
ArticleNature FoodMeasuring human capital using global learning data
Analyses of a global database reveal that in many developing countries progress in learning remains limited despite increasing enrolment in primary and secondary education, and uncover links between human capital and economic development.
- Noam Angrist
- Simeon Djankov
- Harry A. Patrinos
Mapping routine measles vaccination in low- and middle-income countries
Although progress in the coverage of routine measles vaccination in children in low- and middle-income countries was made during 2000–2019, many countries remain far from the goal of 80% coverage in all districts by 2019.
- Local Burden of Disease Vaccine Coverage Collaborators
Mapping local patterns of childhood overweight and wasting in low- and middle-income countries between 2000 and 2017
Fine-scale geospatial mapping of overweight and wasting (two components of the double burden of malnutrition) in 105 LMICs shows that overweight has increased from 5.2% in 2000 to 6.0% in children under 5 in 2017. Although overall wasting decreased over the same period, most countries are not on track to meet the World Health Organization’s Global Nutrition Target of <5% in over half of LMICs by 2025.
- LBD Double Burden of Malnutrition Collaborators
Assessing progress towards sustainable development over space and time
Systematic methods for evaluating progress towards the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals are developed and tested using 119 indicators at China’s national and subnational levels during 2000–2015, showing improvement overall.
- Zhenci Xu
- Sophia N. Chau
- Jianguo Liu
ArticleNature
Successful interventions
Optimizing cover crop practices as a sustainable solution for global agroecosystem services
Cover crops can improve agricultural sustainability. In this meta-analysis, the authors find that a biculture of legume and non-legume cover crops is optimal and may promote multiple agroecosystem services while mitigating climate-related yield losses by 2100.
- Tianyi Qiu
- Yu Shi
- Linchuan Fang
National environmental monitoring and local enforcement strategies
This study analyzes the impact of 1,436 air-quality-monitoring stations in Chinese cities. It found that these stations led to an 8.03% reduction in PM2.5 concentrations in urban areas. Within these areas, they resulted in 0.57% more reduction in PM2.5 concentrations in technically accessible areas compared to non-accessible areas, which also experienced an increase in housing prices and a decrease in air-quality-induced mortality.
- Jing Zhao
- Yiqi Tang
- Junming Zhu
ArticleNature CitiesPhotocatalytic low-temperature defluorination of PFASs
Photocatalysis at 40–60 °C is shown to be able to defluorinate perfluoroalkyl substances, known as ‘forever chemicals’, allowing the recycling of fluorine in polyfluoroalkyl and perfluoroalkyl substances as inorganic fluoride salt.
- Hao Zhang
- Jin-Xiang Chen
- Yan-Biao Kang
ArticleNaturePhotocatalytic C–F bond activation in small molecules and polyfluoroalkyl substances
An organic photoredox catalyst system efficiently reduces C–F bonds, generating carbon-centred radicals for hydrodefluorination and cross-coupling reactions, enabling the general use of organofluorines as synthons and breaking down environmentally damaging forever chemicals.
- Xin Liu
- Arindam Sau
- Garret M. Miyake
ArticleNatureSustainable land and irrigation management to limit loss of hydropower in the Andes-Amazon headwaters
In the Andean Amazon basin, irrigation will be vital to maintaining food production and livelihoods of local communities under climate change, but unplanned irrigation expansion could lead to the loss of hydropower, according to an analysis using catchment and hydropower models.
- Zhaowei Ding
- Hector Angarita
- Rafael J. P. Schmitt
E-waste challenges of generative artificial intelligence
Generative artificial intelligence (GAI) is driving a surge in e-waste due to intensive computational infrastructure needs. This study emphasizes the necessity for proactive implementation of circular economy practices throughout GAI value chains.
- Peng Wang
- Ling-Yu Zhang
- Wei-Qiang Chen
Brief CommunicationNature Computational ScienceEco-innovation minimizes the carbon footprint of wine production
Constructed wetlands and Phycosol systems that integrate solar technologies with microalgae reduce the winery’s greenhouse gas emissions and contribute to Sustainable Development Goals, according to an analysis of data on wastewater generation, biogenic fermentation, and biomass utilization.
- Sudharsanam Abinandan
- Kuppan Praveen
- Mallavarapu Megharaj
Curbing household food waste and associated climate change impacts in an ageing society
Given Japan’s aging population, this study examines household food waste and life cycle greenhouse gas emissions for the six age brackets of Japanese households. Older households have higher food waste emissions than younger households.
- Yosuke Shigetomi
- Asuka Ishigami
- Andrew Chapman
Global property rights and land use efficiency
The study examines how land property rights impact land use efficiency (LUE) globally, based on the SDG 11.3.1 indicator. Secure rights improve LUE, with common law countries outperforming civil law countries, supporting sustainable land management.
- Junrong Ma
- Li Tian
- Wei Ouyang
Neurospora intermedia from a traditional fermented food enables waste-to-food conversion
A multi-omics analysis of oncom, an Indonesian fermented food made from soymilk waste, shows how associated fungi break down food waste to yield nutritious and positively received foods.
- Vayu Maini Rekdal
- José Manuel Villalobos-Escobedo
- Jay. D. Keasling
Pathway decisions for reuse and recycling of retired lithium-ion batteries considering economic and environmental functions
Reuse and recycling of retired electric vehicle batteries offer sustainable waste management but face decision challenges. Ma et al. present a strategy with an accessible economic and environmental evaluation framework for treating these batteries.
- Ruifei Ma
- Shengyu Tao
- Guangmin Zhou
Assessing global drinking water potential from electricity-free solar water evaporation device
Solar water evaporation is regarded as a promising toolset for decentralized drinking water purification. This study predicts the global drinking water supply potential via solar water evaporation, highlighting where and how to promote solar evaporation devices to fulfill the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 6.1 with reasonable costs.
- Wei Zhang
- Yongzhe Chen
- Jiuhui Qu
Impact of climate-smart agriculture practices on multidimensional poverty among coastal farmers in Bangladesh
In Bangladesh, crop vulnerability, crop income, and access to technical and educational services determine the adoption of climate-smart agriculture practices, which reduce farmers’ multidimensional poverty, according to coastal household data and statistical analysis.
- Md. Karimul Islam
- Fariha Farjana
Gastric cancer prevention by community eradication ofHelicobacter pylori: a cluster-randomized controlled trial
A cluster-randomized trial carried out across 980 villages in a high-risk region in China found that systematic treatment of antibiotics, omeprazole and bismuth modestly reduced gastric cancer incidence inHelicobacter pylori-positive populations.
- Kai-Feng Pan
- Wen-Qing Li
- Wei-Cheng You
ArticleNature MedicineModest forest and welfare gains from initiatives for reduced emissions from deforestation and forest degradation
Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation initiatives have moderately helped to conserve forests while delivering minor benefits to local people, according to a meta-analysis of 32 quantitative studies.
- Sven Wunder
- Dario Schulz
- Bibiana Betancur-Corredor
Wheat redistribution in Huang-Huai-Hai, China, could reduce groundwater depletion and environmental footprints without compromising production
Strategic redistribution of wheat in China’s Huang-Huai-Hai region could significantly reduce environmental impacts and groundwater depletion by improving water and nitrogen use efficiency without decreasing wheat production, according to optimization models
- Wenjiao Shi
- Minglei Wang
- Xiaoqing Wang
Water quality management could halve future water scarcity cost-effectively in the Pearl River Basin
Future water scarcity is expected to increase up to fourfold in most parts of the Pearl Basin by 2050, driven by changes in both water quantity and quality. Water quality management options could cost-effectively half future water scarcity.
- Safa Baccour
- Gerwin Goelema
- Maryna Strokal
Permaculture enhances carbon stocks, soil quality and biodiversity in Central Europe
Increased soil carbon, lower soil bulk density, higher earthworm abundance and vascular plant richness indicate that permaculture in Central Europe enhances soil health and biodiversity, suggest field experiments in Germany and Luxembourg.
- Julius Reiff
- Hermann F. Jungkunst
- Martin H. Entling
A portable thermal ablation device for cervical cancer prevention in a screen-and-treat setting: a randomized, noninferiority trial
A randomized controlled trial performed in a screen-and-treat program in Zambia found that a portable, battery-operated thermal ablation device was not inferior to cryotherapy and electrosurgical excision in cervical precancer treatment.
- Partha Basu
- Mulindi Mwanahamuntu
- Groesbeck P. Parham
Directed conservation of the world’s reef sharks and rays
A survey of sharks and rays on coral reefs within 66 marine protected areas across 36 countries showcases that the conservation benefits of full MPA protection to sharks almost double when accompanied by effective fisheries management.
- Jordan S. Goetze
- Michael R. Heithaus
- Demian D. Chapman
ArticleNature Ecology & EvolutionA renewably sourced, circular photopolymer resin for additive manufacturing
A photopolymer platform derived from renewable lipoates can be 3D-printed into high-resolution parts, which possess properties comparable to some commercial acrylic resins, and then recycled to produce a re-printable resin.
- Thiago O. Machado
- Connor J. Stubbs
- Andrew P. Dove
Effects of management practices on the ecosystem-service multifunctionality of temperate grasslands
Sustainable agricultural policies need to be practically assessed. Here, the authors assess how management practices affect ecosystem services in Swiss agricultural grasslands showing that organic farming has a lesser impact than the eco-scheme and the use as pasture or meadow.
- Franziska J. Richter
- Matthias Suter
- Valentin H. Klaus
Effectiveness of carbon dioxide emission target is linked to country ambition and education level
The effectiveness of carbon dioxide emission reduction targets increases with the level of the targets’ ambition and countries’ education level and income equality, according to an analysis using an econometric model and emission intensity and socio-economic data for 163 countries over the past decade.
- Yuheng Zheng
- Rui Shan
- Yueming (Lucy) Qiu
Risk-based lung cancer screening performance in a universal healthcare setting
Implementation of organized low-dose computed tomography screening in over 4,000 individuals with high risk for lung cancer as part of the Ontario Lung Cancer Screening Pilot reported high cancer detection rates, early detection of cancer and low serious harms.
- Martin C. Tammemägi
- Gail E. Darling
- Linda Rabeneck
ArticleNature MedicineFSC-certified forest management benefits large mammals compared to non-FSC
Camera-trap images of 55 mammal species in 14 logging concessions in western equatorial Africa reveal greater animal encounter rates in FSC-certified than in non-certified forests, especially for large mammals and species of high conservation priority.
- Joeri A. Zwerts
- E. H. M. Sterck
- Marijke van Kuijk
Probiotics reshape the coral microbiome in situ without detectable off-target effects in the surrounding environment
Pioneering coral probiotics study shows in situ application reshapes the coral microbiome, boosting beneficial bacteria and reducing pathogens without affecting surrounding seawater and sediment microbiomes.
- Nathalia Delgadillo-Ordoñez
- Neus Garcias-Bonet
- Raquel S. Peixoto
VespAI: a deep learning-based system for the detection of invasive hornets
A deep learning-based system enables the rapid detection and classification of the invasive hornetVespa velutina, providing an automated surveillance capability at the invasion front.
- Thomas A. O’Shea-Wheller
- Andrew Corbett
- Peter J. Kennedy
The potential of urban irrigation for counteracting carbon-climate feedback
This study shows that urban irrigation is capable of achieving the environmental co-benefit of heat mitigation and carbon neutrality and has the potential to counteract the climate–carbon feedback loop in the U.S. urban environment.
- Peiyuan Li
- Zhi-Hua Wang
- Chenghao Wang
The impacts of decarbonization pathways on Sustainable Development Goals in the European Union
In the European Union, current climate policies improve energy- and carbon- as well as inequality-related aspects of sustainability; future net-zero emissions pathways further improve population health and agricultural productivity, according to an integrated assessment modelling analysis.
- Jorge Moreno
- Lorenza Campagnolo
- Marc Vielle
Self-help mobile messaging intervention for depression among older adults in resource-limited settings: a randomized controlled trial
The PRODIGITAL-D trial in adults aged 60+ years from socioeconomically deprived areas of Brazil showed that a 6-week self-help mobile messaging psychosocial intervention was effective in improving depression recovery at 3 months compared to a single message control intervention.
- Marcia Scazufca
- Carina Akemi Nakamura
- Ricardo Araya
Enhanced cholera surveillance to improve vaccination campaign efficiency
A modeling study of 35 cholera-affected countries in Africa showed that introducing cholera surveillance could improve the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of preventive cholera vaccination campaigns.
- Hanmeng Xu
- Kaiyue Zou
- Elizabeth C. Lee
WASH interventions and child diarrhea at the interface of climate and socioeconomic position in Bangladesh
Household water, sanitation, and handwashing (WASH) interventions can reduce diarrhoea-related morbidity in young children. Here, the authors report findings from a pre-specified secondary analysis of a cluster-randomised trial assessing how WASH impacts vary by socioeconomic position and season.
- Pearl Anne Ante-Testard
- Francois Rerolle
- Benjamin F. Arnold
Clinical surveillance systems obscure the true cholera infection burden in an endemic region
Integrated analysis of clinical, serological and behavioral data estimates that current clinical surveillance systems detect only 1 of 3,280 true community infections in a cholera-endemic region of Bangladesh.
- Sonia T. Hegde
- Ashraful Islam Khan
- Andrew S. Azman
Anxiety-focused cognitive behavioral therapy delivered by non-specialists to prevent postnatal depression: a randomized, phase 3 trial
In a phase 3 trial, an anxiety-focused cognitive behavioral therapy intervention delivered during pregnancy by non-specialist providers in Pakistan reduced the incidence of postnatal depression and anxiety compared to enhanced care.
- Pamela J. Surkan
- Abid Malik
- Atif Rahman
ArticleNature MedicineReductions in smoking due to ratification of the Framework Convention for Tobacco Control in 171 countries
An interrupted time series analysis found that the World Health Organization Framework Convention for Tobacco Control reduced smoking prevalence across 170 countries (excluding China) since the country-specific year of ratification.
- Guillermo Paraje
- Mauricio Flores Muñoz
- Prabhat Jha
Avoiding ecosystem and social impacts of hydropower, wind, and solar in Southern Africa’s low-carbon electricity system
Avoiding the most damaging land use and freshwater impacts of solar PV, wind, and hydropower development while halving carbon emissions by 2040 in the Southern Africa region is not only possible but incurs only modest (3-6%) system cost increases.
- Grace C. Wu
- Ranjit Deshmukh
- Kudakwashe Ndhlukula
Sustainability benefits of transitioning from current diets to plant-based alternatives or whole-food diets in Sweden
The authors found that replacing animal source foods with plant-based alternatives would lead to substantial reductions in environmental impacts, while meeting most nutrition recommendations and being cost-competitive with the current average Swedish diet.
- Anne Charlotte Bunge
- Rachel Mazac
- Line Gordon
Durable CO2 conversion in the proton-exchange membrane system
We develop a proton-exchange membrane system that reduces CO2 to formic acid at a catalyst that is derived from waste lead–acid batteries and in which a lattice carbon activation mechanism contributes.
- Wensheng Fang
- Wei Guo
- Bao Yu Xia
ArticleNatureFertilizer management for global ammonia emission reduction
A machine learning model for generating crop-specific and spatially explicit NH3 emission factors globally shows that global NH3 emissions in 2018 were lower than previous estimates that did not fully consider fertilizer management practices.
- Peng Xu
- Geng Li
- Benjamin Z. Houlton
ArticleNatureParis targets within reach by aligning, broadening and strengthening net-zero pledges
Steps to enhance countries’ emission pledges – early implementation of existing net-zero pledges, inclusion of all countries, and aiming for net-zero 5 years earlier– can close most of the gap between emissions trends and Paris targets, according to integrated assessment model results.
- Ioannis Dafnomilis
- Michel den Elzen
- Detlef van Vuuren
Mapping the planet’s critical areas for biodiversity and nature’s contributions to people
This study shows that conserving approximately half of global land area through protection or sustainable management could provide 90% of ten of nature’s contributions to people and could meet representation targets for 26,709 species of mammals, birds, amphibians, and reptiles. This finding supports recent commitments to conserve at least 30% of global lands and waters by 2030.
- Rachel A. Neugarten
- Rebecca Chaplin-Kramer
- Amanda D. Rodewald
Overcoming the permeability-selectivity challenge in water purification using two-dimensional cobalt-functionalized vermiculite membrane
Clean water and sanitation are major global challenges. Here, Prof. Zhang’s group developed a two-dimensional cobalt-functionalized vermiculite membrane, which overcame the persistent membrane permeability-selectivity trade-off in water purification.
- Mengtao Tian
- Yi Liu
- Zhenghua Zhang
Managing urban development could halve nitrogen pollution in China
Here the authors demonstrate how managed urbanization in China could halve reactive nitrogen pollution to both the atmosphere and water resources. Investing 61 billion USD could provide 245 billion USD in benefits, while contributing to multiple SDG goals.
- Ouping Deng
- Sitong Wang
- Baojing Gu
Informing disaster-risk management policies for education infrastructure using scenario-based recovery analyses
Post-disaster education continuity is a significant global challenge. The study demonstrates that scenario-based recovery analyses can help quantify the impact of disaster management policies on post-disaster education continuity in low-income countries.
- Eyitayo A. Opabola
- Carmine Galasso
A novel antibiotic class targeting the lipopolysaccharide transporter
A tethered macrocyclic peptide antibiotic class described here—which shows potent antibacterial activity against carbapenem-resistantAcinetobacter baumannii—blocks the transport of bacterial lipopolysaccharide from the inner membrane to its destination on the outer membrane through inhibition of the LptB2FGC complex.
- Claudia Zampaloni
- Patrizio Mattei
- Kenneth A. Bradley
A new antibiotic traps lipopolysaccharide in its intermembrane transporter
A mechanism of lipid transport inhibition has been identified for a class of peptide antibiotics effective against resistantAcinetobacter strains, which may have applications in the inhibition of other Gram-negative pathogens.
- Karanbir S. Pahil
- Morgan S. A. Gilman
- Daniel Kahne
Systemwide energy return on investment in a sustainable transition towards net zero power systems
Here, the authors adopt systemwide EROI to assess the sustainability risks of nine global energy transition scenarios. The EROI of fossil fuel dominated scenarios tend to approach the upper limit of the net energy cliff, posing higher sustainability risks.
- Hasret Sahin
- A. A. Solomon
- Christian Breyer
Hybrid wastewater treatment and reuse enhances urban water system resilience to disruptive incidents
Hybrid urban water supply systems combine conventional, centralized water sources with distributed sources. Such system configurations are shown to exhibit lower severity, range of impact and duration of substandard performance compared with centralized systems in a number of disruptive incidents.
- Lu Liu
- Xiangnan Zhou
- Qilin Li
ArticleNature WaterCommunity-based screening enhances hepatitis B virus linkage to care among West African migrants in Spain
Picchio et al. report findings from a community-based hepatitis B virus (HBV) screening program for sub-Saharan African migrants in Catalonia, Spain, utilizing simplified testing and expedited referral to specialist care. Their findings support the adoption of these strategies to increase HBV testing and linkage to care among at-risk populations.
- Camila A. Picchio
- Daniel K. Nomah
- Jeffrey V. Lazarus
Benefits, harms and cost-effectiveness of cervical screening, triage and treatment strategies for women in the general population
A modelled evaluation of screening and treatment strategies for prevention of cervical cancer in 78 low- and lower-middle-income countries provides evidence to support the World Health Organization’s recommendation of primary HPV testing for women in the general population.
- Kate T. Simms
- Adam Keane
- Karen Canfell
Benefits and harms of cervical screening, triage and treatment strategies in women living with HIV
A model evaluating cervical screening, triage and treatment strategies to prevent cervical cancer in women living with HIV in Tanzania provides evidence to support the World Health Organization’s recommendation of primary HPV testing starting at age 25 years with 3–5-year regular screening intervals.
- Michaela T. Hall
- Kate T. Simms
- Karen Canfell
Network-based restoration strategies maximize ecosystem recovery
Network-based restoration strategies that prioritize the reintroduction of highly connected species maximize the recovery of biodiversity following ecosystem collapse.
- Udit Bhatia
- Sarth Dubey
- Auroop R. Ganguly
Projecting future carbon emissions from cement production in developing countries
The rapid deployment of low-carbon measures is urgently needed to reduce cement emissions as cement CO2 emissions from developing countries will almost deplete the remaining cement emissions budget within climate targets.
- Danyang Cheng
- David M. Reiner
- Dabo Guan
Multi-use of offshore wind farms with low-trophic aquaculture can help achieve global sustainability goals
Combining mussel and macroalgae farming with offshore wind farms can provide emission capture and utilization of carbon and macro-nutrients for food, feed, and materials, suggest up-scaled model simulations from the North and Baltic Seas.
- Marie Maar
- Andreas Holbach
- Annette Bruhn
Quasi-experimental evaluation of a nationwide diabetes prevention programme
Analysis of the largest behaviour change programme for prediabetes globally provides causal evidence that lifestyle advice and counselling implemented at scale can improve key cardiovascular risk factors.
- Julia M. Lemp
- Christian Bommer
- Pascal Geldsetzer
ArticleNatureEnsembles of climate simulations to anticipate worst case heatwaves during the Paris 2024 Olympics
- Pascal Yiou
- Camille Cadiou
- Mathieu Vrac
Identification of the flavivirus conserved residues in the envelope protein hinge region for the rational design of a candidate West Nile live-attenuated vaccine
- Bailey E. Maloney
- Kassandra L. Carpio
- Yan-Jang S. Huang
Helper T cell bias following tuberculosis chemotherapy identifies opportunities for therapeutic vaccination to prevent relapse
- Yazmin B. Martinez-Martinez
- Matthew B. Huante
- Janice J. Endsley
A Rift Valley fever mRNA vaccine elicits strong immune responses in mice and rhesus macaques
- Ting Bian
- Meng Hao
- Wei Chen
Replanting unproductive palm oil with smallholder plantations can help achieve Sustainable Development Goals in Sumatra, Indonesia
Unproductive palm oil is hindering sustainable development in Sumatra, Indonesia, but its replanting through small plantations could contribute more to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals than industrial replanting, suggests a model-data analysis based on 25,067 villages.
- Ariadna Fosch
- Guilherme Ferraz de Arruda
- Yamir Moreno
A redistribution of nitrogen fertiliser across global croplands can help achieve food security within environmental boundaries
Current cereal crop production levels could be sustained with significantly reduced total global fertilisation if nitrogen fertiliser use is evenly distributed across global croplands, according to an analysis of simulations from the LandscapeDNDC biogeochemical model
- Andrew Smerald
- David Kraus
- Clemens Scheer
Vaccination of cattle with theBabesia bovis sexual-stage protein HAP2 abrogates parasite transmission byRhipicephalus microplus ticks
- Marta G. Silva
- Reginaldo G. Bastos
- Carlos E. Suarez
Thermosteric and dynamic sea level under solar geoengineering
- Chao Yue
- Svetlana Jevrejeva
- John C. Moore
YF17D-vectored Ebola vaccine candidate protects mice against lethal surrogate Ebola and yellow fever virus challenge
- Viktor Lemmens
- Lara Kelchtermans
- Kai Dallmeier
The rVSV-EBOV vaccine provides limited cross-protection against Sudan virus in guinea pigs
- Wenguang Cao
- Shihua He
- Logan Banadyga
Lyophilization to enable distribution of ChAdOx1 and ChAdOx2 adenovirus-vectored vaccines without refrigeration
- Cheng Zhang
- Adam Berg
- Alexander D. Douglas
Hydroponic potato production in wood fiber for food security
- Krzysztof Kusnierek
- Pia Heltoft
- Tomasz Woznicki
ASP-2/Trans-sialidase chimeric protein induces robust protective immunity in experimental models of Chagas’ disease
- Julia T. Castro
- Rory Brito
- Ricardo T. Gazzinelli
Hobby engagement and mental wellbeing among people aged 65 years and older in 16 countries
A meta-analysis of longitudinal studies representing 16 countries found that hobby engagement was associated with better mental and self-reported health in adults aged 65 years and older as well as correlation with higher life expectancy and national happiness levels.
- Hei Wan Mak
- Taiji Noguchi
- Daisy Fancourt
Accounting for the climate benefit of temporary carbon storage in nature
Efforts to retain or increase land carbon pools are hampered by the risk of loss to natural or human disturbances. The proposed approach to tonne-year accounting could effectively quantify and track the climate value of both temporary and permanent carbon storage.
- H. Damon Matthews
- Kirsten Zickfeld
- Amy Luers
Pay-it-forward incentives for hepatitis virus testing in men who have sex with men: a cluster randomized trial
A community-led randomized controlled trial in China showed that a pay-it-forward incentives increased the uptake of hepatitis B and C virus testing in men who have sex with men as compared with standard-of-care.
- Ye Zhang
- Jianjun Li
- Weiming Tang
ArticleNature MedicineAdoption of climate-resilient groundnut varieties increases agricultural production, consumption, and smallholder commercialization in West Africa
The adoption of climate-resilient crop varieties has the potential to build farmers’ climate resilience. Here, the authors show that adoption of climate-resilient groundnut varieties in West Africa benefits all households, with the biggest gains accruing to small-scale farmers.
- Martin Paul Jr Tabe-Ojong
- Jourdain C. Lokossou
- Hippolyte D. Affognon
Carbon footprints of the equity portfolios of Chinese fund firms
Emissions embodied in equity portfolios have increased since 2015 due to holdings of more carbon-intensive assets but investing in high-tech sectors instead can enhance sustainability and reduce climate-related risks, according to estimates of carbon footprint trends in the portfolios of 105 Chinese equity fund firms.
- Jinglei Wang
- Dabo Guan
- Xiang Yu
Social innovation supports inclusive and accelerated energy transitions with appropriate governance
In Europe, social innovation in energy is largely driven by governance in a national context, and receives strong acceptance from citizens, concludes a mixed methods analysis of surveys, experiments and expert elicitation.
- Benjamin K. Sovacool
- Heike Brugger
- Karoline S. Rogge
Coral reefs benefit from reduced land–sea impacts under ocean warming
Surveys of reef change are combined with a unique 20-year time series of land–sea human impacts and the results show that integrated land–sea management could help achieve coastal ocean conservation goals and provide coral reefs with the best opportunity to persist in our changing climate.
- Jamison M. Gove
- Gareth J. Williams
- Gregory P. Asner
Near-term pathways for decarbonizing global concrete production
This work quantifies the climate benefits of efficiently utilizing concrete through improved material and structural design, and it shows that over 75% of CO2 emissions from global concrete production could be cut with already implementable measures
- Josefine A. Olsson
- Sabbie A. Miller
- Mark G. Alexander
A planetary health innovation for disease, food and water challenges in Africa
By harvesting aquatic vegetation that provides habitat for snails that harbour Schistosoma parasites and converting it to compost and animal feed, a trial reduced schistosomiasis prevalence in children while providing wider economic benefits.
- Jason R. Rohr
- Alexandra Sack
- Caitlin Wolfe
ArticleNatureHow to make climate-neutral aviation fly
Europe’s aviation must reduce more than just flight CO2 emissions to achieve net-zero. Synthetic fuels and carbon capture and storage could help but decreasing air traffic is crucial due to non-CO2 climate impacts and resource constraints.
- Romain Sacchi
- Viola Becattini
- Marco Mazzotti
Efficient solvent- and hydrogen-free upcycling of high-density polyethylene into separable cyclic hydrocarbons
Ru nanoparticles on HZSM-5 catalysed solvent- and hydrogen-free upcycling of high-density polyethylene into a separable distribution of linear (C1 to C6) and cyclic (C7 to C15) hydrocarbons.
- Junjie Du
- Lin Zeng
- Jie Zeng
ArticleNature NanotechnologyThe effects of cash transfers on adult and child mortality in low- and middle-income countries
A survey of mortality data from low- and middle-income countries shows that government-led cash transfer programmes are associated with decreased mortality among women and children under five years of age.
- Aaron Richterman
- Christophe Millien
- Harsha Thirumurthy
ArticleNatureLow-carbon diets can reduce global ecological and health costs
The hidden costs of current diets, or the cost saving associated with the adoption of low-carbon diets, remain unknown. This study combines life cycle assessment and monetarization factors to quantify the indirect costs of nine global dietary change strategies which progressively reduce animal-sourced foods, including consumption-linked health burden from changes in diet-related disease risk.
- Elysia Lucas
- Miao Guo
- Gonzalo Guillén-Gosálbez
An assessment of energy system transformation pathways to achieve net-zero carbon dioxide emissions in Switzerland
Achieving net zero targets in Switzerland will increase the per capita energy system cost by 320 to 1390 CHF/year and will rely on carbon capture and negative emissions, according to an energy system modelling analysis of 7 scenarios with different socio-economic and geopolitical contexts.
- Evangelos Panos
- Ramachandran Kannan
- Tom Kober
Floatable photocatalytic hydrogel nanocomposites for large-scale solar hydrogen production
Floatable hydrogel nanocomposites, with facile intercalation of various photocatalysts, effectively produce hydrogen. The easily scalable nature of the nanocomposites demonstrates the practical application of this new type of photocatalytic platform.
- Wang Hee Lee
- Chan Woo Lee
- Taeghwan Hyeon
ArticleNature NanotechnologyCircularity in Europe strengthens the sustainability of the global food system
Ensuring that waste or by-products from one process form the input of another is key for food systems sustainability. This study assesses the biophysical potential of redesigning the European (EU27 + UK) food system on the basis of circularity principles. Changes in food consumption, crop production, animal production and fertilizer patterns are considered through scenario analysis.
- H. H. E. van Zanten
- W. Simon
- M. Herrero
Salt substitution and salt-supply restriction for lowering blood pressure in elderly care facilities: a cluster-randomized trial
In a cluster-randomized trial performed in 48 residential elderly care facilities in China, use of a low-sodium salt substitute instead of regular salt decreased blood pressure and cardiovascular events, whereas an alternative strategy of restricting salt consumption was not successful and did not have these beneficial effects.
- Yifang Yuan
- Aoming Jin
- Yangfeng Wu
ArticleNature MedicineCarbon reduction technology pathways for existing buildings in eight cities
Here, the authors perform analysis of technology pathways for existing buildings using urban building energy models developed with cities, showing that shallow and deep retrofits along with onsite photovoltaic and grid decarbonization can help achieve carbon reduction targets.
- Yu Qian Ang
- Zachary Michael Berzolla
- Christoph F. Reinhart
Crop switching can enhance environmental sustainability and farmer incomes in China
Spatial optimizations of high-resolution data from China on crop-specific yields, harvested areas, environmental footprints and farmer incomes shows that crop switching can enhance environmental sustainability and farmer incomes, and contribute substantially towards China’s agricultural sustainable development targets.
- Wei Xie
- Anfeng Zhu
- Kyle Frankel Davis
ArticleNatureOptimal dietary patterns for prevention of chronic disease
Analyses of eight dietary patterns revealed that adherence to low insulinemic, low inflammatory or diabetes risk-reducing diets was associated with the largest risk reduction of cardiometabolic diseases and cancer in US men and women.
- Peilu Wang
- Mingyang Song
- Edward L. Giovannucci
ArticleNature MedicineDiverse carbon dioxide removal approaches could reduce impacts on the energy–water–land system
Carbon dioxide removal will be essential to reaching ambitious climate goals by offsetting hard-to-abate emissions and drawing down legacy CO2. A diverse portfolio of CO2 removal strategies, rather than any single approach, could achieve gigatonne-scale removals while limiting risks to the water–energy–land system.
- Jay Fuhrman
- Candelaria Bergero
- Haewon McJeon
ArticleNature Climate ChangeOptimal nitrogen rate strategy for sustainable rice production in China
A proposed optimal nitrogen rate strategy together with analysis of an extensive on-farm dataset shows that meeting national rice production targets in 2030 in China is possible while concurrently reducing nationwide nitrogen consumption.
- Siyuan Cai
- Xu Zhao
- Xiaoyuan Yan
ArticleNatureProspects of metal recovery from wastewater and brine
Recovering metals from wastewater and brine could augment metal stocks that are fundamental to modern technology. This Perspective assesses the potential of, and provides guidance for, recovering metals from wastewater and brine.
- Ryan M. DuChanois
- Nathanial J. Cooper
- Menachem Elimelech
PerspectiveNature WaterCooperative adaptive management of the Nile River with climate and socio-economic uncertainties
The Nile River system is faced with challenges including increasing water demands, political tensions, and future climate and socio-economic uncertainties. Cooperative adaptive management can help increase synergies, balance trade-offs and bring various benefits to riparian countries.
- Mohammed Basheer
- Victor Nechifor
- Julien J. Harou
Challenges and opportunities for achieving Sustainable Development Goals through restoration of Indonesia’s mangroves
An Indonesia-wide analysis identifies locations for potential mangrove restoration, ranked by scenarios of success likelihood according to biogeomorphology, current and past land use and land tenure, and estimates the restoration costs.
- Sigit D. Sasmito
- Mohammad Basyuni
- Daniel Murdiyarso
ArticleNature Ecology & EvolutionA membrane-based seawater electrolyser for hydrogen generation
An efficient and scalable direct seawater electrolysis method for hydrogen production that addresses the side-reaction and corrosion problems associated with using seawater instead of pure water is demonstrated.
- Heping Xie
- Zhiyu Zhao
- Zongping Shao
ArticleNatureUsing machine learning to assess the livelihood impact of electricity access
Advancements in satellite imagery and machine learning can be used to infer the causal impact of electricity access on livelihoods, providing a low-cost, generalizable approach to evaluating public policy in data-spare environments.
- Nathan Ratledge
- Gabe Cadamuro
- Marshall Burke
ArticleNatureFeasibility of novel adult tuberculosis vaccination in South Africa: a cost-effectiveness and budget impact analysis
- Sahan Jayawardana
- Chathika K. Weerasuriya
- Miqdad Asaria
Global mitigation opportunities for the life cycle of natural gas-fired power
Natural gas is seen as a key interim fuel along the pathway to a zero-carbon energy system, yet there is some concern it may delay the transition. This Analysis estimates the life cycle emissions from gas-fired electricity and the abatement potential of different mitigation options.
- Sarah M. Jordaan
- Andrew W. Ruttinger
- Arvind P. Ravikumar
AnalysisNature Climate ChangeFloating perovskite-BiVO4 devices for scalable solar fuel production
This work introduces lightweight, leaf-like photoelectrochemical devices for unassisted water splitting and syngas production, which could be used in the fabrication of floating systems for solar fuel production.
- Virgil Andrei
- Geani M. Ucoski
- Erwin Reisner
ArticleNatureMeeting sustainable development goals via robotics and autonomous systems
A horizon scan was used to explore possible impacts of robotics and automated systems on achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Positive effects are likely. Iterative regulatory processes and continued dialogue could help avoid environmental damages and increases in inequality.
- Solène Guenat
- Phil Purnell
- Martin Dallimer
Integrating sustainability into climate finance by quantifying the co-benefits and market impact of carbon projects
Clean development mechanism projects with the largest local co-benefits for achieving the sustainable development goals are valued up to 30% higher by the climate finance market, according to econometric analyses.
- Jiehong Lou
- Nathan Hultman
- Yueming Lucy Qiu
Computer-designed repurposing of chemical wastes into drugs
A forward-synthesis platform, Allchemy, computationally determines how to ‘close the circle’, or use waste chemicals to make valuable pharmaceutical or agrochemical products, ranking possible routes by environmental, geospatial, and other factors.
- Agnieszka Wołos
- Dominik Koszelewski
- Bartosz A. Grzybowski
ArticleNatureMachine learning-aided engineering of hydrolases for PET depolymerization
Untreated, postconsumer-PET from 51 different thermoformed products can all be almost completely degraded by FAST-PETase in 1 week and PET can be resynthesized from the recovered monomers, demonstrating recycling at the industrial scale.
- Hongyuan Lu
- Daniel J. Diaz
- Hal S. Alper
ArticleNatureTackling psychosocial and capital constraints to alleviate poverty
Psychosocial measures improve the cost-effectiveness of multi-faceted interventions against extreme poverty.
- Thomas Bossuroy
- Markus Goldstein
- Kelsey A. Wright
Planning sustainable electricity solutions for refugee settlements in sub-Saharan Africa
Providing reliable, sustainable and clean energy in humanitarian contexts is increasingly important but a lack of data on settlements impedes progress. Here, Baldi et al. present a database and analytical tools for 288 refugee settlements in sub-Saharan Africa that can support renewable energy deployment decisions.
- Duccio Baldi
- Magda Moner-Girona
- Fernando Fahl
Nano-enabled pesticides for sustainable agriculture and global food security
A comprehensive analysis of the key properties of nanopesticides in controlling agricultural pests for crop enhancement shows a much higher efficacy compared with non-nano analogues, also for in-field trials.
- Dengjun Wang
- Navid B. Saleh
- Chunming Su
AnalysisNature NanotechnologyAquatic foods to nourish nations
Data on the nutrient content of almost 3,000 aquatic animal-source foods is combined with a food-systems model to show that an increase in aquatic-food production could reduce the inadequate intake of most nutrients.
- Christopher D. Golden
- J. Zachary Koehn
- Shakuntala H. Thilsted
ArticleNatureFair algorithms for selecting citizens’ assemblies
Principles from the field of fair division are used to develop selection algorithms for citizens’ assemblies that produce panels that are representative of the population while simultaneously selecting individuals with near-equal probabilities.
- Bailey Flanigan
- Paul Gölz
- Ariel D. Procaccia
A sustainable development pathway for climate action within the UN 2030 Agenda
Current action is insufficient to meet both the Paris Agreement and the Sustainable Development Goals. Integrated model-based analysis shows that strong interventions across many dimensions, together with ambitious lifestyle change, are needed to enable real progress towards the UN Agenda 2030.
- Bjoern Soergel
- Elmar Kriegler
- Alexander Popp
ArticleNature Climate ChangeA systematic review and meta-analysis of psychological interventions to improve mental wellbeing
This meta-analysis of 419 randomized controlled trials found that various types of psychological interventions could improve mental wellbeing in clinical and non-clinical populations. Effect sizes tended to be small to moderate and were influenced by various moderators.
- Joep van Agteren
- Matthew Iasiello
- Michael Kyrios
ArticleNature Human BehaviourThe effects of tobacco control policies on global smoking prevalence
Analysis of global smoking prevalence trends from 2009 to 2017 demonstrates that, when implemented, national-level tobacco control policies are highly effective; however, considerable gaps remain in the universal adoption of anti-tobacco interventions.
- Luisa S. Flor
- Marissa B. Reitsma
- Emmanuela Gakidou
Synthesis
Applying minerals to soil to draw down atmospheric carbon dioxide through synergistic organic and inorganic pathways
Soil-based carbon dioxide removal approaches that make use of primary and secondary minerals can create synergies between inorganic carbon, soil organic carbon, and stable biochar carbon formation.
- Wolfram Buss
- Heath Hasemer
- Justin Borevitz
Finishing the odyssey to a stem cell cure for type 1 diabetes
- Lise Hunault
- Daniel Hesselson
Progress on the research and development of plague vaccines with a call to action
- E. Diane Williamson
- Paul B. Kilgore
- Ashok K. Chopra
Overcoming challenges measuring SDG 12 progress using national registers to track chemicals in waste
Pollutant Release and Transfers Registers (PRTRs) can be used as a valuable tool in assessing progress towards reducing human and ecological harm from chemicals.
- Alicia Berthiaume
Harnessing the plant microbiome for sustainable crop production
In this Review, Compant et al. explore the functions, mechanisms, assembly and interactions of plant microbiomes, highlighting current applications and their limitations. They also discuss how recent advances could lead to new or improved applications and identify research gaps crucial for harnessing microbiome functions in sustainable plant production.
- Stéphane Compant
- Fabricio Cassan
- Angela Sessitsch
Review ArticleNature Reviews MicrobiologyMalaria vaccines: a new era of prevention and control
In this Review, Duffy et al. examine the malaria vaccine landscape, showcasing both achievements and setbacks over the past decades. They discuss approaches and assays for different parasite stages, summarize recent advancements, propose a decision-making process for the field and identify future priorities to address unmet needs.
- Patrick E. Duffy
- J. Patrick Gorres
- Michal Fried
Review ArticleNature Reviews MicrobiologyThe interplay between diet and the gut microbiome: implications for health and disease
In this Review, Stanton and colleagues examine the effect of different whole diets on the composition and function of the gut microbiome and explore how the diet–microbiome relationship influences human health and the progression of different chronic diseases.
- Fiona C. Ross
- Dhrati Patangia
- Catherine Stanton
Review ArticleNature Reviews MicrobiologyContinuing development of vaccines and monoclonal antibodies against Zika virus
The 2016 Zika virus (ZIKV) epidemic catalyzed a global effort to develop diagnostic tests, vaccines, and therapeutic treatments. However, the rapid waning epidemiology of ZIKV stalled many countermeasure development efforts. On January 31 and February 1, 2023, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) hosted “Continuing Development of Vaccines and Monoclonal Antibodies Against Zika Virus,” a workshop of assembled experts from multiple fields and sectors to review the latest ZIKV research findings and develop recommendations for advancing vaccines and monoclonal antibodies. This report describes the workshop proceedings and summarizes the key challenges and major recommendations identified at the workshop. While the current incidence and testing for ZIKV are low globally, ZIKV has not disappeared, and future large-scale outbreaks are possible. Developing an effective vaccine and monoclonal antibody treatment is still a public health priority, especially for persons who can become pregnant and who live or travel in ZIKV-endemic regions.
- Sara E. Woodson
- Kaitlyn M. Morabito
Foodborne bacterial pathogens: genome-based approaches for enduring and emerging threats in a complex and changing world
In this Review, Mather et al. discuss the role of genome-based approaches in deepening our understanding of both enduring and emerging bacterial foodborne pathogens in the context of evolving global food systems and environmental changes.
- Alison E. Mather
- Matthew W. Gilmour
- Nigel P. French
Review ArticleNature Reviews MicrobiologyThyroid function and iodine intake: global recommendations and relevant dietary trends
This Review discusses the importance of adequate iodine intake for thyroid function, outlining the varying global intake recommendations. Iodine is also considered in the context of the increasing prevalence of overweight and obesity, as well as dietary trends such as cardioprotective salt restriction and plant-based diets.
- Sarah C. Bath
Review ArticleNature Reviews EndocrinologySynthetic microbiology in sustainability applications
In this Review, Jones, Marken and Silver develop a conceptual framework for synthetic microbiology organized into three domains — factory, farm and field — to explore the utility of synthetic microbiology in addressing sustainability challenges, and examine several examples of microbial engineering applications relevant to each domain.
- Ethan M. Jones
- John P. Marken
- Pamela A. Silver
Review ArticleNature Reviews MicrobiologyThe refinery of the future
Efforts to find renewable alternatives to fossil fuels that might enable a carbon-neutral society by 2050 are described, as well as outlining a possible roadmap towards a refinery of the future and evaluating its requirements.
- Eelco T. C. Vogt
- Bert M. Weckhuysen
PerspectiveNatureEffects of urban-induced mutations on ecology, evolution and health
Pollution in urban areas causes higher rates of mutation than in unpolluted areas. This Perspective discusses the effects of these mutations on the health, evolutionary fitness and ecology of urban organisms.
- Marc T. J. Johnson
- Irtaqa Arif
- Kristin M. Winchell
PerspectiveNature Ecology & EvolutionContributions of human cultures to biodiversity and ecosystem conservation
This Review identifies and describes interactions and feedbacks between biodiversity and diversity of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities, and uses case studies from South America to illustrate the conservation and human benefits that can arise from protecting both biological and cultural diversity.
- Carolina Levis
- Bernardo M. Flores
- Charles R. Clement
Review ArticleNature Ecology & EvolutionInvasive species drive cross-ecosystem effects worldwide
Invasive species may have impacts on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning beyond the ecosystem they directly invade, by altering flows of biotic or abiotic materials. In this Review, the authors synthesize current evidence showing how invasive species have cross-ecosystem effects in three ways: by introducing novel spatial flows between ecosystems, or altering the quality or magnitude of spatial flows.
- Tianna Peller
- Florian Altermatt
Review ArticleNature Ecology & EvolutionA theoretical framework to improve the adoption of green Integrated Pest Management tactics
A theoretical framework, the Multi-Dimensional Management of Multiple Pests, is proposed to enhance the adoption of green Integrated Pest Management (IPM) tactics and encourage a more comprehensive assessment of environmental benefits.
- Peng Han
- Cesar Rodriguez-Saona
- Nicolas Desneux
Durable CO2 conversion in the proton-exchange membrane system
We develop a proton-exchange membrane system that reduces CO2 to formic acid at a catalyst that is derived from waste lead–acid batteries and in which a lattice carbon activation mechanism contributes.
- Wensheng Fang
- Wei Guo
- Bao Yu Xia
ArticleNatureThe principles of natural climate solutions
Natural climate solutions can mitigate climate change but misunderstandings about what constitutes a natural climate solution generate unnecessary confusion and controversy. This Perspective distills five foundational principles of natural climate solutions and fifteen operational principles for practical implementation.
- Peter Woods Ellis
- Aaron Marr Page
- Susan C. Cook-Patton
An analysis of emerging food safety and fraud risks of novel insect proteins within complex supply chains
- A. Traynor
- D. Thorburn Burns
- C. T. Elliott
A research agenda for understanding how social inequality is linked to brain structure and function
Hatzenbuehler et al. argue that cognitive neuroscience should take more interest in the consequences of social inequality, and discuss various research methods for accomplishing this goal.
- Mark L. Hatzenbuehler
- Katie A. McLaughlin
- Mina Cikara
PerspectiveNature Human BehaviourA non-academic perspective on the future of lithium-based batteries
In the field of lithium-based batteries, there is often a divide between academic research and industrial needs. Here, the authors present a view on applied research to help bridge academia and industry, focusing on metrics and challenges to be considered for the development of practical batteries.
- James T. Frith
- Matthew J. Lacey
- Ulderico Ulissi
“Reactive Mineral Sink” drives soil organic matter dynamics and stabilization
- Songlin Wu
- Kurt O. Konhauser
- Longbin Huang
Characterizing the nature and extent of access to unsafely managed sanitation in the United States
This Review identifies factors that lead to ‘unsafely managed sanitation’ in the United States, the specific types of access, and obstacles to characterizing and addressing the problem.
- Jillian Maxcy-Brown
- Drew Capone
- Mark A. Elliott
Review ArticleNature WaterSustaining effective latrine cleaning in schools to protect child health in low-income settings
Access to sanitation is a fundamental right that is still missing, especially in many parts of low-income countries. This Perspective focuses on the impact of unclean school latrines on child health.
- Fiona Vande Velde
- Bruno Levecke
- Michael R. Templeton
PerspectiveNature WaterAdvancements in Rift Valley fever vaccines: a historical overview and prospects for next generation candidates
- Cigdem Alkan
- Eduardo Jurado-Cobena
- Tetsuro Ikegami
Key advances in vaccine development for tuberculosis—success and challenges
- Rocky Lai
- Abiola F. Ogunsola
- Samuel M. Behar
Q fever immunology: the quest for a safe and effective vaccine
- Gayathri Sam
- John Stenos
- Bernd H. A. Rehm
Strategic considerations on developing a CHIKV vaccine and ensuring equitable access for countries in need
- Neil Cherian
- Alison Bettis
- Timothy Endy
Late-life suicide in an aging world
Suicide is an important problem among older adults and in particular older men. Here, the author discusses factors that impact suicide risk, including social determinants of health and cultural perception of old age, and proposes strategies for a multifaceted approach to suicide prevention.
- Diego De Leo
PerspectiveNature AgingRethinking the urban physical environment for century-long lives: from age-friendly to longevity-ready cities
Age-friendly cities initiatives aim to facilitate active and healthy aging. Focusing on the urban physical environment, the authors argue that longevity-ready cities that aim for better health and well-being for people of all ages from a life-course perspective can accomplish more than initiatives focused solely on old age.
- Chenghao Wang
- Diego Sierra Huertas
- Robert B. Jackson
PerspectiveNature AgingRewiring photosynthetic electron transport chains for solar energy conversion
Photosynthetic electron transport chains convert solar energy into chemical energy. In this Review, engineering efforts to rewire these electron transport pathways for electricity and chemical production are discussed, highlighting major advances alongside outstanding research problems for achieving real-world applications.
- Joshua M. Lawrence
- Rachel M. Egan
- Jenny Z. Zhang
Review ArticleNature Reviews BioengineeringNanotechnology-based strategies against SARS-CoV-2 variants
This Perspective highlights the role that nanotechnology might play in tackling the rise of new SARS-CoV-2 variants.
- Xiangang Huang
- Edo Kon
- Wei Tao
PerspectiveNature NanotechnologyHarnessing human and machine intelligence for planetary-level climate action
- Ramit Debnath
- Felix Creutzig
- Emily Shuckburgh
Climate change and health: three grand challenges
This Review outlines three ‘grand challenges’ to protect and promote health in the face of climate change, and discusses the role of the health community in driving change within and beyond the health sector.
- Diarmid Campbell-Lendrum
- Tara Neville
- Maria Neira
Review ArticleNature MedicineAdverse childhood experiences and lifelong health
Adverse childhood experiences can negatively impact lifelong health; this Review discusses the underlying mechanisms and potential solutions, advocating for multisectoral interventions and implementation research.
- Zulfiqar A. Bhutta
- Supriya Bhavnani
- Vikram Patel
Review ArticleNature MedicineDigital health for aging populations
As the proportion of older adults increases globally, digital health innovations, particularly wearables, could transform the future of healthy aging.
- Chuanrui Chen
- Shichao Ding
- Joseph Wang
PerspectiveNature MedicineBrain imaging with portable low-field MRI
The advent of portable, low-field MRI is transforming clinical brain imaging. This Review discusses the bioengineering advances that have enabled scanning outside the controlled environment of conventional MRI suites, enhancing access to neuroimaging. Ongoing development and innovation will increase the real-world application of MRI.
- W. Taylor Kimberly
- Annabel J. Sorby-Adams
- Kevin N. Sheth
Review ArticleNature Reviews BioengineeringSystems metabolic engineering of microorganisms for food and cosmetics production
Microbial production of food and cosmetics is a promising technology with which to obtain sustainable and environmentally friendly compounds. This Review discusses the production of food and cosmetic compounds using metabolically engineered microorganisms and the systems metabolic engineering strategies that can be used to develop industrially competitive microbial strains and processes.
- Kyeong Rok Choi
- Sang Yup Lee
Review ArticleNature Reviews BioengineeringCo-culture approaches for cultivated meat production
Cell co-culture can assist the fabrication process of cultured meat and improve the quality of the final product. This Review discusses relevant cell types and co-culture techniques, and examines their use for cultivated meat production.
- Shlomit David
- Anna Tsukerman
- Shulamit Levenberg
Review ArticleNature Reviews BioengineeringLead immobilization for environmentally sustainable perovskite solar cells
An analysis of chemical processes to immobilize lead from perovskite solar cells is presented, highlighting the need for a standard lead-leakage test and mathematical model to reliably evaluate the potential environmental risk of perovskite optoelectronics.
- Hui Zhang
- Jin-Wook Lee
- Nam-Gyu Park
PerspectiveNatureA precision environmental health approach to prevention of human disease
Precision environmental health leverages environmental and system-level data to understand underlying environmental causes of disease, identify biomarkers of exposure, and develop new prevention and intervention strategies. In this Perspective, the authors provide real-life illustrations of the utility of precision environmental health approaches and identify current challenges in the field.
- Andrea Baccarelli
- Dana C. Dolinoy
- Cheryl Lyn Walker
Future-proofing ecosystem restoration through enhancing adaptive capacity
This Perspective piece outlines potential avenues to support ecosystem restoration projects into the future.
- Marina Frietsch
- Jacqueline Loos
- Joern Fischer
Global burden of hepatitis B virus: current status, missed opportunities and a call for action
This Review provides an overview of the global epidemiology and burden of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, identifying gaps in the HBV care cascade and proposing some solutions to help reach the goal of WHO to eliminate HBV as a public health threat by 2030.
- Yao-Chun Hsu
- Daniel Q. Huang
- Mindie H. Nguyen
Review ArticleNature Reviews Gastroenterology & HepatologyGoals, progress and priorities from Mar del Plata in 1977 to New York in 2023
This Perspective reviews key water-related goals and progress achieved since the first UN Water Conference in Mar del Plata (1977) and highlights three priorities for the second UN Water Conference in New York (2023).
- R. Quentin Grafton
- Asit K. Biswas
- Cecilia Tortajada
PerspectiveNature WaterThe transformative potential of a Global Urban Agenda and its lessons in a time of crisis
- Jessica Espey
- Susan Parnell
- Aromar Revi
Paper-based sensors for bacteria detection
Developing point-of-care devices for the detection of pathogenic bacteria is essential to prevent and treat infections and to provide food security. This Review highlights paper-based analytical devices with substantial point-of-care applicability for bacteria detection and discusses challenges and opportunities for future development.
- Federico Mazur
- Angie Davina Tjandra
- Rona Chandrawati
Review ArticleNature Reviews BioengineeringSmart micro- and nanorobots for water purification
Micro- and nanorobots hold great promise for next-generation water-remediation applications. This Review discusses the development of intelligent micro- and nanoscale systems for the removal and degradation of water contaminants and the challenges toward their practical application.
- Mario Urso
- Martina Ussia
- Martin Pumera
Review ArticleNature Reviews BioengineeringAn evolution towards scientific consensus for a sustainable ocean future
- Françoise Gaill
- Tanya Brodie Rudolph
- Olivier Poivre d’Arvor
Africa needs context-relevant evidence to shape its clean energy future
Discussions abound regarding the future of African energy systems, yet they typically overlook the different starting points and development objectives of each country. This Perspective highlights these differences and calls for more context-specific attention to define low-carbon energy pathways.
- Yacob Mulugetta
- Youba Sokona
- Abdulmutalib Yussuff
PerspectiveNature EnergyHarnessing the microbiome to prevent global biodiversity loss
Careful and responsible microbiome management is a critical strategy to counter biodiversity loss, but practical and regulatory hurdles must be addressed to maximize its utility.
- Raquel S. Peixoto
- Christian R. Voolstra
- Gabriele Berg
PerspectiveNature MicrobiologyPriorities for ocean microbiome research
Studying the ocean microbiome can inform international policies related to ocean governance, tackling climate change, ocean acidification and pollution, and can help promote achievement of multiple Sustainable Development Goals.
- Tara Ocean Foundation
- Tara Oceans
- European Marine Biological Resource Centre - European Research Infrastructure Consortium (EMBRC-ERIC)
PerspectiveNature MicrobiologyManaging nitrogen legacies to accelerate water quality improvement
Agricultural nitrogen legacies are delaying improvements to water quality. Comprehensive management strategies that address legacy issues are needed to ensure better environmental outcomes.
- Nandita B. Basu
- Kimberly J. Van Meter
- Søren Bøye Olsen
PerspectiveNature GeoscienceEquity, technological innovation and sustainable behaviour in a low-carbon future
Low-carbon innovations in technology and behaviour are increasingly prevalent, but they are not always equitable. This Review examines how such innovations can introduce and perpetrate inequalities, and discusses ways to ensure that a low-carbon future is both sustainable and equitable.
- Benjamin K. Sovacool
- Peter Newell
- Jessica Fanzo
Review ArticleNature Human BehaviourLessons from the elimination of poliomyelitis in Africa
This Perspective chronicles the journey to the elimination of transmission of wild poliovirus in Africa, with a critical discussion of the global, continental, national and community actions that were required and the lessons learnt along the way.
- Abdulaziz Mohammed
- Oyewale Tomori
- John N. Nkengasong
PerspectiveNature Reviews ImmunologyRediscovering Asia’s forgotten crops to fight chronic and hidden hunger
Asia has a rich variety of nutritious ‘neglected crops’, including cereals, roots and pulses. Adopting a diverse cropping portfolio using these forgotten crops is a promising approach to closing the current production and nutrition gaps.
- Kadambot H. M. Siddique
- Xuan Li
- Karl Gruber
PerspectiveNature PlantsShedding light on the evidence blind spots confounding the multiple objectives of SDG 2
The United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 2 encompasses targets ranging from the eradication of hunger and malnutrition to ensuring a sustainable food production system. Conflicts between these goals gives rise to gaps in our understanding that hamper attempts at evidence-based policy-making.
- Leslie Lipper
- Ruth DeFries
- Livia Bizikova
PerspectiveNature Plants