Track Categories

The track category is the heading under which your abstract will be reviewed and later published in the conference printed matters if accepted. During the submission process, you will be asked to select one track category for your abstract.

The term "sustainable infrastructure" refers to structures like highways, bridges, telephone pylons, hydroelectric power plants, etc. that are built using all-around sustainable principles to provide the basic services required by the population. This implies that the entire infrastructure, including all economic, financial, social, and institutional aspects, is ecologically friendly.

 

 

Energy is sustainable if it satisfies current requirements without endangering the capacity of future generations to satisfy their own. Renewable energy is also included in the most well-liked sustainable energy sources, such as hydropower, solar, and wind. Natural resources on the earth are preserved via sustainable energy, and the pollution caused by non-sustainable energy is decreased.

Food sustainability is about generating food at a productivity level that is enough to maintain the human population. Sustainable food production is fundamentally grounded on the availability of fertile land, water, nutrients, and an adequate climate.

Programs, projects, and actions targeted at sustaining a certain resource are referred to as having "sustainability." The term "sustainability" truly refers to the four pillars of sustainability, which are human, social, economic, and environmental.

The goal of human sustainability is to protect and develop society's human capital. Programs that fall under the category of human sustainability include those that make investments in the health and education systems, as well as in services access, nutrition, knowledge, and skills.

 

 

In order to support health and welfare both now and in the future, it is our duty to safeguard global ecosystems and conserve natural resources. Environmental sustainability's forward-thinking nature is a crucial component because so many decisions that affect the environment have long-lasting effects. should make investments in socially conscious and environmentally friendly practises, like as employing clean energy and paying living wages, in order to ensure a future that is livable.

Decision-makers and scientists still don't generally acknowledge social sustainability as a distinct component of sustainable development and as crucial as the economic or environmental components. It also involves recognising and controlling how corporate decisions affect people, both positively and negatively. The calibre of a company's interactions and involvement with its stakeholders is crucial.

Economic sustainability refers to actions that promote long-term economic growth without having a negative effect on the community's social, environmental, and cultural facets. Economic stability is produced through economic sustainability, which makes the economy resilient to risk factors such future increases in the cost of energy and water. It involves striking a balance between economic expansion and profit-making with the effects on the community and the environment.

Reducing waste refers to any activity involving the design, production, acquisition, or usage of components or goods that can lessen the quantity of trash initially produced and the toxicity of that waste before it enters the system.

Reusing something simply means using it more than once for the same reason. Reusing products is an effective strategy to lower the volume of waste produced and eventually landfilled. It is also a smart approach to cut costs.

Recycling is the process of taking waste stream items and utilising them as the basis for making new products. Since recycling both reduces landfilling and promotes resource efficiency, it has numerous positive effects on the environment.

Green nanotechnology is the application of nanotechnology to improve the sustainability of processes that have harmful environmental effects. It also refers to the usage of nanotechnology-related products to improve sustainability. It involves developing eco-friendly nanoproducts and utilising nanoproducts to advance sustainability.

Sustainable manufacturing is the production of manufactured goods using economically sensible procedures that reduce their harmful effects on the environment while preserving energy and other resources. Additionally, safer production practises improve worker, community, and product safety.

The idea of sustainable ecosystem management is helpful because it provides a framework for juggling conflicting human requirements and long-term environmental sustainability through negotiation among stakeholders and adaptive management. The maintenance of the biotic and abiotic elements of the Earth as well as the efficiency of ecosphere activities depend on the management and protection of ecosystems. Diverse scales are used to manage and maintain ecosystems and biodiversity.

Greenwashing is a marketing and communication tactic used by businesses or other groups. It entails advancing ecological justifications in an effort to cultivate public perception of ecological responsibility. To mislead customers into thinking a company's products are ecologically friendly is regarded as an unsupported claim.

Bio-economy is an emerging paradigm under which the creation, development, and revitalization of economic systems based on a sustainable use of renewable biological resources in a balanced way is rapidly spreading globally. Bio-economy is building bridges between biotechnology and economy as well as between science, industry, and society.

The information required to comprehend and make use of the significant advancements in the sector is provided by Sustainable Nuclear Power to non-nuclear engineers, scientists, and energy planners. Additionally, it deals with the safety and disposal concerns that have dogged the growth of the nuclear power sector for more than 20 years and alarmed planners, policymakers, and the general public.

Sustainable tourism is a subfield that includes ecotourism. The primary driver behind developing nations' embrace of ecotourism and incorporation of it into their economic development and conservation policies is the belief that it can be a powerful tool for sustainable development. As an alternative form of travel, ecotourism entails going to natural areas to learn about them, conduct eco-friendly research, or engage in other environmentally friendly activities. It is a form of travel centred on nature experiences that promotes the economic and social growth of the communities where it is practised. It places a strong emphasis on getting in touch with and learning about nature, the local culture, flora, wildlife, and their ecosystems.

Aims to bring together top academic academics, scientists, and research scholars to discuss all facets of sustainable territorial management and sustainable development. It also gives researchers, practitioners, and educators a premier interdisciplinary forum to present and discuss the most recent advancements, concerns, and trends as well as real-world difficulties encountered and solutions chosen in the areas of sustainable territorial management and sustainable development.

The everyday necessities of rural residents must be met by dependable public services, together with technical, socioeconomic, and environmental requirements to support regional economies and urban-rural connections. This comprehensive approach is essential for sustainable rural development. To become more robust to economic shocks or environmental disruptions in the context of climate change, rural communities must create a variety of nonfarming occupations paired with agricultural systems (tailored to local geographical conditions).

The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), sometimes referred to as the Global Goals, were enacted by the United Nations in 2015 as a global call to action to eradicate poverty, safeguard the environment, and guarantee that by the year 2030, peace and prosperity will be experienced by everyone. The idea was to create a set of global objectives that would aid in addressing the pressing political, economic, and environmental problems our planet is currently facing.

Our future may change with the aid of education for sustainable development. We will be able to address the current global environmental challenges with the help of continued government support, sensible laws and regulations, responsible behaviour on the part of individuals and communities, and, most importantly, a strong sense of compassion for the environment. As a result, education promotes gender equality  and the reduction of inequities.