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International Conference on Sustainable Environment and Agriculture (ICSEA 2026)

Conference

Mar 24, 2026 at 2:03 PM

International Conference on Sustainable Environment and Agriculture (ICSEA 2026)https://www.icsea.org/index.html2026 11th International Conference on Sustainable Environment and Agriculture (ICSEA 2026) will be held in Tokyo, Japan during August 1-3, 2026. It is one of the leading international conferences for presenting novel and fundamental advances in the fields of Sustainable Environment and Agriculture. It also serves to foster communication among researchers and practitioners working in a wide variety of scientific areas with a common interest in improving Sustainable Environment and Agriculture related techniques.Important DatesSubmission Deadline: Before April 15, 2026Notification Date:Before May 15, 2026Registration Deadline:Before June 10, 2026Conference Dates: August 1-3, 2026All full paper submissions will be peer reviewed and evaluated based on originality, technical and/or research content/depth, correctness, relevance to conference, contributions, and readability. After acceptation, conference presented and registered full papers will be included in Springer Book Series Environmental Science and Engineering (ISSN: 1863-5520), which will be submitted to EI Compendex, Scopus, SCImago and other major databases for indexing. Call for papers2026 11th International Conference on Sustainable Environment and Agriculture (ICSEA 2026) is the premier forum for the presentation of new advances and research results in the fields of theoretical, experimental, and applied Sustainable Environment and Agriculture. The conference will bring together leading researchers, engineers and scientists in the domain of interest from around the world. Topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to:Air Pollution and Control Emission sourcesAtmospheric modeling and numerical predictionInteraction between pollutantsPollution control technologiesAir emission tradingWastewater and Sludge TreatmentNutrients removalSuspended and fixed film biological processesAnaerobic treatmentSludge treatment and reuseIndustrial wastewater treatmentAdvances in biological, physical and chemical processesStorm-water managementSolid Waste Treatment and DisposalWaste minimization, recycling and reuseTechnical aspects of treatment and disposal methods (landfilling, thermal treatment etc)Leachate treatmentLegal, economic and managerial aspects of solid waste managementManagement of hazardous solid wasteGlobal Environmental Change and Ecosystems ManagementGlobal warmingOzone layer depletionCarbon capture and storageBiofuelsIntegrated ecosystems managementSatellite and Geographic Information System applications in the environment Environmental Restoration and Ecological EngineeringHabitat reconstructionBiodiversity conservationLandscape degradation and restorationGround water remediationSoil decontaminationEnvironmental monitoringEco-technologyEnvironmental toxicologyEnvironmental Biotechnology Water Treatment and ReclamationAdvanced treatment of water and secondary effluents (membranes, adsorption, ion exchange, oxidation etc)Disinfection and disinfection by- productsManagement of water treatment residualsAesthetic quality of drinking water (taste, odors)Effect of distribution systems on potable water qualityReuse of reclaimed waters Environment and HealthHealth related organismsHazardous substances and detection techniquesBiodegradation of hazardous substancesToxicity assessment and epidemiological studiesQuality guidelines, environmental regulationIndoor air pollution Environmental SustainabilityResource managementLife cycle analysisRenewable sourcesEnergy savingClean technologiesSustainable citiesCrop FarmingFood cropsEconomic cropsFeed cropsHorticultural cropsCrop breedingPlanting techniquesIrrigation and drainage systemsGreenhouse structure and engineeringCrop harvesting and post-harvest processing, storage and technologyPhytopathologyAgricultural entomologyPesticide scienceBioenergy Animal HusbandryFood of animal originProcessing of animal productsLivestock and poultry house construction and facilities engineeringBiological feedAnimal production technologyVeterinary epidemic prevention systemAnimal health and welfareFarm managementAquacultureFood traceability and safety Agricultural MachineryMechanical designMechanical equipmentAdvanced machine systemsBio-machine systemsAgricultural Development and ManagementAgricultural waste managementAgricultural environmentRural developmentAgricultural economyEnvironmental constraints to animal agriculturePrecision agriculture

Thailand Research Funding News: Thailand-UK Partnership

General NEWS

Jun 23, 2025 at 10:29 AM

ISPF Grants for International Research Collaborations 2025 - Thailand-UK Partnershiphttps://nriis.go.th/www/NewsEventDetail.aspx?nid=12161 The National Research Office of Thailand in collaboration with the British Council (BC) has agreed to open applications for the ISPF Grants for International Research Collaborations for Fiscal Year 2025 under the International Science Partnership Fund (ISPF) to collaborate with the United Kingdom in generating research outputs and outcomes that can be utilized to mitigate or solve critical and challenging global problems.Research Topic Areas Open for Applications: Research and innovation in "Resilient Planet" focusing on "Urban Climate Resilience" with emphasis on addressing problems arising from air pollution and PM2.5 in urban areas.Funding Characteristics and Budget Support:Joint project between researchers from two countries: Thailand and the United KingdomTwo-stage proposal submission process (2-stage proposal)Expression of Interest Stage: Thai or UK Project Leaders submit Expression of Interest (EOI) through https://grants.britishcouncil.org/Full-proposal Stage: Thai and UK Project Leaders jointly prepare a complete research proposal in English according to the specified standard format and submit the proposal to https://grants.britishcouncil.org/. Only researchers who submitted EOI by June 30, 2025, and received confirmation from the British Council can submit the complete proposal.Thai Project Leaders prepare proposals in Thai according to the format specified by NRO and submit to www.nriis.go.th along with the attached complete project proposal (in English) from the British Council system.NRO will consider and approve research grants for Thai researchers not exceeding £50,000 per year or approximately 2,250,000 THB per year, with a research duration not exceeding 2 years (24 months) throughout the project. NRO will consider supporting the research budget annually, taking into account the success of the previous funded year before providing support for the following year.Researchers can submit EOI through https://grants.britishcouncil.org/ from now until June 30, 2025, at 6:00 PM Thailand time.Applications for complete proposals are accepted through the NRIIS system and British Council Applicant Portalfrom July 4 – August 4, 2025, at 6:00 PM Thailand time.Notes:Only researchers who submit EOI and receive confirmation from the British Council can submit complete proposals.Thai researchers' home institutions must endorse the research proposals in the NRIIS system by August 11, 2025, at 4:30 PM.For additional details: https://opportunities-insight.britishcouncil.org/short-articles/opportunities/ispf-research-collaboration-grants-2025Download Related Files:National Research Office Announcement on Call for Project Proposals for Fiscal Year 2025.pdfISPF Research Collaborations 2025 Grant Applicant Guidelines_0.pdf

Study measures the psychological toll of wildfires

General NEWS

Jan 13, 2025 at 10:18 PM

Research in Southeast Asia quantifies how much wildfire smoke hurts peoples’ moods; finds the effect is greater when fires originate in other countries.Peter Dizikes | MIT NewsPublication Date: February 13, 2024Wildfires in Southeast Asia significantly affect peoples’ moods, especially if the fires originate outside a person’s own country, according to a new study.The study, which measures sentiment by analyzing large amounts of social media data, helps show the psychological toll of wildfires that result in substantial air pollution, at a time when such fires are becoming a high-profile marker of climate change. “It has a substantial negative impact on people’s subjective well-being,” says Siqi Zheng, an MIT professor and co-author of a new paper detailing the results. “This is a big effect.”The magnitude of the effect is about the same as another shift uncovered through large-scale studies of sentiment expressed online: When the weekend ends and the work week starts, people’s online postings reflect a sharp drop in mood. The new study finds that daily exposure to typical wildfire smoke levels in the region produces an equivalently large change in sentiment.“People feel anxious or sad when they have to go to work on Monday, and what we find with the fires is that this is, in fact, comparable to a Sunday-to-Monday sentiment drop,” says co-author Rui Du, a former MIT postdoct who is now an economist at Oklahoma State University.Read more at https://news.mit.edu/2024/study-measures-psychological-toll-wildfires-0213