While there is a lot of discussion about why we need sustainability (climate change, forever chemicals,
human toxicity, ecosystem degradation) and what we should do to measure and characterize sustainability
(life cycle assessments, United Nations sustainable development goals, circular economy, safe and
sustainable by design, planetary boundaries), it is especially important to discuss how we should make
these changes.
This is the domain of green chemistry. When a researcher contemplates a new experiment, when an
inventor imagines a new product, he or she makes several small and large decisions that will have a
profound impact on the ultimate sustainability of what they do. If they do not have the skills and tools to understand the sustainability implications at the mechanistic molecular level (green chemistry), it is unlikely that they will successfully achieve sustainability objectives.
This presentation will discuss how green chemistry can be integrated into the earliest stages of research and development to ensure maximum sustainability. Real world, commercialized examples will be used to illustrate key points.