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universally accepted term to describe the movement towards more environmentally acceptable chemical processes and products . It encompasses education, research, and commercial application across the entire supply chain for chemicals . Green Chemistry can be achieved by applying environmentally friendly technologies some old and some new. While Green Chemistry is widely accepted as an essential development in the way that we practice chemistry, and is vital to sustainable development, its application is fragmented and represents only a small fraction of actual chemistry. It is also important to realize that Green Chemistry is not something that is only taken seriously in the developed countries. Some of the pioneering research in the area in the 1980s was indeed carried out in developed countries including the UK, France, and Japan, but by the time the United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) coined the term Green Chemistry in the 1990s, there were good examples of relevant research and some industrial application in many other countries including India and China . The Americans launched the high profile Presidential Green Chemistry Awards in the mid-1990s and effectively disclosed some excellent case studies covering products and processes . Again, however, it is important to realize that there were many more good examples of Green Chemistry at work long before this for example, commercial, no-solvent processes were operating in Germany and renewable catalysts were being used in processes in the UK but they did not get the same publicity as those in the United States . The developing countries that are rapidly constructing new chemical manufacturing facilities have an excellent opportunity to apply the catchphrase of Green Chemistry Benign by Design from the ground upwards. It is much easier to build a new, environmentally compatible plant from scratch than to have to deconstruct before reconstructing, as is the case in the developed world. 1.1 Green Chemistry and Environmentally Friendly Technologies
In this chapter I shall start by exploring the drivers behind the movement towards Green and Sustainable Chemistry. These can all be considered to be costs of waste that effectively penalize current industries and society as a whole. After a description of Green Chemistry I will look at the techniques available to the chemical manufacturers. This leads naturally into a more detailed discussion about methods of evaluating greenness and how we should apply sustainability concepts across the supply chain. It is important that, while reading this, we see Green Chemistry in the bigger picture of sustainable development as we seek to somehow
satisfy societys needs without compromising the survival of future generations. 1.1.2 Objectives for Green Chemistry: The Costs of Waste Hundreds of tones of hazardous waste are released to the air, water, and land by industry every hour of every day. The chemical industry is the biggest source of such waste . Ten years ago less than 1% of commercial substances in use were classified as hazardous, but it is now clear that a much higher proportion of chemicals presents a danger to human health or to the environment. The relatively small number of chemicals formally identified as being hazardous was due to very limited testing regulations, which effectively allowed a large number of chemicals to be used in everyday products without much knowledge of their toxicity and environmental impact. New legislation will dramatically change that situation. In Europe, REACH (Registration, Evaluation, Assessment of Chemicals) will come into force in the first decade of the twenty-first century and whilst, at the time of writing, the final form of the legislation has yet to be decided, it is clear that it will be the most important chemicals-related legislation in living memory and that it will have a dramatic effect on chemical manufacturing and use [6]. REACH will considerably extend the number of chemicals covered by regulations, notably those that have been on market since 1981 (previously exempt), will place the responsibility for chemicals testing with industry, and will require testing whether the chemical is manufactured in Europe or imported for use there. Apart from the direct costs to industry of testing, REACH is likely to result in some chemical substances becoming restricted, prohibitively expensive, or unavailable. This will have dramatic effects on the supply chain for many consumer goods that rely on multiple chemical inputs. Increased knowledge about chemicals, and the classification of an increasing number of chemical substances as being in some way hazardous, will have health and safety implications, again making the use of those substances more costly and difficult. Furthermore, it will undoubtedly cause local authorities and governments to restrict and increase the costs of disposal of waste containing those substances (or indeed waste simply coming from processes involving such substances). Thus, legislation will increasingly force industry and the users of chemicals to change both through substitution of hazardous substances in their processes or products and through the reduction in the volume and hazards of their waste. The costs of waste to a chemical manufacturing company are high and diverse (Fig. 1.1-1) and, for the foreseeable future, they will get worse. These costs and other pressures are now evident throughout the supply chain for a chemical product from the increasing costs of raw materials, as petroleum becomes more scarce and carbon taxes penalize their use, to a growing awareness amongst end-users of the risks that chemicals are often associated with, and the need to disassociate themselves from any chemical in their supply chain that is recognized as being hazardous (e.g. phthalates, endocrine disrupters, polybrominated compounds, heavy metals, etc.
1.1.3 Green Chemistry The term Green Chemistry, coined by staff at the US EPA in the 1990s, helped to bring focus to an increasing interest in developing more environmentally friendly chemical processes and products. There were good examples of Green Chemistry research in Europe in the 1980s, notably in the design of new catalytic systems to replace hazardous and wasteful processes of long standing for generally important synthetic transformations, including FriedelCrafts reactions, oxidations, and various base-catalyzed carboncarbon bond-forming reactions. Some of this research had led to new commercial processes as early as the beginning of the 1990s [4]. In recent years Green Chemistry has become widely accepted as a concept meant to influence education, research, and industrial practice. It is important to realize that it is not a subject area in the way that organic chemistry is. Rather, Green Chemistry is meant to influence the way that we practice chemistry be it in teaching children, researching a route to an interesting molecule, carrying out an analytical procedure, manufacturing a chemical or chemical formulation, or designing a product . Green Chemistry has been promoted worldwide by an increasing but still small number of dedicated individuals and through the activities of some key organizations. These include the Green Chemistry Network (GCN; established in the UK in 1998 and now with about one thousand members worldwide) [8] and the Green Chemistry Institute (established in the USA in the mid 1990s, now part of the American Chemical Society and with chapters in several countries around the world) [9]. Other Green Chemistry Networks or other focal points for national or regional activities exist in other countries including Italy, Japan, Greece and Portugal and new ones appear every year. The GCN was established to help promote and encourage the application of Green Chemistry in all areas where chemistry plays a significant role. At about the same time as the establishment of the GCN, the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) launched the journal Green Chemistry. The intention for this journal was always to keep its readers aware of major events, initiatives, and educational and industrial activities, as well as leading research from around the world. The journal has gone from strength to strength and has a growing submission rate and subscription numbers, as well as having achieved one of the highest impact factors among the RSC journals . Green Chemistry can be considered as a series of reductions . These reductions lead to the goal of triple bottom-line benefits of economic, environmental, and social improvements [11]. Costs are saved by reducing waste (which is becoming increasingly expensive to dispose of, especially when hazardous) and energy use (likely to represent a larger proportion of process costs in the future) as well as making processes more efficient by reducing materials consumption. These reductions also lead to environmental benefit in terms of both feedstock consumption and end-of-life disposal. Furthermore, an increasing use of renewable resources will render the manufacturing industry more sustainable[12]. The reduction in hazardous incidents and the handling of dangerous substances provides additional
social benefit not only to plant operators but also to local communities and through to the users of chemical-related products. It is particularly important to seek to apply Green Chemistry throughout the lifecycle of a chemical product . Scientists and technologists need to routinely consider lifecycles when planning new synthetic routes, when changing feedstocks or process components, and, fundamentally, when designing new products. Many of the chemical products in common use today were not constructed for end-of-life nor were full supply-chain issues of resource and energy consumption and waste production necessarily considered. The Green Chemistry approach of benign by design should, when applied at the design stage, help assure the sustainability of new products across their full lifecycle and minimize the number of mistakes we make.
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