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Elizabeth Grossman

Elizabeth Grossman

Posted: July 27, 2010 12:06 PM

Can Green Chemistry Get Us Out of Deepwater?

What's Your Reaction:

As we've watched the Deepwater Horizon disaster unfold, Advancing Green Chemistry executive director Karen Peabody O'Brien and I have been thinking about how green chemistry can help change how we go about preventing the kind of toxic pollution now taking its toll on the Gulf Coast - how we can do better than booms, skimmers, dispersants, and fires - and how green chemistry can help move us beyond our dependence on petrochemicals. Here are some of our thoughts (and I'd like to acknowledge Karen as my co-author):

It is now more than three months since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded, killing 11 workers, injuring more, and unleashing its vast underwater oil gusher into the Gulf of Mexico. As this unnatural disaster continues with devastating consequences to Gulf Coast wetlands, wildlife, culture, and economy, our attention is - quite understandably - focused on the immediate. But as we hasten to rescue, repair, and restore, shouldn't we also be thinking about what we can do to make sure this never happens again?

This question has many answers. Among them is green chemistry, the science that calls for eliminating hazards and waste at the design stage rather than at the end of the pipe - literally and figuratively. While not a magic wand, green chemistry would go a long way toward moving us away from society's dependence on toxic petrochemicals as the basis for most manufactured materials.

Rather than preventing pollution and toxic exposures by designing products to be without inherent hazards, we've relied on containing, or "managing," the risk of exposure. And risk management works... until it doesn't. Sooner or later, it fails. Hence Bhopal. Hence toxic spills. Hence the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Accidents happen.

Historically, we've taken these risks and assumed the environment would successfully absorb the consequences of our industrial effluence - accidental or intentional. But clearly this is not working.

Green chemistry can change this course. It is a radical departure from the status quo, the age-old practice of valuing expedience at the expense of the environment and human health.

Green chemistry design has already created products like paint made with soy additives, pesticides made from microbes, and plastics made from orange peels. There are even green chemistry products that can break down petroleum in environmentally benign ways, products that detoxify hazardous petrochemicals and leave behind nothing more toxic than oxygen and water. Not only are these products safe for human health but who wouldn't prefer an orange peel spill to what is happening in the Gulf?

So far, nearly 2 million gallons of chemical oil dispersants have been poured into the Gulf. Yet these EPA-approved dispersants - themselves petroleum-based products with unknown long term ecological and health impacts - are products of the kind of old thinking and outdated design that got us into this mess in the first place.

"This is an engineering miracle," said Paul Anastas, assistant administrator for the Environmental Protection Agency's Office of Research and Development, pointing to a photograph of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig. "But when we define our goals, we define the consequences of our actions," he continued in remarks to the 14th annual American Chemistry Society Green Chemistry and Engineering conference in Washington, DC, last month. "There is no doubt," said Anastas who is also a founder of green chemistry, "that we're on an unsustainable trajectory."

To change this course, said Anastas, "we need to design into our technologies the consequences to human health and the environment."

We have the capacity to do this - to create high performance products that are both effective and environmentally benign. But until we make a real commitment to this transformation we will be limited to what Anastas called "elegant and expensive technological bandages that are inherently unsustainable."

What would such a commitment look like?

- Every chemistry PhD student would graduate with an in-depth understanding of the environmental costs and benefits of the design choices they make. Every chemistry student would learn the biological mechanisms of toxicology. Investing in and expanding green chemistry education is key. Equipping the next generation with the tools necessary to create sustainable technologies is essential.

- Government procurement programs would use green chemistry principles to seek out the 'greenest' technologies. Rather than being limited to products (ranging from dispersants to carpets) that fit a standard set decades ago, government agencies would be empowered to choose and use the most environmentally innovative.

- Companies would compete to lead the transition away from chemicals of greatest concern. We are not talking about using marginally "less bad" chemicals, but about redesigning products and processes to be inherently benign and sustainable. How much smarter is it to become a market leader rather than wait for regulations to force a change?

We don't need rocket science to prevent future Deepwater disasters. We need chemistry. And green chemistry is one of our most promising tools. Let's deploy it to its fullest potential.

 
 
 

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11:33 PM on 07/28/2010
There is no doubt that we quickly and desperately need to move away from reliance upon petrochemistry. And I applaud the efforts to move green chemistry to the forefront. That being said, we cannot always engineer and chemistry our way out of problems - that is frequently how we get into trouble by not understanding all the ramifications. Green chemistry is a start, but we need to understand all the ramifications before we adopt or implement solutions. Fpr example, the study that recently found the adoption of beneficial insects in lieu of pesticides in one ecosystem was causing the die off of certain birds - the microbes had spread beyond the farm operation. Of course, the beneficial microbes were much better than conventional pesticides, but there was an unforeseen consequence of depleting an insect necessary for a healthy bird population.

So, while I also encourage the adoption of green chemistry, like all solutions, we need to understand all of the consequences.

Jennifer Taggart
www.thesmartmama.com
08:10 PM on 07/28/2010
This article gets it exactly right. Many of our current environmental problems would not exist if we funded and prioritized green chemistry, and removed the hazards rather than figure out how to manage them once they are already out in our air, or water, or food, or consumer products. Or our bodies.

Companies that put these chemicals into their products (or in their factories) need to challenge (and support) their product designers to find ways to design out the toxics and embrace green chemistry. This can be done if companies make it a priority, and consumers demand truly green products, not greenwashing.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
10:01 AM on 07/28/2010
Censored Gulf health news: Call it what it is: Genocide. Crime Against Humanity (videos)

http://www.examiner.com/x-10438-Human-Rights-Examiner~y2010m7d27-BP-EPA-Sept-11-Deja-View-Video
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BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
09:58 AM on 07/28/2010
The idea that Corexit could be used is ludicrous.The EPA told BP to stop and they continued
anyway.
Just 2 Million gallons sprayed? That seems real low.

"Even as British Petroleum has started using Corexit in the Gulf and ordered 15 million gallons from the manufacturer,"

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/05/dispersant-delay/
They have sprayed the stuff boats,jets and are still spraying on land at night!!
03:10 AM on 07/28/2010
bIomimicry- cradle to cradle design- etc we have some of the answers already but trying to get solutions to market or finding products is a problem I have no clue how to answer---- we need some smart young business types to get into this!
05:59 PM on 07/27/2010
I think for far too long, the mantra has been that "The Solution to Pollution is Dilution".

This only works for a short while, and the capacity for the solvent to handle solute is finite. There is only so much raw sewage we can dump into rivers before they become incapable of supporting aqatic life.

We still haven't heard an iota of news regarding the long term affects of the oil plumes etc. I wonder how many people have heard about the Minamata mercury poisoning episode. That occured over decades, but the gulf spill could have similar affects.

Of course any such events will happen long after the focus of news media has shifted to the next disaster, and any attempt at corelating these potential instances of illness will be fought tooth and nail.

We have not seen the last of the problems from Deepwater Horizon.
04:25 PM on 07/27/2010
Thanks Elizabeth for this important post. YES, we need to start thinking and acting in terms of the big-picture solutions, and green chemistry is a critical component of what's needed to bring American industry into the 21st century. Designing our technologies with human/environmental health as a primary consideration will enable us to build a sustainable economy and innovate the next generation of safer products that people everywhere want to buy. What's not to like?

But importantly: It's not going to happen without government policies that shift the market in ways that support the development of green chemistry. As long as we have a system that enables companies to hide the true toxicity of their products, and even the ingredients in those products, consumers (and companies) will not have the information they need to make the best choices -- and there is no incentive for developing green chemistry.

Here is a report signed by more than 100 academics from UC who agree that green chemistry innovation will not happen without new policies that stimulate the market. http://coeh.berkeley.edu/docs/news/green_chem_brief.pdf

That's why it's so important to pass new laws like the Safe Cosmetics Act of 2010, which would require FDA to assess the safety of cosmetic chemicals and phase out the most hazardous. See http://www.aolnews.com/nation/article/how-safe-are-your-cosmetics-new-bill-wants-to-find-out/19562564. The time to act is now!
11:55 PM on 07/27/2010
Tells you something there only two, now three, replies to this vitally important post. All else on on HuffPo is ephemera compared to this. Point being, it may already be too late to redeem the planet from poisons we've spread and now mingle in us, likely rearranging genetic structure and not for the better. There are hopeful signs.... FINALLY reductions in PCB and DDT in benthic samples. But now others showing up... alkyphenols, PBDEs, etc. The crux may be that maladies caused by toxic chems mean mega profits for big pharma and the medical system. Legal system may be best hope, if only all parties could agree on unimpeachable scientific protocols.....
Glad to be fan 2.