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Upcoming Events

  • Phone Seminar - Dr. Paul Anastas, US EPA Office of Research and Development
    Thursday, August 05, 3:00 - 4:00 EDT
  • 3rd International Symposium on Green Processing in the Pharmaceutical and Fine Chemical Industry
    Thursday, September 30, 8:00 EDT - Friday, October 01, 2:00 EDT
  • Michigan Green Chemistry Conference October 2010
    Wednesday, October 20, 8:00 - 5:00 EDT

Click here for full calendar

Recently Added Resources

2010 Phone Seminar Presentations
NYTimes: 'Green chemistry' movement sprouts in colleges, companies
2009 Fall/Winter Phone Seminar Series Presentations
2009 Summer Phone Seminar Series Presentations
Asking the Right Questions - Dr. John Warner

Green Chemistry News

News items are provided by Environmental Health News
A proactive approach to toxic chemicals: Moving green chemistry beyond alternatives in the 'Safe Chemicals Act of 2010.'
Recent chemical reform bills call for green chemistry to be a core element as a source of safer alternatives. But green chemistry offers much more than just replacements.
Exploring algae as fuel.
Dozens of companies, as well as many academic laboratories, are pursuing the same goal — to produce algae as a source of, literally, green energy. And many of them are using genetic engineering or other biological techniques, like chemically induced mutations, to improve how algae functions.
Governor’s green chemistry plan revs up.
Overshadowed by the angst over Assembly Bill 32 and its greenhouse-gas reduction mandate is a potentially more far-reaching legacy of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s administration: green chemistry to regulate toxic substances in consumer products.
Delivering sustainable infrastructure that supports the urban built environment.
There is an increasing awareness that cities function as complex, dynamic urban ecosystems. Thus major shifts in planning, decision making and implementation will be needed to address the challenge of urban sustainability.
Microspheres help restore eyesight.
Biodegradable biopolymer microspheres could deliver stem cells to the eyes of patients whose sight has been destroyed by age-related macular degeneration (AMD) to repair the damage and enable them to see clearly again, say researchers in the UK.

More news

Great Lakes Green Chemistry Network Advisory Board

Tracey Easthope, Enviromental Health Director, The Ecology Center of Michigan
John Jackson, Director, Clean Production & Toxics Program, Great Lakes United
Fe de Leon, Researcher, Canadian Environmental Law Association
C. J. Li, Professor
, Canada Research Chair (Tier I) in Green/Organic Chemistry,  McGill University
Dave Long, President, Environmental Sustainability Solutions, LLC
Karen Peabody-O'Brien, Executive Director, Advancing Green Chemistry
Beverley Thorpe, Director, Clean Production Action (International)
Joel Tickner, Director, Lowell Center for Sustainable Production