Green Chemistry 

Green chemistry, similar to sustainable chemistry or circular chemistry, is an area of chemistry and chemical engineering focused on the design of products and processes that minimize or eliminate the use and generation of hazardous substances. While environmental chemistry focuses on the effects of polluting chemicals on nature, green chemistry focuses on the environmental impact of chemistry, including lowering consumption of nonrenewable resources and technological approaches for preventing pollution. 


Green chemistry emerged from a variety of existing ideas and research efforts such as atom energy and catalysis in the period leading up to the 1990s, in the context of increasing attention to problems of chemical pollution and resource depelation. The development of green chemistry in Europe and the United States was linked to a shift in environmental problem-solving strategies: a movement from command and control regulation and mandated lowering of industrial emissions at the "end of the pipe," toward the active prevention of pollution through the innovative design of production technologies themselves.

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#Sustainable Research Award, #Chemistry Innovation Prize,
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