Key Takeaways From the 2025 ACS Green Chemistry & Engineering Conference

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Key Takeaways From the 2025 ACS Green Chemistry & Engineering Conference

NORTHAMPTON, MA / ACCESS Newswire / August 7, 2025 / MilliporeSigma

Paulo Freire, Brazilian educator and philosopher, once said, “Education does not change the world. Education changes people, and people change the world.”

This quote captures the spirit of key events at the 29th Annual American Chemical Society Green Chemistry & Engineering Conference, held in June 2025 in Pittsburgh-where the message was clear: education lays the foundation, but it is collaboration and community that truly catalyzes lasting change.

As a Platinum Sponsor, MilliporeSigma, the U.S. and Canada Life Science business of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, partnered with Beyond Benign to foster a green chemistry community that empowers educators to transform chemistry education for a sustainable future through key events that demonstrated the value of partnership to catalyze change in chemistry education.

Catalyzing Change in Chemistry Education

At the panel, “Catalyzing Change in Chemistry Education,” Jeffrey Whitford, Vice President of Sustainability & Social Business Innovation at MilliporeSigma, and Dr. Amy Cannon, Co-founder and Executive Director of Beyond Benign, led a dynamic discussion with:

  • Dr. Lloyd Bastin, Professor, Departments of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Widener University

  • Dr. Glenn Hurst, Professor, Green Chemistry Education, University of York

  • Dr. Flavia Zacconi, Associate Professor, Department of Organic Chemistry, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile

They shared practical strategies for integrating green chemistry into higher education. Key takeaways and actionable insights included:

  • Sign Beyond Benign’s Green Chemistry Commitment (GCC): Signing the GCC can spark department-wide change, serving as a catalyst to move green chemistry from individual efforts to institutional priorities. For the panelists, the GCC sets a clear framework for curriculum development, visibility and long-term sustainability goals.

  • Leverage Community Through the GCTLC: Joining Beyond Benign’s Green Chemistry Teaching and Learning Community (GCTLC) connects educators worldwide to a free platform for shared resources, mentorship and collective momentum-making change less isolating and more achievable.

  • Start Small, Scale Strategically: Change begins with one lecture, one lab or one policy. Small wins-like replacing a reagent or introducing green metrics-can snowball into broader departmental or institutional transformation.

  • Break Down Disciplinary Silos: The panelists shared success in integrating green chemistry across departments-from political science, engineering, environmental studies and beyond. Interdisciplinary collaboration creates new pathways for sustainability education.

  • Showcase Impact and Demonstrate Value: Quantify environmental and economic benefits-such as reduced CO2 emissions, water savings from new lab setups or decreased hazardous waste-to gain administrative buy-in and drive broader adoption.

  • Normalize Green Chemistry as a Core Learning Goal: Shift green chemistry from an optional add-on to an embedded learning objective. When it becomes part of departmental identity, it reshapes student expectations and institutional culture.

  • Commit to Continuous Improvement and Storytelling: Use the GCC’s annual reporting structure to reflect, improve and highlight success stories. The GCC program drives continuous improvement and accountability through regular reporting and engagement to encourage adoption of green chemistry in higher education.

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