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A Horizon Scan to Support Chemical Pollution–Related Policymaking for Sustainable and Climate-Resilient Economies

Authors :
Green, Christopher
Bilyanska, Antoaneta
Bradley, Mags
Dinsdale, Jason
Hutt, Lorraine
Backhaus, Thomas
Boons, Frank
Bott, David
Collins, Chris
Cornell, Sarah E.
Craig, Mark
Depledge, Michael
Diderich, Bob
Fuller, Richard
Galloway, Tamara S.
Hutchison, Gary R.
Ingrey, Nicola
Johnson, Andrew C.
Kupka, Rachael
Matthiessen, Peter
Oliver, Robin
Owen, Stewart
Owens, Susan
Pickett, John
Robinson, Sam
Sims, Kerry
Smith, Pete
Sumpter, John P.
Tretsiakova-McNally, Svetlana
Wang, Mengjiao
Welton, Tom
Willis, Katherine J.
Lynch, Iseult
Green, Christopher
Bilyanska, Antoaneta
Bradley, Mags
Dinsdale, Jason
Hutt, Lorraine
Backhaus, Thomas
Boons, Frank
Bott, David
Collins, Chris
Cornell, Sarah E.
Craig, Mark
Depledge, Michael
Diderich, Bob
Fuller, Richard
Galloway, Tamara S.
Hutchison, Gary R.
Ingrey, Nicola
Johnson, Andrew C.
Kupka, Rachael
Matthiessen, Peter
Oliver, Robin
Owen, Stewart
Owens, Susan
Pickett, John
Robinson, Sam
Sims, Kerry
Smith, Pete
Sumpter, John P.
Tretsiakova-McNally, Svetlana
Wang, Mengjiao
Welton, Tom
Willis, Katherine J.
Lynch, Iseult
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

While chemicals are vital to modern society through materials, agriculture, textiles, new technology, medicines, and consumer goods, their use is not without risks. Unfortunately, our resources seem inadequate to address the breadth of chemical challenges to the environment and human health. Therefore, it is important we use our intelligence and knowledge wisely to prepare for what lies ahead. The present study used a Delphi-style approach to horizon-scan future chemical threats that need to be considered in the setting of chemicals and environmental policy, which involved a multidisciplinary, multisectoral, and multinational panel of 25 scientists and practitioners (mainly from the United Kingdom, Europe, and other industrialized nations) in a three-stage process. Fifteen issues were shortlisted (from a nominated list of 48), considered by the panel to hold global relevance. The issues span from the need for new chemical manufacturing (including transitioning to non-fossil-fuel feedstocks); challenges from novel materials, food imports, landfills, and tire wear; and opportunities from artificial intelligence, greater data transparency, and the weight-of-evidence approach. The 15 issues can be divided into three classes: new perspectives on historic but insufficiently appreciated chemicals/issues, new or relatively new products and their associated industries, and thinking through approaches we can use to meet these challenges. Chemicals are one threat among many that influence the environment and human health, and interlinkages with wider issues such as climate change and how we mitigate these were clear in this exercise. The horizon scan highlights the value of thinking broadly and consulting widely, considering systems approaches to ensure that interventions appreciate synergies and avoid harmful trade-offs in other areas. We recommend further collaboration between researchers, industry, regulators, and policymakers to perform horizon scanning to inform policymak

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1400005473
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002.etc.5620