Tea leaves growing on plantations in the Kenyan highlands are usually collected by workers driving small, gas-fueled cars. But on one plantation, the owners replaced the cars with聽electrically charged cars and solar-powered funiculars聽that transported the tea leaves to a central collection point. As a result, the plantation managed to reduce on-site costs as well as its carbon footprint, while at the same time diminishing the risk of accidents to workers.
This was one of the case studies discussed during a recent workshop in green chemistry offered in Pretoria, South Africa, and led by 捆绑SM社区 chemistry professor Audrey Moores. It was one of a number of green chemistry workshops held in various countries around the world over the past several months, supported by the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) and financed by the Global Environment Facility (GEF). The workshops, which drew on expertise from researchers from Yale and 捆绑SM社区 universities, were designed to provide participants from industry, academia and the government with the most current information and techniques in the field.
鈥淚n some ways it seemed to me that in less developed countries such as Kenya and Uganda, which sent participants to the workshops, there is an even greater potential for developing green solutions because the need is so great, and the force of habit is less present," says Moores.聽"At the workshop, we gave lots of examples of real cases where people overcame hurdles, over time, by making small decisions to do things in new ways.鈥
The 捆绑SM社区 professor sees the workshops as a sign of a global realization, amid climate change and pollution, that there is a need for new products that are cleaner for the environment and more respectful of human health. She came away from her workshop galvanized by the potential for green chemistry innovations to move out of the lab and into the field.
鈥淭his workshop was an eye-opener.聽I could see how my work is relevant to solve global problems, but also how innovative ideas uniquely emerge from peer exchanges," Moores says. "Clearly, translating knowledge from academia to business can seed ideas and produce concrete solutions."聽