TY - JOUR
T1 - Confronting the interconnection of chemical pollution and climate change
AU - Bălan, Simona A.
AU - van Bergen, Saskia K.
AU - Blake, Ann
AU - Buck, Topher
AU - Coffin, Scott
AU - DeWitt, Jamie C.
AU - Goldenman, Gretta
AU - von Hippel, Frank A.
AU - von Hippel, Sophia
AU - Leonetti, Christopher P.
AU - Rist, David
AU - Scheringer, Martin
AU - Trier, Xenia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Climate change and chemical pollution are interdependent planetary threats, but climate change mitigation efforts typically do not consider chemicals and materials. This may exacerbate chemical pollution and associated harm to human and environmental health. Because most chemicals and materials are currently derived from petrochemicals, the extraction of fossil fuels cannot be limited without transitioning chemical manufacturing to different carbon sources. However, simply changing the carbon source is insufficient and could exacerbate the biodiversity crisis. We propose a comprehensive strategy to address the interconnections between chemical pollution, climate change, and biodiversity loss. This includes incentives for key actors to reduce the global production and consumption of chemicals and materials, to transition to chemicals and products that are safe and sustainable by design, to develop metrics and targets to assess progress, and to continuously evaluate and modify strategies based on performance metrics.
AB - Climate change and chemical pollution are interdependent planetary threats, but climate change mitigation efforts typically do not consider chemicals and materials. This may exacerbate chemical pollution and associated harm to human and environmental health. Because most chemicals and materials are currently derived from petrochemicals, the extraction of fossil fuels cannot be limited without transitioning chemical manufacturing to different carbon sources. However, simply changing the carbon source is insufficient and could exacerbate the biodiversity crisis. We propose a comprehensive strategy to address the interconnections between chemical pollution, climate change, and biodiversity loss. This includes incentives for key actors to reduce the global production and consumption of chemicals and materials, to transition to chemicals and products that are safe and sustainable by design, to develop metrics and targets to assess progress, and to continuously evaluate and modify strategies based on performance metrics.
KW - Chemical pollution
KW - Climate change
KW - Reduced consumption
KW - Safe and sustainable by design
KW - Sustainability transitions
U2 - 10.1016/j.eist.2025.100966
DO - 10.1016/j.eist.2025.100966
M3 - Comment/debate
AN - SCOPUS:85216902797
SN - 2210-4224
VL - 55
JO - Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions
JF - Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions
M1 - 100966
ER -