UNESCO/PhosAgro/IUPAC Green Chemistry for Life Program
Abstract
In Venice on 5 September 2016, the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (“UNESCO”), in partnership with PhosAgro and IUPAC, presented leading young chemists from around the world with the latest round of grants for research in the field of green chemistry. The presentation took place during the opening of the 6th International IUPAC Conference on Green Chemistry, which will be followed by a symposium dedicated entirely to a discussion of the grant programme.
The five-year, global project called Green Chemistry for Life, with USD 1.4 million in funding, was launched on 29 March 2013 at UNESCO’s Paris headquarters. The initiative is aimed at providing support for talented young scientists from around the world that are conducting research in the field of green chemistry. Its goal is to protect the environment and human health through the development of energy-efficient and environmentally friendly technologies.
This programme is unique in that, for the first time in UNESCO’s long history and in the entire UN system, this kind of initiative is being implemented with extra-budgetary funds provided by Russian business. PhosAgro, with assistance from Russia’s Foreign Ministry and the Russian National Commission for UNESCO, offered to provide financial support for scientific research for young scientists from all around the world. The programme has proven to be a useful and effective way to support and promote promising projects developed by young scientists, as well as to attract attention of the public to the key role that chemistry plays in solving issues facing global civilisation.
In 2016, the international scientific jury selected the six best projects from among submissions from around the world for the PhosAgro/UNESCO/IUPAC grant. The winners included young scientists from Egypt, Ahmed Shebl Elsayed Sayed; Pakistan, Muhammad Ismail; Italy, Enrico Ravera; Russia, Alsu Akhmetshina; Kenya, Wycliffe Chisutia Wanyonyi; and Uruguay, Ignacio Carrera. The winners may use their prize money for research on topics that include ways to minimise the impact of pesticides on plants, fruits, and vegetables, and to ensure the safety of farmers and workers; to patent new wastewater treatment technologies; to discover technologies for greener drug synthesis; or for the introduction of more environmentally friendly means of synthesising nano-fertilisers. A very interesting idea was proposed by the above-mentioned scientist from Kenya, Wycliffe Chisutia Wanyonyi, which is to use chicken feathers for the production of cosmetics, such as hair-care products, and even the production of fertilisers.

Awardees present at the ICGC in Venice: Ignacio Carrera (Uruguay), Alsu Akhmetshina (Russia), Wycliffe Chisutia Wanyonyi (Kenya), and Ahmed Shebl Elsayed Sayed (Egypt)
In her address to conference participants, IUPAC President Natalia Tarasova said, “Science today plays a leading role in addressing the challenges facing humanity, which is why it is especially important to support talented young people. We also believe in scientific diplomacy, in the notion that science knows no boundaries, since scientists from all around the world speak the same language. That is why it is important to develop support for young scientists at the international level.”
Russian National Commission for UNESCO Member and PhosAgro CEO Andrey Guryev said, “The further progress of humankind while minimising our impact on the environment at the global level is possible only through the joint efforts of science, international organisations, and business. I hope that, in the future, this project will serve as an example of successful cooperation between science and industry in the formation of a new ethics of progress that envisages a great degree of responsibility for the prosperity of future generations on our planet.”
Professor John Corish of the Trinity College Dublin School of Chemistry noted that, “There were no weak projects this year, and submissions were received from all around the world: from Asia, the Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean, Western and Eastern Europe, North America, Africa and the Arab world. Making a selection from among the projects was very difficult, but I can say that all of this year’s winners are very good. I have no doubt that some of these technologies will eventually be used everywhere and will change our world for the better.”
Grant recipient Ignacio Carrera from Uruguay said, “Green Chemistry for Life is an excellent programme. It is very important, especially for young scientists, to receive funding and support for their research.”
Grant recipient Alsu Akhmetshina, from the R. E. Alekseev Nizhgorod State Technical University in Russia, observed that, “The Green Chemistry for Life project represents a big step towards waste-free production, towards responsible and sustainable industry and agriculture.”
Call for Applications Open
The call for the 4th round of grant applications is now open until 28 February 2017.
See more details at www.unesco.org/new/en/natural-sciences/science-technology/basic-sciences/chemistry/green-chemistry-for-life/how-to-apply/
or
iupac.org/green-chemistry-life-grants-awarded-leading-young-scientists/
©2016 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead - Full issue pdf
- Contents
- Vice-President’s Column
- IUPAC— Holding the International Chemistry Family Together
- Stamps International
- Reaching Out for the Sun
- Features
- IChO-48—An Extraordinary Olympiad of Chemistry
- SAICM Science Sector and IUPAC Activities
- The Solar Army
- IUPAC Wire
- Chemistry International Goes Seasonal
- Future of the Chemical Sciences
- IUPAC 2017 Distinguished Women in Chemistry or Chemical Engineering—Call for Nominations
- 2017 IUPAC-Solvay International Award For Young Chemists
- IUPAC100 Logo Competition
- UNESCO/PhosAgro/IUPAC Green Chemistry for Life Program
- Hanwha Total IUPAC Young Scientist Award 2016
- DSM Materials Sciences Award 2016 Goes to Professor Steven P. Armes
- WANTED: A Home for an Orphaned Chemical Database
- Project Place
- Identifying International Chemical Identifier (InChI) Enhancements—QR Codes and Industry Applications
- Categorizing Chalcogen, Pnictogen, and Tetrel Bonds, and Other Interactions Involving Groups 14-16 Elements
- Standardization of Electrical Energy Per Order (EEO) Reporting for UV/H2O2 Reactors
- Isotopes Matter
- Materials on the Nanoscale—Uniform Description System Version 2.0
- Making an imPACt
- How to Name New Chemical Elements (IUPAC Recommendations 2016)
- Vocabulary of Concepts and Terms in Chemometrics (IUPAC Recommendations 2016)
- Glossary of Terms Used in Extraction (IUPAC Recommendations 2016)
- Extraction for Analytical Scale Sample Preparation (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Review of Footnotes and Annotations to the 1949–2013 Tables of Standard Atomic Weights and Tables of Isotopic Compositions of the Elements (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Guidelines for Measurement of Luminescence Spectra and Quantum Yields of Inorganic and Organometallic Compounds in Solution and Solid State (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Bookworm
- Storing Energy, with Special Reference to Renewable Energy Sources
- Chemistry Beyond Chlorine
- POLYCHAR 23—World Forum on Advanced Materials
- Macromolecular Complexes Part I and II
- Polymer-Solvent Complexes and Intercalates POLYSOLVAT-10
- A Draft Framework for Understanding SDG Interactions
- Up for Discussion
- Is it possible to extend the Cahn-Ingold-Prelog priority rules to supramolecular structures and coordination compounds using lone pairs?
- Preliminary Property Design for Ionic Solids and Liquids
- Conference Call
- New Chemistries for Phytomedicines and Crop Protection Chemicals
- Science: How Close to Open?
- Chemical Safety and Security in a Rapidly Changing World
- POLYCHAR 24 World Forum Advanced Materials
- Polymers and Organic Chemistry (POC-16)
- Phosphorus Chemistry
- Where 2B & Y
- Solutions for Drug-Resistant Infections
- Macro- and Supramolecular Architectures and Materials
- Colloquium Spectroscopicum Internationale
- Introduction to the World of Chemical Data—an OnLine College Course (OLCC) on Cheminformatics
- Chemical Identifier
- Digital Cultural Heritage
- 16th International Meeting on Boron Chemistry (IMEBORON16)
- Mark Your Calendar
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