Researchers, Entrepreneurs, Industry Leaders and Investors
The 2013 Sustainable Chemistry Summit, presented by GreenCentre Canada, will map the journey of green chemistry technologies from lab to market.
Following the path of innovation, the Summit will start with sessions on the genesis of discoveries, unfold along each step of the journey toward commercialization, and culminate with a look at real-life examples of technologies that have made it.
Networking opportunities include an opening reception, a gala dinner, and a combined academic-industry poster session and reception.
The Sustainable Chemistry Summit will connect you, educate you and inspire you– leaving you with the tools you need to chart your own course from lab to market.
Sessions include:
Research Discovery: Trends and eureka’s in green chemistry
Identifying Discoveries: How do researchers find out how a discovery can be applied?
Making a connection: Academia and Industry working together
Measuring sustainability: How green is your innovation?
Avoiding Green Washing: Best practices in marketing sustainability
Speakers include:
Paul Anastas, Director, Yale University for Green Chemistry and Green Engineering
John Warner, President & CTO, Warner Babcock Institute
Philip Jessop, Canada Research Chair of Green Chemistry at Queen’s University
Rui Resendes, Executive Director, GreenCentre Canada
Information
Lisa Doulas, Conference Planner
Summit2013@ldcomm.ca
613-539-2482
http://www.greencentrecanada.com/summit/index.html

Paul Anastas

©2013 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Masthead
- Masthead
- Graphical abstracts
- In this issue
- Editorial
- “Bio” is coming – as technology for a new area of chemistry
- Review
- Flow chemistry approaches directed at improving chemical synthesis
- Original articles
- Intensification of slow reversible chemical transformation: carboxylation of resorcinol as a case study
- Transposition of a triphosgene-based process for pharmaceutical development: from mg·h-1 to kg·h-1 of an unsymmetrical urea
- Rapid synthesis of novel isoindolo[1,2-a]quinazoline on ionic liquid support under microwave irradiation
- Development of green technology for extraction of nickel from spent catalyst and its optimization using response surface methodology
- Company profiles
- Green Biologics Ltd.: Commercialising bio-n-butanol
- Conference announcements
- 2013 Sustainable Chemistry Summit: Mapping the Journey from Lab to Market (Montreal, QC, Canada, June 5-7, 2013)
- 11th International Conference on Materials Chemistry (MC11; University of Warwick, UK, July 8–11, 2013)
- Zing Microwave and Flow Chemistry Conference (Napa Valley, USA, July 20–23, 2013)
- Catalysis for Renewable Sources: Fuel, Energy, Chemicals (Lund, Sweden, July 22–28, 2013)
- Meet Micro and Nano Experts from Industry and Science @ Ede (Ede, The Netherlands, December 11–12, 2013)
- Conferences 2013–2015
- Book review
- Chemical energy storage
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Masthead
- Masthead
- Graphical abstracts
- In this issue
- Editorial
- “Bio” is coming – as technology for a new area of chemistry
- Review
- Flow chemistry approaches directed at improving chemical synthesis
- Original articles
- Intensification of slow reversible chemical transformation: carboxylation of resorcinol as a case study
- Transposition of a triphosgene-based process for pharmaceutical development: from mg·h-1 to kg·h-1 of an unsymmetrical urea
- Rapid synthesis of novel isoindolo[1,2-a]quinazoline on ionic liquid support under microwave irradiation
- Development of green technology for extraction of nickel from spent catalyst and its optimization using response surface methodology
- Company profiles
- Green Biologics Ltd.: Commercialising bio-n-butanol
- Conference announcements
- 2013 Sustainable Chemistry Summit: Mapping the Journey from Lab to Market (Montreal, QC, Canada, June 5-7, 2013)
- 11th International Conference on Materials Chemistry (MC11; University of Warwick, UK, July 8–11, 2013)
- Zing Microwave and Flow Chemistry Conference (Napa Valley, USA, July 20–23, 2013)
- Catalysis for Renewable Sources: Fuel, Energy, Chemicals (Lund, Sweden, July 22–28, 2013)
- Meet Micro and Nano Experts from Industry and Science @ Ede (Ede, The Netherlands, December 11–12, 2013)
- Conferences 2013–2015
- Book review
- Chemical energy storage