Christina
Apel
a,
Akshat
Sudheshwar
b,
Klaus
Kümmerer
ac,
Bernd
Nowack
b,
Klara
Midander
d,
Emma
Strömberg
d and
Lya G.
Soeteman-Hernández
*e
aLeuphana University of Lüneburg, Institute of Sustainable Chemistry, Lüneburg, Germany
bEmpa – Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, Technology and Society Laboratory, St. Gallen 9014, Switzerland
cInternational Sustainable Chemistry Collaborative Center ISC3, Bonn, Germany
dIVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute, Stockholm, Sweden
eNational Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Center for Safety of Substances and Products, Bilthoven, The Netherlands. E-mail: lya.hernandez@rivm.nl
First published on 19th August 2024
The European Chemicals Strategy for Sustainability introduces the Safe-and-Sustainable-by-Design (SSbD) concept. It goes beyond current regulatory compliance and aims to ensure the safety and sustainability of (novel) chemicals, materials, products, and processes. It starts at early-innovation stages and follows the chemicals and materials throughout their entire lifecycle. This perspective paper presents an SSbD roadmap that explores current needs and gives recommendations for the practical operationalization of SSbD in industrial operations and processes. This roadmap was co-created including different SSbD stakeholders and encompasses three interlinked agendas on (i) research needs, (ii) skills, competencies, and education needs, and (iii) knowledge and information sharing needs. An overarching need is the development of a common understanding of SSbD with clear definitions, terminology, and criteria. In addition, SSbD operationalisation needs to be pragmatic and applied as early as possible in the innovation process. From a research needs perspective, it is essential to integrate the different fields of innovation, safety, and sustainability. From a skills, competencies and education perspective, targeted training is needed that balances the depth and breadth of SSbD required for a specific audience. These trainings should not only convey hard/technical skills, but also soft/social skills to support more sustainability-oriented decisions on all levels. From a knowledge and information sharing perspective, a strategic plan and a trusted environment are needed to support dialogue between all SSbD stakeholders while at the same time protecting intellectual property (IP). The roadmap should help to coordinate planning for the implementation of SSbD at industrial, academic, policy, and regulatory level by defining actions and raise strategic efforts.
Sustainability spotlightTo ensure planetary health and human well-being, innovations need to consider to be safe and sustainable-by-design (SSbD) from the very beginning of the development of (new) chemicals, materials, products, and processes. In this context, the presented roadmap provides recommendations on how to bring SSbD to practical applicability and thereby contributes to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). With the acceleration of the transition towards SSbD, a positive impact is expected in ‘good health and wellbeing’ (SDG3), ‘water quality’ (SDG6), ‘decent work and economic growth’ (SDG8), ‘responsible consumption and production’ (SDG12), ‘climate action’ (SDG13), ‘life below water’ (SDG14), and ‘life on land’ (SDG 15). Furthermore, through the specific agendas, our roadmap also contributes to ‘quality education’ (SDG4), ‘gender equality’ (SDG5), ‘industry, innovation and infrastructure’ (SDG9), and ‘partnership for the goals’ (SDG17). |
The SSbD framework4 and methodological guidance5 published by the European Commission is a holistic Research and Innovation (R&I) approach, but to achieve the operationalization of SSbD, further necessities, requirements and barriers need to be addressed and overcome. SSbD needs to be translated from a policy ambition to a practical, operational and implementable concept in industrial operations and processes, including training and education. The EU-funded IRISS project (the international ecosystem for accelerating the transition to Safe-and-Sustainable-by-Design materials, products and processes) has developed an SSbD roadmap in co-creation which is a collaborative process of creating new value together with external experts and stakeholders, i.e. industry representatives, participants of webinars and scientific conferences, and regulators.6 The SSbD roadmap encompasses three agendas addressing needs for (i) research, (ii) skills, competencies and education, and (iii) knowledge and information sharing that are strongly interlinked. While developing the roadmap agendas, the leading questions were: What is needed to bring SSbD to practice? How can SSbD be implemented in practice? This perspective presents the developed roadmap to support the SSbD implementation.
Research efforts should be directed towards early-stage safety and sustainability (environmental, social, economic) assessment, taking also into account political and legal aspects, and integrating them with the functionality of chemicals, materials, products, and processes, and services. Similarly, engineering tools (e.g., digital twins) that allow the implementation of SSbD at the (re)design stage while having the life cycle in mind are necessary. The different safety and sustainability approaches need to be streamlined and complementary. This is needed given that safety assessment is weight-of-evidence-based while sustainability assessment is a comparative approach.
For early-stage human and environmental safety assessments, optimization and use of predictive tools such as in silico tools (QSARs, read-across, AI/Machine learning) along with the application of New Approach Methodologies (NAMs, including 3D-models, organoids, organ-on-a-chip, and virtual human platforms) are necessary.
For early-stage sustainability assessments, in addition to conventional lifecycle assessment (LCA), the development of ex-ante/predictive environmental and social lifecycle assessment (LCA and S-LCA) approaches taking into account functionality parameters and tailored to assess the impacts even at low Technology Readiness Level (TRL) and early-innovation phases are needed. An integration of S-LCA as part of the LCA methods would be preferable. Moreover, further development of tools is required for reliability, comparability, and cross-platform compatibility and accessibility of all relevant data.
Integrative tools are required that combine lifecycle methods: LCA which assesses environmental impacts, S-LCA which assesses social impacts, lifecycle costing (LCC) which assesses economic impacts, along with safety assessment methods which assess hazard and risk impacts. In the same context, it is necessary to further refine and quantify criteria for material performance.
To account for different behaviours, sensitivities, and impacts, a diversity-data ecosystem, including gender, sex, and vulnerable groups-aggregated data should be built and used for the above-mentioned assessments. Ontologies need to be developed to optimize the use of these data throughout the innovation process. This may be achieved by applying Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR) principles10 and Transparency, Responsibility, User focus, Sustainability, and Technology (TRUST) principles11 to produce data.
SSbD will involve trade-offs between the safety, environmental, social, and economic sustainability domains. Thus, specific guidance on managing these trade-offs for SSbD innovation is necessary, also to have reliable certification and to avoid SSbD becoming a tool for green or sustainability washing.
The scientific community, industry, policy makers and regulators are needed to address current SSbD research needs. A sound Risk and Sustainability Governance system supporting SDGs, circularity, and sustainable chemistry along with chemical, material, and product management is needed. SSbD alignment to current and upcoming safety and sustainability regulations is vital to prepare industry for future compliance needs. Furthermore, it is critical to harmonize safety and sustainability policies and their compliance while considering reporting, transparency, and contribution to regulatory preparedness. This is only possible after the establishment of an infrastructure to support harmonization and standardization that relies on validated and standardized test guidelines for all safety and sustainability dimensions. Finally, the governance system needs to establish incentives for the application of SSbD, i.e., certification schemes, labels, etc. that attract consumers and aid in marketing and funding SSbD products and research, thereby valorising the SSbD approach.
Research is required on business models. Alternative business models that incorporate SSbD need to be developed and implemented that support sustainable growth, allocate resources to operationalize SSbD in practice (e.g., money, time, expertise), and consider services and non-material alternatives (i.e. thinking beyond chemicals).
It is important that trainings also encourage an attitude and qualities that support more sustainable lifestyles and business behaviours. This is particularly important not just for the general public that would buy and consume future SSbD products, but also for leadership as the new mindset also needs to be embedded in the corporate culture. Without anchoring aspects such as ethical, social, and environmental responsibility in corporate culture in alignment with the concept of extended producer responsibility,12 the mindset of the company itself and its employees will not change. These types of skills and qualities are defined in the Inner Development Goals (IDGs) framework to create a sustainable global society and includes for example critical thinking and co-creation skills.13
SSbD trainings should be easily accessible for everyone internationally and be specific mixture of several approaches and formats, for example online courses (e.g., massive open online courses (MOOCs)) and onsite trainings (e.g., summer schools or bootcamps). Accessibility is needed to support lifelong learning in alignment with the European Skills Agenda.14 Finally, all the SSbD training (including but not limited to MOOCs, Summer Schools, events, etc.) should be traceably compiled into a directory.
From a research needs perspective, it is essential to develop and promote SSbD data management following FAIR and TRUST principles, to develop a sound risk and sustainability governance system to support harmonization and standardization of safety and sustainability methods and results, and to develop business models that are supportive of SSbD (corporate & societal needs).
For the skills, competencies and education needs, harmonized training material is needed, adapted to different audiences (industry, academia, policy makers, regulators). This targeted training needs to balance the depth and breadth of SSbD required for a specific audience by not only conveying hard/technical skills, but also soft/social skills to support more sustainable decisions on all levels.
For the knowledge and information sharing needs, a coordinated and easily accessible network and platform is urgently needed to bring all the different initiatives in innovation, safety, sustainability, and circularity together for the practical application of SSbD. For this, a strategic plan and a trusted environment are needed to support dialogue and co-creation between all SSbD actors while at the same time protecting IP.
To ensure planetary health and human well-being, and avoid any additional damage, innovations need to consider SSbD at very early stages of development of new chemicals, materials, products, and processes. It is acknowledged that a learning by doing approach is needed to translate the JRC SSbD framework to business operations. Thus, this roadmap provides recommendations on how to bring SSbD to practical applicability with the synergistic efforts of industry, academia, NGOs, policy makers, regulators and all stakeholders along the life cycle.
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2024 |