The Lost Women of Science podcast tells the remarkable stories of groundbreaking women who never got the full recognition they deserved – until now. The website also includes resources they use to tell each woman’s story.
Day: March 1, 2024
The greenwashing trap: how green hydrogen can keep its promises
Read the full story at Power Technology.
The promise of green hydrogen has been met with scepticism. Can hydrogen producers really deliver the green fuel they claim? How can they avoid the greenwashing trap? Kit Million Ross looks beyond the hydrogen fanfare.
Global standard-setter proposes ethics guidelines to curb greenwashing risks
Read the full story at ESG Dive.
The International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants proposed compliance standards for sustainability reporting Monday to help companies and asset managers mitigate greenwashing and for evaluating outside sustainability experts’ credentials.
The standards, which are both profession and framework agnostic, include five “fundamental principles” all sustainability assurance practitioners should abide by: Integrity, objectivity, professional competence and due care, confidentiality and professional behavior.
IESBA said it developed the ethics standards due to the rise in importance of sustainability information to capital markets, consumers, companies and the broader society. “It is of public interest that sustainability assurance practitioners act ethically in order to maintain public trust and confidence in sustainability information,” the ethics proposal stated.
Why the slowest EV chargers may be the fastest way to get people into EVs
Read the full story at Grist.
Apartments need EV charging. Supporters of trickle-slow “Level 1” chargers argue that access is more important than speed.
Compost integral in urban park construction
Read the full story in Biocycle.
The Downtown Cary Park in Cary, North Carolina, constructed with climate resiliency as a core goal, amended clay soils and engineered others with compost to manage storm water and aid in tree establishment and preservation.
The chemistry of cold-water washing
Read the full story in Chemical & Engineering News.
Companies up and down the cleaning supply chain are pushing for cold-water washing because it is by far the biggest lever for reducing household laundry’s greenhouse gas footprint. Consumer product giants such as P&G and Unilever are aiming for net-zero emissions over the full life cycle of their products by 2040, some of the most aggressive targets for greenhouse gas reduction among the chemical industry’s customer segments. Detergent makers can’t meet those goals without changing consumer behavior, and consumers won’t switch if their clothes aren’t getting clean. Better chemistry is central to making it all work.
A taste of expanding the worth of the Great Lakes fishery
Read the full story from the Chicago Sun-Times.
Great Lakes St. Lawrence Governors & Premiers, is building toward 100 percent use of fish caught in the Great Lakes, highlighted Monday by a “head to tail” Great Lakes Fish challenge at Kendall College in Chicago.
Exploring the impact of grid-connected hydrogen production on carbon emissions
Read the full story at TechXplore.
Researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) examined how different interpretations of contracted variable renewable energy (VRE) sources (i.e., sources of energy that rely on changing weather conditions, such as solar and wind energy) and energy system policies can affect the costs and emissions of electrolytic hydrogen production.
Their paper, published in Nature Energy, shows that different assumptions about the VRE used to power grid-connected electrolyzers can significantly influence estimations of resulting carbon emissions.
Arsenic in landfills is still leaching into groundwater − 20 years after colleagues and I learned how the ‘king of poisons’ could escape trash dumps

by Gumersindo Feijoo Costa, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
Arsenic has long been considered “the king of poisons.” Films such as “Arsenic and Old Lace” by Frank Capra and “The Name of the Rose” by Jean-Jacques Annaud illustrate the deadly effect that a high dose has on people.
But when someone experiences arsenic poisoning, it’s usually not the direct result of a diabolical plot – in fact, it usually isn’t. So how do you figure out how the arsenic got into someone’s bloodstream?
That’s the question a team of fellow chemical engineers and I tackled more than 20 years ago after an abrupt jump in the number of U.S. cases of arsenic poisoning. We later published a peer-reviewed study documenting the investigation.
Finding the source of arsenic poisonings is not always easy, but it’s extremely important for public health. Scientists often need to combine science and detective work, which led us to conclude that landfills could be a significant source of contamination.
Yet nearly 20 years later, landfills in the U.S., Europe and around the world remain important sources of arsenic poisoning.
Exploring a mystery
Arsenic is a chemical element that occurs naturally in the environment. In its organic form, with a carbon molecule attached, it is harmless. But it is highly toxic in its inorganic form, without carbon. Inorganic arsenic is present in high levels in groundwater in 70 countries, including Chile, China, India, Mexico and the United States.
Prolonged exposure to inorganic arsenic, mainly through drinking water and food, can lead to chronic poisoning, the most characteristic effects of which are skin lesions and skin cancer.
In 2002, I was a visiting scholar at the University of Arizona studying anaerobic processes in nature – or those that occur without oxygen. My colleagues and I were focused on how anaerobic bacteria can change the number of electrons in arsenic, affecting its solubility. This is important because when arsenic is soluble, meaning it can dissolve in water or other liquids, it can become mobile.
We came across a report by the American Association of Poison Control Centers that found the number of arsenic poisonings in the U.S. jumped to 1,680 in 2001 from about 1,000 or fewer in previous years.
Based on that data, we set ourselves the goal of finding out where the arsenic may have come from and exploring what possible human-related activities were involved. To do so, we used the scientific method, which can be summarized in three stages: observation of a phenomenon, establishment of an explanatory hypothesis and validation with experimental results.
After observing the rise in arsenic cases in the data and considering a few possibilities, we hypothesized that arsenic might be escaping from city landfills and entering the American food supply via groundwater.
Arsenic is found in many household and industrial products, from pesticides and food additives to semiconductor chips and pharmaceuticals. And when disposed of, the arsenic in the products can leach from the landfill into the soil.
Investigating a hypothesis
To validate our hypothesis, we designed an experiment that used three biological reactors to simulate the chemical process of how an improperly maintained landfill could leach arsenic into the groundwater. Two of the reactors contained various mixtures of insoluble arsenic and organic and inorganic material, as well as anaerobic bacteria, while the third was used as a control without the bacteria.
About 250 days after our experiment began, we found that anaerobic bacteria and organic matter had transformed the insoluble arsenic, which wasn’t able to travel through water, into its soluble form, which could travel through water. This allowed it to move through the ground as contaminated water, or leachate, and eventually end up in groundwater. From there, the arsenic can find its way to humans via drinking water or the food chain, such as in rice crops or chicken eggs.

To determine what else might be going on here, we teamed up with the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology at the University of Arizona. With their help, we detected the presence of cacodylic acid in the leachate. This compound exponentially multiplies the toxic effects of the leachate stream, such as by promoting tumors.
Consequently, poor sealing of landfills or operating them in a way that mixes inorganic and organic waste matter significantly increases the probability of a gradual release of heavy metals like arsenic in leachates, which can lead to both environmental and human harm.
The European Commission seems to be trying to take more aggressive action against illegal landfills, which are less likely to use appropriate safeguards, and recently announced it was referring Spain to the Court of Justice of the European Union for failing to ensure that its landfills – namely, 195 illegal ones – don’t endanger human health or harm the environment.
As our research suggests, the only ways to solve the problem of arsenic leaching into the food supply is by proper landfill design and management, which necessarily involves monitoring and treatment of the leachates they generate.
Moreover, I believe the implementation of a circular economy strategy – in which reuse and recycling are maximized – in the management of cities and in the individual behaviors of citizens would lead to a minimization of waste and also greatly reduce the potential release of toxic heavy metals such as arsenic from landfills.
Gumersindo Feijoo Costa, Catedrático de Ingeniería Química, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
A boutique hotel helps explain the benefits of businesses and government teaming up to conserve energy
Read the full story at Inside Climate News.
What once was an abandoned department store in downtown Racine, Wisconsin, is now a boutique hotel that is unusually good at conserving energy.
The most efficient elements of Hotel Verdant are not visible to the general public, things like a geothermal heating system underground and thick insulation beneath the roof.
But energy conservation is a crucial part of how this project came together with aid from a state-backed loan program that encourages developers to embrace energy efficiency.
Optimizing EPR Through Comprehensive Needs Assessments: A Focus on Compostable Packaging and Composter Engagement
The growth of compostable packaging presents important considerations for Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) policy. As more states undertake needs assessments, including emerging materials, like compostable packaging, can ensure sound financial and environmental outcomes.
This policy brief explains the importance of conducting needs assessments for EPR that account for composting infrastructure and compostable packaging.
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