Special sessions address emerging topics of high societal awareness and concern, discuss environmental and sustainability topics specific to the hosting region, delve into global policy trends or foster transdisciplinary collaboration.
Special sessions are held on Wednesday, 25 September.
Michelle Bloor and the SETAC Advisory Panel on Chemicals Management (CheM)
Duration: 80 minutes (estimate)
Background
SETAC established an advisory panel on chemicals management (SETAC CheM Panel), in December 2022, to coordinate SETAC’s contributions to the policy dialogue at UNEP and the Open-Ended Working Group (OEWG) for the establishment of a science-policy panel to contribute further to the sound management of chemicals and waste and to prevent pollution (SPP CWP). The members of the SETAC CheM Panel are appointed by the SETAC World Council, guided by the SETAC principles and ensuring sectoral balance, interdisciplinarity, and focus on science-based objectivity.
In 2023 at the SETAC Europe Annual Meeting, SETAC’s CheM Panel held its first introductory Special Session on the development of the new UNEP SPP CWP that will be established by 2024-25. The Special Session was an opportunity to engage with the European SETAC community to explain the UNEP processes that are in place to establish the science-policy panel, how SETAC is contributing to the process, and how SETAC members could get involved. The Special Session included talks from a range of international speakers, a panel discussion and audience participation, live Mentimeter polls, and the CheM Affinity Group was launched.
Following on from this session, the CheM Panel has arranged special sessions at the SETAC Australasia, Latin America, Africa, and North America Annual and Biennial Meetings in 2023. In 2024, a special session was accepted for SETAC Europe and proposed for the Asia-Pacific Meeting. These special sessions are to enable the CheM Panel to undertake a global consultation with the membership to explore the Global Horizon Scanning Project previously undertaken by SETAC. This work is being undertaken in collaboration with the lead authors of the SETAC Global Horizon Scanning Project. The aim is to determine if regionally the questions identified through the original scan are still relevant, if there is a desire to add new questions based on 2023-24 knowledge, and if so, what are those questions. This exploration is of great interest to UNEP and will be shared with them, in the form of a publication, to feed into the new science-policy panel preparation process. Horizon scanning is one of the five functions of the new panel, but since the panel is several years away from its establishment, the information and evidence provided by SETAC, and other stakeholders will provide insight to help the discussions and process development.
Aim and overview
This session will explore SETAC’s Asia Pacific Horizon Scanning publication (Leung et al., 2020). The special session will mirror the format used for the CheM Panel’s Global Horizon Scanning events in other geographical units to ensure standardization.
Outline (duration is 80 minutes, but this can be longer if time permits):
Output from the session
The data collected from the live polls, presentations and the discussion captured during the special session in Asia-Pacific will be combined with data gathered from the special sessions held in Australasia, Europe, Latin America, Africa and North America meetings and will be used to prepare a journal paper publication.
Co-chairs: Zongwei Cai, Hong Kong Baptist University, Grace Thoburn, Royal Society of Chemistry and Guanqun Song, Royal Society of Chemistry.
Secretary: Molly Yu, Royal Society of Chemistry and Hongwan Liu, Royal Society of Chemistry
Planetary health is a relatively new field of research which examines the link between human well-being and the health of the Earth's natural systems. This has become increasingly important as we face environmental challenges - including climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss - brought on as the human population has grown. The field aims to ensure that human progress aligns with the long-term health and resilience of the planet, in a sustainable way.
This session is organised by the Royal Society of Chemistry's Environmental Science journals (Environmental Science: Advances, Environmental Science: Atmospheres, Environmental Science: Nano, Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts and Environmental Science: Water Research & Technology), which provide comprehensive coverage of the environmental science field to address global challenges for a sustainable future. This session will bring together experts from the Editorial Boards of these journals from across the globe, to discuss innovative solutions for a healthier planet.
Invited speakers:
Green development is not only an urgent need for environmental protection, but also a vital engine for advancing social progress and academic innovation. This forum aims to gather research elites and pioneers in the field to collaboratively explore sustainable development pathways, contributing wisdom and strength toward a green future for the earth. Meanwhile, we focus on the academic growth of researchers, promote knowledge sharing and intellectual exchange, and support researchers in achieving a dual leap in personal value and academic achievements in the green field.
This forum is the featured event of "ACS All-Star Academy", which is an online/onsite brand-series organized by ACS Publications, inviting a lineup of top editors and researchers to lecture and share on various topics of interest to the research community, and facilitate dialogue among all parties.
Invited Speakers:
Prof. Bryan W. Brooks
Editor-in-Chief of Environmental Science & Technology Letters
Baylor University
Prof. Guibin Jiang
Editor-in-Chief of Environment & Health
Associate Editor of Environmental Science & Technology
Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Prof. Xiang-Dong Li
Deputy Editor of ACS Environmental Au
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Prof. Gregory Lowry
Executive Editor of Environmental Science & Technology
Carnegie Mellon University
Prof. Susan D. Richardson
Executive Editor of Environmental Science & Technology
University of South Carolina
Prof. Shane A. Snyder
Editor-in-Chief of ACS ES&T Water
Georgia Institute of Technology