Chemistry Rediscovered – just 2 weeks to go!

The EYCN has launched the second edition of its video competition Chemistry Rediscovered, this time putting the International Year of the Periodic Table at its heart. All chemists between the ages of 12 and 35 years are invited to send in videos on the theme “In Your Element”.

More information available online: https://www.euchems.eu/divisions/european-young-chemists-network/chemistry-rediscovered/

Deadline: 31 January 2019

Joint call for proposals on microplastics in the marine environment

Twelve JPI Oceans member countries together with Brazil launched a call for transnational research projects worth some €2.9 million to study the sources, distribution and impact of microplastics in the marine environment.

Deadline: 28 February 2019
Website: http://www.jpi-oceans.eu/calls/proposals/microplastics-marine-environment

Call for proposal: solar-driven chemistry 2019/2020 – deadline approaching

The EuChemS-initiated multinational call for projects on “solar-driven chemistry” was signed by 5 national funding organisations and was published on 14 December. The challenge, namely, the conversion of solar energy into chemical compounds through technical processes, and by means of artificial compounds and using available raw materials (carbon dioxide, water) remains a visionary goal. Many fundamental scientific questions will need to be answered before it can be implemented in a meaningful way on a technical scale, but the social impact of such advances is tremendous. More information on the call available online here.

Deadline: Wednesday 13 February 2019.

European Commission draft regulation ‘Reference points for action for non-allowed pharmacologically active substances’

Call for feedback on the European Commission draft regulation ‘Reference points for action for non-allowed pharmacologically active substances

Drop us a line if you would like to contribute to an EuChemS response! Deadline to send us feedback: 3 February 2019.

Multi-billion-euro investment in the port of Antwerp by British chemical company Ineos

The British chemical giant Ineos is to invest some €2.7 billion in two new petrochemical plants in the port of Antwerp. The investment will be the biggest ever made by a European chemical company in the last twenty years, and the biggest ever by Ineos itself. The construction of the two factories, which will take some four to five years is set to create some 500 new jobs. The Financial Times reports that Ineos’ plans include the building of a 1m tonne ethan cracker that will turn ethane into ethylene, a major building block for plastics. Read the full story here.

Glyphosate risk assessment report copy-pasted from industry contributions

A report presented in the European Parliament on 15 January, mandated by Members of the European Parliament, shows that some 50% of the risk assessment content used by the EU to formulate its opinion on glyphosate, copies, at times with the exact same wording, contributions from Monsanto and other companies. The new report comes ahead of an important vote on the conclusions of the European Parliament’s Pesticides Committee at the Plenary.

In May 2017, EuChemS organised a key workshop on Glyphosate in the European Parliament, chaired by MEP Pavel Poc. The workshop which aimed at presenting the opinions of scientists ultimately demonstrated a need to pursue further studies and the need to establish a standard method for reliable measurements of glyphosate in different types of samples.

Save the date! EuChemS workshop in the European Parliament: Chemical sciences for Horizon Europe, education & employability

On 7 March 2019, EuChemS will be holding a workshop in the European Parliament, focusing on Horizon Europe, education, employment, and more specifically, the existing gap between skills and jobs. The workshop will be chaired by Member of the European Parliament (MEP) Van Nistelrooij. More details on the programme and registration will soon be communicated. Watch this space!

Horizon Europe & Brexit

A number of EU Politicians have butted in on what a future relationship with the UK should look like post-Brexit. The view is that the UK and its strong research institutions should continue to fully collaborate in EU research framework programmes but that their participation should be a full one, stating that ‘they should be part of all or none’ [of Horizon Europe] reports Science Business. Both the UK and other EU Member States have stressed that continued cooperation in research and innovation is a priority once the UK leaves the EU, a position that EuChemS has also underlined in its statements on Horizon Europe.

The full extent of collaboration on Horizon Europe will not be clear until the UK’s departure and subsequent negotiations on both the final research framework programme and the new relationship between the EU and the UK.

Romanian Presidency of the Council of the EU – priorities

From January until June 2019, Romania will hold the Presidency of the Council of the EU. During this 6-month period, the presidency chairs meetings at every level in the Council, aiming to set goals, prepare a common agenda determining the major topics and issues to be addressed, as well as helping Member States come to final agreements and compromises. Romania’s presidency intersects with the finalisation of a number of important policy issues, significant political events (Brexit), as well as the upcoming European Parliament election in May. Indeed, over the next 5 months, the future multiannual financial framework (the EU’s long-term budget for 2021-2027) which includes Horizon Europe, will be a significant focus of debate. Romania has set out a number of priorities: promoting research and innovation, digitalisation, internal security, EU defence capabilities, and a push for greater common values in terms of democracy, equal opportunities, and human dignity. Romanian ministers have predicted that the finalisation of the EU budget agreement will be a difficult challenge but have also vowed to represent eastern, western, northern and southern Europe in order to achieve a final agreement before the May elections. Science Business analyses the situation.

Clean Energy Package moves forward

On 18 December 2018, negotiators from the Council, the European Parliament and the European Commission provisionally agreed on new rules for making the EU’s electricity market work better – a move which marks a significant step forwards to finalising the Clean Energy for All Europeans package and subsequently, the Energy Union. The agreement also marks a step forwards in the fight against climate change and an accelerated move to the clean energy transition.

Meanwhile, the Committee for Industry Research and Energy of the European Parliament will vote on 23 January on the agreement on the Electricity Market Design Directive and Regulation, which was reached on 19 December 2018. The agreed texts aim to increase cross-border flows of electricity from renewable sources, end state subsidies to polluting coal power plants, as well as introduce technologies to help customers better control their energy usage.

IYPT2019 and element scarcity

Celebrating the IYPT2019 also means looking at what the chemical elements mean to us today. EuChemS recently developed and unveiled a unique Periodic Table which depicts the abundance (on a logarithmic scale) of chemical elements. The table shows the abundance of elements under serious threat in the next 100 years, those under increasing threat due to their increasing use, those with limited availability, as well as those coming from conflict zones. Finally, a smartphone symbol was added to the Periodic Table to show which chemical elements are used to make our phones – many of which are come from areas of conflict or under serious threat.

On 22 January, EuChemS will present and discuss this new Periodic Table at an event in the European Parliament, titled ‘The Periodic Table and us: its history, meaning and element scarcity’, chaired by Member of the European Parliament (MEP) Catherine Stihler. The event will feature opening talks from MEP Catherine Stihler and EuChemS President Pilar Goya. David Cole-Hamilton, EuChemS Vice-President will unveil the Periodic Table and discuss element scarcity and our role in protecting endangered elements. Natalia Tarasova, IUPAC Past President will in turn discuss the IYPT2019; Brigitte Van Tiggelen, science historian and Chair of the EuChemS Working Party on the History of Chemistry, will look at the history surrounding the Periodic Table as we now know it; M. Pilar Gil, University of St Andrews, will present oldest known Periodic Table wallchart. The event will also include presentations from Peter Handley, Head of the Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials Unit in the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Growth who will discuss critical raw materials in the circular economy and strategic value chains and Horizon 2020/Europe; as well as Andreea Strachinescu, Head of Unit of the European Commission Directorate-General for Maritime Affairs, who will discuss ocean resources.  MEP Clare Moody will make the closing remarks.

More information on the event available here: https://www.euchems.eu/periodic-table-and-us/

More information on elements in danger is available here

International Year of the Periodic Table – IYPT2019

Proclaimed the International Year of the Periodic Table by the United Nations General Assembly and UNESCO, 2019 will be the 150th anniversary of Dmitri Mendeleev’s discovery of the Periodic Table (interestingly, several scientists in Europe developed Periodic Systems and systemisation attempts around the same time. You may recognise names such as Antoine Lavoisier, Alexandre-Emile Beguyer de Chancourtois, John Newlands and the familiar name of Julius Lothar Meyer).

The IYPT2019 will be launched at an Opening Ceremony in Paris on 29 January 2019. Some of the speakers include Ben Feringa, Youri Oganessian and Sir Martyn Poliakoff. Pilar Goya, EuChemS President will also take to the stage and present the EuChemS Periodic Table as well as unveil the new video game developed by EuChemS – which will be available to try out for the very first time at the event.

Not registered yet? Click here!

The IYPT2019 is an initiative set off by the Mendeleev Chemical Society, and with the support of IUPAC, UNESCO and 5 founding partners including EuChemS.

IUPAC has also created a webpage which lists events and activities worldwide linked to the IYPT2019: https://www.iypt2019.org/events

Organising an event in Europe? You can also apply for the EuChemS recognition scheme: https://www.euchems.eu/iypt2019-event-submission-form/