. . . Is about environmental impact
What happens to the chemicals in an industrial
cleaner after you pour it into the sink? What
about shampoo and conditioner once you rinse it
out of your hair? When you see black smoke pouring
out of the chimney at an industrial complex, what
impact is it having on the atmosphere? These are
the types of questions studied routinely by environmental
chemists.
The fate and effects of chemicals on the environment
are matters of increasing concern to those specializing
in the management of our environment. Fate involves
studying where chemicals show up in streams, rivers,
and air. The environmental pollution contain certain
molecules that have not been removed in water
treatment plants, caught by the filters in industrial
smoke stacks, disposed of properly, or have leaked
out of their containers. Whatever the cause, environmental
chemists study how the chemicals travel into the
environment and their effects.
. . . Is reducing contamination and managing
our environment
Those studying the contamination of our environment
in the 1970s focused exclusively on the fate and
effects of chemicals because the technology to
measure the damage had not yet been developed.
Jack Sheehan, director of regulatory and operating
services at Rhone-Poulenc, noted that as the technology
for measuring leakage from landfills, for example,
was developed, industry realized the potential
for chemicals to negatively impact the environment.
As a result of this new data, chemists were able
to help design pollution abatement systems that
reduce the amount of unwanted elements escaping
into the environment, and they applied their knowledge
of how chemicals work in the environment to the
development of remediation systems to clean up
contaminated areas.
Sheehan, who has worked in the field more than
almost 20 years, says chemistry's role in environmental
management will continue to increase in the future.
"Industry is moving into a more proactive
mode. We are working to ensure that chemicals
are handled more responsibly from the time of
manufacture."
For many chemical companies, this may involve
redeveloping a chemical product to come up with
functional groups or compounds that are less noxious
in the environment. For example, explains Leo
Manzer, director of the corporate catalysis center
at DuPont, his company used catalysts to develop
a new production process for methylisocyanate,
a highly flammable and hazardous material that
is dangerous to transport. The new production
process allows the chemical to be manufactured
on the site where it is used, thus avoiding shipping
and storing.
. . . Is a broad-based discipline
Because our environment is so complex, environmental
chemists always underscore the interdisciplinary
nature of their field. Environmental chemists
must be able to understand and use the terminology
of a range of other disciplines including biology,
geology, ecology, sedimentology, mineralogy, genetics,
and soil and water chemistry. Gary Klecka, a research
associate at Dow Chemical, says, "If I am
a groundwater chemist, I need to be able to communicate
with a hydrogeologist and understand him or her
without needing to be an expert."
Environmental chemists may be involved in analytical
testing, new product development in the lab, field
work with users of chemicals, and as safety and
regulatory issue advisors. Many opportunities
exist for movement into different areas of expertise,
often outside the lab. Many chemists return to
school to study public policy, law, or business
using their interest in or aptitude for chemistry,
but applying it in new ways. For example, knowledge
of chemical processes is often vital for the individual
working in the regulatory affairs department of
a company who must ensure that the company complies
with government regulations.
Environmental management is becoming a popular
career track. Also, students who hold degrees
in environmental sciences are beginning to compete
for jobs traditionally held by geologists, biologists,
and chemists.
Chemistry students interested in applying their
training to an environmentally-oriented job are
encouraged to take courses in environmental studies.
Potential employers look favorably on this as
a good indication of your interest and your ability
to think in an interdisciplinary manner.
Most environmental chemists emphasize that a solid
foundation in chemistry is important to their
work and advise dedicated students to continue
in chemistry. Dan Lusardi, manager of research
and field support at Betz Laboratories Inc., says
that in this field, it is important to get the
basics and then branch out.
Copyright 1994, 1997 American Chemical Society
Leo Manzer, Catalysis
"I did not know environmental issues would
be in the forefront of catalysis when I got into
it," says Leo Manzer, director of the corporate
catalysis center at DuPont. But, in fact, catalytic
chemistry is used in many different ways to minimize
the impact of industry on the environment. Manzer
is an organic chemist by training, but he has
spent the last 10 years of his career working
strictly on catalysis and considers himself a
de facto environmental chemist.
Designed to initiate reactions with other chemicals
in order to achieve a desired outcome, catalysts
are often used to treat hazardous materials. When
passed over a catalyst, organic or toxic elements
are filtered out. Catalysts are also built into
a manufacturing process to improve the overall
yield. "This is important when it comes to
the environment," says Manzer. "Say
your annual production of a chemical is one billion
pounds. If you have a process that gives you a
99% yield, that may seem like a good number. But
over the year it means you are making approximately
ten million pounds of waste. Adding a catalyst
can give you 100% yield, no waste, and no environmental
problems in the process."
Catalysts are also being used in entirely new
production processes. When developing replacements
for chlorofluorocarbons, for example, DuPont brought
Manzer in to assist with the organic chemistry
in developing a catalyst to synthesize tetrafluoroethane-a
material chosen from 800 potential candidates
to replace CFCs.
Jack Sheehan, Resource Management "In
the future, environmental management will see an
increasing emphasis on chemistry," says Jack
Sheehan, director of regulatory and operating services
at Rhone-Poulenc. Sheehan is a chemist who began
to focus on the environment early in his career.
In the 1970s, he worked for Stauffer Chemical (now
part of Rhone-Poulenc) to gather data on environmental
pollutants. "The severe problem we faced at
that time was mercury," he says. "It was
collecting in the vicinity of chlorine and caustic
plants and was beginning to show up in fish."
His data were used by the company's engineering
department to design first-generation, pollution-abatement
systems.
Having been involved in the environmental area
for more than two decades, Sheehan says he sees
real changes ahead. "In the beginning, our
work was focused on helping people to design and
install equipment. There was a big role for chemical
engineers to play. In the future, there will be
increasing emphasis on the chemists as the industry
works to modify its production processes to reduce
pollutants."
Michael Rothgeb, Consumer
Products in the Environment
Finding out the impact of consumer products
on the environment is the job of Michael Rothgeb,
a section manager in the corporate environmental
sciences department at Procter & Gamble. "Using
lab tests, field tests, and our experimental stream,
we try to determine what happens to a consumer
product ingredient when it goes through a wastewater
treatment facility. What happens when it is discharged?
Does it affect fish? Does it affect the Daphnia
that fish feed on or the algae that Daphnia feed
on?"
Rothgeb started with Procter & Gamble 13 years
ago as an analytical chemist. His job not only
involves gathering data but also helping to guide
technologists to new materials that will be better
for the environment. "There is a common misperception
that consumer products place a great burden on
the environment," he says. "In general,
things like driving a car or heating water actually
burden the environment more than our use of consumer
products. Some materials have not been good. So,
our work as environmental scientists will help
us avoid problems in the future."
Mike Bobek, Regulatory Affairs and Emergency
Response
Mike Bobek, manager of the environmental controls
group at Betz Labs, does not work in a lab. But
he applies his training in analytical chemistry
daily to a wide variety of regulatory issues.
"When analyzing data, you need to be familiar
with test methodologies and sampling techniques.
Relating numbers with test methods continues to
involve the application of my chemistry knowledge,"
he says.
Bobek's job has a variety of functions, one of
which is to ensure that Betz's domestic production
plants maintain environmental compliance. This
means knowing how the plants operate and understanding
the huge volume of environmental regulations that
pertain to it.
Another aspect of his work is providing information
and guidance in cases of emergency. "If a
spill occurs at one of our plants or at a customer's
plant, we need to give them advice on how to handle
the situation and, later, how to clean it up."
When an emergency call comes in, Bobek finds out
what chemical or chemicals are involved. He checks
if there are any special handling precautions
that should be taken. He advises as to whether
the chemical should be mixed with an organic material
to absorb or collect it, or if this will only
aggravate the situation. He supplies other information
such as the necessity for protective clothing
or breathing precautions. Finally, he determines
the potential impact of that chemical on waterways
and decides if it is necessary to notify a government
agency.
Garv Klecka, Product Support
As one of the largest chemical companies in the
United States, Dow makes chemicals that are used
in everything from plastic to paint and glue,
to shampoo. Gary Klecka, one of the senior scientists
in its environmental research lab, is responsible
for supporting these products from an environmental
perspective. His job is to understand how chemicals
need to be handled when they are being transported,
how to store them safely, and how to clean them
up should they enter the environment.
"As a lab, we work on the issues the company
is facing at the time. In the mid-1980s, we were
very concerned with groundwater issues and developing
remediation processes for groundwater." Recently,
he says, the lab has been focusing on the fate
of chlorinated solvents in groundwater, studying
how microorganisms degrade chemical contaminants.
"Fifteen years ago, we believed these chemicals
were persistent in the environment. But now, we
believe they are not-that they do degrade through
various mechanisms. We use these conclusions to
support a wide range of chlorinated solvent products
used in metal finishing, paint removal, and dry
cleaning solutions, and to help us develop entirely
new strategies for their remediation."
Laura McConnel, Agriculture Chemical Fate
Laura McConnel says her work at the U.S. Department
of Agriculture (USDA) is similar to the kinds
of research she did as a Ph.D. candidate in analytical
chemistry. "I first came across environmental
chemistry in a seminar in which students' Ph.D.
research was being discussed," she says.
At the USDA, she is in charge of research on the
Chesapeake Bay area. "We are looking at what
happens to pesticides in the environment, and
we are trying to decrease the surface runoff from
agriculture fields that gets into rivers and then
runs into the Chesapeake Bay." Part of this
research involves investigating the importance
of the atmosphere as a carrier of pollutants.
"We are trying to figure out what the air-water
interface for the area is. Do these pollutants
come out in the rain or in gas form?" Similar
studies have been done in the Great Lakes area
where they believe as much as 80% of PCB contamination
travels through the air, she says. "The USDA
is interested in applying this research to finding
ways to use pesticides so that they are not lost
to the atmosphere so quickly."
Dan Lusardi, Industrial Products in the Environment
Certain industries use large amounts of water.
Power plants, oil refineries, steel and paper
manufacturers all send millions of gallons of
water through their equipment every day. Because
water can often corrode or scale machinery, it
is treated with chemicals to reduce or eliminate
these effects. But what happens to those chemicals
when they are discharged?
"My job is to provide analytical support
to our environmental laboratories that look at
the impact of these chemicals on aquatic life,"
says Dan Lusardi, manager of research and field
support at Betz Laboratories Inc., one of the
leading makers of water treatment chemicals for
industrial processes.
Lusardi's work includes providing analytical support
for testing, developing testing methodologies,
and compiling data on all Betz products to determine
their fate in the environment. This information
is then made available to Betz's customers who
use it when they are applying to a government
or regulatory agency for permits to discharge
process water after it has been used.
WORK DESCRIPTION
Environmental chemist is a general term. In fact,
most chemists in the field would probably describe
themselves more specifically by the work they
do. This may be collecting and analyzing samples,
developing remediation programs, changing production
processes to ones that yield a more environmentally
friendly product, advising on safety and emergency
response, or dealing with government regulations
and compliance issues.
WORKING CONDITIONS
Workplaces for environmental chemists are as varied
as their job descriptions. Often their work is
done in an indoor lab environment. However, when
studying the fate and effects of chemicals in
the environment, a river bed or stream may become
their lab. Some companies have sophisticated indoor
ecosystems in which they test their products.
Others collect data outside and miles away from
their own production sites.
PLACES OF EMPLOYMENT
The chemical industry employs a huge number of
chemists to ensure that a company is in compliance
with government regulations. Government agencies
such as the Department of Agriculture, Department
of Defense, and the Environmental Protection Agency
also hire chemists for environmental work. In
addition, waste management companies employ chemists
to do consulting or remediation.
PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS
Because environmental chemistry is so interdisciplinary,
excellent communication skills, teamwork, the
ability to associate with people and express ideas
efficiently to a nonscientific audience are all
important. This last challenge will become appartent
when dealing with regulations or with sales and
marketing individuals in your own company. As
environmental management expands globally, chemists
with the added knowledge of other languages may
be even more successful.
EDUCATION AND TRAINING
Environmental chemists come from a variety of
backgrounds, and there is no one path into the
field. Candidates with a Ph.D. degree will find
more interesting work more quickly than those
with a master's or bachelor's degree. However,
because the field is growing so rapidly, opportunities
do exist for individuals with an associate's degree.
Companies often hire graduates from schools with
well-established programs. Employers also look
for candidates who demostrate the ability to broaden
their skills and think in an interdisciplinary
manner. Course work in subjects related to the
environment is one indication of this.
JOB OUTLOOK
Due to increased government regulations, job opportunities
for environmental chemists continue to grow. Despite
downsizing, companies are placing greater emphasis
on compliance and environmental processes. Opportunities
exist to for chemists to move into different areas
of expertise outside a traditional job in the
lab. By studying law, business, or public policy,
opportunities can be found in the regulatory area
as well as in health and safety functions.
SALARY RANGE
The starting salary for a Ph.D. chemist is in
the low $50,000-per-year range. For master's candidates,
$40,000 is an average starting salary. Bachelor's
candidates can earn anywhere from the mid-$20,000s
per year to the low $30,000s. An individual going
into the regulatory side of environmental chemistry
is likely to start out at a higher salary and
continue to be paid more throughout his or her
career because these jobs are more high profile
and require taking responsibility for a company's
liability. Although the work an analytical chemist
does to reduce contamination is important, the
chemist-regulator who negotiates a company out
of trouble will receive more recognition and better
compensation.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Regional Offices
(check the government section in your local phone
book)
WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW
Because career choices abound in the environmental
area, students are advised to think about the
type of work that interests them and what discipline,
in addition to chemistry, they would like to emphasize
while still in school. Because many colleges and
universities have an environmental sciences program,
students have an opportunity to investigate some
potential areas before actually exploring the
job market. Environmental chemists working in
industry also suggest taking courses in industrial
chemistry and chemical engineering. These offer
students the best way of discovering what working
in industry is like.
American Chemical Society, Education Division,
1155 Sixteenth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036;
(202) 452-2113.
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