UN Commission on Sustainable Development
Landing page for sustainable development policy work.
Landing page for sustainable development policy work.
Landing page for Toxics in Consumer Products (XRF) projects.
IPEN has worked, since its inception, to promote the need for sound chemicals management among public interest, non-governmental organizations (NGOs). IPEN’s global outreach and awareness-raising projects and campaigns are developed in partnership with its Participating Organizations and are designed to help NGOs:
Childhood exposure to lead in paint remains a serious problem in developing countries.
Lead paint is one of the most widespread sources of lead exposure today. There are no safe levels of lead exposure for children and increasing evidence shows that even low levels of lead exposure are harmful for adults.
IPEN has undertaken three influential projects to build the capacity of nongovernmental (NGOs) in developing countries and countries in economic transition to engage in toxic pollution and heavy metals (mercury) elimination issues.
Since 2005, IPEN has been carrying out sampling projects in countries around the world to test for persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and other toxic chemicals.
The term 'nanotechnology' describes materials, systems and processes that exist or operate at the extremely small scale of a few hundred nanometres or less. To put a nanometre in context: a strand of DNA is 2.5nm wide, a red blood cell is 7,000 nm and a human hair is 80,000 nm wide.
Pesticides, chemical preparations for destroying plant, fungal, or animal pests,
Heavy metals are a loosely defined subset of elements with metallic properties and relatively high densities or relative atomic weights, some of which are dangerous to health and / or the environment.
IPEN's work on heavy metals currently focuses on lead (specifically, eliminating lead from paint) and mercury (including sampling of mercury in fish and human hair and work on the international mercury treaty), although IPEN has also produced data about arsenic and cadmium via product testing with a x-ray fluorescence machine.
