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These former Pitt Med students designed a lab plastic recycling system

A box of Polycarbin-branded pipette tips

The scientific community creates an estimated 12 billion pounds of plastic waste annually.

Thanks to a company founded by two former Pitt Med students, Pitt labs are at the forefront of a new way to reduce their carbon emissions, landfill waste and single-stream recycling contami91porn视频 鈥 by returning used scientific plastics to the lab in a closed-loop recycling system.

James O鈥橞rien and Noah Pyles discovered the limitations of recycling infrastructure as students five years ago in the Physician Scientist Training Program at the 91porn视频 School of Medicine.

鈥淏ecause everything in the laboratory is single-use and made of these fossil fuel-derived plastics, every time a scientist chooses to buy a plastic product, it confers a carbon impact to our industry,鈥 O鈥橞rien said.

Often, labs don鈥檛 have a choice. Squeezed by budgets and grant cycles, they buy what they can afford.

鈥淪o, you basically have this very difficult juxtaposition in which scientists are working to innovate on behalf of human health while their supply chain is completely rooted in the carbon-intensive fossil fuel industry, conferring quite a burden on some of our most disadvantaged communities from a public health perspective,鈥 O鈥橞rien explained.

A growing number of Pitt labs and offices have committed to advancing sustainability. Still, Assistant Director of Sustainability Samantha Chan said she and her team have collected feedback from designated Green Labs over the years that 鈥減articipants were really upset with the amount of waste they were producing 鈥 but there isn鈥檛 a budget or funding for [offsetting] that.鈥

[Read more: The Green Labs program is making Pitt facilities more sustainable.]

O鈥橞rien and Pyles knew scientists wanted better. Feeling a moral imperative, they left med school in 2019 to create a closed-loop recycling solution specifically for the life sciences and health care ecosystem.

In the ultimate circular move, their company, , is returning to the University to help offset its carbon footprint and stay on track to , one of which is reducing landfill waste by 25% by 2030. Even better, the partnership means Pitt labs don鈥檛 have to pay shipping costs to participate in Polycarbin鈥檚 take-back program, unlike many manufacturers鈥 similar programs.

Within a month of announcing the , 43 labs across the Pittsburgh campus signed on to participate. 鈥淚 got so many emails,鈥 said Chan, who worked with Polycarbin to bring the program to Pitt.

鈥淪cientists want to know that what they鈥檙e doing is making an impact,鈥 O鈥橞rien said. Increasingly, that means having quantitative data. 鈥淭he health science ecosystem functions on evidence-based medicine, so we operate on evidence-based sustainability.鈥

The company developed the Carbin Counter, a data tool that measures the impact of customers鈥 carbon emission reduction, freshwater savings and crude oil supplantation from the market, telling customers exactly how much their work contributes to a circular economy.

鈥淲e believe that the inflection point for our industry is right around the corner, where it鈥檚 not going to be about qualitative platitudes鈥 and greenwashing, or marketing that makes something seem eco-friendly, said Pyles. 鈥淚 think the scientific community could be the vanguard of this movement for climate conscious consumers.鈥

Pyles and O鈥橞rien have been looking for ways to give back to Pitt for introducing them to each other and playing a hand in Polycarbin鈥檚 success. Pyles credited Physician Scientist Training Program director Richard Steinman and administrator Blair Douglass 鈥渇or teaching James and me basically that the status quo, or the conventional wisdom, is always worthy of being challenged. Without rigorous academic training in the life sciences, we would not have been able to do this. We would have just listened to everyone when they said it wasn鈥檛 possible,鈥 said Pyles. He added, 鈥淥ur company doesn鈥檛 exist without the Samantha Chans of the world. She鈥檚 been an awesome advocate.鈥

Chan believes the future of Green Labs is bright. She points to an effort by researchers 91porn视频wide asking funding organizations like the NIH to add sustainability allocation lines to their grants so labs can move toward reusable models. O鈥橞rien agrees: 鈥淲e鈥檙e living in this interesting time now where institutions like Pitt have an opportunity to lead on this front. In the future it may be a prerequisite.鈥

For O鈥橞rien, returning to med school at some point is not out of the question. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been working closely with Pitt鈥檚 School of Medicine to define a pathway for that,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e been unbelievably supportive of our work here.鈥

In the meantime, he and Pyles are excited to see institutions like Pitt living out a mission consistent with their values. 鈥淏ecause that next Pitt Med student may go on with their MD/PhD degree to found a new novel biologic. And you want them thinking about sustainability in the laboratory in addition to whatever other great work that they鈥檙e doing.鈥

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鈥 Micaela Corn, image courtesy of Polycarbin