Agenda
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Available On Demand
Plastic is in our blood. What now?
Dr. Charlotte Davies Common SeasDr Charlotte Davies is the Executive Director of Common Seas, where she leads global efforts to tackle plastic pollution through policy innovation, strategic partnerships, and systems change - particularly focusing on plastic’s impacts on human health and coastal countries.
With over two decades of experience spanning environmental conservation, finance, and nonprofit leadership, Charlotte’s career includes senior roles in the Marine Biological Association and Ocean Conservation Trust, alongside other funding organisations and charitable and educational trusts. Charlotte brings a blend of operational expertise and mission-driven vision to her work.
Living by the sea and often found on or around the water, Charlotte is a passionate advocate for the marine environment. She is a Chartered Accountant and holds a Doctorate in Biochemistry from Oxford University. Her current work is driven by a desire to understand and address the scientific mechanisms behind plastic’s impact on ecosystems, the economy and human health. As the leader of Common Seas, she champions evidence-based, scalable solutions for a more just and sustainable future.
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Biodegradable Plastics: A Solution to the Plastics Crisis?
Winnie Cortene-Jones Bangor UniversityWinnie is a marine environmental scientist with over a decade of experience researching the sources, effects, and solutions to plastic pollution.
Winnie is a Lecturer in Marine Pollution at Bangor University and holds an Honorary Associate Research role at the University of Plymouth. She has led research into the global land-sea releases and movement of plastics, and the environmental degradation and impacts of biodegradable and bio-based plastics across terrestrial and marine environments. Her interdisciplinary work has furthered understanding of the risks of plastic pollution in a changing world and informs effective solutions.
Since 2021, Winnie has actively participated in and supported the development of the UN Global Plastics Treaty. She has attended several of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee sessions, and she leads working groups focused on core issues for the Scientists’ Coalition for an Effective Plastics Treaty. Winnie has authored numerous peer-reviewed publications, policy briefs, and technical reports, and has spoken around the world at conferences, parliamentary meetings, and at the United Nations, as well as regularly featuring on TV, radio, podcasts, and in print articles.
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Available On Demand
Plastic Pollution and Chemical Burdens
Thilo Hofmann University of ViennaThilo Hofmann is Professor and Chair of Environmental Geosciences at the Centre for Microbiology and Environmental Systems Sciences (CeMESS), University of Vienna. His research investigates the dynamics, fate, and transformations of organic and inorganic pollutants, including plastics and nanoparticles, and develops strategies for their remediation. Current projects address “forever chemicals” such as PFAS, plastic pollution including tyre wear particles, plastic additives of concern, the impact of chemicals on the human microbiome, nanoparticles emissions from break-wear, and high-resolution mass spectrometry and transformation processes.
He directs the University of Vienna’s Environmental and Climate Research Hub, which brings together over 70 research groups across the natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, law, and economics to address holistically today’s pressing environmental challenges. Thilo is a Highly Cited researcher in the category Environment and Ecology, has published +260 papers. He holds adjunct and guest professorships at Duke University (USA) and Nankai University, Tianjin (China). -
Available On Demand
Considerations in material choice
Ciaran Lahive University of ManchesterCiaran Lahive is a Royal Academy of Engineering Research Fellow based within the Henry Royce Institute and the Department of Materials at the University of Manchester. Ciaran’s background is in organic and pharmaceutical chemistry, with a BSc from University College Cork, Ireland. He earned his PhD as a Marie Curie Early-Stage Researcher Fellow at the University of St Andrews, UK, which was followed by postdoctoral work at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands. During this period, he focused on sourcing useful chemicals from sustainable feedstocks such as biomass. He then held a position at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, USA, where he developed advanced chemical deconstruction technologies to recycle textiles, composite materials used in high-performance applications such as wind turbine blades, and multi-layer packaging materials.
The focus of Ciaran's current research at the University of Manchester is on developing analytically underpinned solutions to the sustainability challenges facing the modern world. He currently leads research across a broad range of sustainability-themed areas, including mechanical and chemical recycling, as well as the intersectoral transitions of polymer materials, with the aim of achieving systems-level sustainability for plastics across various sectors, including the automotive and healthcare sectors. -
Available On Demand
Microplastics in blood - innocent or guilty?"
Tom McKinnon Imperial CollegeDr Tom McKinnon is Associate Professor of Thrombosis and Haemostasis at Imperial College London. He obtained a first-class degree in Biomedical Science from the University of Portsmouth and then his PhD in molecular haemostasis from Imperial College London.
Tom has over 20 years of research experience working on the biochemical and cellular basis of thrombosis and haemostasis. A particular research focus has been the structure and function of the blood coagulation protein Von Willebrand Factor. His research group investigates abnormalities and factors that lead to both bleeding and thrombotic disorders and are developing novel agents to treat both bleeding and thrombosis.
His group used a range of techniques, including DNA cloning, mutagenesis, protein expression and purification and biochemical assays of protein function and interactions. Additionally, the group uses microfluidics to probe blood coagulation, platelet function and thrombosis in vitro and have an optimised system to culture endothelial cells under shear stress conditions.
A recent avenue of research for the McKinnon lab has been the impact of microplastics on the cardiovascular system with particular reference to how microplastics may increase the risk of endothelial damage and subsequent aberrant thrombosis.
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Available On Demand
Questions and Discussion
Claire Hansell Nature
Zoltan Fehervari Nature
Winnie Cortene-Jones Bangor UniversityWinnie is a marine environmental scientist with over a decade of experience researching the sources, effects, and solutions to plastic pollution.
Winnie is a Lecturer in Marine Pollution at Bangor University and holds an Honorary Associate Research role at the University of Plymouth. She has led research into the global land-sea releases and movement of plastics, and the environmental degradation and impacts of biodegradable and bio-based plastics across terrestrial and marine environments. Her interdisciplinary work has furthered understanding of the risks of plastic pollution in a changing world and informs effective solutions.
Since 2021, Winnie has actively participated in and supported the development of the UN Global Plastics Treaty. She has attended several of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee sessions, and she leads working groups focused on core issues for the Scientists’ Coalition for an Effective Plastics Treaty. Winnie has authored numerous peer-reviewed publications, policy briefs, and technical reports, and has spoken around the world at conferences, parliamentary meetings, and at the United Nations, as well as regularly featuring on TV, radio, podcasts, and in print articles.
Thilo Hofmann University of ViennaThilo Hofmann is Professor and Chair of Environmental Geosciences at the Centre for Microbiology and Environmental Systems Sciences (CeMESS), University of Vienna. His research investigates the dynamics, fate, and transformations of organic and inorganic pollutants, including plastics and nanoparticles, and develops strategies for their remediation. Current projects address “forever chemicals” such as PFAS, plastic pollution including tyre wear particles, plastic additives of concern, the impact of chemicals on the human microbiome, nanoparticles emissions from break-wear, and high-resolution mass spectrometry and transformation processes.
He directs the University of Vienna’s Environmental and Climate Research Hub, which brings together over 70 research groups across the natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, law, and economics to address holistically today’s pressing environmental challenges. Thilo is a Highly Cited researcher in the category Environment and Ecology, has published +260 papers. He holds adjunct and guest professorships at Duke University (USA) and Nankai University, Tianjin (China).
Ciaran Lahive University of ManchesterCiaran Lahive is a Royal Academy of Engineering Research Fellow based within the Henry Royce Institute and the Department of Materials at the University of Manchester. Ciaran’s background is in organic and pharmaceutical chemistry, with a BSc from University College Cork, Ireland. He earned his PhD as a Marie Curie Early-Stage Researcher Fellow at the University of St Andrews, UK, which was followed by postdoctoral work at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands. During this period, he focused on sourcing useful chemicals from sustainable feedstocks such as biomass. He then held a position at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, USA, where he developed advanced chemical deconstruction technologies to recycle textiles, composite materials used in high-performance applications such as wind turbine blades, and multi-layer packaging materials.
The focus of Ciaran's current research at the University of Manchester is on developing analytically underpinned solutions to the sustainability challenges facing the modern world. He currently leads research across a broad range of sustainability-themed areas, including mechanical and chemical recycling, as well as the intersectoral transitions of polymer materials, with the aim of achieving systems-level sustainability for plastics across various sectors, including the automotive and healthcare sectors.
Tom McKinnon Imperial CollegeDr Tom McKinnon is Associate Professor of Thrombosis and Haemostasis at Imperial College London. He obtained a first-class degree in Biomedical Science from the University of Portsmouth and then his PhD in molecular haemostasis from Imperial College London.
Tom has over 20 years of research experience working on the biochemical and cellular basis of thrombosis and haemostasis. A particular research focus has been the structure and function of the blood coagulation protein Von Willebrand Factor. His research group investigates abnormalities and factors that lead to both bleeding and thrombotic disorders and are developing novel agents to treat both bleeding and thrombosis.
His group used a range of techniques, including DNA cloning, mutagenesis, protein expression and purification and biochemical assays of protein function and interactions. Additionally, the group uses microfluidics to probe blood coagulation, platelet function and thrombosis in vitro and have an optimised system to culture endothelial cells under shear stress conditions.
A recent avenue of research for the McKinnon lab has been the impact of microplastics on the cardiovascular system with particular reference to how microplastics may increase the risk of endothelial damage and subsequent aberrant thrombosis.