Welcome to Marketplace
– an online platform where buyers and sellers of alternatives to hazardous chemicals can interact.
Companies in many different industries – electronics, construction, textiles and so on – handle chemicals in some way, either as a raw material or as a component of a product. While most chemicals are safe, many chemicals that are commonly used in the manufacture of products also have problematic properties.
In recent years there has been a drive by companies to substitute the hazardous chemicals in their products and supply chains with safer alternatives. Sadly, however, these alternatives are often hard to find.
The idea behind Marketplace is to achieve two goals: to provide a unique marketing opportunity for producers of safer alternatives, and to become a one-stop shop for downstream user companies looking to substitute hazardous chemicals in their products.
Do you want to replace a chemical that is harmful to health or the environment with a better solution?
Search our database and filter for chemical functions, relevant industry or a specific hazardous chemical that you are looking for safer alternatives to.
Who is behind Marketplace?
Marketplace was initiated by the International Chemical Secretariat – ChemSec – a non-profit organisation dedicated to working towards a toxic-free environment.
At ChemSec, we strive to bridge the gap between decision-makers, industry, NGOs and scientists; and offer expertise and guidance on chemical management policies in order to get progressive chemical legislation. We also work together with companies to reduce their use of hazardous chemicals and to get their support for progressive chemicals legislation.
ChemSec operates through support from a broad spectrum of society. A main contributor is the Swedish Government, but ChemSec also receives financial support from a variety of international charitable foundations as well as from other NGOs.
ChemSec is made up of a unique, highly dedicated team of chemists, political scientists, business experts and communicators.
What sparked the idea of Marketplace?
Among many other things, ChemSec engages in advancing corporate chemicals management through the ChemSec Business Group. The Business Group has several members: adidas Group, Apple, B&Q, Boots, Coop Denmark, Dell, EurEau, H&M, Ikea, Shaw, Skanska, Sony Mobile and the Swedish Construction Federation.
The need was first explained by one of ChemSec’s Business Group companies at the 2014 annual meeting, and has been reiterated many times since then. “Why can’t there be a place where producers of alternatives just present everything they have, like a Smorgasbord or a buffet, where we can pick and choose, and perhaps make substitutions we had not initially considered? A place where we do not have to formulate a question to find an answer?”
In parallel with this need, and as a result of our in-depth discussions with chemical producers, we see there is also the opposite problem: “We have developed alternatives, but what will we do with them, how do we find out which companies we should reach out to and, how do we reach them?”
Both these problems boil down to the fact that authorities, users and producers of alternatives do not have a common place to interact on the topic of alternatives. This results in lost innovation potential, lost business opportunities for progressive companies and a chemical regulation that accepts unnecessary use of well-known hazardous compounds, such as PBTs and endocrine disruptors. In a wider sense this means continued and unnecessary exposure of the environment and humans, including babies and the unborn, to toxic substances.
You can read more about ChemSec and our work at our website.