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quarta-feira, 13 de junho de 2012

Laying down the law on nanotechnology

Regulating nanotechnology is fraught with difficulties.
Current environmental law simply doesn't apply on the nano-scale


Scientist at work in a nanotechnology laboratory
A huge number of labs are now working with the nanotechnology 'toolbox' to develop new products and applications. Photograph: Science photo library


The first asbestos mine opened in Quebec in 1874. By the 1950s, asbestos was being widely used as an insulator, a flame retardant and as 'flocking' (fake snow). Today, we know that asbestos fibres can burrow into the lungs and cause asbestosis, lung cancer and mesothelioma.
While concerns about the safety of asbestos were raised as early as 1900, it was not until 1999 that the use of asbestos was fully banned in the UK. Every year, 4,000 people die in the UK from asbestos related diseases. This trend is likely to continue till at least the 2050s. As a society, we have learned a late lesson in the control of asbestos, despite early warnings as to possible side effects.
New and emerging technologies (GM, synthetic biology and nanotechnology, for instance) offer the potential for a cleaner, healthier and better future. However, the risks from these technologies are not fully known. Will a future generation look back on our current wave of scientific innovation much as we regard the introduction of asbestos to the market?
One nanometre is one billionth of a metre. To put this into perspective, a single strand of human hair is around 80,000 nanometres in width. In the time it takes you to say the word 'nanotechnology', your hair will have grown by 10 nanometres. That mankind can engineer and create on this scale seems somewhat unbelievable, but the promises of nanotechnology are legion. In the medical arena, nano-robots could be programmed to repair damaged cells and mimic our own natural healing processes (just like 'Innerspace', only minus Meg Ryan). In the context of climate change, the effects of man on the environment could be halted and reversed through nano filters designed to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. It is estimated that there are over 1,000 nanotechnology enhanced products already on the market: everything from tennis balls to sunscreen and odour-free socks.
As chemical substances get smaller, their behaviours and characteristics may change, with certain nanomaterials possessing properties not found in their bulk counterparts. The nano form of gold may be red or blue in colour; platinum is inert in its bulk form, but a catalyst at the nano-scale. 
While nanotechnology may hold the key to a cleaner, healthier, odour-free future, the novel properties that nanomaterials can possess give rise to new forms of risk. Potential risks from nano are both unknown and unknowable. Unknown because little risk assessment has take place to date (less than 2% of the money being poured into nano research is devoted to risk analysis) and unknowable because scientific expertise in chemical assessment has not kept pace with scientific expertise in nanotechnology. Put simply, we are not currently capable of testing all of the inherent properties of all nanomaterials.
Regulatory efforts to control the use of nanotechnology at UK and EU levels have been limited. The previous government had a UK Nanotechnologies Strategy which prioritised the commercial development and application of nanotechnology. In the context of risk and regulation, their view was that existing laws would be sufficient. 
However, as demonstrated by the Cardiff-based BRASS Centre in great detail in 2008, while existing laws can and do regulate nanotechnology, they do so imperfectly. Put simply, there are gaps in existing regulatory frameworks which mean that nanotechnology is not wholly covered.
Some of these gaps exist because of a misplaced notion that nanomaterials are equivalent to their bulk counterparts. For example, the Environmental Permitting Regulations (England and Wales) 2010 make it an offence to release hazardous chemicals into groundwater without a permit. Hazardous substances are those which are toxic, persistent and liable to bio-accumulate, and other substances which give rise to an equivalent level of concern. This leaves us in a chicken and egg situation. For a substance to be characterised as hazardous, there must be evidence that that substance poses unacceptable risks. However, we still await testing methodologies sufficient to adequately evaluate the potential risks of nanosubstances (as well as internationally accepted standards by which testing may occur). On a practical level, this likely means that most nanosubstances will not be classified as hazardous and so can be discharged into groundwater or disposed of as non-hazardous waste.
Other gaps in existing regulatory regimes in the UK exist because legislation is based on thresholds or concentrations. Health and safety regulation is partly premised on occupational exposure levels; environmental permits are granted on the basis of emission levels; chemicals fall within or without rigorous testing requirements based on tonnage production thresholds. Given that nanotechnology is the technology of the very, very tiny, using thresholds in regulation means that much nanotechnology will fall below the relevant tonnage or concentration criteria and so fail to be fully regulated.
The approach of the EU has been little better. The 2008 EU Regulation on Food Additives contains the first targeted legislative provision on nanomaterials. The effect of this provision is that food additives which are produced using "nanotechnology" or which have undergone a "change in particle size" need to undergo a safety evaluation. As a regulatory technique, there is nothing novel about pre-market approvals. However, there is no definition of "nanotechnology" in this Regulation and no guidance on what a "change in particle size" might mean — is this only a change to a particle size under 100nm, or something else entirely?
We also come back (once again) to our scientific inability to assess the full suite of inherent nanochemical properties. Given these issues, it questionable whether this provision will have any practical impact whatsoever.
As from 2013, the EU Cosmetics Regulation requires that any cosmetic which contains nanomaterials (and here there is a definition) must be labelled. This obligation is limited: a requirement to put "(nano)" next to the relevant ingredient on the ingredients list. There is no need to label the product with "contains nano" or any requirement to put a notice on the relevant packaging. Regulatory theory says that labels allow consumers free choice to choose between alternate products on the market. But, as my colleague Elen Stokes has observed, nano labels have been rejected in other jurisdictions (including the US) for being ineffective.
Simply ask yourself this question: when was the last time you ever picked up your body wash in the shower and scrutinised the ingredients list? And, even if you did notice "(nano)" next to an ingredient, what would that mean to you: a warning as to possible side effects? A selling point as to unique properties? Something else?
Regulating nanotechnology is difficult because of the myriad ways in which nanomaterials can be used and due to their global impact - the fact that product X made in the US can travel via Europe and be sold in China. There is also a real issue in knowing when and how to regulate: with hindsight it may be too little, too late or too much, too soon. A balance needs to be struck between the benefits from nano (societal, environmental and economic) and the potential risks. How we as a society deal with uncertainty, how we respond to scientific innovation and how we frame the debate on risk and regulation – these are all so very important. As we saw with asbestos, it may be the difference between life and death. Sometimes, size really does matter.
A fuller version of this paper was given at the Hay Festival on June 3 2012