Home > Press > ICON Issues Survey of Nanotechnology Practices
Abstract:
Broad-based Council Surveys Industry regarding Workplace Safety
The first comprehensive, international survey of
workplace safety practices in the burgeoning nanotechnology industry finds
that many nanotech companies and laboratories believe nanoparticles specks
of matter that are smaller than living cells may pose specific
environmental and health risks for workers. In response, companies are
reporting that they are developing special programs and procedures for
mitigating risks to workers and consumers. Yet, due in part to a lack of
general information regarding nanomaterials risks, companies and labs have
workers using conventional environmental, health and safety (EHS) practices
when handling nanomaterials, even though the practices were developed to
deal with bulk materials that can have markedly different chemical
properties than their nano-sized counterparts.
"The use of conventional practices for handling nanomaterials appears to
stem from a lack of information on the toxicological properties of
nanomaterials, as well as nascent regulatory guidance regarding the proper
environmental, health and safety practices that should be used with them,"
said Kristen M. Kulinowski, director of the International Council on
Nanotechnology, a coalition of academic, industrial, governmental and civil
society organizations that commissioned the survey.
The report, A Survey of Current Practices in the Nanotechnology Workplace,
is available at icon.rice.edu. Both the
survey and report were produced by a research team from the University of
California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) that includes environmental scientists,
sociologists, and corporate environmental management experts and
anthropologists.
"This is an important study because it reinforces the perspective that there
needs to be more information regarding the toxicology of new nanomaterials
and how they should be handled in the contexts of industry, consumers and
the environment," said Patricia Holden, principal investigator (PI) for this
project and associate professor in the Bren School at UCSB, where she
co-advised four masteršs students in this research as part of their group
thesis.
"The value of this study is that we brought together knowledge of academic
and industry laboratory practices, toxicologic risk assessment, and social
science approaches," said study co-PI Barbara Herr Harthorn, PI and
co-director of the NSF Center for Nanotechnology in Society at UCSB. "This
allowed us to gather and analyze a unique set of detailed data from around
the globe, establishing a beachhead for future studies and a first step
toward developing safe handling guidelines for nanomaterials."
Survey data were collected this summer from 64 organizations in North
America, the European Union, Asia and Australia. North American and Japanese
respondents each represented 39 percent of those surveyed, with 17 percent
from the European Union and 5 percent from Australia. About 80 percent of
responses were from private-sector companies, including for-profit entities
that are developing or have developed at least one product containing
nanomaterials.
"The National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) is pleased
to see the ICON report, which we will review with great interest in our
ongoing efforts to further scientific research and provide interim
recommendations on safe approaches to nanotechnology," said NIOSH Director
Dr. John Howard. "We appreciate UCSB's partnership, early in their process,
in inviting us to participate in the planning and design of the survey. This
work will give researchers a better understanding of current work practices
in the nanotechnology industry, and valuable insight into current
information gaps that might exist in understanding and managing the
occupational health implications of this revolutionary technology."
Workers occupy the frontiers of nanotechnology development. Engineered
nanomaterials are intentionally designed to take advantage of properties
that emerge at the nanoscale, and nanotech workers typically face the
greatest exposure risks from engineered nanomaterials. For example, in
products containing nanomaterials that are incorporated in a plastic
composite or other solid matrix, risks to consumers are believed to be
minimal because the materials are locked up tight. But workers who make the
products, and who handle the nanomaterials in raw form, face more risk of
exposure.
There remains little specific information about the potential harm workers
face from most engineered nanomaterials. By attempting to understand how
employers and workers are currently approaching the development and
implementation of workplace safety practices, ICON and UCSB are taking an
important step toward the development and global adoption of best practices
to minimize exposure and hazard from engineered nanomaterials.
"This report highlights some key obstacles to the responsible and successful
development of nanotechnology," said Tracy Godfrey, a project analyst with
Environmental Defense. "While a majority of companies report a lack of
environmental health and safety information to guide good risk management,
few companies conduct their own studies to develop this information.
"Environmental Defense is working to address these important gaps through
our efforts to increase risk research, improve government policy, and
develop proactive corporate standards."
The survey and report were part of a two-phase project aimed at determining
how industry is managing the occupational safety risks that may be posed by
certain nanomaterials.
"When ICON began discussing the need for best-practices guidelines for
handling nanomaterials, we quickly realized there was little documentation
of existing workplace policies and practices," Kulinowski said. "It's hard
to know where you need to go if you donšt know where you are. With only
limited anecdotal evidence of EHS practices available, we decided that a
more comprehensive evaluation was needed."
The first-phase report, Current Knowledge and Practices regarding
Environmental Health and Safety in the Nanotechnology Workplace, was issued
last month. It offered a review and analysis of existing efforts to develop
"best practices" for workplace safety in the nascent nanotech industry.
Today's second-phase report takes a snapshot of industry practices currently
in use. Taken together, the two reports provide the first-ever overview of
environmental health and safety in the nanotechnology workplace.
ICON, which commissioned the survey and worked with UCSB's team during both
phases of the project, is committed to developing and communicating
information regarding the potential health and environmental risks of
nanotechnology and of thereby fostering risk reduction while maximizing
societal benefits of the growing industry. ICON is administered by Rice
University's Center for Biological and Environmental Nanotechnology (CBEN).
ICON issued a call for proposals for the study in late 2005 and awarded the
grant to the UCSB team in March. The UCSB team includes Magali Delmas,
associate professor of corporate environmental management; Richard
Appelbaum, professor of sociology and global and international studies;
Bren master's students Gina Gerritzen, Keith Killpack, Maria Mircheva and
Leia Huang; and sociology doctorale candidate Joe Conti.
About ICON:
The International Council on Nanotechnology is a multi-stakeholder group
whose mission is to assess, communicate, and reduce nanotechnology's
environmental and health risks while maximizing its societal benefit. Our
efforts are founded on the belief that partnership activities between
governments, industry, academia and non-governmental organizations are the
key to an environmentally responsible nanotechnology industry.
For more information, please click here
About CBEN:
The Center for Biological and Environmental Nanotechnology is a National
Science Foundation Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center dedicated to
developing sustainable nanotechnologies that improve human health and the
environment. Located at Rice University in Houston, CBEN is a leader in
ensuring that nanotechnology develops responsibly and with strong public
support.
For more information, please click here
About Rice University:
Rice University is consistently ranked one of America's best teaching and research universities. It is distinguished by its: size: 2,850 undergraduates and 1,950 graduate students; selectivity: 10 applicants for each place in the freshman class; resources: an undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio of 6-to-1, and the fifth largest endowment per student among American universities; residential college system, which builds communities that are both close-knit and diverse; and collaborative culture, which crosses disciplines, integrates teaching and research, and intermingles undergraduate and graduate work. Rice's wooded campus is located in the nation's fourth largest city and on America's South Coast.
For more information, please click here
Contacts:Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
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