Australian Occupational Health and Safety Attorney Warns of Potential Nano-EHS "Epidemic"

A high-profile occupational health and safety attorney was interviewed yesterday on ABC Local Radio in Australia regarding potential workplace safety risks accompanying exposure to certain nanoscale materials in some circumstances.

The reporter conducting the interview evidently led off the radio report by stating that "[t]o one of the nation's leading work safety lawyers, the nanotechnology industry represents a ticking time bomb." 

Not good . . .

The attorney apparently then advised that "employers at the moment may be unaware of the extent of the potential liability sometime down the track.   . . . We could be facing another epidemic in our industrial history of people, large groups of people, displaying latent symptoms from current exposures that are taking place at the moment. . . . We just don't have a clue as to what the long-term impact of the use of that technology will have.  . . . . You can see the dilemma here.  It's not necessarily that the zinc product using nanotechnology is necessarily harmful, we just simply don't know."

Personally, I would not jump from "we don't know" to "ticking time bomb" and/or "epidemic."  Readers can find the transcript from the radio program here.

We recently posted about concerns voiced by Australian labor unions regarding potential workplace exposure to nanoscale materials.  The ABC Radio Australia interview will no doubt add more fuel to this fire.

 

 

Berkeley City Council to Consider Nanotechnology Regulation

On December 5, 2006 the Berkeley, California City Council will have its first reading of an ordinance to amend its municipal laws to included specific regulation of nanoparticles.  If passed, this would be the first known instance of nanoparticle regulation at the local level.

The draft agenda for Council's December 5 meeting includes, as "new business," a first reading of an ordinance entitled "Manufactured Nanoparticle Health and Safety Disclosure."  This ordinance is an amendment to Berkeley Municipal Code Sections 15.12.040 and 15.12.050, addressing disclosure requirements for hazardous materials and waste management.  Those immediately impacted include the University of California-Berkeley and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, both of which conduct nanotechnology research within Berkeley City Limits.  The San Francisco Chronicle reports that the amendment  is being urged by the Community Environmental Advisory Committee "because so little is understood about the possible impact of the materials on human health."

The draft ordinance is also asking that letters be sent to elected officials asking them to earmark a percentage of funds included in the National Nanotechnology Initiative's annual budget for health and safety research.

Updates on the progress of this ordinance will be posted as they become available.