The Wilson Center's Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies has launched a product database
currently listing over 200 consumer products identified by their manufacturers
as using nanotechnnology. A 10-page initial
analysis is available (1.1 MB pdf).
David Forman commented in Small Times Direct, the email service from Small
Times magazine: On the safety front, note that the Wilson Center released a
nano product list today. The list could serve their purposes of encouraging
discussion about safety and environmental impacts. But at the same time, I can't
help but think this effort will simultaneously muddy the waters. The benefits
and risks are quite different for nanoscale processing than they are for
nanomaterials. Will the lay audience make the distinction? And what's a consumer
product anyway? If you're going to list the iMac because its CPU is made using a
65 nanometer process and you're going to include Intel's and AMD's CPUs
because they are also made using sub-100 nanometer processes then don't you
have to include every single PC or laptop on the market that uses one of these
chips? We also have to consider how the nano label is used. The Wilson Center
says that every product in the list is manufacturer-identified.' Trouble with
that is that there are plenty of companies that will call something nano' to
benefit from the buzz. We've been weeding them out of our pages for years. In
short, this list is interesting, but as Oregon's Safer Nano
2006 conference on Monday and Tuesday shows, the discussion it's intended to
promote is already well under way.
The Washington Post commented:
Perhaps most surprising, the list contains several products meant to be eaten
a step up from the kind of exposure that has drawn attention to date, namely nanoparticle-laden cosmetics and sunscreens that some fear could cause harm if
absorbed through the skin.
My comments: First, as the Wilson Center points out, the current list is not
comprehensive. If you use the 1-100 nm definition for nanotech as many or even
most do in business this list would include a huge variety of products made
using molecules/particles/features in this size range. Second, given this fact,
does it make sense to group such products together? [This concern may lessen as
the database grows.] Third, one wonders whether those in charge of marketing
these products are now glad or sorry to have used the nano label. And finally,
the chocolate chewing gum contains nanoscale crystals, but of what? Christine