PHA-Exchange> COMPETITION ANNOUNCEMENT: Design a Nano-Hazard Symbol

Claudio claudio at hcmc.netnam.vn
Thu Oct 12 20:12:27 PDT 2006


> COMPETITION ANNOUNCEMENT: Design a Nano-Hazard Symbol
(ETC Group announces International Graphic Design Competition)   > CALL FOR ENTRIES. (More info below).
> 
> Biotechnology, nuclear power, toxic chemicals, electromagnetic radiation -- each of these technological hazards has a universally  recognized warning symbol associated with it. So why not nanotechnology -- the world's most powerful (and potentially   dangerous) technology?

> First: Why Do We Need a Nano-Hazard Symbol?
> 
> Nanotechnology, the manipulation of matter at the tiny level of atoms and molecules, has created a new class of materials with unusual properties and new toxicities.
> 
> It used to be that nanotechnology was the stuff of science fiction.  
> Today, however, there are over one thousand nanotechnology companies  worldwide. Nanoparticles, nanotubes and other engineered  
> nanomaterials are already in use in hundreds of everyday consumer  products, raising significant health, safety and environmental concerns. Nanoparticles are able to move around the body and the  environment more readily than larger particles of pollution. Because of their extremely small size and large surface area nanoparticles  
> may be more reactive and more toxic than larger particles of the same  substance. They have been compared to asbestos by leading insurance  
> companies who worry their health impact could lead to massive claims.  
> At least one US-based insurance company has canceled coverage of small companies involved with nanotechnology. Unlike more familiar  
> forms of pollution arising from new technologies, nano-hazards  (potentially endangering consumers, workers and the environment) have  
> yet to be fully characterized, regulated or even subject to safety testing. The US Food and Drug Administration will have its first public meeting about regulating nanomaterials on October 10, 2006.  
> Most governments worldwide have yet to even begin thinking about nano-regulation. Nonetheless, nanoparticles invisible to the naked eye are already in foods, cosmetics, pesticides and clothing without even  being labelled. Every day laboratory and factory workers could be  
> inhaling and ingesting nanoparticles while the rest of us may be  unwittingly putting them on our skin, in our body or in the environment.
> 
> It's not just a safety question. Nanotechnology also raises new  societal hazards: The granting of patents on nano-scale materials and processes, and even elements of the periodic table, allows for  
> increased corporate power and monopoly over the smallest parts of  nature. Some designer nanomaterials may come to replace natural  
> products such as cotton, rubber and metals -- displacing the  livelihoods of some of the poorest and most vulnerable people in the world.  In the near future the merger of nanotechnology with  
> biotechnology (in nano-biotechnology applications such as synthetic  
> biology) will lead to new designer organisms, modified at the  molecular level, posing new biosafety threats. Nano-enabled technologies also aim to 'enhance' human beings and 'fix' the  
> disabled, a goal that raises troubling ethical issues and the specter  of a new divide between the technologically "improved" and "unimproved."
> 
> ETC Group has called for a moratorium on nanoparticle production and release to allow for a full societal debate and until such time as  precautionary regulations are in place to protect workers, consumers  and the environment. Standard setting bodies around the world are now  
> scrambling to agree on nomenclature that can describe nanoparticles and nanomaterials. A common, internationally-recognized symbol  
> warning of the presence of engineered nanomaterials is equally overdue.
> 
> For a short and simple introduction to Nanotechnology see "A Tiny Primer on Nano-scale Technologies," available online:  
http://www.etcgroup.org/en/materials/publications.html?id=55

> Concerned citizens everywhere are invited to submit their designs for a universal Nanotechnology Hazard Symbol at:  http://www.etcgroup.org/  nanohazard
> 
> Entries will be judged by a panel of eminent judges convened by the  ETC Group (Action Group on Erosion Technology and Concentration,  www.etcgroup.org). These judges include Dr. Vyvyan Howard (Editor of the Journal of Nanotoxicity), Dr. Gregor Wolbring (The Canadian Advisory Commitee on Nanotech Standardisation), Chee Yoke Ling (Third  World Network), Claire Pentecost (Associate Professor and Chair of the Photography Department at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago), Rory O'Neill (Editor of Hazards magazine) and Dr. Alexis Vlandas (Nanotechnology Spokesperson for International Network of  
> Engineers and Scientists for Global Responsibility). Entries will  also be judged by participants at the World Social Forum, Nairobi, Kenya, 20-25 January 2007.
> 
> The winning entry will be submitted to international standard-setting  bodies responsible for hazard characterisation, to international governmental organisations and to national governments as a proposed  symbol for nanotechnology hazards.
> 
> Closing date: 8 January 2007 A gallery of entries submitted will be available at 
http://www.etcgroup.org/gallery2/v/nanohazard/
> 
> Details Of The Competition:
> We are asking concerned people everywhere (including artists, designers, scientists, students, regulators and members of the public) to submit possible designs for an international Nano-Hazard  warning symbol that could be used to identify the presence of nanmoaterials. This symbol could, for example, be placed on products containing nanomaterials, in laboratories or factories where workers  
> handle nanoparticles, or on containers transporting nanomaterials.  
> The symbol should be simple,  easy to recognize and communicate  clearly the new, potential hazards that result when matter is manipulated at the nanoscale (1 billionth of a metre -- the size of atoms and molecules).
> 
> We encourage participants to be as creative as possible in inventing  a new nano-hazard symbol. Images can be designed on computer or by hand, scanned, photographed or otherwise rendered in 2 dimensions --either using colour or in black and white. Entries will be judged on their conceptual as well as artistic merit. Descriptions and  
> explanations accompanying the entries will be very welcome.
> 
> For examples of existing hazard warning symbols for comparison see  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hazard_symbol
> 
> Participants can submit as many different entries as they wish. Each  entry should be submitted seperately. Entries can be submitted in one of 3 ways:
> 1) Upload electronically using the upload form at http:// 
> www.etcgroup.org/nanohazard
> 2) Email as a jpeg or gif file to nanohazard at etcgroup.org
> 3) Send by post to Nano-Hazard Competition, ETC Group, 431 Gilmour  Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K2P 0R5. Canada
> 
> Please include your name, country and a contact email or postal address.
> 
> All submitted entries will be treated as non-copyright and in the  public domain unless the submitter wishes to place them under a creative commons license allowing free non-commercial use (see details here http://www.creativecommons.org). Entries submitted with  
> copyright conditions (other than creative commons) will not be  considered. Entries sent by post will not be returned.
> 
> The closing date for entries is 8th January 2007.
> 
> Judging will be in two parts:
> Judging Panel: A selection of entries will first be made by a panel of eminent judges chosen by the ETC Group.
> This panel includes:
> Dr. Vyvyan Howard, Founding editor of the Journal of Nanotoxicology.
> Dr. Gregor Wolbring, The Canadian Advisory Commitee on Nanotech  Standardisation.
> Chee Yoke Ling, Legal Advisor, Third World Network.
> Claire Pentecost, Artist, Writer, Associate Professor and Chair of   the Photography Department at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago  Rory O Neill, Editor of Hazards (trade union workplace safety magazine).
> Dr. Alexis Vlandas, Nanotechnology spokesperson for International Network of Engineers and Scientists for Global Responsibility.
> 
> Public Judging: The selected entries will then be displayed at the  World Social Forum in Nairobi, Kenya (20- 25 January 2007) for civil  society attendees to judge. We also encourage everyone to view the  gallery of submitted artwork online and submit comments there.
> 
> More Information:
> For a short introduction to nanotechnology see:  "A Tiny Primer on  Nano-scale Technologies" available online:  http://www.etcgroup.org/en/materials/publications.html?id=55
> 
> For an introduction to the toxicity of nanoscale materials see the   following resources:
> "Size Matters" (2003), an ETC Occasional Paper which includes an appendix by Dr Vyvyan Howard, Founding Editor of the Journal of  Nanotoxicology: http://www.etcgroup.org/upload/publication/165/01/occ.paper_nanosafety.pdf
> 
> ETC Group's 2004 Communique, 'Nano's Troubled Waters'   http://www.etcgroup.org/upload/publication/116/01/gt_troubledwater_april1.pdf
> 
> A May 2006 report on nanotechnology in sunscreens and cosmetics by Friends of the Earth: http://www.foe.org/camps/comm/nanotech/
> 
> A recent scientific evaluation of nanoscale hazards by the European  Commission's highest level scientific committee on toxicity, The Scientific Committee on Emerging and Newly Identified Health Risks:  
> http://ec.europa.eu/health/ph_risk/committees/04_scenihr/scenihr_cons_01_en.htm
> 
> A comprehensive overview (2004) of nanoparticle toxicity, "Small  Matter, Many Unknowns" by Swiss Re, the world's second largest re-insurance company: http://www.swissre.com/INTERNET/pwsfilpr.nsf/vwFilebyIDKEYLu/ULUR-5YNGET/$FILE/Publ04_Nanotech_en.pdf
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