Arizona State University
  • ASU Home
  • ASU A-Z Index
  • My ASU
  • Colleges & Schools
  • Directory
  • Map
  • SIGN IN
 

April 27, 2009
twitter twitter    subscribe subscribe news asu[insight]   
  • now
  • science & tech
  • business, culture & affairs
  • university
  • sports
  • archives
  • press room

featured

  • Week in Review Gallery: Jan. 30-Feb. 5

today's headlines

  • ASU among top schools for Peace Corps volunteers
  • Environmental expert to speak on climate change
  • Forum addresses educational equity

editor's picks

  • Silent auction for student who lost leg in Haiti earthquake
  • Wrestling coach aims to take team to the top
  • $2.3M grant powers teen health study

Home

Researchers: Who should help support nano-regulation?

Who should be responsible for regulating the use of nanomaterials, especially in light of the potential environmental impact of such materials?

The issue is explored in a recent Nano Today magazine article by Jonathan Posner, an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, and Jameson Wetmore, an assistant professor in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change.

The U.S. Department of Energy is involved in a major project to learn how engineered nanomaterials used in of many of today’s common products are transported in our environment -- and to determine what will happen as the nanomaterials make their way into rivers, oceans, soil, plants and animals.

Posner and Wetmore discuss how regulations should be guided by a scientific consensus about the environmental impact of the materials, and they make the case that corporations – the primary sources of the manufacture and use of engineered nanomaterials -- should contribute to efforts to do the environmental science necessary to provide a well-reasoned guide for debates on regulation policy.

Joe Kullman, joe.kullman@asu.edu
(480) 965-8122
Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering
Article source:
Nano Today
Article:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nantod.2009.03.002
Editor's Note: Links are included for informational purposes only. Due to varying editorial policies, news publications may remove or change a link for archival purposes at any time without notice.

Share this story:
  • Email this pageEmail this page
  • Copyright & Trademark
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy
  • Emergency
  • Contact ASU

Site contact | ASU News Staff
Centerpoint, suite 416 | Map
Campus mail: 5011 ­ASU News
Phone: (480) 965-3502
FAX: (480) 965-2159

sod110