http://www.makepovertyhistory.org

« Home | Nanomaterials under REACH » | Using nanotech to prevent pollution - EPA Conferen... » | Microsatellites in the sky » | Nanoethics Journal » | Inadequate regulation of nanotech in food and farm... » | Privacy is dead? » | Nanotechnology and Transnational Governance, the c... » | Regulating Nanotechnology Wihtin Precautionary Pri... » | A Nanotechnology Arms Control Treaty? » | EPA's Nano Program -- open for public comment » 

Friday, July 27, 2007 

Wilson center issued a report on handling Nanowaste

The institutional capacity for handling nano waste is put under scrutiny. Wilson Center adresses the issue:

A new report from the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies, Where Does the Nano Go? End-of-Life Regulation of Nanotechnologies, addresses these issues. Authored by Linda K. Breggin and John Pendergrass, legal experts from the Environmental Law Institute (ELI), the report presents the most comprehensive analysis to-date of two key Environmental Protection Agency laws that regulate the end-of-life management of nanotechnology. These are the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), and the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA), also known as the Superfund statute.

The report is timely. Today, there are over 500 company-identified nanotechnology consumer products on the market, all of which will sooner or later be disposed of. These products can be seen in an online inventory maintained by the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies. This inventory does not include nanotech products being sold but not identified as such, or the hundreds of nano raw materials, intermediate components, and industrial equipment items used by manufacturers today.

The webcast and report is downloadable here.

Labels: , , ,

|

Links to this post

Create a Link

About me

  • I'm Mohamad Mova Al 'Afghani
  • From Bremen, Germany
  • email: movanet@yahoo.com
My profile
Powered by NanotechLaw

esbn 12459-060313-417250-83 Rate content: