Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Rice University expert calls for coordination in nanotechnology research

Rice chemist Vicki ColvinIn House testimony, Vicki Colvin says nano community needs 'research harmonization'

Nanotechnology holds great promise for the future of cancer therapy and water treatment, but concerns about the safety of nanoproducts may limit these important technological developments, Vicki Colvin said today in comments to the U.S. House Committee on Science and Technology.
Colvin, director of Rice's Center for Biological and Environmental Nanotechnology (CBEN) and executive director of the International Council on Nanotechnology (ICON), was an expert witness at the hearing "Research on Environmental and Safety Impacts of Nanotechnology." The hearing relates to the current direction of the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI).

Colvin told the committee she was providing her individual opinions, which have been informed by ICON's work with diverse international stakeholders on nanotechnology research needs in the areas of environment, health and safety (EHS).

ICON, which is affiliated with CBEN, is an international organization with members from academia, nongovernmental organizations, industry and government dedicated to the safe, responsible and beneficial development of nanotechnology. ICON's EHS database is the first to integrate the diverse scientific literature on the impacts of nanoparticles

She called on the National Nanotechnology Initiative to release a detailed strategy for nano-EHS research no later than fall 2008.

"Going from a climate of uncertainty to one of confidence in managing nanotechnology risk is a massive undertaking that will take years to fully develop," Colvin said. "It will also take careful planning and coordination among agencies in this government and abroad. The ultimate plan would be most effectively organized by two, maybe three, overarching outcomes that stakeholders agree will give us more confidence in managing risks."

Colvin emphasized the importance of unifying "researchers' languages, methods and materials," which she referred to as "research harmonization" tools.

"If you fund five teams to help understand nanotube toxicity and they get five different answers, you are actually worse off because your research creates uncertainty rather than combat it," she said.

Colvin said there is a real need for government intervention.

"If left to ourselves, we might harmonize as a community in five to 10 years -- too long to wait for nanotechnology's innovation. The good news is that the U.S. government can, if it is thoughtful about the mechanisms, help researchers fix this problem quickly and for relatively low cost." ###

To read the full text of Colvin's remarks, visit icon.rice.edu. To interview Colvin about her testimony, contact David Ruth at 713-348-6327 or druth@rice.edu.

Contact: David Ruth druth@rice.edu 713-348-6327 Rice University

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