© Alex Parlini, Proj. on Emerging NanotechnologiesNanoparticles are already used in many sunscreens.
One month ago, the Committee on Environment, Health and Consumer Protection of the European Parliament voted in favor of excluding nanotechnology from the EU list of novel foods allowed on the market. This committee vote represents one of the first times ever that a legislative body has weighed in on the issue of nanotech particles in food. (Nanotechnology refers to materials or devices developed on an atomic or molecular scale, sized between 1 to 100 nanometers - basically, really, really, really tiny novel particles that our skin and other organs have never before encountered at this scale.)
For those of us watching how government views nanotechnology, this was welcome news.
Whether we are focusing on food or other consumer goods, so
far more than a thousand products containing nanoparticles are currently available in the U.S. These nano-enabled products have been put on the market without testing their possible impacts on human health or the environment. And, without stringent government review and without regulation, these products are foisted on an unsuspecting public. People are using nanotechnology, such as sunscreen containing nanoparticles of zinc oxide, on a daily basis, almost completely unaware of what they're putting on their bodies.
Comment: According to the following article Nanotechnology - the new threat to food: Several articles carried on SOTT depict the human and environmental risks of emerging nanotechnology:
Regulated or Not, Nano-Foods Coming to a Store Near You
Food Industry Too Secretive Over Nanoparticles
Scientists Scared as Nanotechnology and Nanoparticles Become Common in Consumer Products
More Research Urged on Nanoparticle Risk
Alert over the march of the 'grey goo' in nanotechnology Frankenfoods