Eudoxa Comment January 2004
Witnessing the birth of the European nano-effort?
Written by Waldemar Ingdahl
This article has previously been published in The
Sprout Vol II Issue 5, January 2004
Opponents to nanotechnology only care about policy. But if eurocrats
and techies could engage in a policy discussion, guided by a vision which
expands beyond funding for the next year or a better insulin pump, then
the future has a chance- that is, of course if the EU Commissioner can
even be bothered to turn up to such talks.
"La Bora", the strong wind of the Adriatic Sea swept through
the city of Trieste in Italy. But there was no wind sweeping through the
conference centre that hosted the EuroNanoForum 2003. Between December
9th and 12th more than a thousand delegates gathered at the conference
organised by the European Commission's DG for Research/ Industrial Research,
in order to assess both the state of the art and policy issues in the
area of nanotechnology.
Nanotechnology, the manufacture of materials and machines with atomic
precision and size, is widely regarded as the next revolution in technology.
It is predicted to become a very broad emergent technology, with several
different areas of application such as functional materials, medicine,
electronics, and optics.
While the debate rages on its eventual capabilities or even how to define
it, it is becoming popular for funding and investment. In the early and
middle 1990's nanotechnology was just speculative ideas, something to
interest open-minded researchers, engineering hobbyists and science fiction
fans. But slowly the idea percolated through the scientific community.
It went from a wild idea to the next big thing. Suddenly funding for nanotechnology
research appeared and it was not just acceptable to study it, but a good
buzzword to add to one's research proposal.
EU Research Commissioner Philippe Busquin spoke to the conference via
a recorded message. Busquin's speech summed up what the conference was
about: the EU formally acknowledged nanotechnology as an important part
of European research. This was bolstered by the presence of several prominent
guests, among them Nobel laureate Sir Harry Kroto.
Nanotechnology represents a great scientific challenge, since traditional
scientific disciplines like biology, chemistry and microtechnology converge.
New inter-disciplinary approaches need to be developed. But in becoming
acceptable research the original meaning of nanotechnology has been diluted,
which was visible in many scientific presentations at the conference.
Whereas it was first considered as operations on the molecular scale using
molecular tools, nanotechnology now appears to mean any technology involving
extremely small structures. One reason is of course that as it became
well funded it was advantageous for researchers to call their research
nanotechnology if it involved tiny structures in some way.
New manufacturing tools require a novel entrepreneurial attitude. Thus
a session was dedicated to how to raise venture capital for start-ups.
Much is expected of the field to create new jobs. But the European problem
of translating scientific innovation into concrete business opportunities
was visible because of Europe's difficulties of raising sufficient venture
capital and providing entrepreneurial structures.
In looking at the here-and-now issues, we may lose sight of the larger
and more important issues facing us. Problems can likely be designed away
with some forethought. But even fairly mild nanotechnological applications
raise important of what we want to achieve with industry and our lives,
where we want to take the economy and our species. These are the real
issues, but they cannot be debated within the rather narrow discourse
among regulators and engineers.
Unfortunately, those at the conference who started to take a deeper look
at the social implications often did it from the perspective of the precautionary
principle. The precautionary principle is often misused as a tool to stifle
development or gain political control over it rather than the common sense
approach of being careful with things that we have reason to suspect are
dangerous. The real test of sincerity in applying it is whether the one
proposing it is interested in examining benefits in addition to risks,
and weighing them. Quite often potential benefits clearly outweigh even
fairly clear risks, and precautions should not be applied to stifle beneficial
development. But when the risks are automatically given primacy, then
there is no room for constructive analysis- other issues than just risks
are the real source of the controversy.
The irony is that much of the nanotechnology field, in its eagerness
to distance itself from its roots in "science fiction" has also
ignored these deeper issues. A shortsighted search for directly applicable
practical results becomes pure science or technology, and easily misses
the important policy dimensions.
European nanotechnology research would do well to develop technologies
of foresight at the same time: social or digital tools to further knowledge
exchange, constructive debate, cross-examination of evidence and views,
institutions to engage the public and special interests in dialogue about
potential about potential future applications and their risks and benefits.
Opponents to technology only care about policy. But if one can meet them
in a policy discussion, guided by a vision more long-range than funding
for the next year or a better insulin pump, then the future has a chance.
Maybe a "Bora" wind of visions and audacity could do some good
for European nanoresearch too.
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