Richard Denison, Ph.D., is a Senior Scientist.
I just read an interesting column by John DiLoreto, CEO of NanoReg, that appears online at Nanotechnology Now. It’s titled “We Should Have Seen It Coming: States Regulating Nanotechnology.” It nicely describes the important role states play in advancing environmental policy and regulation – especially when the feds are asleep at the wheel. And it also gives a neat rundown of the various state actions aimed at nanomaterials that are underway.
But, search as I might, I couldn’t find a single acknowledgment in Mr. DiLoreto’s latest column – or in his earlier related column titled “What Drives the Regulation of Nanomaterials?” – of the role the nanotechnology industry itself played in bringing all of this on itself.
That’s quite an omission, in my view, given that the industry’s actions (or, more accurately, the lack thereof) played a central role in getting us to where we are (or, more accurately, aren’t) today on nanotechnology oversight. That includes driving states to feel they had to step in to fill the federal void. Read More