| Literature DB >> 25294341 |
Ivo Iavicoli1, Veruscka Leso, Walter Ricciardi, Laura L Hodson, Mark D Hoover.
Abstract
In a world of finite resources and ecosystem capacity, the prevailing model of economic growth, founded on ever-increasing consumption of resources and emission pollutants, cannot be sustained any longer. In this context, the "green economy" concept has offered the opportunity to change the way that society manages the interaction of the environmental and economic domains. To enable society to build and sustain a green economy, the associated concept of "green nanotechnology" aims to exploit nano-innovations in materials science and engineering to generate products and processes that are energy efficient as well as economically and environmentally sustainable. These applications are expected to impact a large range of economic sectors, such as energy production and storage, clean up-technologies, as well as construction and related infrastructure industries. These solutions may offer the opportunities to reduce pressure on raw materials trading on renewable energy, to improve power delivery systems to be more reliable, efficient and safe as well as to use unconventional water sources or nano-enabled construction products therefore providing better ecosystem and livelihood conditions.However, the benefits of incorporating nanomaterials in green products and processes may bring challenges with them for environmental, health and safety risks, ethical and social issues, as well as uncertainty concerning market and consumer acceptance. Therefore, our aim is to examine the relationships among guiding principles for a green economy and opportunities for introducing nano-applications in this field as well as to critically analyze their practical challenges, especially related to the impact that they may have on the health and safety of workers involved in this innovative sector. These are principally due to the not fully known nanomaterial hazardous properties, as well as to the difficulties in characterizing exposure and defining emerging risks for the workforce. Interestingly, this review proposes action strategies for the assessment, management and communication of risks aimed to precautionary adopt preventive measures including formation and training of employees, collective and personal protective equipment, health surveillance programs to protect the health and safety of nano-workers. It finally underlines the importance that occupational health considerations will have on achieving an effectively sustainable development of nanotechnology.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25294341 PMCID: PMC4201727 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-13-78
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Example relationships among guiding principles for a green economy and the opportunities and challenges for nano-applications
| Guiding principles for a green economy (based on the proposals of ref.[ | |
|---|---|
| (P1) | Is a means for achieving sustainable development; |
| (P2) | Creates decent work and green jobs; |
| (P3) | Improves governance and the rule of law – by being inclusive; democratic; participatory; accountable; transparent and stable; |
| (P4) | Is equitable, fair and just – between and within countries and between generations; |
| (P5) | Reduces poverty, and increases well-being, livelihoods, social protection, and access to essential services; |
| (P6) | Protects biodiversity and ecosystems; |
| (P7) | Is resource and energy efficient; |
| (P8) | Respects planetary boundaries or ecological limits or scarcity; |
| (P9) | Uses integrated decision making; |
| (P10) | Internalizes externalities; |
| (P11) | Measures beyond gross domestic product indicators and metrics |
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| -Smart energy nanotechnology can improve power delivery systems to be more efficient, reliable and safe (P1, P2, P5). |
| -Nano-devices may trade on renewable energy produced through naturally replenished resources, i.e. sunlight and wind. This may reduce fossils as energy resources and the impact for the greenhouse gas emissions balance (P3, P4, P5, P6, P7, P9). | |
| -Energy efficient nanotechnology requires less energy to perform the same function - getting more use out of the already created energy (P7, P8, P10). | |
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| -Design nano-enabled infrastructure necessary to manage water and keep it clean is inextricably linked to prospects for economic development and better livelihood conditions (P1, P2). |
| -Access to clean water and adequate sanitation is a basic human right and is critical to the alleviation of poverty (P3, P4, P5). | |
| -Investment in infrastructures and considerable greening of water policies are necessary to reduce the cost to face water shortages (P8, P9, P10, P11). | |
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| -Nanotechnology aims to increase the efficiency buildings use resources - energy, water, and materials - while reducing building impacts on environment and human health through better siting, design, construction, and removal (P1, P2, P6, P7, P8, P10, P11). |
| -NMs applied to the surfaces of structural elements of the buildings can contribute to environmental cleaning by photo-catalytic reactions (P1, P2, P6, P7, P8). | |
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| -Nano-enabled applications may provide a slow release and dosage of fertilizers and an efficient water reservoir for plants. This may contribute to a greater agricultural productivity, especially in countries with prolonged dry spells (P1, P2, P4, P5). |
| -Nano-packaging - with improved barrier and mechanical properties - may allow a longer safe storage of food, especially in regions where cooling is not easily available (P2, P4, P5, P8). | |
| -Nano-sensors may improve the quality and reduce the cost of continuous environmental monitoring. Nano-remediation of environmental pollution may exceed conventional methods in efficiency and speed (P1, P2, P6, P7). | |
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| -Efficient synthetic pathways must be developed to obtain NMs “safe by design” (e.g. through green chemistry; optimized reaction chemistry; minimized energy consumption and costs; employment of benign feed stocks and reagents; avoidance of hazardous substances and pollutants); |
| -Analytical methods must be developed to obtain a reliable nanomaterial characterization and tools to detect, monitor and track NMs in the environment and biological media. | |
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| -Biological impact must be determined for NM primary and acquired physico-chemical properties (size, surface area, chemical composition, protein corona as a nano-bio interaction) on ecosystems, as well as in |
| -The “life-cycle” impact must be assessed for NMs on the environment and biological systems: NMs emitted from production processes, or released from nano-enabled devices during their assembly, use, recycling or disposal. | |
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| -NM key health effects must be defined: e.g. pulmonary toxicity, genotoxicity and carcinogenicity. |
| -Information must be developed on the potential toxicity of NMs available for employers and workers involved in NM research and developmental areas, as well as in nano-enabled device manufacture, assembly, application and disposal, avoiding dispersion of essential information. | |
| -A highly skilled workforce must be built and sustained, that is well trained to face emerging risks as well as known physico-chemical risks in new situations and also trained to avoid accidents. | |
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| -Participation of scientific, governmental, industry and workforce representatives must be pursued for the processes of opinion forming, education and decision making in shaping green nanotechnology. |
| -Nano-green jobs must redirect current path of environmental decline and create economic opportunity, strengthening local urban and rural communities. | |
| -The green economy policies must balance nanotechnology environmental, societal, occupational and health promotion benefits, with commercialization costs and risks. | |
| -Companies involved in green-nanotechnology innovations must plan a precautionary risk management approach by identifying actual risks, planning/implementing control measures and risk communication. | |
Figure 1An analysis of potentially hazardous exposure conditions for workers involved in nanotechnology activities. Legend: Note how the recycling of nano-enabled products over time may result in changes in the composition of workplace exposures.