Nanoparticles in Our Foods?

04 Dec, 2012

by Twilight Greenaway, via Grist.org

The foods above all contain titanium dioxide in nano form. Source: Environmental Science & Technology. I’ve been keep­ing my eye on the role of nan­otech­nol­ogy in food for a few years now, so I was inter­ested to see a feature-length inves­ti­ga­tion called “Eating Nano” in this month’s E Magazine. In it, E edi­tor Brita Belli takes a deep dive into the grow­ing role of nan­otech­nol­ogy in food and agri­cul­ture, the cur­rent lack of over­sight and reg­u­la­tions, and the grow­ing con­sen­sus that more infor­ma­tion and trans­parency are both sorely needed in rela­tion to this grow­ing field.

Nanotechnology involves the engi­neer­ing and manip­u­la­tion of par­ti­cles at a nano scale. Nanoparticles, as they’re called, are mea­sured in nanome­ters or bil­lionths of one meter. Another way to put it: If a nanopar­ti­cle were the size of a foot­ball, a red blood cell would be the size of the field. Although some nanopar­ti­cles have been found to exist in nature (car­bon nanopar­ti­cles exist in caramelized foods, for instance, and sil­ver­ware has been shown to shed nano-sized sil­ver par­ti­cles), it’s the nanopar­ti­cles that are engi­neered in lab­o­ra­to­ries that have envi­ron­men­tal health advo­cates concerned.

Here’s the thing: It turns out most mate­ri­als start behav­ing dif­fer­ently at that size. According to the British cor­po­rate account­abil­ity orga­ni­za­tion As You Sow, which has been keep­ing tabs on the nan­otech indus­try for sev­eral years, “mate­ri­als reduced to the nanoscale either through engi­neered or nat­ural processes can sud­denly show very dif­fer­ent prop­er­ties com­pared to what they exhibit on a macroscale, enabling unique appli­ca­tions such as alter­ations in color, elec­tri­cal con­duc­tance, or permeability.”

Considering the fact that nanopar­ti­cles are now used to help deliver nutri­ents, keep food fresh for longer, and act as thick­en­ing and col­or­ing agents in processed foods, these “dif­fer­ent prop­er­ties” might be cause for con­cern. Or—at the very least—they might be rea­son enough to con­duct thor­ough research into their health impacts.

In actu­al­ity, com­pa­nies are not required to dis­close nano-sized ingre­di­ents, nor is there much active ques­tion­ing about their safety. Instead, Belli writes, “From the government’s per­spec­tive, nano forms of sil­ver, iron or tita­nium are no dif­fer­ent, fun­da­men­tally, from their scaled-up coun­ter­parts which have already been safety tested, so the agency has ush­ered the par­ti­cles into the food sup­ply under the Generally Recognized as Safe provision.”

Click here to read the rest of this arti­cle at Grist.org.

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