2008 Newsletter Archives Subscribe to
the C-R-Newsletter!
Note: The Center
for Responsible Nanotechnology is an affiliate of World
Care, an international, non-profit, 501(c)(3) organization. The
opinions expressed by CRN in our newsletters and elsewhere do not necessarily
reflect those of World Care.
To
keep up with all the latest CRN and nanotech activity on a daily basis,
be sure to check our Responsible Nanotechnology weblog.
==========
Global Catastrophic Risks
CRN is proud to join with the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies
to present an exciting and informative one-day seminar -- Friday, November
14, 2008 -- on “Global Catastrophic
Risks” at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.
Learn about threats to the future of humanity, natural and man-made, and the
pro-active steps we can take to reduce these risks and build a more resilient
civilization.
SEMINAR FACULTY
Nick
Bostrom Ph.D., Director, Future of Humanity Institute, Oxford University
Jamais
Cascio, research affiliate, Institute for the Future
James
J. Hughes Ph.D., Exec. Director, Institute for Ethics and Emerging
Technologies
Mike
Treder, Executive Director, Center for Responsible Nanotechnology
Eliezer
Yudkowsky, Research Associate. Singularity Institute for Artificial
Intelligence
William
Potter Ph.D., Director, James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies
This
event comes just ahead of the futurist mega-gathering Convergence 08 at
the same venue (see below). Please join
us for this essential seminar!
Convergence 08
On November 15-16, 2008, the world’s most dangerous ideas will
collide in Mountain View, California. Convergence08 will
examine the world-changing possibilities of nanotech and
the life-changing promises of biotech. It is the premier forum for debate
and exploration of cogtech ethics, and ground zero of the past and future
infotech revolution. Convergence 08 is an innovative, lively unconference,
the first and only forum dedicated to NBIC (Nano-Bio-Info-Cogno) technologies.
CRN will be there, and we hope you will be too. Discounted early
bird registration is available until October 20.
Scenarios Becoming Real
Although we're quick to point out that the nanotechnology
scenarios developed by the CRN Task Force are not predictions, it's
interesting to follow the news and see how some early elements we hypothesized
are starting to take place.
Again, the scenarios should not be viewed as predictions, nor do they represent
outcomes desired by the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology. CRN intends
the scenarios to provide a springboard for discussion of molecular manufacturing
policies and societal responses. While each scenario can be understood
individually, the real value of the process comes from the comparison
of multiple scenarios.
During the last comparable upheaval, back in the 1930s, most of Europe began
moving toward a system of democratic socialism, which is still in place today.
The US never went as far, of course, and in fact retreated from that direction
in the 1980s and 1990s in a move toward laissez faire economics that
many people blame in part for our present troubles.
At the same time, China has, since the 1980s, combined one-party politics
with robust capitalist economics and achieved astonishing financial growth.
Russia's present leadership seems eager to follow that example, while the
US may lean more toward Europe and others in adopting socialist management
of health care and various major financial institutions.
If that happens, we would end up with something like the old Cold War alignment,
but with the economic systems flipped around. It’s possible we may see,
over the next decade or so, a clear realignment that puts communist capitalism --
China and Russia -- on one side, with democratic socialism -- the
United States, Europe, Japan, Australia, and Canada on the other side. India,
Africa, and South America would remain in the middle, to be wooed and/or fought
over by both sides.
CRN Goes to Spain
Last month, CRN Executive Director Mike Treder traveled to Spain
to make a presentation to a group of faculty and students about the effects
of nanotechnology on globalization.
In addition to speaking about economic, military, and humanitarian implications,
a major point he made was the projected continuum between global warming,
climate chaos, geoengineering, and planet-scale engineering.
You can read more about those remarks in CRN’s latest
monthly column for Nanotechnology Now.
Funding for Independent Researchers
The European Research Council has good news for "early career independent
researchers" working in "any field of science, engineering, and scholarship." They
are offering grants totaling almost half a billion US dollars for qualified
researchers from any country who have an innovative idea and need funding
to explore or develop it.
Later this month, CRN’s Mike Treder will make a presentation
at the World Public Forum’s “Dialogue
of Civilizations” in Rhodes, Greece. Mike will report to the group
on this subject: “From ‘top down’ to ‘bottom up’ --
In technology, economics, and geopolitics.”
World Public Forum is “a deliberative-consultative body that unites
various public organizations, members of organs of government, representatives
of intellectual, cultural, spiritual, business and political elite from different
countries, representatives of various cultural traditions, people that strive
for contribution in dialogue among civilizations.” Their
mission includes “the creation of effective and democratic instruments
of solving of global problems and realization of evolutionary changes in
the structure of modern society.”
Mike looks forward to meeting and exchanging ideas with the event’s
esteemed participants.
Feature Essay: The Human Extinction Scenario By Jamais Cascio, CRN Director of Impacts Analysis
It's 2019. A major pandemic has swept the planet, with upwards of 25 million
people infected. Global food networks have collapsed, and riots over food
supplies are in daily headlines around the world. The transition away from
fossil fuels is underway, but a lack of standards, failing infrastructure,
and catastrophic mistakes have made the shift far more painful than expected.
Pirates fill the seas, hackers attack key networks, and "griefing" has moved
from the world of online games to our information-laden real lives. War, drought,
and climate disruption have pushed millions out of their homes throughout
the world, a global diaspora that grows daily.
And into this set of interwoven crises, an announcement: According to the
most sophisticated global computer simulations ever run, the human species
is likely to go functionally extinct by 2042.
What do you do?
This is the premise behind Superstruct, a new
project organized by the Palo Alto, California-based Institute
for the Future (IFTF). The Institute has been around for 40 years,
a non-profit think tank offering structured forecasts to a variety of
global clients. For 30 years, it has produced an annual "Ten-Year Forecast," highlighting
trends and topics that the combined work of the various IFTF associates
deem likely to be important over the coming decade. This year, for the
2009 forecast, IFTF decided to do something different: Rather than rely
on its internal experts, they would "crowd-source the future," opening
up the foresight process to thousands (or more) of participants.
IFTF is doing this crowd-sourcing in the form of a game -- Superstruct.
Superstruct (meaning to build upon) is a "massively-multiplayer forecasting
game" designed by Ten-Year Forecast director Kathi
Vian, noted game specialist Jane
McGonigal, and me, environmental futurist (and the Director of Impacts
Analysis at the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology) Jamais
Cascio. I have worked as a part-time Research Affiliate with IFTF
for a few years now. For Superstruct, Kathi makes sure that the work
fits in with Ten-Year Forecast goals, Jane has organized the game structure,
and I've been in charge of building the game world.
Unlike World of Warcraft or other massively-multiplayer online worlds, Superstruct
is not played as a traditional computer game. Rather, it's perhaps better
thought of as a collaborative storytelling exercise, but with rules. Participants
will be asked to describe in detail how they themselves will be living in
2019, and how they would respond to the crises presented -- and to the announcement
of the likely extinction of humankind. Moreover, the participants will be
asked to work together to come up with new forms of organizations -- superstructs
-- that could offer novel ways to deal with the crises at hand, and help push
out the extinction horizon for the human species.
Participation takes the form of videos, blog posts, twitter feeds, and active
contributions on the Superstruct discussion boards. Already, creative early
participants have produced novel materials, even entire websites, based in
this fictional world of 2019. Twitter chat has been underway for at least
a week; Superstruct-related posts either have the #2019 tag, or come from
a Twitter account with 2019 in its name (e.g., my game-related Twitter feed
is at cascio2019).
The five "superthreats" described at the beginning of this essay (given the
catchy titles of "Quarantine," "Ravenous," "Power Struggle," "Outlaw Planet," and "Generation
Exile") may at first seem like a cacophony of catastrophe, as if we've overloaded
the world of 2019 with more than its fair share of disasters.
In truth, while the conditions may in some cases be exaggerated, the number
and complexity of the problems on the planet strongly parallel what we see
today: global economic meltdown; peak oil; struggles against violent extremism;
multiple simultaneous wars; and environmental crises galore. These problems
haven't gone away by 2019, but they serve as the background conditions that
made the superthreats possible.
But we're not just offering an eschatological laundry list for participants
to deal with; we're also talking about the various tools and ideas that could
be available to us to deal with these crises. The design team decided early
on that full-blown molecular manufacturing, while certainly a possibility
within this time-frame, would not be available -- we didn't want fixing the
world to be too easy. But that research is underway, and has started to bear
early fruit -- much more precise microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), even
borderline nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS). Moreover, the fabber revolution
is well underway, and many of the nanotech-related issues surrounding intellectual
property, open source design, and access to materials have already begun to
emerge.
Moreover, if you look back at the eight scenarios produced
by the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology last year, you'll note that deep
crises can serve as a catalyst for accelerated development of advanced technologies.
While the scenario behind Superstruct doesn't map precisely to any single
CRN scenario, it has elements that reflect nearly all of them.
Nanotechnology-aware participants in Superstruct should look for ways in which
the early precursor technologies likely to be available by 2019 can help to
enhance other kinds of projects. The heart of Superstruct can be found in
the combinations of ideas and organizations created by the players -- the
goal isn't to be the one person who can save the world, but to be the one
who sees the right kind of collaborative structures needed. To that end, we
have a small number of judges (including science fiction writer Bruce Sterling,
graphic novelist Warren Ellis, and Heroes producer Tim Kring) who
will offer their own, unique awards at the end of the project. Players will
also be able to earn badges and other smaller awards along the way.
When this is done, not only will Superstruct participants have access to the
entire body of material created by the other participants, in 2009 they'll
also receive IFTF forecast work produced as a result.
Superstruct play officially begins October 6, and the project will run through
November 17.
Help create the future -- and maybe avert human extinction -- by playing Superstruct.
To
keep up with all the latest CRN and nanotech activity on a daily basis, be
sure to check our Responsible Nanotechnology weblog.
==========
Big Boost for Molecular Manufacturing
Research in diamond mechanosynthesis -- building diamondoid nanostructures
atom by atom using scanning probe microscopy, a technique seen as a first
step toward mature molecular manufacturing -- has received a major boost with
a $3 million grant from the U.K. Engineering
and Physical Sciences Research Council, awarded to Professor Philip Moriarty
at the University of Nottingham for a “Digital Matter” project.
In a series of laboratory experiments, Moriarty and his research partners
will spend up to five years testing proposed “tooltips” developed
in sophisticated computer simulations by Robert Freitas and Ralph Merkle of
the Nanofactory Collaboration.
This is truly big news. It's the first time we've seen such significant government
spending on research directly connected to molecular manufacturing. Our response,
as always, is to urge equivalent funding and attention for
the positive and negative implications of nanofactory technology.
CRN Goes to Oxford
Last month, Mike Treder and Chris Phoenix, the co-founders of
CRN, made a joint presentation titled "Small Machines, Big Choices: The Looming
Impacts of Molecular Manufacturing" at a Global
Catastrophic Risks conference held at Oxford University in England.
The talk was well received and generated lots of discussion, as well as
a positive review from
Ronald Bailey, science correspondent for Reason magazine, who attended
the conference and published his observations.
Looking Ahead
A group of leading nanotechnology researchers recently asked CRN
executive director Mike Treder to provide a current “best-estimate
timeline” for the eventual development of molecular manufacturing.
The primary conclusion (see previous link) is that nanofactory technology “might
become a reality by 2010 to 2015, more plausibly will by 2015 to 2020, and
almost certainly will by 2020 to 2025.” That statement seems reinforced
by the big news item in the opening entry of this
newsletter.
CRN Goes to Washington
At the end of July, CRN’s Mike Treder gave
a talk at this year’s World Future Society (WFS) annual conference.
Here is his first-hand report on the event:
In
2005, for my first appearance at the annual conference of the WFS, I was
given a small room with only 25 chairs, and I was scheduled for a 9:30 PM
presentation. My topic was “Do Sweat the Small Stuff: Why Everyone
Should Care about Nanotechnology.” To my surprise and delight, the
room was full and in fact we had another 10 or 15 people standing at the
back.
Last
year in Minneapolis, I gave my second talk at a WFS annual conference, this
time on the topic of “Nanotechnology and the Future of Warfare.” The
room was larger, with seating for about 50, and again it was filled to overflowing.
This
year I traveled to Washington, DC, for the 2008 conference, where I gave
a one-hour presentation on "Radical Technologies, Rapid Change, and the
Real World." This time, they were prepared for a bigger audience to attend,
with a large room and seats for at least 100 people. But guess what -- it
still wasn't big enough -- once again, we had a standing room only crowd.
You
can download
a PDF of the talk that Mike presented, and you can also download the full
text of all eight future scenarios that were discussed in his presentation.
This
fall, the Institute for the Future invites you to play Superstruct, the
world’s first massively multiplayer forecasting game. It’s not
just about envisioning the future -- it’s about inventing the future.
Everyone is welcome to join the game.
“It's
the year 2019, and humans have only 23 years to go, as the Global Extinction
Awareness System starts the countdown for Homo sapiens.”
Fun
stuff. If you’d like to know more about the game and how you can get
involved, read the Superstruct FAQ.
Nanotech and the Big Picture
Our latest
column for the popular Nanotechnology Now web portal has just
been posted. Here is the abstract:
When
CRN was founded five years ago, our intent was to assist in establishing
the technical feasibility of molecular manufacturing, to mount a convincing
argument that it would be a disruptive, transformative technology, and to
raise awareness of the potential imminence of its arrival. Now we need to
step back and look at the bigger picture...
We
hope you'll read all
our columns, offer feedback, and tell others about them too.
CRN Going to Spain
In early September, CRN’s Mike Treder will travel to Spain
to make a presentation on “Nanotechnology and Globalization” as
part of a three-day annual event sponsored by the Basque Savings Bank Federation.
In previous years they have covered the digital revolution, sustainable development,
demographic evolution, climate change, and other issues. If you are in Spain
and can attend the event, be sure to say ‘hola’ to Mike.
Guest Essay: The Perfect Storm By Jeffrey L. Treder
Jeff Treder, older brother of CRN executive director Mike Treder, is a retired
English professor and published author. Here he offers an overview of past
and future trends that may be relevant to the development and deployment of
molecular manufacturing.
The Perfect Storm
In October, 1991, two weather systems merged in the Atlantic off
New England to produce a maelstrom that earned the title “the perfect
storm.” Subsequently that evocative phrase has been applied metaphorically
to any number of tumults. Now it seems possible, even likely, that the phrase
might legitimately describe something much bigger than a nor’easter.
Four things, distinct but deeply influencing one another, are about to impact
our world in ways hard to predict but foolish to ignore. These four are climate
change, oil and natural gas passing their supply peak, fresh water depletion
and pollution, and population pressure.
Their mutual influence is obvious. Often they reinforce one another, sometimes
in positive feedback loops (positively harmful to people). Over the last 150
years, fossil fuel consumption has empowered massive population growth and
has become a major cause of long-term climate change. Population growth (along
with technological and economic growth) in turn has greatly increased the
rate at which fossil fuels are consumed. Just while oil and natural gas are
passing their production peak, they are being consumed ever faster, meaning
that the effects of gradually decreasing supply will be felt relatively abruptly.
Both population and economic growth aggravate the depletion of water supplies
for drinking, irrigation, and manufacturing. Together, these four historical
mega-events will reverberate in various ways: food production will be unable
to keep pace with demand, bringing on famine; fresh water supplies are already
being depleted and poisoned worldwide, spreading famine and disease, which
in turn reduce governmental stability; governmental instability leads to repression
and armed conflict of every sort. Meanwhile, the reigning economic theory,
capitalism, tells us we must have constant economic growth in order to bring
profit to the investors who finance the growth -- the perfect feedback loop.
More growth means more production, more people, more consumption, more pollution,
more climate change. The earth is a small house stuffed with people eating
the emergency rations, and the toilet is backing up.
I am going to attempt a forecast of how these things may play out over the
next two decades. All the details are of course speculative, but keep in mind
that the forces in play are not speculative. The earth’s climate is
warming and the glaciers are melting. The fresh water supply is already precarious.
At current rates of consumption, oil and natural gas production is bound to
start declining pretty soon; the only serious debate is over just how soon,
and political events in the Mideast may speed the decline. The earth’s
population is estimated to have been less that one billion in 1800, close
to two billion in 1900, and over six billion in 2000; we will be seven billion
in just a few more years.
When two vehicles collide head-on, the impact speed is the sum of the individual
speeds. Likewise, the collision of global population and economic growth with
environmental degradation and fossil fuel and fresh water depletion is going
to make many changes occur faster than they otherwise would and faster than
we expect.
Keep in mind also that I am talking about what I think is most likely to happen,
not what I want to happen or think ought to happen. Reality, whatever it may
turn out to be, trumps our wishes and oughts.
Climate Change
Climate change, a.k.a. global warming, is now denied only by the
uninformed or the disingenuous. The earth’s temperature is rising and
human activity is largely if not solely the reason why. Our activities release
carbon dioxide and methane, the chief greenhouse gases, into the atmosphere
in ever increasing amounts. We are destroying much of the vegetation that
absorbs carbon dioxide, especially by cutting down rain forests and by polluted
water runoffs which make the oceans slightly more acidic, killing off plankton.
Humans have already removed half of the earth’s forests and wetlands
and are hard at work on the remaining half. Each of the last five decades
has seen more flooding and wildfires worldwide than the decade before. Polar
and mountain glaciers are melting faster than even most alarmists predicted.
Hurricanes and tornadoes are more frequent and stronger. Fisheries are collapsing,
due both to overfishing and to warming water. Coral reefs are dying. Droughts
are worse and deserts are expanding.
No matter what we do now, these trends will continue over the next few decades.
If everyone from governments and transnational corporations to SUV owners
immediately starts doing what environmentalists are telling them to do, global
climate might stabilize by the end of the century. But that is a very big
if. Most likely, people won’t change their ways until fuel prices and
shortages force them to.
Prediction: The planet’s weather will continue to grow more violent.
Droughts, heat waves, dust storms, and flooding will be particularly hard
on human life. Increasing temperatures will kill off vegetation and dry up
water resources, and their loss will lead, in a destructive feedback loop,
to even more warming. The Amazon and Indonesian rain forests will suffer drought
and massive wildfires, sending up thousands of tons of carbon dioxide into
the atmosphere. Fresh water supplies will be critical by 2020 and will be
a major cause of migration and conflict. Due both to thermal expansion and
glacial melt, the sea level will slowly rise, and by 2030 low lying coastal
areas like Bangladesh, the Nile delta, the Netherlands, London, and southern
Florida and Louisiana will be inundated during storm seasons. Much of Venice
will be abandoned.
The Global Oil Peak
As to fossil fuel depletion, I am assuming, and I believe, that those
analysts are correct who see the global oil production peak occurring by 2010
(if it has not already occurred), in the same way that U.S. production peaked
in the early 1970’s. The easy-to-extract-and-refine part of the world’s
oil fields has already been burned up. Of the remaining less exploited fields,
the chief one is offshore of Africa, south of Nigeria in the “armpit.” Drilling
and pumping there will involve all the customary African politics; oil production
is a long-term operation and African politics are capricious. The profits
will go to the oil giants and to the current high office holders in Nigeria,
Cameroon, Angola, and a few others. Most jobs on the rigs require training
and experience, which most Africans lack. And if oil is produced there in
significant quantity, the effect will be to stretch the global depletion curve
while adding to the burdens of economic growth and climate change. More oil
will only amplify the impending collision.
Whenever we pass the global production peak, we will only know it in hindsight.
Total production will gradually zigzag downward, and prices upward, but we
will only know for sure that this trend is more than temporary about ten years
after it begins.
Perhaps the most important aspect of the oil peak is the psychological one.
A lot of oil will still be being pumped and refined, if not quite as much
as a decade before. But everyone will know by then, though some will still
deny, that the handwriting is on the wall. The next few years will be worse,
and the years after that worse still. Visible on the horizon will be a day
when “civilization as we know it” will be over. Airlines, factories,
trucking fleets, industrial fertilizer, petrochemicals, and commutes -- all
those things that burn petroleum or are made from it -- will be in a terminal
shrink. Coal will outlast oil, but it is a more potent climate changer. Nuclear,
solar, and wind power will help a little but nowhere near enough; they can’t,
for instance, fly airplanes. Unemployment will balloon and the global economy
will be sliding inexorably into depression. People will react in various way
to this crisis, mostly unhappy ways. It will be one more component in humanity’s
extreme psychological stress.
And then there is the political factor. The world’s largest oil fields
are in the Mideast. The main underlying reason why the U.S. invaded Iraq and
overthrew Saddam was in order to gain and maintain de facto control over those
oil fields. The official explanation for this, beyond rooting out the malignancy
and his supposed Al Qaeda connections and WMD, was to bring stability and
democracy to that politically challenged region. Predictably, and as widely
predicted, that effort couldn’t succeed and didn’t. Whatever the
next twenty years may bring to the Mideast, it won’t be stability. Iraq
seems to be headed for civil war, possibly a long one. The totalitarian regime
in Iran will certainly try to control the outcome of that war. The U.S. government
may feel driven to go to war against Iran. Lots of things are possible and
the most likely ones are bad, bad for the locals and bad for the West’s
oil supply.
Prediction: Driven especially by steeply rising demand in China and India,
alongside unslackened demand in the U.S., the price of oil will continue ratcheting
upward, and so will the price of everything that depends on oil, like food,
fertilizer, plastics, lubricants, manufactured goods, and transportation.
In short, the cost of living will keep going up. Rising fuel prices will force
more airline bankruptcies and mergers; increasingly, only the wealthy will
be able to afford air travel. Somewhere in the 2010-2020 decade the bloated
and sublimely corrupt House of Saud will fall to a radical Islamic revolution.
The flow of Mideast oil to the West will be seriously disrupted, after which
air travel will become rare, the province of governments, corporations and
millionaires. There will be war between Israel and a coalition of Islamic
nations, a very bloody war climaxed when Israel, out of options, goes nuclear.
And then the U.S. and China, desperate from oil starvation (among
other desperations), will go to war over control of the Arabian and African
oil fields. In the process those oil fields will largely be destroyed. By
2030, the remnants of the world’s oil and natural gas supply systems
will be dysfunctional and fought over.
Disease
Global warming and the disruptions caused by it, by population pressure
and poverty, and by fossil fuel depletion will promote the spread of disease.
AIDS will lead the way, devastating China, India, Southeast Asia, and Russia
just as it has already devastated sub-Saharan Africa. Since we are at the
top of the food chain, and since our whole environment is increasingly polluted,
most of the food we eat is laced with toxins, which lower our bodies’ resistance
to disease. Sometime in the next twenty years there is likely to be another
worldwide flu pandemic like the one that killed millions in 1918-19. Malaria,
dengue fever, cholera, and tuberculosis will continue to ravage the poorest
regions of the world. The poor will become poorer still, many of them dying,
but no nation will escape the economic, social, and emotional damage of chronic
and epidemic diseases
Ecological Loss
Concern over the loss of some percentage of the earth’s millions
of plant and animal species seems to most people, and certainly to most Americans,
an incomprehensible fuss motivated mainly by green-warm-fuzzy sentimentality.
There is more to it than that, though. Deforestation, desertification, pollution,
and urbanization -- modern humanity’s footprints -- are disrupting and
destroying ecosystems all over the planet. Population pressure and soil exhaustion
are driving farmers to push into ancient rain forests, slashing and burning
to clear the land. Rich natural biodiversity is being replaced by chemically
sustained, large-scale monoculture. When we harm our natural environment,
we harm ourselves, often in ways that are hard to detect and understand, the
full effects of which may not show up for some time. The complex interdependency
of the life forms in an ecosystem isn’t just a biology teacher’s
mantra. For millennia, the earth’s forests have been steadily absorbing
carbon dioxide and giving off oxygen, and now we are steadily bulldozing and
burning them while replacing them with cars, trucks, buildings, pavement,
airports, power plants, and farmland, most of which consume oxygen and spew
atmospheric pollutants. It’s as if we are in a race with ourselves to
see which we will run out of first, drinkable water or breathable air.
Water
The growing scarcity of clean, fresh water is the most unambiguously
severe threat confronting us. We can live, sort of, without oil, but not without
water. There is good news and bad news here. The good news is that, as with
oil, water won’t be running out on us all at once. It’s a gradual
thing (though less gradual recently), and some regions are affected more severely
than others. The bad news is that the problems we have created for ourselves
are largely irreversible. Once the great underground aquifers are depleted,
they won’t be replenished for something like a thousand years -- if
untapped. Farmland which, through irrigation, has been sterilized by mineral
salts is similarly going to remain unproductive for a very long time, like
the former Fertile Crescent which is now Iraq. As the glaciers downsize, we
get less meltwater from them. River dams silt up over time, thus holding less
water, and dredging them is expensive -- in money and energy -- even where
technically feasible. Much of our remaining fresh water, in aquifers, lakes,
rivers and reservoirs, is dangerously polluted from our mining operations,
industries, toxic wastes, irrigated agriculture, herbicides, pesticides, livestock,
and, in many parts of the world, untreated human sewage. Air pollution turns
rain into acid rain.
Water scarcity is now a problem in most parts of the world, and in three large
regions it has become critical -- Australia, northern China, and the southwest
part of North America (from Kansas down to Central America). Global warming
will probably make these dry areas dryer still, even as their dams continue
silting up and even as they are pumping deeper into their aquifers and getting
ever less groundwater at ever higher costs (more energy required). Major cities
in these regions depend on that disappearing water: Perth, Melbourne, Sydney,
Beijing, Phoenix, Los Angeles, San Diego. The odds against Las Vegas are about
ten to one.
Along with famine and political turbulence, water scarcity will be a main
cause of mass migration, notably from North Africa into Europe and from Central
America and Mexico into the United States. Both of these migrations are already
underway, of course; as the numbers grow, so will conflict. And Latin Americans
will have to keep going when they reach Southern California and Arizona. There
won’t be enough water there either.
Famine
The Green Revolution of the 1960’s enabled farmers in many
parts of the world to grow food much more efficiently and abundantly, and
thus enabled the population to keep on growing. That revolution coincided
with the advent of large-scale industrial farming, and it was made possible
entirely by cheap and abundant oil. All this increasing energy consumption
in “developing” countries, for agriculture and livestock feed
as well as for factories, office buildings, road construction, trucks and
cars, is helping to hurry the world past the oil peak. (If the poor nations
share in the blame, of course, the rich ones, especially the U.S., get the
glutton’s share.) The slowdown in oil-based food production, along with
water scarcity and soil salinization, will spread famine in Africa, China,
India, Central and Southeast Asia, and many other parts of the world. At the
same time, overfishing coupled with global warming will exhaust the world’s
harvest of wild fish; fish farming will help, but it won’t make up the
difference. The reduction and unreliability of long-distance transportation
will require that most food be grown locally. Water for drinking and irrigation
will be scarce and fought over. There will be widespread anarchy, and many
localities will be ruled by warlords, gangs and militias (variant terms for
similar things) fighting among themselves -- West Africa gives us a preview.
Even local food production and distribution will be difficult under such conditions.
By 2025-30, millions of people will be dying every month from starvation,
disease, human violence, and natural disasters. By 2030 the world population,
after having peaked at around 7.5 billion, will be down below 5 billion and
falling.
Russia
After the implosion of the Soviet Union came the high-minded but
misguided and doomed attempt by the Clinton administration to impose democracy
and capitalism on a society completely unready to receive them. For many centuries
the Russian people had been accustomed to autocracy and authoritarianism,
both from the state -- tsars and then commissars -- and from the Orthodox
church. Russian culture has always been deeply hierarchical and paternalistic.
The poor and weak are resigned to being regimented -- what we tend to see
as oppressed. They don’t necessarily like it, but they prefer it to
Western-style freedom, because they know intuitively that in their culture,
freedom would mean a violent, winner-take-all free-for-all. That is just what
it did mean in the 1990’s, and the reasons why are easy to see in hindsight
(and were seen by many in foresight).
The Russians had none of the civil institutions and customs of a democratic
society, such as property and contract law, a secure and well-regulated banking
system, an independent judiciary, and above all a cherished concept of civil
liberty and responsibility. So when the Soviet state crumbled, the more powerful
Soviet apparatchiks, under a smokescreen of democratic blarney, seized the
remaining economic assets, including heavy industry and, especially, natural
resources (the only really valuable asset) -- mining, oil, and natural gas.
What has emerged is an authoritarian, paternalistic (think Godfather) gangster
state, run by a band of billionaire thugs who massage the masses with fascist
rhetoric and who are determined to regain international respect (again, think
Godfather). The country’s physical infrastructure, however, is in much
worse shape even than America’s. Their environmental pollution as almost
as bad as China’s. Their oil and natural gas deposits have already passed
their production peak, and the income from these will decline as the global
economy sinks. How the Russians will react to this is unpredictable. We may
hope that their nuclear arsenal and its delivery systems deteriorate faster
than the psychic state of the bosses. The long-suffering Russian people will
go on with disease, alcohol and apathy.
China
China’s problems now and in the near future are the problems
of the rest of the world writ larger and sooner. And China has real big problems.
The collision of economic growth with environmental disaster is happening
there in news-cycle slow motion, historical fast motion. China has one-fifth
of the world’s people; whatever happens to them is going to affect us
all.
They have the world’s worst air quality; they bring a new large coal-fired
power plant on line every week, and they are adding new cars and drivers at
a pace similar to America in the 1950’s. Their great ambition is to
surpass America in all things; their first breakthrough is the production
of greenhouse gases. Pollution in their rivers and coastal waters has killed
off most of the fish. Most of the sewage of thirteen hundred million people
goes into the ground water system untreated. Most of that polluted river water
is sucked out for irrigation and industry, both of which pollute it even more,
before a toxic trickle of it reaches the sea. Overgrazing, soil erosion, and
aquifer depletion, coupled with climate change, are causing wholesale desertification
on the dry northern plain. Poorly educated peasants continue to leave overcrowded
rural villages and stream into overcrowded cities where they join a hugely
overcrowded labor pool and get hungrier as they watch the lifestyle of the
wealthy minority. To their mind, the government has made promises it isn’t
delivering on, or is delivering very unequally. As for the Communist (well,
militaristic authoritarian) leaders, they are experts at riding the tiger.
They know the tiger well, but it keeps getting bigger and more agitated.
Prediction: Around 2015, widespread, desperately violent peasant uprisings
will be harshly suppressed by the army. Before 2020 the economy will implode
under the combined weight of overpopulation, environmental ruin, epidemic
disease, and loss of overseas markets due to global economic conditions. That
will lead to civil war. After great bloodshed, the army will manage to establish
military rule over most regions of an exhausted, impoverished country. As
noted above, China’s leaders will probably feel driven to go to war
with America over control of Mideast and African oil, a war neither former
great power will be able to win. By 2030 China’s population will be
around 800 million and falling
The United States
Apart from the United States’ indulgence in human slavery and
the consequent and calamitous Civil War, the nation has enjoyed a singularly
favored history. Recently, however, the richest nation ever has drifted (and
sometimes barged) into serious problems. These problems include the mammoth
national debt, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan (and the financial cost thereof),
a financial system regulated after-the-fact (Enron, mortgage loans), oil dependency,
aging infrastructure, unaffordable healthcare, retiring Baby Boomers, personal
debt (particularly through “credit” cards: that is, debt cards),
porous borders, drought in the West, and a government (regardless of party)
which is reactionary in the most literal sense, failing to anticipate trouble
but instead reacting to it histrionically and often counterproductively. And
the list goes on .... Any two or three of these might be manageable, but in
company with climate change, the whole list is a backbreaker.
The trouble with the national debt is that the government can only keep on
servicing it (forget repaying it) as long as the economy keeps on growing.
Whether or not a continuously growing economy is a good thing, it won’t
happen. Among the numerous reasons why it won’t, the first is probably
our participation in the globalized economy. It is the computer, an American
invention, which has chiefly empowered globalization, and that is ironic because,
while the global economy has both benefits and costs, the U.S. gets more of
the costs than the benefits. Globalization has compromised the economic independence
of all nations, and as the richest nation, the U.S. has the most to lose --
at least a lot of middle-class Americans do, those whose jobs have been deported
to lower-wage regions. It’s cold comfort to tell these people that instead
of clerking at Walmart, they can regain a sufficient income by retraining
to be a computer programmer, a surgeon, a CEO, or a lawyer.
The trouble with personal debt is that many are using it to subsidize inadequate
income and in lieu of retirement savings -- savings essential since few employers
offer pension plans any more. The trouble with healthcare is that many of
us can’t afford the insurance premiums and almost none of us can afford
a hospital stay without insurance. (Two of the main reasons why our healthcare
is so expensive are our infatuations with high-tech machinery and with lawsuits.)
The trouble with the war in Iraq is that we can’t win it and we can’t
quit and go home without jeopardizing our oil supply. As with China, the old
image of riding the tiger applies -- can’t stay on, can’t get
off. Altogether, too many troubles.
Prediction: The U.S. will enter a period of “stagflation” as in
the 1970’s -- flat or falling incomes, rising unemployment, and rising
prices (mainly due to rising energy costs). After Saudi Arabia falls to Islamic
fundamentalists, energy shortfalls along with mounting debt and a middle class
falling into poverty will increasingly cripple the U.S. economy. Walmart will
go bust. Social Security cuts will push more retirees into poverty. By 2020
the whole global economy will be in a tailspin. Before 2030 we will go to
war with China -- last-ditch and hopeless -- for control of the major oil
fields. After that, things will get worse all around.
Why We Probably Won’t Deflect the Perfect Storm Before it Arrives
Most of the experts who have written on these interrelated subjects
conclude their analysis with recommendations about what we must do in order
to avert a catastrophe. Usually they are guardedly optimistic about our willingness
to actually do what must be done, and do it in time. I have no argument with
such optimism except that, obviously, I don’t share it. I expect that
some people, some groups, even some governments (not, however, major ones
like the U.S., China, India, and Russia) will take some steps that will do
some good, but it won’t be enough, because overall we are motivated
mostly by short-term self-interest, as we perceive it. We do in fact act as
if there were no tomorrow.
When the opportunity came to pump non-renewable water and oil from underground,
we pumped and used them as fast as we could, even after we realized that our
grandchildren and their children will have to do without. Even now that most
of us realize that our lifestyle is altering the earth’s climate in
ways that will harm the human race far more than help it, what are we doing?
So far, at least, rather than cutting back, we are pumping more water and
oil, digging and burning more coal, sawing down more forests, plowing and
irrigating more land, making and driving more cars and trucks, manufacturing
and buying more luxurious gadgets, and evidently we will keep on doing so
until the economic and environmental costs become absolutely prohibitive.
We justify such behavior on the grounds that our economy has to keep on growing,
because if it doesn’t keep on growing, our lifestyle will begin slipping
-- never mind that all this economic growth is incontestably at the expense
of our descendants.
There once was a time when more was better, but now what we have is already
too much and more is a disaster. There is scant evidence to suggest that we
are about to suddenly convert ourselves en masse into self-denying, far-seeing
altruists. In the meantime, having sown the wind, we begin reaping the whirlwind.
Suggested Reading
James Gustave Speth - The Bridge at the Edge of the World: Capitalism,
the Environment, and Crossing from Crisis to Sustainability
James Howard Kunstler - The Long Emergency: Surviving the End of Oil,
Climate Change, and Other Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-First Century
Kenneth S. Deffeyes - Hubbert’s Peak: The Impending World Oil Shortage
John Ghazvinian - Untapped: The Scramble for Africa’s Oil
William H. Calvin - Global Fever: How to Treat Climate Change
Jared Diamond - Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
Maude Barlow - Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle
for the Right to Water
Lester R. Brown - Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (Third Edition)
Pat Murphy - Plan C: Community Survival Strategies for Peak Oil and Climate
Change
and the enduring classic
Marc Reisner - Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing
Water
To
keep up with all the latest CRN and nanotech activity on a daily basis, be
sure to check our Responsible Nanotechnology weblog.
==========
Doing the Impossible
In April, Jason Gorman, with the U.S. National Institute of Standards
and Technology, announced that “the
first real steps towards building a microscopic device that can construct
nano machines have been taken” by researchers, and that their “early
prototype for a nanoassembler” had been described in a peer-reviewed
publication.
A new nanoscale motor, able to control
movement “with a precision of less than the diameter of an atom” --
in other words, with atomic precision -- also was announced in late April,
this time by researchers in Spain.
Michio Kaku, the renowned physicist who was one of the developers of string
field theory, says that many things that
people today call impossible -- such as desktop nanofactories, which he calls ‘personal
fabricators’ -- probably aren’t. In a new three-part program broadcast
on the BBC, Kaku says: “Perhaps these "impossibilities" are merely very
difficult engineering problems.”
Climate Change Evidence
New and stronger evidence of atmospheric global warming is cropping up all
the time, so much so that NASA's top climate scientist, James Hansen, warned
recently that, “We've already reached the dangerous level of
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere." In other words, we are at, or very
near, a climate tipping point.
Decreasing snowfall levels in the
Alps and elsewhere portend problems for both tourism and agriculture (which
depends on snowmelt for irrigation), while increased levels of invasive species
(such as giant Burmese pythons in Florida) could wreak havoc on indigenous
plants and wildlife in areas around the world.
Honey bees are dying out as never seen before, and some experts think the
cause is increased levels of CO2.
Coral reefs are seriously endangered, and ocean phytoplankton is disappearing
at a dangerous rate too. Mysterious ocean dead zones may be linked to acidified
water, likely traceable to the greenhouse effect.
Given that we now have all this convincing evidence, it’s not surprising
that debates over global warming have taken a major
turn in recent months from whether or not it’s a real problem
to how we can best manage the problem. CRN
believes that all nations should immediately begin implementing known
measures for drastically reducing carbon emissions, while at the same
time pursuing the development of new technologies, including molecular
manufacturing, that may make a big difference further in the future.
Geoengineering Debates
As evidence mounts of the damage that global climate change could do to both
the environment and the economy, not to mention threatening the lives of millions
or even billions of people, some analysts are thinking about large-scale engineered
solutions to combat the problem. Whether it is seeding the ocean with
iron, or spraying huge amounts of sulfates into the atmosphere, or even
placing giant mirrors in space, such previously fanciful notions are now
being seriously considered in some quarters.
The website of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has launched
an online debate between several informed
and influential scientists to consider the question of geoengineering: how
much, how soon, which methods might be safest, and what else could be done
instead?
Although CRN is generally taking a precautionary approach toward geoengineering
-- not unless and until it is absolutely necessary, and only then after fully
exploring the possible side effects and preparing for unintended consequences
-- our analysis suggests it may indeed
be attempted someday. We will continue to argue that the most responsible
approach is to strictly limit carbon output while promoting development
of renewable energy.
Responsibility to Protect
After the devastating cyclone that struck Burma (Myanmar) in early May, leaving
more than 100,000 dead and over two million homeless, the international community
was largely appalled by the inaction and
intransigence of the military junta that rules the country. This quickly raised
the question of whether and when some sort of forceful
intervention superseding an irresponsible government’s national
sovereignty might be sanctioned as an emergency relief effort.
We see a possible precedent between the
UN’s “Responsibility to Protect” in this and other similar
cases, and the eventual need for action to control rogue deployment of molecular
manufacturing technology. Since the founding of CRN, we have been concerned
that the exponential proliferation of nanofactory technology may make it essential
to create an international administration to regulate it. That may not prove
to be necessary, but just in case it does, it would be helpful if the world
already had experience in managing global challenges with a collaborative
consensus approach.
The long-term move toward internationalist solutions for ending conflict,
preventing deprivation, and ensuring human rights also may find an application
in developing sources of clean, renewable energy. So says Michael Berger of Nanowerk,
who calls for a collaborative ‘nanotechnology
Apollo program’. We like that idea, and we also hope that growing
concerns about the risks associated with today’s early-generation
nanotech will provoke the adoption of common international standards and
meaningful regulation that could pave the way for an eventual global
administration of molecular manufacturing.
Closing this section on a high note, we’re pleased to report that a
non-profit group we promoted in the early days after the Burmese cyclone is
having significant success in getting relief
to villagers who badly need it and who’ve been let down by their tyrannical
government. Avaaz.org is making a big difference. Many still suffer, but without
their efforts, many more would be starving or dying of disease. We encourage
you to support them.
Power, Perspective, and Post-Humanity
No matter how interesting and enlightening are the discussions that CRN and
other groups engage in and conduct, how much power do any of us truly have
in making our big ideas matter? It turns out that we and at least one other
analyst have proposed that in the real world, there may only be about 6,000
to 7,000 people -- or roughly one in a million --
who possess true power.
It’s fascinating, though, to try placing the tiny segment of time in
which we live into a larger perspective. Inspired by the iconic film, “Powers
of Ten,” we performed a similar exercise going backward and forward
in time by powers of ten, with results
that generated a lot of interest on the Internet.
Complexity certainly seems to be the upswing. But does it also herald the end
of civilization? That’s the thrust of a recent cover story in New
Scientist magazine. After examining that article and also a rebutting
piece by another commentator, we concluded that trying to negotiate the
narrow passage between between collapse of civilization on one side through
overuse or misuse of technology, and replacement of our current civilization
on the other side through surrender to the machines may be exceedingly difficult.
More likely is that our civilization will end, as has every one before it,
and that its replacement will be a new civilization built upon the old.
But the entities creating and inhabiting that new order will not be humans
as we know them. Instead, the majority will be posthumans of some form or
other, perhaps human-machine hybrids, bio-engineered chimeras, redundant
virtual superintelligences, or something else we can't even imagine.
CRN Speaking Schedule
Over the next few months, CRN executive director Mike Treder will make presentations
on advanced nanotechnology at the following events...
June
17-19: International Conference on Nanotechnology, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
June
25: Workshop on Emerging Issues, Washington, DC
July
17-20: Conference on Global Catastrophic Risks, Oxford, UK
July
26-28: WorldFuture 2008, Washington DC
September
3-5: Basque Country Program on Globalization, San Sebastian, Spain
Feature Essay: Nano, Geo, Uh-Oh
By Jamais Cascio, CRN Director of Impacts Analysis
Stewart Brand once said, "We are as gods, and might as well get good at it."
More and more, I think this should be rephrased as, "We are as gods, and we'd
better not screw things up."
Even today, we underestimate our own power. With the advent of molecular manufacturing,
we're likely to underestimate just how much we're underestimating ourselves.
Case in point: geoengineering.
I pay close attention to developments in this arena. Geoengineering (or "geo," as
many in the field refer to it) is the idea of using large-scale engineering
to modify the planet's geophysical systems. These days, it typically refers
to efforts to slow or halt global warming through the manipulation of the
atmosphere and/or oceans. Some versions of geo go after atmospheric carbon
directly, while others simply try to reduce incoming sunlight (or "insolation")
while we make the necessary changes to our economies and societies to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions.
As you might imagine, geo is the focus of both intense scientific study and
political debate.
Like molecular manufacturing (MM), much of the debate around geo's implications
and risks exists in the anticipatory vacuum: the technology (for MM or geo)
is not here yet. All we have to go on are our understandings of present-day
related technologies, our models of how the future technologies will emerge,
and our core philosophies about how people act. What's often left out is the
intersection of these drivers, such as how new technologies can reshape how
people can (and will) act. In the geo mailing list I inhabit, for example,
one of the leading posters has made it clear that he considers concerns about
how much highly-motivated individuals or small groups could do with geoengineering
proposals to be ridiculous. Geo would require the resources of a nation, in
his view.
That might be true for today. But it won't be true forever -- or, arguably,
even for very much longer.
The deployment of molecular manufacturing technologies will give individuals
and small groups production capacities far beyond what we've ever experienced.
That's what the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology has long argued, and
it's a crucial point. Whether we're talking dry nano or wet, diamondoid or
biomimetic, the ability to shape materials at a molecular scale with systems
able (in principle, at least) to self-replicate will be fundamentally transformative.
We simply can't reliably apply our understanding of how people behave with
limited capacities to a world where individuals no longer face those same
limits. With molecular manufacturing, we'll be hard-pressed to make a clear
distinction between the potential power of individuals and the power of nations.
Many of the scenarios portraying the misuse of this kind of power rely on
the bad behavior of anti-social individuals or groups -- terrorists, the criminally
insane, the ludicrously careless. It's far more likely, in my view, that the
more difficult risks associated with molecular manufacturing will come from
people who think they're doing the right thing for the world. Individual efforts
at geoengineering rank high on my list of molecular manufacturing scenarios
filed under "road to hell paved with good intentions."
What might such scenarios look like? Although some might try to carry out
basic plans that present-day geoengineers predict nations will undertake somewhere
down the road (such as pumping megatons of sulphur dioxide particles into
the lower stratosphere), that's not MM thinking. How about millions of diamond
micro-drones, running on sunlight, able to stay in the air indefinitely, both
blocking a fraction of insolation and increasing overall planetary albedo?
Or, systems that filter and sequester CO2 right out of the air?
Systems that automatically hunt down large greenhouse gas emitters anywhere
on Earth and shut them down wouldn't technically be geoengineering, but would
operate on a similar scale.
These may all sound appealing to varying degrees, but if done without coordination,
testing, and oversight, they could be disastrous. One person doing this might
not be a major problem. A dozen, a hundred, a million people around the world
trying something like this would be catastrophic.
We are increasingly moving into a world where individuals and small groups
possess orders of magnitude more power than ever before. For now, that power
is largely limited to the Internet, where influence and ability to make changes
is not necessarily proportional to organizational size. But as we start building
the technologies that allow us to treat the physical world with the same rules
as the digital world -- in terms of replication and reach -- we'll soon see
the same kind of disruption of traditional measures of power.
It's not just a case of needing to be ready for people who aim to do wrong
with this new power. We'll also need to be ready for people who aim to do
right with it, too... but screw things up.
Every
month is full of activity for CRN. To follow the latest happenings on
a daily basis, be
sure to check our Responsible Nanotechnology weblog.
==========
Powerful Nanoscale Computer Created
A potentially powerful new form of nanoscale
computing has been developed by scientists in Japan. BBC News describes
the development as a "tiny chemical 'brain' which could one day act
as a remote control for swarms of nano-machines." The innovative device
is made of duroquinone, a compound
composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, which suggests that it might
become a key component of an early-generation nanofactory.
MSNBC has an excellent article online
about the new computing technique and also offers an interesting
video to illustrate it.
More Enabling Technologies
CRN has been tracking numerous examples of enabling
technologies that may help pave the way for molecular
manufacturing. Over the last several weeks, these are some of the
most interesting that we’ve found:
A new three-part TV series from the
BBC features leading theoretical physicist and futurist Dr Michio Kaku exploring
the cutting edge of science. In part three of the series, Kaku says:
“Amazingly,
we can now manipulate individual atoms. We can pick them up, move them around,
and even play with them. Today we can manipulate individual atoms, but this
is just the beginning of a journey -- a journey which will ultimately give
us the power to manipulate the very stuff of our universe: matter itself.
We are on the brink of a revolution which will give us control -- exquisite
control -- of our physical world.”
Part
three covers, among other things, bloodstream nanobots, space elevators,
invisibility, teleportation, and military nanobots. A good deal of time
is also spent presenting the concept of a desktop nanofactory.
You can watch allthreeparts online.
Empowering Hope
CRN’s latest monthly
column for the popular Nanotechnology Now web portal is by
our Director of Impacts Analysis, Jamais
Cascio. His article is titled "Super-Empowered Hopeful Individuals." Here
is the abstract:
Most
discussions of the benefits of molecular manufacturing tend to focus either
on broad social advances or individual desires that such a transformative
technology may be able to satisfy. These are surely useful ways of thinking
about a nanotech-enabled world. But what if this model misses another category,
one that may be less noticeable precisely because we pay so much attention
to its opposite?
We
hope you'll read all
our columns, offer feedback, and tell others about them too.
Disruptive Nanotechnology
A California newspaper, Palo Alto Weekly, has a cover story on nanotechnology.
It's a long article that covers both current work in nanoscale technologies
and the more futuristic possibilities of molecular manufacturing. CRN executive
director Mike Treder was interviewed for the piece and quoted extensively
in it. You can read the whole article online.
Religion & Nanotech
In February, the University of Wisconsin-Madison released the results of a
study on religion and nanotechnology. A press
release about their findings deals with the question: “Is nanotechnology
morally acceptable?”
The article generated significant coverage online, including numerous
comments at CRN’s blog.
New Nano TV Show
"Nanotechnology: The Power of
Small" is coming to U.S. public television stations in April 2008. The
program, produced by the Fred Friendly Seminars and sponsored by the National
Science Foundation, comprises three episodes:
PRIVACY
- Watching You Watching Me
HEALTH
- Forever Young
ENVIRONMENT
- Clean, Green, and Unseen
CRN’s Mike Treder was asked by the makers of the program to preview
it and give them a reaction. Afterwards, he
wrote:
Imagine
yourself sitting in an audience at a university symposium and watching a
large and diverse panel of experts from science, business, and activist
groups debate the merits of advanced nanotechnology. That's exactly the
experience you'll have in viewing this program. Unlike many so-called science
specials on TV these days, "The Power of Small" takes its subject seriously
and treats its audience as intelligent, discriminating adults. Thankfully,
there are no flashy graphics, no distracting camera tricks or special effects;
just smart, thoughtful people led by a capable moderator discussing provocative
issues. Overall, I was quite impressed.
Debating CRN's Scope
Although we call ourselves the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology, we've
confined our focus to a specific, powerful application of advanced nanotechnology
known as molecular manufacturing. However, not
everyone believes that CRN should continue concentrating only on molecular
manufacturing and its implications. We’ve recently had a good
long discussion on our blog about whether, how, and why CRN should consider
expanding our scope. Please let us know if you have anything to add!
Archiving Nanotech Interviews
Sander Olson is one of the original developers of the NanoApex and NanoMagazine websites.
Over the years, Sander has conducted numerous conversations with notable figures
working in or commenting on the field of nanotechnology. Since the acquisition
of his sites in 2005 by the International Small Technology Network, many of
Sander's interviews have not been available on the web.
To correct this, CRN created a page on
our main website as an archive of his interviews. In recent weeks, we’ve
added Sander’s in-depth talks with Jeff Chinn, Hugo DeGaris, Jack Dunietz,
Glenn Fishbine, J. Storrs Hall, Jeffrey Harrow, Gary Mezo, Jagdish Narayan,
and James Talton.
Guest Science Essay: Atomic Force Microscopy
By Michael Berger, editor-in-chief of Nanowerk
(This article was originally
published on March 10, 2008, at Nanowerk.com and is reprinted here by
permission.)
Whenever you read an article about nano this or nano that, chances are you
come across a large number of confusing three-letter acronyms - AFM, SFM,
SEM, TEM, SPM, FIB, CNT and so on. It seems scientists earn extra kudos when
they come up with a new three-letter combination. One of the most important
acronyms in nanotechnology is AFM - Atomic Force Microscopy. This instrument
has become the most widely used tool for imaging, measuring and manipulating
matter at the nanoscale and in turn has inspired a variety of other scanning
probe techniques.
Originally the AFM was used to image the topography of surfaces, but by modifying
the tip it is possible to measure other quantities (for example, electric
and magnetic properties, chemical potentials, friction and so on), and also
to perform various types of spectroscopy and analysis. Today we take a look
at one of the instruments that has it all made possible. So far, over 20,000
AFM-related papers have been published; over 500 patents were issued related
to various forms of scanning probe microscopes (SPM); several dozen companies
are involved in manufacturing SPM and related instruments, with an annual
worldwide turnover of $250–300 million, and approx. 10,000 commercial
systems sold (not counting a significant number of home-built
systems).
To put the AFM in its context: The reason why nanosciences and nanotechnologies
have taken off with such amazing force over the past 20 years is because our
ongoing quest for miniaturization has resulted in tools such as the AFM (invented
in 1986) or its precursor, the scanning tunneling microscope (STM; invented
in 1982. IBM has a website with a gallery of STM images here).
Combined with refined processes such as electron beam lithography, this allowed
scientists to deliberately manipulate and manufacture nanostructures, something
that wasn't possible before.
These engineered nanomaterials, either by way of a top-down approach (a bulk
material is reduced in size to nanoscale particles) or a bottom-up approach
(larger structures are built or grown atom by atom or molecule by molecule),
go beyond just a further step in miniaturization. They have broken a physical
barrier beyond, or rather: below, which the standard laws of physics are replaced
by what is called "quantum effects". Any material reduced to the nanoscale
can suddenly show very different properties than to what it shows on a macro-
and larger scale. For instance, opaque substances become transparent (copper);
inert materials become catalysts (platinum); stable materials turn combustible
(aluminum); solids turn into liquids at room temperature (gold); insulators
become conductors (silicon).
A second important aspect of the nanoscale is that the smaller nanoparticles
get the larger their relative surface area becomes. The larger the relative
surface area, the more reactive a particle becomes with regard to other substances.
The fascination with nanotechnology stems from these unique quantum and surface
phenomena that matter exhibits at the nanoscale, enabling novel applications
and interesting materials.
But without the AFM, all this wouldn't be happening.
The term microscope in the name is actually a misnomer because it implies
looking, while in fact the information is gathered by feeling the surface
with a mechanical probe. The operation principle of an AFM is based on three
key elements:
1) an atomically sharp tip (the "probe"), placed at the end of a flexible
cantilever beam, that is brought into physical contact with the surface of
a sample. The cantilever beam deflects in proportion to the force of interaction;
2) a piezoelectric transducer to facilitate positioning and scanning the probe
in three dimensions over the sample with very precise movements; and
3) a feedback system to detect the interaction of the probe with the sample.
Scanning across the surface, the sharp tip follows the bumps and grooves formed
by the atoms on the surface. By monitoring the deflections of the flexible
cantilever beam one can generate a topography of the surface.
This principle has been the basis for one of the most important nanoscience
tools and allowed the visualization of nanoscale objects where conventional
optics cannot resolve them due to the wave nature of light.
A recently published article in the Encyclopedia of Life Sciences,
written by Martijn de Jager and John van Noort, both from the University of
Leiden in the Netherlands, gives an excellent overview of Atomic
Force Microscopy and its applications in life sciences. Below we are
summarizing some of the key information from this article.
The AFM can be operated in a number of modes, depending on the application
but four modes are most commonly used for AFM imaging: contact mode (or constant
height mode), where the deflection of the cantilever is directly used as a
measure for the height of the tip and the normal force applied to the sample
scales directly with its height. In constant force mode, the normal force
the cantilever deflection under scanning reflects repulsive forces acting
upon the tip, and at sufficiently small scanning velocities the force feedback
can reduce the normal force. Tapping mode (or noncontact mode), where the
tip is vibrated (oscillating at its resonance frequency) perpendicular to
the specimen plane to avoid gouging the specimen as the tip is scanned laterally
and the lateral forces are reduced. In a fourth mode of scanning, the force–distance
mode, the tip is brought to the sample at frequencies far below the resonance
frequency of the cantilever while at the same time the deflection is recorded.
This allows one to measure the local interaction as a function of the tip-sample
distance.
As de Jager and van Noort write in their article, large numbers of various
biological samples, including cells, cell compartments and biomolecules, have
been studied with AFM. "In some of these studies, AFM is used as a plain imaging
tool to investigate the topography of immobilized and/or fixed samples, complementing
existing methods such as electron microscopy, with the advantage that sample
preparation is generally more straightforward. For other experiments, the
use of AFM is a prerequisite to look at nonfixed materials and even their
dynamics in aqueous environment. Besides its imaging capabilities AFM is becoming
increasingly important as a nanomanipulation tool. The single-molecule analysis
of interaction forces, elasticity and tertiary protein structure in intact
biological materials is uniquely possible using AFM."
Introducing this vast body of research is beyond the scope of any article.
Let's just take a look at two examples illustrated in the paper:
Imaging Cells
"AFM imaging of living cells provides a direct measurement of cell morphology
with nanometer resolution in three dimensions. Because of its noninvasive
nature and the absence of fixation and staining, even dynamic processes like
exocytosis, infection by virus particles and budding of enveloped viruses
have been successfully visualized in successive scans. Owing to the high elasticity
of the cell membrane, the tip can deeply indent the cell without disrupting
the membrane. Making use of this effect, even submembraneous structures such
as cytoskeletal elements or organelles like transport vesicles can be revealed.
However, due to the elasticity of the cell the contact area between the tip
and the sample increases with increasing applied force. The elastic modulus
of living cells varies between 10 and 100 kPa, which results in a tip sample
contact area of 50–100nm in the softest region of the cell. Therefore,
the (sub-) nanometer resolution that is routinely achieved on more rigid samples
cannot be achieved on membranes of intact cells."
Structure, Function and Interaction of Single DNA and Protein Molecules
"Besides the analysis of cells and cell membranes, AFM-based methods to study
purified single molecules like proteins, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic
acid (RNA) have developed rapidly in the past decade. Unique details on the
mechanism and function of DNA- and RNA metabolizing proteins can directly
be obtained by quantification of the number, position, volume and shape of
protein molecules on their substrate. Like other single molecule techniques
all individual instances of the entire population of structures are revealed,
also showing rare but important species. Further insights in the mechanism
of a reaction can be obtained from image analysis by measuring parameters
such as protein-induced DNA bending, wrapping and looping. Besides topography
imaging, force spectroscopy has been successful in unraveling tertiary structure
in proteins, RNA and other polymers."
Although it already is an essential tool for structural analysis and manipulation
of complex macromolecules and living cells, it is to be expected that AFM-based
applications will be further extended in the future. Technical developments
will advance the AFM system itself, by improvement of resolution, image rate,
sensitivity and functionality. A combination with complementary techniques
will fill in some limitations of AFM.
To fully exploit the potential of AFM to study functional biomolecules and
their interactions, de Jager and van Noort say that video microscopy would
be needed to capture dynamic events. "Currently, the scan rate is limited
by the mechanical response of the cantilever and the piezo. Smaller cantilevers
will result in higher resonance frequencies, allowing faster scanning rates.
By reducing the size of the cantilevers one order of magnitude, the frame
rate can be reduced from typically a minute down to video rate, allowing the
study of a significantly larger range of biomolecular processes."
The two researchers expect the most important developments for the tip itself. "Image
resolution in all modes is dependent on tip geometry. The reduction of tip
size, increase of its aspect ratio and its resistance to wear as a result
of scanning will have a considerable impact on all AFM applications."
For instance, researchers at Harvard and Stanford universities have developed
a specially designed AFM
cantilever tip, the torsional harmonic cantilever (THC), which offers
orders of magnitude improvements in temporal resolution, spatial resolution,
indentation and mechanical loading compared to conventional tools.
With high operating speed, increased force sensitivity and excellent lateral
resolution, this tool facilitates practical mapping of nanomechanical properties.
Does
it matter to the rest of the world if science funding in the United States
is flat or declining? We think it does, partly because the U.S. economy
and federal budgets are by far the largest in the world — meaning
they have the ability to support more basic science research than anyone
else — but also because so much vital policy toward science and
technology emanates from the United States.
If
the U.S. government is unwilling to provide adequate funding for basic
science, that sends a message to business, government, and research institutions
worldwide: that science is less important than other priorities (such
as making war and making profits), and that the benefits of basic research
are not worth supporting, even if it means that future generations — not
to mention our own generation — will suffer as a result.
Is the Future
Safe?
A
recurring theme on our Responsible Nanotechnology blog this month was
the future of conflict and violence. Are they truly on the decline, as
some analysis suggests, and if so, can that happy development be maintained?
Our
latest monthly column for the popular Nanotechnology Now web
portal has been posted. This month's entry is by CRN’s Director
of Impacts Analysis, Jamais Cascio. His article is titled “What
Did We Learn?”
Here
is how it begins:
As
enjoyable as it can be to construct future histories and stories of what
the coming years might hold, the goal of a scenario planning process is
to help people make better decisions by giving them a sense of the implications
of different choices. While the individual scenarios trigger their own
particular conclusions, several insights arise from looking at the set
of scenarios as a whole…
Wise-Nano Wiki
Upgrade
Many
of our readers probably are familiar with the Wise-Nano wiki
site started a
few years ago by CRN. Recently, we completed a successful upgrade
to the site’s MediaWiki software, using the expert assistance
of Nato Welch, CRN's Tech Support Specialist.
We
invite everyone to take a look at the material collected by the community
at Wise-Nano, and consider making your own contributions. That could be
done by improving, editing, discussing, or expanding on existing material,
or contributing one or more articles of your own that are relevant to
the development of molecular manufacturing.
Mind Changing
What
have you changed your mind about?
That's
the annual question for
this year at Edge.com. A total of 165 thinkers from around the world gave
their answers.
A
few of our
favorites were Laurence
Smith, who discussed the collapse of Arctic sea ice, Roger
Schank, who wrote about the possibilities for Artificial Intelligence, Oliver
Morton, who changed his mind about human spaceflight, Carolyn
Porco, who's thinking about the ways our future on this
planet might evolve, Lee
Silver, who has new thoughts on the persistence of supernatural
beliefs, Kevin
Kelly, who now thinks differently about the Wikipedia, William
Calvin, who wrote about abrupt climate change, and Martin
Rees, who has reconsidered his ideas about very
long-term planning.
Enabling Nanotech
Update
Enabling
nanotechnologies are those that may represent significant steps
toward the eventual realization of exponential
general-purpose molecular manufacturing. These kinds of technologies
are not yet molecular manufacturing, in the classic sense, and in
fact their developers may not be actively working in that direction.
However, progress made by these technologies can bear watching, because
they may enable, or make easier, the development of significant portions
of molecular manufacturing's full range of
needed technical capabilities.
Over
the last few weeks, we’ve seen reports on four specific technological
developments that we thought were of special interest. You can read about
them here:
In
our previous newsletter, we promised that
this month we would offer an assessment of CRN’s first five years
and present an overview of our accomplishments, our disappointments, and
our plans for the future.
A
useful way to approach this task might be to go back and consider what
we believed and what we said when we started CRN and what we have learned
since then.
Early
in 2003, we published the following foundational
statements that summarized CRN's basic positions:
A)
Effective use of nanotechnology can benefit everyone.
Advanced
nanotechnology promises the ability to build precise machines and components
of molecular size. Using mechanically guided chemistry, rapid prototyping,
and automated assembly, a nanofactory could combine components into large
and complex products. A personal nanofactory should be able to provide
cheap, clean, rapid manufacturing; the resulting abundance has the potential
to alleviate most shortages, and enable a high standard of living for
everyone who has access to it. Rapid, cheap, flexible manufacturing will
allow swift development of new inventions, spurring innovation and creating
further benefits. We are dedicated to the principle of making these
benefits available as widely as possible through effective administration
of molecular manufacturing.
B)
Unwise use of nanotechnology can be very dangerous.
A
technology this powerful could easily be misused. The rapid development
cycle and massive manufacturing capability may lead to an unstable arms
race between competing powers. Excessive restrictions may lead to an inhumane
gap between rich and poor, and may encourage a black market in bootleg,
unsafe molecular manufacturing technology. Insufficient restrictions may
allow small groups and even individuals to produce undesirable products
or terrorist tools. The products of a nanofactory could have unprecedented
power and efficiency. Some restrictions, implemented worldwide, will
probably be necessary for sufficient control of the use of molecular manufacturing.
C)
Nanofactory technology can be used safely.
The
manufacturing capability of advanced nanotechnology might be encapsulated
in a device of convenient size, with built-in mechanisms for restricting
the products it can make. A box the size of a microwave oven would provide
ample manufacturing capacity for a household; such a format would be suitable
for private ownership, and is easily large enough to contain all necessary
functionality for safe use, including elimination of any chemical emissions,
and various security technologies. The security features would ensure
that the factory would only make approved products; several approval processes
could be instituted for the use of various groups and situations. By
using nanofactories with built-in restrictions, necessary control could
be imposed while allowing widespread use of molecular manufacturing.
D)
Preventing nanotechnology is impossible; careful study will be necessary
for wise use.
Many
nations around the world have already established nanotechnology programs,
spending hundreds of millions of dollars per year. Many enabling technologies
are developing rapidly. There is no realistic way to relinquish or prevent
all development that could lead to robust molecular manufacturing, and
there are compelling military and economic reasons for its development—in
many different countries. Meanwhile, estimates of the technology's ultimate
potential, and the timeline and cost for development, vary widely. Information
is power; only through intensive studies can we ensure that the developers
and the future administrators of this powerful capability have the tools
they need to make the right decisions. A detailed understanding of
molecular manufacturing technology is necessary to prepare for its eventual
development.
E)
Effective use of nanotechnology will require intelligent and prudent
policy-making.
Like
a computer, a nanotechnology manufacturing system could be incredibly
flexible—useful for a wide range of tasks. The administration of
a single technology with a multitude of uses, many of them dangerous,
poses a unique problem. No single organization can effectively tackle
this problem. A single point of control will not be responsive enough
to choose the correct set of restrictions for every case, when decisions
must be made rapidly and too much restriction may be as bad as too little;
however, some worldwide control will probably be necessary. An organization
with a single focus, such as military or commercial, cannot make good
decisions about unrelated purposes; an organization that tries to accommodate
everyone will probably make unwise compromises. Predicting the effects
of any choice will require a detailed understanding of the potential of
the technology. Well-informed policy must be set, and administrative
institutions carefully designed and established, before molecular manufacturing
is developed.
F)
The situation is urgent; nanofactories may be developed within a decade.
Development
of molecular manufacturing technology will rapidly become easier. Computer
chips have parts only 120 atoms wide, and getting smaller; molecules bigger
than that have already been constructed. Several technologies allow direct
creation of complex structures less than 20 atoms wide, and single-atom
lithography is being developed. Automated assembly has been used for decades;
rapid prototyping is quickly developing from industrial to home use. Molecular
manufacturing and assembly will be simpler and easier in many ways than
normal manufacturing. Rapid development programs, some of which may be
secret, competitive, and unregulated, will be driven by powerful economic
and military incentives. To be prepared for the coming development
of molecular manufacturing technology, we must start planning for it immediately.
Let’s
take those points one at a time and see if they still apply today, in
early 2008.
Effective
use of nanotechnology can benefit everyone.— What’s
suggested here is that the benefits of
molecular manufacturing might not be distributed equitably unless
we make certain choices. We still believe this, and although we have
offered arguments to support our position
and engaged
others in discussion, the issue is still open and may not be
decided for quite some time. It’s really an old, classic debate
about how much the state should intervene in markets, but we think
the unprecedented potential productivity of advanced
nanotechnology makes it more relevant than ever. We will continue
to emphasize this aspect of our message.
Unwise
use of nanotechnology can be very dangerous.— Over
the years, perhaps not surprisingly, this point has brought more attention
to CRN than any other. We have raised concerns about the potential
for a new arms race, about environmental implications, about job loss
and economic disruption, about ubiquitous intrusive surveillance,
and many other dangers. We’re gratified
that the public
at large seems to have caught on to the seriousness of the risks
we’ve raised and placed them in proper perspective versus
the still important but less critical worries about things like
nanoparticle toxicity. Of course, there is nothing close to agreement
on CRN’s assertion that “some restrictions,
implemented worldwide, will probably be necessary for sufficient
control of the use of molecular manufacturing.” That’s
one of our most controversial positions, but we have not yet seen
a reason to change it.
Nanofactory
technology can be used safely.— We’re
proud to have taken the lead in proposing extensive
plans for safe use of personal nanofactories. Our suggested
approach of wide distribution combined with built-in technical restrictions
almost always garners positive response. Granted, it will be anything
but easy to design and implement such a system, but the basic concepts
seem to be sound.
Preventing
nanotechnology is impossible; careful study will be necessary for
wise use.— This
point was made against a backdrop of some individuals and groups calling
for a moratorium on nanotechnology research
and development or even outright relinquishment of
the technology. Fortunately, such cries have found little sympathy. CRN’s
position that advanced nanotechnology should be developed as
fast as it can be done safely and responsibly appears to be the
mainstream consensus, and with good reason. The potential benefits are
far too great to be relinquished, and the best way to head off risks is
to carefully study and understand the
technology, and then to develop it under sensible guidelines.
Effective
use of nanotechnology will require intelligent and prudent policy-making.— There
are three key points in this position: first, that the issues involved
are complex and overlapping, meaning that no
simple solution will work; second, that a laissez faire approach
could be very dicey because the dangers are
too great to allow for unregulated dissemination of nanofactory
technology; and, third, that policy choices must be made and administrative
systems put in place before the technology is complete.
The first point seems self-evident and has largely been accepted,
although we suspect that the enormous implications of this overwhelming
complexity are not yet fully appreciated. The second point is
controversial, of course, and this is an area where CRN is open
to considering that we might be wrong. Good arguments can be made
for the effectiveness — indeed,
perhaps even the necessity — of
supporting emergent networked solutions instead of top-down imposed
solutions. That’s an ongoing discussion. The third point
is equally controversial, and arguably unachievable, but because
it focuses attention on how molecular manufacturing is potentially
so disruptive, we think it is worth bringing up again and again.
The
situation is urgent; nanofactories may be developed within a decade.— Now,
we get to the heart of the matter. Unless CRN can establish the urgency
factor suggested by this final point, then all of the other positions
stated above may be considered only of academic interest and not necessary
for critical debate, or at least not for a long time. So, where are
we today?
Since
CRN was founded in December 2002, we’ve seen remarkable progress
in the development of technologies that may contribute to the eventual
achievement of exponential general-purpose molecular manufacturing. We
won’t go down the whole list, because it is too long (see the Enabling
Nanotech Update above for some examples), but it now seems obvious
to us and to many scientists and other observers that the feasibility
question is well on its way to being settled. The contention that building
productive nanoscale machinery is impossible for this reason or that
reason has faded into the background. On the point of whether or not
molecular manufacturing is feasible, CRN and our allies apparently have
won the argument.
A
larger question exists, however, about urgency. Feasibility is only one
factor; the other is imminence. There is a huge difference between saying
that nanofactories will be developed someday and saying that
they will be developed soon. We have based our appeals to policy
makers and to the public on the idea that immediate
action was needed. Originally, we claimed that the technology “might
become a reality by 2010, likely will by 2015, and almost certainly
will by 2020.” Recently we
revised that projection to say “might become a reality by
2010 to 2015, more plausibly will by 2015 to 2020, and almost certainly
will by 2020 to 2025.”
It’s
interesting to note that while CRN’s time
frame for the expected development of molecular manufacturing has
shifted back by approximately five years, the mainstream scientific
community’s position has been moving forward, from a point of ‘never’,
to ‘maybe by the end of the century’, to ‘not until
at least 2050’, and now to ‘perhaps around 2030 or so’.
These projections might not yet match up exactly with CRN’s, but
the gap is steadily shrinking.
So,
we’re seeing agreement about feasibility, and a convergence
around the likely time frame. These are both positive developments, as
uncertainty is being removed.
And
that’s where we stand today. The Center for Responsible Nanotechnology
has accomplished a great deal in five years, clarifying and sharpening
the discussion, forcing our concerns onto the agenda, and moving the mainstream
closer to our positions. Our challenge now is to take a step back and
see what we most want to achieve during the next five years.