Summer has passed all too quickly, and to make sure you aren’t missing out we have compiled the latest headlines from European Technology Assessment organisations. Let’s take a quick look at current news and events!

ITA (Austria)

Help us shape Europe’s future! Healthy food? Clean energy? Take part in this online consultation and tell us what you expect for your future: This is your chance to communicate your ideas and needs to EU decision makers. We want to know what matters, in order to forward those recommendations to Europe’s largest research program, Horizon 2020. Please follow the link to attend the survey.

Neuro-Enhancement – What is really possible? In August, the ITA finished a three-year project on neuro-enhancement. Do we know enough about the brain to chemically or electrically improve its function? In more than 100 events taking place in 19 countries, the EU-funded NERRI project tried to answer this and other questions. Formats ranged from science cafes to student and teacher workshops. An online consultation explored the acceptability of chemical or technical methods among citizens. Main outputs were the stirring of the European debate, insights into individual hopes and fears concerning neuro-enhancement and new perspectives on actual technical possibilities and limitations. Detailed results will be published shortly, for updates go to oeaw.ac.at/ita.

ITAS (Germany)

Two years ago, the Final Storage Commission appointed by the German Bundestag made a new start on the search for a final storage site for highly radioactive waste material in Germany. Among representatives  from politics, society, and science was ITAS director Armin Grunwald as co-chairman of the work group "Societal and Technical-scientific Decision Criteria and Criteria for Error Corrections". Following the hand-over of the final report in July 2016, Grunwald stressed that “the commission fulfilled its mandate to forge a societal consensus on both a procedure and criteria for the search for a final storage for highly radioactive waste in Germany.” The tools provided would enable the government to start with the search for a waste site within the coming months. "If we implement new technologies and release them into society, we are obliged to think things through to the end. The commission did this subsequently for nuclear energy in Germany.” Read more or watch a Video-Interview (German) with Armin Grunwald

NBT (Norway)

CRISPR is a recently developed method for making targeted changes in the genetic material DNA. It functions as a pair of “genetic scissors” which can remove, replace or add specific segments of DNA in humans, animals and plants, and has the potential to radically change the way we produce food and medicine. The Norwegian Board of Technology has in cooperation with the Norwegian Biotechnology Advisory Board written a policy brief which outlines five upcoming debates we need to address.  Questions discussed at a meeting in the Norwegian Parliament were: Should we regulate CRISPR as GMO? Must we modify animals in order to stay competitive? Should we alter the human lineage? Should we use it for treatment or artificial enhancement? Do we need more or less control?

TA-SWISS (Switzerland)

TA-SWISS is launching two new studies: The first will look at the very controversial topic of “social freezing”. In industrial societies, women increasingly delay motherhood, freezing their unfertilized eggs to forego a loss of fertility. Societal, ethical and medical questions surrounding this kind of technological backup plan are ie: Is egg freezing still within the scope of reproductive autonomy and what will be the long term consequences of the ongoing medicalization of reproduction? Is it really the ultimate boon offering women more reproductive freedom?

The second study will examine the opportunities and risks of the block-chain, the technology behind digital currencies like Bitcoin. Simply put, the blockchain is a vast, globally distributed ledger running on millions of devices and open to anyone. This makes it a digital version of trust with the potential to render all kinds of third-party intermediaries superfluous. Thus, costs around contracting and making payments are bound to plummet and by supporting fully transparent e-voting systems, the block-chain may even boost democracy. What else will change, when the internet will be as much about the exchange of value as about the exchange of information? You’ll find the call for tenders for this second study by October on ta-swiss.ch.

POST (UK)

In the UK, there are almost 3 million users of e-cigarettes and their popularity is rising. POST did a briefing on e-cigarettes in January 2014 and then many of the questions around the safety and quality of devices, the role of e-cigarettes in reducing or stopping smoking and health risks were still being researched. POST has completed a new briefing building on the 2014 publication incorporating the latest evidence.

The key points are: A growing body of evidence shows that e-cigarettes are much less harmful than tobacco, and could in help smokers quit tobacco. Further evidence suggests that e-cigarettes do not encourage tobacco smoking among non-smokers or children. The public perceptions, however, is shifting: 25 percent think that e-cigarettes present a risk of harm similar to that of tobacco smoking, compared with seven percent in 2013. Read the full POST briefing on e-cigarettes.

 

This newsletter brings together institutions from across Europe researching how science and technology is impacting our lives, society and legislation. Through publicising news of the many varied projects going on we hope to capitalise on sharing knowledge and address the problems that extend beyond national boundaries. If your TA institution wishes to contribute, please contact us with your suggestions.