|
||||||||
Home | BizChina | Newsphoto | Cartoon | LanguageTips | Metrolife | DragonKids | SMS | Edu | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
news... ... | |
Focus on... ... | |||||||||||||||||
Mobile firms to provide radiation levels soon The world's leading mobile phone makers said on Monday they would start publishing information later this year about the level of radiation emitted by their phones in response to consumer concern. The largest cellphone maker Nokia, the second-largest Motorola and the fourth-largest Ericsson, have agreed with a European standards-setting body on a way to measure radiation absorption on phones globally. "There have been requests by some consumers that this information should be readily available," said Nokia Mobile Phones spokesman Tapio Hedman. "We are providing them with information they feel is important." The agreement with the European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization's (CENELEC) comes after years of lobbying from consumer and other organizations for companies and regulators to agree on a global standard of measuring radiation emitted from handsets. Reports have alleged that radio waves from mobile phones can affect the human brain. Last year, a UK government-sponsored scientific inquiry, chaired by Sir William Stewart, warned children to avoid excessive use of mobile phones because their thinner skulls made them prone to absorbing radiation. "We have worked together with Nokia and Motorola on this. It will not be any kind of warning label, but specification information included in the phone package together with other technical measures," said Mikael Westmark, responsible for health issues at Ericsson. The issue has come to the fore in recent years as the usage of cellphones around the world has risen sharply and consumers spend an increasing amount of time talking or sending messages on their wireless devices. At the end of March this year, there were 770 million mobile phone users globally and Nokia expects that figure to rise to one billion in the first six months of 2002. U.S. neurologist Christopher Newman last year filed a lawsuit against leading U.S. phone companies, including Motorola Inc, saying that the use of his mobile phone had caused a malignant brain tumor. Neither Ericsson, nor Nokia were named in the Newman lawsuit. All three companies say research conducted over several years has found no evidence to link health problems with mobile phones. RADIATION LEVEL TO FEATURE IN USER MANUAL Manufacturers do not plan to label the phones with the actual level of radiation, called Specific Absorption Rate (SAR), nor put it on phone packages. The information would be included in user manuals. SAR -- the best way of measuring radiation -- shows the absorption of energy by the human body in watts per kilogram. The maximum safety limit is 2.0, while most phones on the market are now showing values between 0.5 and 1.0. Mobile phones are, in effect, tiny radio stations that send and receive. Hedman said one of the big challenges would be to explain to consumers what the new number actually means. "The SAR value that will be included in the phone package will be the maximum value, rather than the average one. When you talk, you very seldom reach the maximum level in a properly constructed network," said Westmark. He said the SAR value was highest when dialing and then dropped steeply off after the connection was made. Ericsson and Motorola said they would include the SAR figure with its phones from October, and Nokia said it would start doing it at around the same time. "It's not that as of October 1, you're going to see a lot of this information suddenly appear. It'll be rolled out in new products over time," said Norman Sandler, Motorola's director of global strategic issues. The U.S. Federal Communications Commission already requires cellphones to meet radiation safety standards, and all manufacturers are required to inform the FCC of the SAR levels on their phones before they are approved for sale nationally. Consumers can already get this information from the FCC, and Nokia has published them in the user manuals of its U.S. phones, Hedman said.
|
|
||||||||||||||||
.contact us |.about us |
Copyright By chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved |