Danger on the airwaves: Is the Wi-Fi revolution a health time bomb? It's on
every high street and in every coffee shop and school. But experts have serious
concerns about the effects of electronic smog from wireless networks linking
our laptops and mobiles, reports Geoffrey Lean Published: 22 April 2007
Being "wired-up" used to be shorthand for being at the cutting edge,
connected to all that is cool. No longer. Wireless is now the only thing to be.
Go into a Starbucks, a hotel bar or an airport departure lounge and you are
bound to see people tapping away at their laptops, invisibly connected to the
internet. Visit friends, and you are likely to be shown their newly installed
system.
Lecture at a university and you'll find the students in your audience tapping
away, checking your assertions on the world wide web almost as soon as you make
them. And now the technology is spreading like a Wi-Fi wildfire throughout
Britain's primary and secondary schools.
The technological explosion is even bigger than the mobile phone explosion
that preceded it. And, as with mobiles, it is being followed by fears about its
effect on health - particularly the health of children. Recent research, which
suggests that the worst fears about mobiles are proving to be justified, only
heightens concern about the electronic soup in which we are increasingly
spending our lives.
Now, as we report today, Sir William Stewart (pictured below right), the man
who has issued the most authoritative British warnings about the hazards of
mobiles, is becoming worried about the spread of Wi-Fi. The chairman of the
Health Protection Agency - and a former chief scientific adviser to the
Government - is privately pressing for an official investigation of the risks
it may pose.
Health concerns show no sign of slowing the wireless expansion. One in five
of all adult Britons now own a wireless-enabled laptop. There are 35,000 public
hotspots where they can use them, usually at a price.
In the past 18 months 1.6 million Wi-Fi terminals have been sold in Britain
for use in homes, offices and a host of other buildings. By some estimates,
half of all primary schools and four fifths of all secondary schools have
installed them.
Whole cities are going wireless. First up is the genteel, almost bucolic,
burgh of Norwich, which has installed a network covering almost the whole of
its centre, spanning a 4km radius from City Hall. It takes in key sites further
away, including the University of East Anglia and a local hospital, and will be
expanded to take in rural parts of the south of the county.
More than 200 small aerials were attached to lamp posts to create the
network, which anyone can use free for an hour. There is nothing to stop the
1,000 people who use it each day logging off when their time is up, and logging
on again for another costless session.
"We wanted to see if something like this could be done," says Anne Carey, the
network's project manager. "People are using it and finding it helpful. It is,
I think, currently the largest network of its kind."
Not for much longer. Brighton plans to launch a city-wide network next year,
and Manchester is planning one covering over 400 square miles, providing free
access to 2.2 million people.
So far only a few, faint warnings have been raised, mainly by people who are
so sensitised to the electromagnetic radiation emitted by mobiles, their masts
and Wi-Fi that they become ill in its presence. The World Health Organisation
estimates that up to three out of every hundred people are "electrosensitive"
to some extent. But scientists and doctors - and some European governments -
are adding their voices to the alarm as it becomes clear that the almost
universal use of mobile phones may be storing up medical catastrophe for the
future.
A recent authoritative Finnish study has found that people who have used
mobiles for more than ten years are 40 per cent more likely to get a brain
tumour on the same side of the head as they hold their handset; Swedish
research suggests that the risk is almost four times as great. And further
research from Sweden claims that the radiation kills off brain cells, which
could lead to today's younger generation going senile in their forties and
fifties.
Professor Lawrie Challis, who heads the Government's official mobile safety
research, this year said that the mobile could turn out to be "the cigarette of
the 21st century".
There has been less concern about masts, as they emit very much less
radiation than mobile phones. But people living - or attending schools - near
them are consistently exposed and studies reveal a worrying incidence of
symptoms such as headaches, fatigue, nausea, dizziness and memory problems.
There is also some suggestion that there may be an increase in cancers and
heart disease.
Wi-Fi systems essentially take small versions of these masts into the home
and classroom - they emit much the same kind of radiation. Though virtually no
research has been carried out, campaigners and some scientists expect them to
have similar ill-effects. They say that we are all now living in a soup of
electromagnetic radiation one billion times stronger than the natural fields in
which living cells have developed over the last 3.8 billion years. This, they
add, is bound to cause trouble
Prof Leif Salford, of Lund University - who showed that the radiation kills
off brain cells - is also deeply worried about wi-fi's addition to "electronic
smog".
There is particular concern about children partly because they are more
vulnerable - as their skulls are thinner and their nervous systems are still
developing - and because they will be exposed to more of the radiation during
their lives.
The Austrian Medical Association is lobbying against the deployment of Wi-Fi
in schools. The authorities of the province of Salzburg has already advised
schools not to install it, and is now considering a ban. Dr Gerd Oberfeld,
Salzburg's head of environmental health and medicine, says that the Wi-Fi is
"dangerous" to sensitive people and that "the number of people and the danger
are both growing".
In Britain, Stowe School removed Wi-Fi from part of its premises after a
classics master, Michael Bevington - who had taught there for 28 years -
developed headaches and nausea as soon as it was installed.
Ian Gibson, the MP for the newly wireless city Norwich is calling for an
official inquiry into the risks of Wi-Fi. The Professional Association of
Teachers is to write to Education Secretary Alan Johnson this week to call for
one.
Philip Parkin, the general secretary of the union, says; "I am concerned that
so many wireless networks are being installed in schools and colleges without
any understanding of the possible long-term consequences.
"The proliferation of wireless networks could be having serious implications
for the health of some staff and pupils without the cause being recognised."
But, he added, there are huge commercial pressures" which may be why there
has not yet been "any significant action".
Guidelines that were ignored
The first Stewart Report, published in May 2000, produced a series of
sensible recommendations. They included: discouraging children from using
mobiles, and stopping the industry from promoting them to the young;
publicising the radiation levels of different handsets so that customers could
choose the lowest; making the erection of phone masts subject to democratic
control through the planning system; and stopping the building of masts where
the radiation "beam of greatest intensity" fell on schools, unless the school
and parents agreed.
The Government accepted most of these recommendations, but then, as 'The
Independent on Sunday' has repeatedly pointed out, failed to implement them.
Probably, it has lost any chance to curb the use of mobiles by children and
teenagers. Since the first report, mobile use by the young has doubled.
Additional reporting by Paul Bignall, Will Dowling and Jude Townend
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