PRESS RELEASE:  OCTOBER 5, 2006
Nanotechnology’s Radical Future Discussed in Australia and New Zealand
Disruptive change triggered by nanotechnology was on the agenda for a recent 
three-week speaking tour of Australia and New Zealand conducted by Mike Treder, 
executive director of the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology (CRN). Between 
September 2 and September 21, he gave public lectures and held small group 
discussions on the subject of ‘Disruptive Abundance: Nanotechnology and Human 
Life’ in twelve cities. “We had big audiences everywhere I went -- overflow in 
some places,” said Treder. “People were very interested to hear about the 
profound impacts that advanced nanotechnology will bring to society.”
Treder gave public presentations at the Australian National University in 
Canberra, the capital city of Australia, and at the University of Western 
Sydney. He also held seminars with university students and faculty in both 
locations. In Canberra, Treder met with Australian government officials to 
discuss that country’s plans for a national nanotechnology strategy. In 
Melbourne, he made a presentation to a group of scientists and researchers from 
Monash University and from Nanotechnology Victoria, the organization that 
sponsored his visit to Australia. 
An article 
published by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation said, “Within 15 years, 
desktop nanofactories could pump out anything from a new car to a novel 
nanoweapon, says a technology commentator… While molecular manufacturing is not 
yet a reality, Treder says researchers are already working on building 
molecular-scale machines that could eventually move atoms around to make 
products.”
Public lectures were given in nine New Zealand cities by Treder just prior to 
his arrival in Australia. He was the featured speaker in the annual Pickering 
Lecture Tour, presented by the Institution of Professional Engineers New Zealand 
(IPENZ). “Mike's presentations generated a lot of interest in the future impact 
of nanotechnology across the country,” said IPENZ’s Kathryn McGavin.
Progress in nanotechnology eventually will make it possible to build a wide 
range of products atom by atom, from the bottom up, using nature’s fundamental 
building blocks, according to Treder. This will result in a manufacturing 
revolution, offering the potential for huge gains in quality of life, reductions 
in poverty, clean energy production, vastly improved infrastructures for 
computing, communication, transportation, and more. However, it also could lead 
to severe economic disruption, conflicts over intellectual property, omnipresent 
surveillance, and a potential widening of the gap between rich and poor. Even 
more ominous is the possibility of a new arms race. 
“No one knows for sure how soon all this will happen,” said Treder. “But our 
analysis suggests it will be sooner than most people realize. The cost of not 
being prepared for such disruptive change could be catastrophic. It’s urgent 
that we invest more in understanding the impacts of this powerful new 
technology.”
Mike Treder is available for other speaking 
opportunities, as is Chris Phoenix, Director of 
Research at the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology.