The World Health Organization classifies cell-phone radiation as a “possible” carcinogen.
The very next day, a livid Tom Wheeler began publicly trashing Carlo
to the media. In a letter he shared with the CEOs, Wheeler told Carlo
that the CTIA was “certain that you have never provided CTIA with the
studies you mention”—an apparent effort to shield the industry from
liability in the lawsuits that had led to Carlo’s hiring in the first
place. Wheeler charged further that the studies had not been published
in peer-reviewed journals, casting doubt on their validity.
Wheeler’s tactics succeeded in dousing the controversy. Although
Carlo had in fact repeatedly briefed Wheeler and other senior industry
officials on the studies, which had indeed undergone peer review and
would soon be published, reporters on the technology beat accepted
Wheeler’s discrediting of Carlo and the WTR’s findings. (Wheeler would
go on to chair the Federal Communications Commission, which regulates
the wireless industry. He agreed to an interview for this article but
then put all of his remarks off the record, with one exception: his
statement that he has always taken
scientific guidance from the US Food and Drug Administration , which, he said, “has concluded, ‘the weight of scientific evidence had not linked cell phones with any health problems.’”)
Why, after such acrimony, Carlo was allowed to make one last
appearance before the CTIA board is a mystery. Whatever the reason,
Carlo flew to New Orleans in February 2000 for the wireless industry’s
annual conference, where he submitted the
WTR’s final report
to the CTIA board.
According to Carlo, Wheeler made sure that none of
the hundreds of journalists covering the event could get anywhere near
him.
When Carlo arrived, he was met by two seriously muscled men in
plain clothes; the larger of the two let drop that he had recently left
the Secret Service. The security men steered Carlo into a holding room,
where they insisted he remain until his presentation. When summoned,
Carlo found roughly 70 of the industry’s top executives waiting for him
in silence. Carlo had spoken a mere 10 minutes when Wheeler abruptly
stood, extended a hand, and said, “Thank you, George.” The two muscle
men then ushered the scientist to a curbside taxi and waited until it
pulled away.
In the years to come, the WTR’s cautionary findings would be
replicated by numerous other scientists in the United States and around
the world, leading the World Health Organization in 2011 to classify
cell-phone radiation as a “possible” human carcinogen and the
governments of Great Britain, France, and Israel to issue strong
warnings on cell-phone use by children. But as the taxi carried Carlo to
Louis Armstrong International Airport, the scientist wondered whether
his relationship with the industry might have turned out differently if
cell phones had been safety-tested before being allowed onto the
consumer market, before profit took precedence over science. But it was
too late: Wheeler and his fellow executives had made it clear, Carlo
told
The Nation , that “they would do what they had to do to
protect their industry, but they were not of a mind to protect consumers
or public health.”
T his article
does not argue that cell phones and other wireless technologies are
necessarily dangerous; that is a matter for scientists to decide.
Rather, the focus here is on the global industry behind cell phones—and
the industry’s long campaign to make people believe that cell phones are
safe.
As happened earlier with Big Tobacco and Big Oil, the wireless industry’s own scientists privately warned about the risks.
That campaign has plainly been a success: 95 out of every 100 adult
Americans now own a cell phone; globally, three out of four adults have
cell-phone access, with sales increasing every year. The wireless
industry is now one of the fastest-growing on Earth and one of the
biggest, boasting annual sales of $440 billion in 2016.
Carlo’s story underscores the need for caution, however,
particularly since it evokes eerie parallels with two of the most
notorious cases of corporate deception on record: the campaigns by the
tobacco and fossil-fuel industries to obscure the dangers of smoking and
climate change, respectively. Just as tobacco executives were privately
told by their own scientists (in the 1960s) that smoking was deadly,
and fossil-fuel executives were privately told by their own scientists
(in the 1980s) that burning oil, gas, and coal would cause a
“catastrophic” temperature rise, so Carlo’s testimony reveals that
wireless executives were privately told by their own scientists (in the
1990s) that cell phones could cause cancer and genetic damage.
Carlo’s October 7, 1999, letters to wireless-industry CEOs are the smoking-gun equivalent of
the November 12, 1982, memo
that M.B. Glaser, Exxon’s manager of environmental-affairs programs,
sent to company executives explaining that burning oil, gas, and coal
could raise global temperatures by a destabilizing 3 degrees Celsius by
2100. For the tobacco industry, Carlo’s letters are akin to
the 1969 proposal
that a Brown & Williamson executive wrote for countering
anti-tobacco advocates.
“Doubt is our product,” the memo declared. “It
is also the means of establishing a controversy…at the public level.”
Like their tobacco and fossil-fuel brethren, wireless executives
have chosen not to publicize what their own scientists have said about
the risks of their products. On the contrary, the industry—in America,
Europe, and Asia—has spent untold millions of dollars in the past 25
years proclaiming that science is on its side, that the critics are
quacks, and that consumers have nothing to fear. This, even as the
industry has worked behind the scenes—again like its Big Tobacco
counterpart—to deliberately addict its customers. Just as cigarette
companies added nicotine to hook smokers, so have wireless companies
designed cell phones to deliver a jolt of dopamine with each swipe of
the screen.
Central to keeping the scientific argument going is making it appear
that not all scientists agree. Again like the tobacco and fossil-fuel
industries, the wireless industry has “war gamed” science, as
a Motorola internal memo in 1994
phrased it. War-gaming science involves playing offense as well as
defense: funding studies friendly to the industry while attacking
studies that raise questions; placing industry-friendly experts on
advisory bodies like the World Health Organization; and seeking to
discredit scientists whose views depart from the industry’s.
Funding friendly research has perhaps been the most important
component of this strategy, because it conveys the impression that the
scientific community truly is divided. Thus, when studies have linked
wireless radiation to cancer or genetic damage—as Carlo’s WTR did in
1999; as the
WHO’s Interphone study did in 2010 ; and as
the US National Toxicology Program did in 2016 —industry
spokespeople can point out, accurately, that other studies disagree.
“[T]he overall balance of the evidence” gives no cause for alarm,
asserted Jack Rowley, research and sustainability director for the
Groupe Special Mobile Association (GSMA), Europe’s wireless trade
association,
speaking to reporters about the WHO’s findings .
A closer look reveals the industry’s sleight of hand. When Henry
Lai, the professor whom Carlo tried to get fired, analyzed 326
safety-related studies completed between 1990 and 2005, he learned that
56 percent found a biological effect from cell-phone radiation and 44
percent did not; the scientific community apparently was split. But when
Lai recategorized the studies according to their funding sources, a
different picture emerged: 67 percent of the independently funded
studies found a biological effect, while a mere 28 percent of the
industry-funded studies did. Lai’s findings were replicated by
a 2007 analysis in Environmental Health Perspectives that concluded industry-funded studies were two and a half times less likely than independent studies to find a health effect.
One key player has not been swayed by all this wireless-friendly research: the insurance industry.
The Nation
has not been able to find a single insurance company willing to sell a
product-liability policy that covered cell-phone radiation. “Why would
we want to do that?” one executive chuckled before pointing to more than
two dozen lawsuits outstanding against wireless companies, demanding a
total of $1.9 billion in damages. Some judges have affirmed such
lawsuits, including a
judge in Italy who refused to allow industry-funded research as evidence .
Even so, the industry’s neutralizing of the safety issue has
opened the door to the biggest, most hazardous prize of all: the
proposed revolutionary transformation of society dubbed the “Internet of
Things.” Lauded as a gigantic engine of economic growth, the Internet
of Things will not only connect people through their smartphones and
computers but will connect those devices to a customer’s vehicles and
home appliances, even their baby’s diapers—all at speeds faster than can
currently be achieved.
Billions of cell-phone users have been subjected to a public-health experiment without informed consent.
There is a catch, though: The Internet of Things will require
augmenting today’s 4G technology with 5G, thus “massively increasing”
the general population’s exposure to radiation, according to
a petition signed by 236 scientists worldwide
who have published more than 2,000 peer-reviewed studies and represent
“a significant portion of the credentialed scientists in the radiation
research field,” according to Joel Moskowitz, the director of the Center
for Family and Community Health at the University of California,
Berkeley, who helped circulate the petition. Nevertheless, like cell
phones, 5G technology is on the verge of being introduced without
pre-market safety testing.
Lack of definitive proof that a technology is harmful does not
mean the technology is safe, yet the wireless industry has succeeded in
selling this logical fallacy to the world. In truth, the safety of
wireless technology has been an unsettled question since the industry’s
earliest days. The upshot is that, over the past 30 years, billions of
people around the world have been subjected to a massive public-health
experiment: Use a cell phone today, find out later if it causes cancer
or genetic damage. Meanwhile, the wireless industry has obstructed a
full and fair understanding of the current science, aided by government
agencies that have prioritized commercial interests over human health
and news organizations that have failed to inform the public about what
the scientific community really thinks. In other words, this
public-health experiment has been conducted without the informed consent
of its subjects, even as the industry keeps its thumb on the scale.
“ T he
absence of absolute proof does not mean the absence of risk,” Annie
Sasco, the former director of epidemiology for cancer prevention at
France’s National Institute of Health and Medical Research, told the
attendees of the 2012 Childhood Cancer conference. “The younger one
starts using cell phones, the higher the risk,” Sasco continued, urging a
public-education effort to inform parents, politicians, and the press
about children’s exceptional susceptibility.
For adults and children alike, the process by which wireless
radiation may cause cancer remains uncertain, but it is thought to be
indirect. Wireless radiation has been
shown to damage the blood-brain barrier ,
a vital defense mechanism that shields the brain from carcinogenic
chemicals elsewhere in the body (resulting, for example, from secondhand
cigarette smoke). Wireless radiation has also been shown to
interfere with DNA replication ,
a proven progenitor of cancer. In each of these cases, the risks are
higher for children: Their skulls, being smaller, absorb more radiation
than adults’ skulls do, while children’s longer life span increases
their cumulative exposure.
The wireless industry has sought to downplay concerns about cell
phones’ safety, and the Federal Communications Commission has followed
its example. In 1996, the FCC established cell-phone safety levels based
on “specific absorption rate,” or SAR. Phones were required to have a
SAR of 1.6 watts or less per kilogram of body weight. In 2013,
the American Academy of Pediatrics advised the FCC
that its guidelines “do not account for the unique vulnerability and
use patterns specific to pregnant women and children.” Nevertheless, the
FCC has declined to update its standards.
The FCC has granted the industry’s wishes so often that it qualifies as a “captured agency,” argued journalist Norm Alster in
a report
that Harvard University’s Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics published
in 2015. The FCC allows cell-phone manufacturers to self-report SAR
levels, and does not independently test industry claims or require
manufacturers to display the SAR level on a phone’s packaging. “Industry
controls the FCC through a soup-to-nuts stranglehold that extends from
its well-placed campaign spending in Congress through its control of the
FCC’s congressional oversight committees to its persistent agency
lobbying,” Alster wrote. He also quoted the CTIA website praising the
FCC for “its light regulatory touch.”
The revolving-door syndrome that characterizes so many industries
and federal agencies reinforces the close relationship between the
wireless industry and the FCC. Just as Tom Wheeler went from running the
CTIA (1992– 2004) to chairing the FCC (2013–2017), Meredith Atwell
Baker went from FCC commissioner (2009–2011) to the presidency of the
CTIA (2014 through today). To ensure its access on Capitol Hill, the
wireless industry made $26 million in campaign contributions in 2016,
according to the Center for Responsive Politics , and spent $87 million on lobbying in 2017.
N eutralizing
the safety issue has been an ongoing imperative because the research
keeps coming, much of it from outside the United States. But the
industry’s European and Asian branches have, like their US counterpart,
zealously war-gamed the science, spun the news coverage, and thereby
warped the public perception of their products’ safety.
The WHO began to study the health effects of electric- and
magnetic-field radiation (EMF) in 1996 under the direction of Michael
Repacholi, an Australian biophysicist. Although Repacholi claimed on
disclosure forms that he was “independent” of corporate influence, in
fact Motorola had funded his research: While Repacholi was director of
the WHO’s EMF program, Motorola paid $50,000 a year to his former
employer, the Royal Adelaide Hospital, which then transferred the money
to the WHO program. When journalists exposed the payments, Repacholi
denied
that there was anything untoward about them because Motorola had not
paid him personally. Eventually, Motorola’s payments were bundled with
other industry contributions and funneled through the Mobile and
Wireless Forum, a trade association that gave the WHO’s program $150,000
annually. In 1999, Repacholi helped engineer a WHO statement that “EMF
exposures below the limits recommended in international guidelines do
not appear to have any known consequence on health.”
Two wireless trade associations contributed $4.7 million to
the Interphone study
launched by the WHO’s International Agency for Cancer Research in 2000.
That $4.7 million represented 20 percent of the $24 million budget for
the Interphone study, which convened 21 scientists from 13 countries to
explore possible links between cell phones and two common types of brain
tumor: glioma and meningioma. The money was channeled through a
“firewall” mechanism intended to prevent corporate influence on the
IACR’s findings, but whether such firewalls work is debatable. “Industry
sponsors know [which scientists] receive funding; sponsored scientists
know who provides funding,” Dariusz Leszczynski, an adjunct professor of
biochemistry at the University of Helsinki, has explained.
To be sure, the industry could not have been pleased with some of the
Interphone study’s conclusions . The study found that the heaviest cell-phone users were
80 percent more likely to develop glioma .
(The initial finding of 40 percent was increased to 80 to correct for
selection bias.) The Interphone study also concluded that individuals
who had owned a cell phone for 10 years or longer saw their risk of
glioma increase by nearly 120 percent. However, the study did not find
any increased risk for individuals who used their cell phones less
frequently; nor was there evidence of any connection with meningioma.
When the Interphone conclusions were released in 2010, industry
spokespeople blunted their impact by deploying what experts on lying
call “creative truth-telling.” “Interphone’s conclusion of no overall
increased risk of brain cancer is consistent with conclusions reached in
an already large body of scientific research on this subject,” John
Walls, the vice president for public affairs at the CTIA,
told reporters .
The wiggle word here is “overall”: Since some of the Interphone studies
did not find increased brain-cancer rates, stipulating “overall”
allowed Walls to ignore those that did. The misleading spin confused
enough news organizations that their coverage of the Interphone study
was essentially reassuring to the industry’s customers.
The Wall Street Journal
announced “Cell Phone Study Sends Fuzzy Signal on Cancer Risk,” while
the BBC’s headline declared: “No Proof of Mobile Cancer Risk.”
The industry’s $4.7 million contribution to the WHO appears to
have had its most telling effect in May 2011, when the WHO convened
scientists in Lyon, France, to discuss how to classify the cancer risk
posed by cell phones. The industry not only secured “observer” status at
Lyon for three of its trade associations; it placed two industry-funded
experts on the working group that would debate the classification, as
well as additional experts among the “invited specialists” who advised
the group.
Niels Kuster, a Swiss engineer, initially filed a
conflict-of-interest statement affirming only that his research group
had taken money from “various governments, scientific institutions and
corporations.” But after Kuster co-authored a summary of the WHO’s
findings in
The Lancet Oncology , the medical journal
issued a correction
expanding on Kuster’s conflict-of-interest statement, noting payments
from the Mobile Manufacturers Forum, Motorola, Ericsson, Nokia, Samsung,
Sony, GSMA, and Deutsche Telekom. Nevertheless, Kuster participated in
the entire 10 days of deliberations.
The industry also mounted a campaign to discredit Lennart
Hardell, a Swedish professor of oncology serving on the working group.
Hardell’s studies ,
which found an increase in gliomas and acoustic neuromas in long-term
cell-phone users, were some of the strongest evidence that the group was
considering.
Hardell had already attracted the industry’s displeasure back in
2002, when he began arguing that children shouldn’t use cell phones. Two
scientists with industry ties quickly
published a report
with the Swedish Radiation Authority dismissing Hardell’s research. His
detractors were John D. Boice and Joseph K. McLaughlin of the
International Epidemiology Institute, a company that provided
“Litigation Support” and “Corporate Counseling” to various industries,
according to its website .
Indeed, at the very time Boice and McLaughlin were denigrating
Hardell’s work, the institute was providing expert-witness services to
Motorola in a brain-tumor lawsuit against the company.
The wireless industry didn’t get the outcome that it wanted at
Lyon, but it did limit the damage. A number of the working group’s
scientists had favored increasing the classification of cell phones to
Category 2A, a “probable” carcinogen; but
in the end, the group could only agree on an increase to 2B, a “possible” carcinogen.
That result enabled the industry to continue proclaiming that
there was no scientifically established proof that cell phones are
dangerous. Jack Rowley of the GSMA trade association said that
“interpretation should be based on the overall balance of the evidence.”
Once again, the slippery word “overall” downplayed the significance of
scientific research that the industry didn’t like.
Industry-funded scientists had been pressuring their colleagues
for a decade by then, according to Leszczynski, another member of the
Lyon working group. Leszczynski was an assistant professor at Harvard
Medical School when he first experienced such pressure, in 1999. He had
wanted to investigate the effects of radiation levels higher than the
SAR levels permitted by government, hypothesizing that this might better
conform to real-world practices. But when he proposed the idea at
scientific meetings,
Leszczynski said ,
it was shouted down by Mays Swicord, Joe Elder, and C.K.
Chou—scientists who worked for Motorola. As Leszczynski recalled, “It
was a normal occurrence at scientific meetings—and I attended really a
lot of them—that whenever [a] scientist reported biological effects at
SAR over [government-approved levels], the above-mentioned industry
scientists, singularly or as a group, jumped up to the microphone to
condemn and to discredit the results.”
Years later,
a study
that Leszczynski described as a “game changer” discovered that even
phones meeting government standards, which in Europe were a SAR of 2.0
watts per kilogram, could deliver exponentially higher peak radiation
levels to certain skin and blood cells. (SAR levels reached a staggering
40 watts per kilogram—20 times higher than officially permitted.) In
other words, the official safety levels masked dramatically higher
exposures in hot spots, but industry-funded scientists obstructed
research on the health impacts.
“Everyone knows that if your research results show that radiation
has effects, the funding flow dries up.” —Dariusz Leszczynski, adjunct
professor of biochemistry at the University of Helsinki
“Everyone knows that if your research results show that radiation has
effects, the funding flow dries up,” Leszczynski said in an interview
in 2011. Sure enough, the Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority of
Finland, where Leszczynski had a long career, discontinued research on
the biological effects of cell phones and discharged him a year later.
According to scientists involved in the process, the WHO may
decide later this year to reconsider its categorization of the cancer
risk posed by cell phones; the WHO itself told
The Nation that
before making any such decision, it will review the final report of the
National Toxicology Program, a US government initiative. The
results reported by the NTP
in 2016 seem to strengthen the case for increasing the assessment of
cell-phone radiation to a “probable” or even a “known” carcinogen.
Whereas the WHO’s Interphone study compared the cell-phone usage of
people who had contracted cancer with that of people who hadn’t, the NTP
study exposed rats and mice to cell-phone radiation and observed
whether the animals got sick.
“There is a carcinogenic effect,” announced Ron Melnick, the
designer of the study. Male rats exposed to cell-phone radiation
developed cancer at a substantially higher rate, though the same effect
was not seen in female rats. Rats exposed to radiation also had lower
birth rates, higher infant mortality, and more heart problems than those
in the control group. The cancer effect occurred in only a small
percentage of the rats, but that small percentage could translate into a
massive amount of human cancers. “Given the extremely large number of
people who use wireless communications devices, even a very small
increase in the incidence of disease…could have broad implications for
public health,” the NTP’s draft report explained.
But this was not the message that media coverage of the NTP study
conveyed, as the industry blanketed reporters with its usual “more
research is needed” spin. “
Seriously, stop with the irresponsible reporting on cell phones and cancer ,” demanded a
Vox headline. “
Don’t Believe the Hype ,” urged
The Washington Post .
Newsweek , for its part,
stated the NTP’s findings in a single paragraph , then devoted the rest of the article to an argument for why they should be ignored.
The NTP study was to be peer-reviewed at a meeting on March
26–28, amid signs that the program’s leadership is pivoting to downplay
its findings. The NTP had issued a public-health warning when the
study’s early results were released in 2016. But when the NTP released
essentially the same data in February 2018, John Bucher, the senior
scientist who directed the study, announced in a telephone press
conference that “I don’t think this is a high-risk situation at all,”
partly because the study had exposed the rats and mice to higher levels
of radiation than a typical cell-phone user experienced.
Microwave News ’s Slesin
speculated on potential explanations
for the NTP’s apparent backtracking: new leadership within the program,
where a former drug-company executive, Brian Berridge, now runs the
day-to-day operations; pressure from business-friendly Republicans on
Capitol Hill and from the US military, whose weapons systems rely on
wireless radiation; and the anti-science ideology of the Trump White
House. The question now: Will the scientists doing the peer review
endorse the NTP’s newly ambivalent perspective, or challenge it?
T he scientific
evidence that cell phones and wireless technologies in general can
cause cancer and genetic damage is not definitive, but it is abundant
and has been increasing over time. Contrary to the impression that most
news coverage has given the public, 90 percent of the 200 existing
studies included in the National Institutes of Health’s PubMed database
on the oxidative effects of wireless radiation—its tendency to cause
cells to shed electrons, which can lead to cancer and other
diseases—have found a significant impact, according to a survey of the
scientific literature conducted by Henry Lai. Seventy-two percent of
neurological studies and 64 percent of DNA studies have also found
effects.
The wireless industry’s determination to bring about the Internet
of Things, despite the massive increase in radiation exposure this
would unleash, raises the stakes exponentially. Because 5G radiation can
only travel short distances, antennas roughly the size of a pizza box
will have to be installed approximately every 250 feet to ensure
connectivity. “Industry is going to need hundreds of thousands, maybe
millions, of new antenna sites in the United States alone,” said
Moskowitz, the UC Berkeley researcher. “So people will be bathed in a
smog of radiation 24/7.”
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