Subscribe now

Letter: Femtohazard

Published 25 June 2008

From David Roffey

Gabriel Bodard objects to health concerns about home-based cellphone base stations being described as a “marketing” problem (26 April, p 20), but in this case the description is accurate. Femtocells, which only need to reach out a few hundred metres, put out considerably less radio-frequency energy (typically less than 10 milliwatts) than the phone itself – typically more than 200mW, and more when it is communicating with a base station up to 15 kilometres away.

So anyone who is worried about electromagnetic pollution enough to be scared of a femtocell base station will have no problem, because they will not have a cellphone. For those who do, the problem is one of understanding, solvable by marketing.

Sydney, Australia

Issue no. 2662 published 28 June 2008

Sign up to our weekly newsletter

Receive a weekly dose of discovery in your inbox. We'll also keep you up to date with New Scientist events and special offers.

Sign up
Piano Exit Overlay Banner Mobile Piano Exit Overlay Banner Desktop