Safety
Please note that all information on this page is in a draft version.
Safety deadlines and forms will be published by the end of February 2015.
Timeline
- April-August: Review your organisms & parts against the White List / submit any necessary Check-Ins
- June 26: "About Our Lab" questionnaire due
- June 26: "About Our Project" questionnaire due (remember to update when your primary project idea changes!)
- August 28: Final Safety Form due
What is Safety in iGEM?
iGEM teams follow a high standard of safe and responsible biological engineering. There are three main areas of safety that iGEM teams must attend to: Safe Project Design, Safe Lab Work, and Safe Shipment.
Safe Project Design
Be a responsible engineer! Think carefully about what would happen if you completely "finished" your project, and turned it into a product that real people use. What effects might it have in the real world? Here are some questions to get you started:
- Who will use your product? What opinions do these people have about your project?
- Where will your product be used? On a farm, in a factory, inside human bodies, in the ocean?
- If your product is successful, who will receive benefits and who will be harmed?
- What happens when it's all used up? Will it be sterilized, discarded, or recycled?
- Is it safer, cheaper, or better than other technologies that do the same thing?
Consider these questions, and consider how you might modify your project design in response to these real-world issues. Even if you cannot think of a good modification, you can discuss the problem with others, and propose future experiments to find a good solution.
Learn more about Safe Project Design
Safe Lab Work
All biological lab work, even simple experiments, carries some risk to the experimenter. To reduce these risks, iGEM teams should work in properly equipped facilities and use standard lab safety techniques.
Organisms
Protect yourself from being infected by the organisms you work with! Choose organisms from a low Risk Group, and work in a lab that is appropriate for the organisms you choose.
Parts
iGEM Policy Against Releasing Wet-Lab Projects
Learn more about Safe Lab Work
Safe Shipment
Protect your part submissions from delays and blockages! Protect the Registry of Standard Biological Parts!
iGEM teams and the Registry frequently exchange samples of DNA through the mail. Although these shipments are generally not dangerous, they are still governed by national and international laws. iGEM teams should learn how to ship DNA samples safely and legally, and learn which samples should not be shipped.
Learn more about Safe Shipment
Requirements for iGEM Teams
Safety deadlines and forms will be published by the end of February 2015.
Help!
Visit the Learn More about Safety page!
We've collected resources and tutorials to help you.
Contact iGEM HQ!
Email safety AT igem DOT org any time, with any questions you might have! We are friendly and available, and we will do our best to answer your questions quickly. Any team member can ask a question, whether you are a student, a leader, or an advisor. You should not fear that your team will suffer consequences simply because you asked us a question.
Virtual Open Office Hours
At various times during the summer, we will host Virtual Open Office Hours on Skype. Join us to ask questions, discuss concerns, and meet other iGEMers from around the world!
The schedule for Virtual Open Office Hours will be posted later.
You will need Skype to participate.
- Click here to get Skype in most countries.
- Click here to get Skype in China.
- After you install Skype, remember to add kelly_igem to your contact list!
Ask your Neighbors!
iGEM HQ is a good resource for safety, but it is not the only resource. You probably have many safety experts right next door to you! For example:
- Your faculty advisor or team leaders
- The laboratory manager for the lab where you work
- The safety office or Institutional Biosafety Committee at your university/institution
- Members of your local or national government
Who is the iGEM Safety Committee?
- Marissa Cardwell, MIT Environment, Health, and Safety Office
- Peter Carr, MIT Lincoln Laboratories
- Kirsten Jacobsen, Public Health Agency of Canada
- Tom Knight, Ginkgo BioWorks
- Todd Kuiken, Synthetic Biology Project, Woodrow Wilson Center
- Claudia Mickelson, MIT Environment, Health, and Safety Office
- Piers Millett, Woodrow Wilson Center
- Kenneth Oye, MIT Program on Emerging Technologies
- Megan Palmer, SynBERC
- Anastasia Rogaeva, Public Health Agency of Canada
- Samuel Yu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology