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Can DNA Marking Solve 'Conflict-Mineral' Challenge?

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R.J.Matthews
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Good idea
R.J.Matthews   8/28/2012 12:51:32 PM
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Sounds an interesting idea Douglas, good to see an article like this appearing on EBN. Positive ideas like this can really make a difference and supply chain specialists can make a huge contribution in cleaning up supply chains in a economic way.
 


 
Efforts have been made to tag minerals from certain mines and areas but still have a long way to go to being effective enough. Plus there has been some misuse of the taging process which maybe your idea could stop.
 


 
Great work keep the ideas coming!
 


Douglas Alexander
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Re: Good idea
Douglas Alexander   8/28/2012 2:12:21 PM
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@R.J.  Thank you for the positive comments. I have been listening to lectures on microfluidics and since the costly part of DNA tech is the lab expense, I am interested in examining the advances that would reduce the cost and time for DNA analysis and authentication. Lab on a Chip technologies are moving towards desktop and eventually hand-held equipment that will run a DNA or fluid analysis at low cost and very quickly. We may see common deployments of DNA authenticating equipment in 3-5 years. If you compare Moores Law in microelectronics to the advances in microfluidics, then we should have home genome sequencing kits by 2020. Long before that, we should have do it yourself medical diagnostic kits for what now fuels much of the escalating cost in healthcare...to wit, non-emergency visits to emergency rooms. Imagine taking a blood or urine sample at home, running the diagnostics and seeing a list of possible pathogens or simple remedies for what ails you. I don't want to oversimplify the prospects, but we are moving in that direction and whether it is 5 years or 50 years, we will get there. How long has microfluidics been around? There are projects now dedicated to nanofluidics. We'll get there for sure.

Barbara Jorgensen
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DNA Marking
Barbara Jorgensen   8/28/2012 3:14:22 PM
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That's a great idea for an application of the DNA technology. Right now, I believe the verification that minerals are conflict-free comes from a human and technology based audit process. Embedding something in the ore right out of the mine would be a step in the right direction.

R.J.Matthews
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Re: DNA Marking
R.J.Matthews   8/28/2012 4:36:40 PM
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Not up on the last developments Barbara and Douglas but i know H C Starck and BGR were working on mineral fingerprinting. Which maybe the Dna marking could be a complementary technology for. Maybe what's needed is a kind of smart water for minerals that DNA marking could bring.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/smartwater

http://www.bgr.bund.de/en/themen/min_rohstoffe/ctc/downloads/newsletter_01_2012.pdf?__blob=publicationfile&v=2

http://www.bgr.bund.de/en/themen/min_rohstoffe/ctc/home/ctc_node_en.html

http://www.bgr.bund.de/en/themen/min_rohstoffe/ctc/approach/analytical-fingerprint/fingerprint_inhalt_en.html?nn=1572662

http://www.bgr.bund.de/en/themen/min_rohstoffe/ctc/downloads/afp_update.pdf?__blob=publicationfile&v=2

Hospice_Houngbo
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Re: Good idea
Hospice_Houngbo   8/28/2012 6:00:48 PM
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Any method that can help solve conflict-mineral challenge is praise-worthy and should be encouraged. But we can't expect that to be the solution to all the problem. Also people should be trained in order to avoid that the method being miseused.

Hospice_Houngbo
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Re: DNA Marking
Hospice_Houngbo   8/28/2012 6:10:39 PM
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@R.J.Matthews,

Are there shortcomings to DNA use for mineral fingerprinting that may prevent its reliability? Also can the method be "hacked"?

prabhakar_deosthali
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re:
prabhakar_deosthali   8/29/2012 6:01:24 AM
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The DNA marking of minerals looks to be the promsing technology to prevent the minerals from conflict areas getting into supply chain as long as the DNA marking does not get wiped out or tampered with in the transit process.

For it to be successful, DNA marking technology has to be fool-proof, easy to validate and cheaper to implement.

 

R.J.Matthews
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Re: DNA Marking
R.J.Matthews   8/29/2012 10:53:10 AM
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Probably Douglas is the best person to answer that Hospice but any one measure on it own is going to be vulnerable to being gotten round in some way. In this case say you had a mineral bath at mine giving each shipment a unique id that could not be altered that would not on its on be foolproof.

People at the mine could be bribed to bath minerals from other areas that were not conflict free then fiddle the production figures from the mine or mines. To do that would probably be hader though than getting around some present tagging programs.

Whatever happens you are still going to need smelters to come on board as they form a natural pinch point in the supply chain and spot check at that stage can spot illicit minerals sneaked in with clean sources.

 http://www.enoughproject.org/blogs/tin-tungsten-gold-smelters-time-go-conflict-free

 With Dodd Frank there is now a lot more pressure on those smelters who have not signed up to the program to do so.

Himanshugupta
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Supply Network Guru
How is DNA marking done
Himanshugupta   8/29/2012 2:38:46 PM
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Is there any specific method to apply DNA marking such that it does not get damaged or it cannot be copied. Dipping or spraing DNA might not be enough as DNA can get damaged at high heat or extreme conditions. 

owen
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Re: Good idea
owen   9/3/2012 8:58:22 AM
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Douglas, Aware of you interest, "... in examining the advances that would reduce the cost and time for DNA analysis and authentication." I thought you should be aware of the following press release: 

Bode Technology Offers First Rapid DNA Service Delivering a DNA Profile from Evidentiary Samples in Under 90 Minutes

Released 8/27/12 and available at:

http://www.ipscelltherapy.net/dna/bode-technology-offers-first-rapid-dna-service-delivering-a-dna-profile-from-evidentiary-samples-in-under-90-minutes.php

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