Will 5G give you cancer or coronavirus? Experts reveal why viral conspiracy theory ‘is completely wrong’
5G INTERNET has gone live in Britain and is already delivering ultra-fast internet speeds to smartphones – but can it kill you?
Online conspiracy theorists claim exposure to 5G phone signals will give you cancer or coronavirus, but experts have told The Sun why that’s completely false.
Britain now has a 5G network up and running, delivering ultra-fast speeds that are proving to be 10 times faster than 4G.
But conspiracy theorists around the world are warning about the health risks – with claims that 5G will give you cancer.
Just last year, a story about 5G tests killing hundreds of birds went viral, but was .
There are even “Stop 5G UK” petitions and Facebook groups, attracting tens of thousands of fearful Brits to their cause.
Radiation and cancer – the simple facts
The good news is that 5G will deliver super-fast speeds to your phone without killing you, experts say.
5G signals simply aren’t powerful enough to damage your cells or cause any illnesses.
“Cancers can arise when you sustain a lot of cellular damage,” said Dr David Robert Grimes, an Irish physicist, cancer researcher and scientific myth-buster, speaking to The Sun.
“So if our DNA gets broken up or otherwise accosted by outside forces, it mutates and eventually becomes cancer.”
Some radiation has enough energy to split apart chemical bonds and DNA, and that’s known as ionising.
The type of signals your phone emits is microwave radiation. It’s low on the electromagnetic spectrum, and is therefore non-ionising.
“Microwave radiation is much less powerful than even visible light,” said Dr Grimes.
“We’re talking a 1,000-fold difference between microwave photons and visible light.
“We know visible light is non-ionising, doesn’t break apart bonds, otherwise we’d been in trouble watching TV.
“Essentially we’re not worried about long-term exposure, because it just doesn’t have the energy.”
Importantly, we’ve had years of experience with microwave radiation with zero issues.
“There is no relation between brain cancers and mobile phone use,” Dr Grimes told us.
“You’d expect to see that if there was a link, but we don’t see a link.
“With smokers, the more one smokes, the higher their chances of getting cancer.
“This kind of relationship to dose doesn’t exist between microwave radiation and cancer ”
Is 5G different from 4G?
We’ve been using 4G phones for years with no consequence.
But conspiracy theorists are correct when they say 5G and 4G signals are different.
In the UK, 4G signals generally sit between 800MHz to 2.6GHz on the electro-magnetic spectrum.
5G is a little higher at 3.4GHz to 3.6GHz, but not much.
After all, the greater the frequency, the less useful radiation is for delivering mobile signals over large areas.
“As you go higher up, it travels less distance and it penetrates buildings less effectively,” said Howard Jones, who heads up communications for EE’s networks.
“So you want low-frequency stuff for covering rural areas and in-building areas.”
He said that 5G is simply far too low to change the structure of a human cell.
“Ionising radiation is much higher up the spectrum: gamma rays, X-rays and those kinds of things,” Howard explained.
“The frequency on the cusp of ionising and non-ionising is UV rays that come from the Sun.
“The Sun shines on us all the time and we all know there’s an amount of that radiation that is good for you and bad for you.
“But that frequency that UV rays come from the Sun at is 1,000 times higher than the spectrum that we’ll be using for 5G.”
He added: “It cannot cause cancer. It simply doesn’t have the power.”
5G conspiracy theories – why are they spreading?
Here's what you need to know...
- The electromagnetic spectrum is nothing new.
- But the internet allows conspiracies to spread at speed, according to EE’s Howard Jones.
- “The problem is the level of research people are willing to do that supports the hypothesis they already hold,” Howard told us.
- “You can find lots of people talking about how 5G is not safe on the internet.
- “But people talking about how 5G is safe just doesn’t happen as much. There isn’t as much objective and motivation there to say it is safe.”
- However, there are lots of reasons 5G seems scary to people.
- Dr David Grimes explained: “The first one is the difficult proving a negative.
- “The other factor is that radiation is invisible. It’s a scary word: we conflate difference concepts like radiation and radioactivity.
- “Radiation is just the transmission of energy through a medium – light is radiation.”
- “The things being said about 5G were being said about normal mobile phones and masts in the late 90s. The claims aren’t updated, they’re just reiterated.
- He went on: “Once you’re suckered into these beliefs, it’s hard to leave them.
- “Even if we want to believe it, we almost have to put our questioning hat on, and say what evidence is there for that?
- “Particularly online, you have to treat things with a massive pinch of salt.
- “It’s something as a society we have to learn, or we’ll be taken advantage of by cranks or scheming Russians.”
Find out if 5G is in your area right now.
Check out the best 5G phones you can buy today.
And read about why your iPhone can’t get 5G even if you pay for a 5G contract.
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