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Biotech Science

Microbes for Bioremediation 189

The San Francisco Chronicle has a piece discussing current efforts to clean up nuclear waste sites with microbes. Current treatment procedures generally involve pumping out the contaminated groundwater, filtering it, and pumping it back, which is rather expensive.
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Microbes for Bioremediation

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  • by Lord_Dweomer ( 648696 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @10:57PM (#6548160) Homepage
    And what happens when these microbes mutate?

    I for one welcome our new microbe overlords!

  • by kelceylehrich ( 600264 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @10:57PM (#6548163)
    Is this the intro to another movie?

    I can see it now: radioactive germs bite a kid and he turns into a super human spiderman/hulk thing.

    Great.
  • by derrith ( 600195 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @10:58PM (#6548166)
    is anybody else reminded of Zodiac? This may turn out to be that bad of a fiasco if rushed. I can only hope for the best.
  • by Scalli0n ( 631648 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @10:59PM (#6548172) Homepage
    I can think of cooler stuff to do with microbes - like in restauraunts, have lots of microbes at the bottom of a special trash can to eat away grease (McDonalds would love that.)

    Or even a microbe spray to degrease stuff; cool, huh? No more wiping down.

    Also cool would be microbes in my toilet, to eat my shit (but not die.)

    Of course, I do wonder what they'd do while they weren't eating shit or grease or whatever, but who cares about that, they're cool!
  • by Zagar ( 610861 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @10:59PM (#6548174)
    But the real question is, how well does it work? Can this convert a nuclear waste zone into a habitable zone? This is great news for the environmentalists.
    • by sn00ker ( 172521 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:21PM (#6548248) Homepage
      I'm not sure about Nagasaki, but Hiroshima has a background radioactivity count that is only very slightly higher than normal. Even at ground zero.
      So, as it currently stands, there's not much that microbes could do to "cure" Hiroshima. It's already highly populated after having to recover from near-total population loss, and I seem to recall reading somewhere that it has a birth defect rate that's the same as other Japanese cities. So much for the nuclear waste zone.

      • Did you read and understand the article? A couple good rain storms washed the SURFICIAL contaminants in those cities into the sea.

        This process is being proposed for ground watter in which U is dissolved. It is, thus, mobile and can impact surface water and drinking water wells. The idea is to immobilize what is currently migrating downgradient.

        RTFA
      • Wow, I was just asking some visiting Japanese friends about Nagasaki just the other day - just how *did* they clean up these cities? Anyone know?

        Hiroshima was bombed on August 6th, 1945 and Nagasaki 3 days later - this is less than 60 years ago, and today they're large, thriving cities. Did they dig out most of the city and replace it with clean dirt, or what?
        • Here's a site. (Score:4, Informative)

          by Population ( 687281 ) on Monday July 28, 2003 @01:17AM (#6548656)
          http://www.dtra.mil/news/fact/nw_hnforce.html

          They were "airburst" nukes. That means that there isn't as much contaminated material as there would be if the fireball contacted the earth.

          With an airburst, the contamination can be washed away. Even though this only moves the residual contamination to another area.

          If this had been a groundburst, there would have been a lot more radiation contamination to clean up.
        • by DaveAtFraud ( 460127 ) on Monday July 28, 2003 @01:31AM (#6548703) Homepage Journal
          They didn't have to do anything to clean them up. High intensity radioactivity can only be sustained in isotopes with a short half life. In order for something that is radioactive to keep throwing off high energy particles, gamma rays, x-rays, etc., some piece of it has to decay. As more of it decays there's less of it around to be radioactive. Besides the radiation from the actual explosions, the radioactivity was fairly intense immediately after the bombs went off but then subsided to near normal levels fairly rapidly.

          I get a more intense radiation dose living in the Denver area with lots of graitic soil and living at 6,000+ ft above sea level than most of the inhabitants of Hiroshima or Nagaski get in a normal day. If I go skiing or climb a mountain, I really get nuked. So far, no spare hand growing out of my forehead but I have mutated into being more politically conservative the older I get and the longer I live here.
    • But the real question is, how well does it work?

      Good question. I remember hearing about microbes which were supposedly able to "eat" the garbage at landfill sites. I haven't heard of them since.

      Also, how about our (North America's) fresh water lakes? I would love to see some plan to clean them up. Much of the Great Lakes, for example, are polluted. Very, very sad.
    • by delmoi ( 26744 )
      What's wrong with Hiroshima or Nagasaki?
  • by ecalkin ( 468811 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:00PM (#6548179)
    it starts with the microbes 'consuming' uranium... ok, what does the microbe do with it? it's still radioactive and now your microbe is also!

    then i get to the part where the microbe is taking water based uranium and making a solid form. ok.

    don't you still have to dig this stuff up? wouldn't the 'solid' form break down after a while and still have the problem? and wouldn't the solid form still have the same amount of radioactivity?

    it looks like it makes it easier to get it out of soil, but you still have to dig it up and process it out?

    eric
    • What if reaches critical mass and explodes? Oh no I've spoken too much, here come the Black Helicopters.
    • According to Mining bacteria's appetite for toxic waste [sfgate.com]

      A complex community of microorganisms thrives by "breathing" oxides of sulfur, iron, aluminum and even more hazardous compounds like the uranium and other radioactive elements. As the microbes obtain their oxygen from soluble uranium oxide, for example, they transform it into a highly insoluble form called uraninite.

      The article does not say what is uraninite. Uraninite is the primary ore of uranium. Uraninite is a reduced form of uranium which a

    • And just what do you think that you're going to do with it once you've dug it up?

      Bury it safely?

      The whole point of this excercise is to keep the radioactive material from interacting with living creatures: if it is immobile, insoluble and buried, then there are PRECIOUS FEW living things that are in any way affected by it.

      After all, the REAL danger in toxic and radioactive heavy metals is not momentary exposure, but the concentration over time into the tissues of long-lived creatures (e.g. humans);
    • by spineboy ( 22918 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:48PM (#6548360) Journal
      I believe the gist of the article is that the bacteria are able to turn a SOLUABLE form of uranium into a NON_SOLUABLE form. Therefor it is less ilkely to be dissolved (or far much less of it) into the groundwater and migrate to potable (drinkable) water suplies. Or You could "wash" the soil and introduce the bacteria into the water and have them "filter it out" , thereby purifying the water. It's been done with petroleum eating bacteria on oil spills, so why not nuke wastes. I even remember way back when I was taking some bacterial engineering classes, that some bacteria were selective enough to distinguish different ISOTOPES of elements - not 100% selective and therefore probably not good enough for nuke purification schemes..
  • other uses (Score:5, Funny)

    by pHatidic ( 163975 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:02PM (#6548188)
    The waste ate its way down into layers of saprolite, a claylike rock, so that more than 99 percent of it is deep in the soil, he said.

    Maybe this technology could be put to other uses. for example, what if we used old nuclear waste for drilling deep within the earth. We could pour some in the hole, and then microbe it when it stopped being effective. lather, rinse, repeat.

    1. Pour nuclear waste into ground making a really really deep hole.
    2. Clean up hole with microbes.
    3. ????
    4. Profit!
    • No, don't you see? The moon got blasted out of orbit when we put too much nuclear waste in one place. First the intense magnetic fields made people go insane, then waste dump number 2 exploded and hurled the moon into outer space! It all happened on September 13, 1999!
  • by indros13 ( 531405 ) * on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:04PM (#6548198) Homepage Journal
    My understanding is that microbes (read: bacteria) are already extensively used in the treatment of wastewater. For example, here is a portable toilet [vt.edu] with microbial treatment. I salute the folks who have thought to look at the natural world for solutions to other man-made problems.

  • by The Analog Kid ( 565327 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:08PM (#6548203)
    They have GE Bacteria that will eat oil, to be used in oil spills. These however are not being used outside of labs, because of the consern of "What will happen when the the oil is gone? What are they going to do? Die, or find something else?" So I would think the same with will happen.
    • by TrollBridge ( 550878 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:12PM (#6548217) Homepage Journal
      Skinner: Well, I was wrong. The lizards are a godsend.
      Lisa: But isn't that a bit short-sighted? What happens when we're overrun by lizards?
      Skinner: No problem. We simply release wave after wave of Chinese needle snakes. They'll wipe out the lizards.
      Lisa: But aren't the snakes even worse?
      Skinner: Yes, but we're prepared for that. We've lined up a fabulous type of gorilla that thrives on snake meat.
      Lisa: But then we're stuck with gorillas!
      Skinner: No, that's the beautiful part. When wintertime rolls around, the gorillas simply freeze to death.
    • "What will happen when the the oil is gone? What are they going to do? Die, or find something else?" So I would think the same with will happen.

      Engineer in promoters for certain compounds that must be present for the organism to live. No sustaining compound....microbes die. This is very common in the lab, and I could imagine other potential applications such as radio frequency induced promoters that would trigger pre-programmed apoptosis pathways to eliminate bacteria when the job is accomplished.
      • Same deal with antibiotics, or any other organism and the cruel cruel world. That's how life works -- more organisms are born they can survive, the ones with bad mutations don't survive under "normal" conditions, but when conditions change, normal and abnormal swap places, the ones that used to live die, and some of the ones that used to die now live.
    • by BrainInAJar ( 584756 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:49PM (#6548369)
      "What will happen when the the oil is gone? What are they going to do? Die, or find something else?"

      I'd assume they'd start to eat the natural oils that birds, fish, etc produce. "But they're only engineered to digest petroleum oils" That's the beauty of biology, it mutates into what you want it to exactly not do. Doesn't take that long either. Chernobyl 4 melted down in '86, and life is already thriving there (bacterial life, but life nonetheless)
    • We don't use bioremediation out of "concern about what will happen when the oli is gone?" Where the hell do you get this statement?

      You are utterly ignorant. GE and stimulated naturally occurring bacteria have been successfully used for bioremediation for years, at least since the late 1980's.

      Yes, they DIE when they run out of food. They do not mutate and become inexorable flesh-eating zombies. And they are not engineered to eat "oil'" they are engineered to eat specific chemical compounds or classes o
    • Ummm, yes they are being used in spill clean-ups. Perhaps not the variety you are thinking of... For over a decade, bacteria have been used to digest petroleum spills.
  • by 3141 ( 468289 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:09PM (#6548208) Homepage
    a mountain of radioactive and toxic dirt 2,000 times larger than Egypt's Great Pyramid at Giza.

    That's all very well and good, but I want to know how many Libraries of Congress that is.
  • Mini-Nanotech (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Zagar ( 610861 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:11PM (#6548216)
    Nanotechnology will practicaly do the same thing in a much more efficient way. Imagine, the little robots could built a small city with nuclear waste. Take a few carbon atoms lying around and built some houses. Then build a nuclear plant. Use the depleated uranium to make rods. Use thoses rods in the nuclear plant to provide power to the freshly assembled houses. Tada! City in a Box (Tm)
    • This is nanotechnology; biotech vs. nanotech is to some degree an artificial distinction. Bacteria are nanomachines (well, okay, micromachines; viruses are nanomachines) that are already very good at what they do, and can me made to do what we want them to do, in many cases, with just a few tweaks. I think it's a red herring to imagine that useful nanotech will consist solely, or even mostly, of entirely new machines built up atom-by-atom to resemble the machines we use in the macroscopic world. Life has
  • Ionizing radiation (Score:5, Interesting)

    by dido ( 9125 ) <dido AT imperium DOT ph> on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:20PM (#6548244)

    I wonder how is it that the ionizing radiation doesn't manage to kill off these microbes before they can do their job? A typical gamma ray goes for 5 MeV, whereas a typical ionization energy is only at 15-20 eV. Interfering with chemical reactions necessary to life most definitely. Mutation and more likely outright killing of these organisms.

    How do they survive?

    • by wagnerer ( 53943 ) on Monday July 28, 2003 @12:22AM (#6548495)
      I think you're thinking of alpha energies. Gammas pretty much max out around 3 MeV for radioactive decay and energy lines above 1.5 MeV are not very common. One way to look at it is the higher the energy the more unstable the radioactive atom is giving it a shorter half-life. Short half-life atoms don't stay around long so all you get are a few rare isotopes emitting energies above 1.5 MeV seen outside reactors and accelerators.

      For gamma-rays carbon based life is pretty transparent. The gamma ray will rarely deposit all its energy in one spot instead it knocks an electron off an atom and gives it a few 100 kev to work with and then proceeds on its merry way. Anything in the path of that electron is hammered but for the most part that's just inter/intra-cellular fluid which produces some free radicals that are quickly scavanged. Its only a problem when the DNA helix is hit or possibly the cell membrane, both fairly low in volume compared to the whole cell. Internal alpha particles are another matter entirely. They have energies around the 5 MeV range and an alpha is like a cannon ball shot in a fab shop. Anything it hits is a goner since all that energy is deposited in a very small volume.

      As for microbes surviving high radiation levels you should look at some articles concerning high microbe levels in reactor core coolant streams. They appear to have highly redundant DNA with very good repair mechanisms. Unfortunately the processes they use seem to only work for for ring DNA strands found in bacterias. So don't look for a human drug soon to make you rad proof. D. radiodurans is one species that was found in the shielding water of high activity sources.
    • by caffeine_monkey ( 576033 ) on Monday July 28, 2003 @12:27AM (#6548512)
      Tiny little lead aprons.
    • Sturdy DNA with lots of duplicate genes and robust repair mechanisms.
  • Zodiac (Score:3, Interesting)

    by DdJ ( 10790 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:21PM (#6548252) Homepage Journal
    This actually has something in common with the Stephenson novel "Zodiac". Everyone should go read it. You can buy it here [amazon.com]
  • Screw the expense (Score:3, Insightful)

    by YrWrstNtmr ( 564987 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:26PM (#6548274)
    Current treatment procedures generally involve pumping out the contaminated groundwater, filtering it, and pumping it back, which is rather expensive.

    I want these guys to use whatever works the best. Microbes, filtering, shooting it off into the sun...
    Really...this is one of the places where is has to be done right. Screw the expense.

    Unfortunately, profits and stockholders will get in the way of doing it right.
    • Re:Screw the expense (Score:5, Informative)

      by toxic666 ( 529648 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:58PM (#6548399)
      That is a glib and reactionary set of comments. By your rationale, we should spare no expense because it is radioactive. Hey, I'll take a radioactive hazard that may kill me 30 years from now over gasoline leaking from a pipeline into my basement and exploding.

      And who gets to pay for it? The taxpayers and society. So, in managing hazards to the environment and people, we do this silly thing called engineering. It is not easy, but goes something like this:

      1) Define the problem. Not easy when dealing with contaminants in ground water that don't announce their presence.

      2) Define a goal that reduces the hazard to an acceptable risk, often an increase in health impact to humans by no more than 1 in 1 million.

      3) Assess the alternatives to achieve the goal. These microbes may be a new alternative.

      4) Design the most cost-effective system to achieve the goal.

      5) Maintain documentation and rationale for the decision-making process.

      6) Implement and assess the design. Since the problem and conditions are often not 100% defined due to economic considerations, you need to determine if the solution is working and adjust as necessary.
  • by toxic666 ( 529648 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:28PM (#6548282)
    OK, enough of the silly "Microbes will take over" and Frankenfood-inspired comments.

    Having read the article, it seems like a good way to precipitate soluble U ions as U oxides, or complex uranyl compounds. It appears to offer a way to mitigate impacts upon human health and the environment by precipitating U ions traveling in ground water so they do not discharge to surface water or pumped by potable wells.

    Bioremediation is nothing new. It works well with chlorinated solvents (PCE and TCE), especially in reduced, iron-rich ground water. The caveat for those compounds is, however, that they break down only so far, often leaving vinyl chloride -- a demonstrated carcinogen -- as the final step before there is not enough energy for them to survive by reductive dehalogenation. Basically, the microbes die becuase they do not have a source of "food."

    The same goes for aerobic microbes, like these appear to be; they combine dissolved metals with oxygen to precipitate them. That gets even more expensive, because you have to maintain the proper redox level by introducing O2 with hydrogen peroxide or ozone. It's expensive and prone to mechanical failure or the vagaries of the subsurface.

    These microbes may die out once their source of "food" depletes. However, the by-products should be assessed before they try to use this in a live environment, because sometimes the cure can be worse than the problem. There is also no economic analysis for this research, but it is likely way to early to determine how much it would cost to implement. It may be more reliable and cheaper to precipitate dissolved U by simply pumping a lot of oxygen into the ground water.
  • by jjh37997 ( 456473 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:37PM (#6548313) Homepage

    The story sounds like its using a method that the copper industry has been using for years, expect in this case with microbes that crave uranium instead if copper. They don't eat or destroy the uranium, just chemically transform it into insoluble forms that can be easily filtered out of groundwater.

    Biological heap leaching is an inexpensive way to extract the metal from low-grade ores where copper is bound in a sulfide matrix. As the microbes chew up the ore, which has been treated with sulfuric acid to encourage them, the copper is released and concentrated in a solution that flows into a catch basin. The metal is extracted, and the acid solution is recycled.

  • This is good. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by RandyF ( 588707 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:47PM (#6548354) Journal
    I currently have a septic system that uses bacteria to treat my sewage. The result is water that is clean enough to drink. (No, you can't come over and drink it. It just waters the lawn!)

    The bacteria doesn't get rid of the radiation, just makes the radioactive slush insoluble so that they can collect it and deal with it with less cost. It's a great idea.

    I'm just hoping that some genious comes up with a safe way to speed up the nuclear decomposition so that the material stabilizes into non-radioactive elements. That will be a breakthrough!

    • Stabilize as a non-radioactive element? It's called time. Radionuclides decay at a predictable rate. Billion years or so for your typical uranium isotope.
    • They are working on, or possibly already have, a way to power nuclear plants using existing waste. (This includes waste from nuke plants, plus decommissioned nuclear warheads, all sorts of sources.) The resulting waste, while still radioactive, is much less energetic and so less dangerous. The article where I read about this was actually proposing it as a way of dealing with weapons-grade nuclear materials and keeping them from falling into the hands of terrorists, rogue states, etc.

      A "safe way to spee

    • There's a well known solution to this, which they're working on (for other reasons). If you bombard the "waste" with neutrons, you break down the material into smaller isotopes (throught fission). The result is material which is very highly radioactive; but, the materials have much shorter half lives.

      It's conceivable to build a nuclear plant like this, where the neutron beam is "tuned" to the ideal energy to cause fission in whatever the target material is. It's not necessarily very fficient.

      A neut

  • nuclear energy (Score:4, Interesting)

    by decoder ( 628982 ) on Sunday July 27, 2003 @11:48PM (#6548359)

    Pros:
    • less expensive
    • Clean: no polution
    • less radiation than coal burning, unless you go swimming in the waste pools

    Cons:

    Could this be the cure to the first of the two cons? :-)
  • Where can I get some of this amazing bacteria? My bedroom had to be quarantined off two months ago when I attempted to see if I could use uranium to overclock my Pentium 2, and I forget what color the carpet is... *sniff*
  • ...to deal with the nuculear waste products left behind by my roommates!
  • by muscleman706 ( 654133 ) on Monday July 28, 2003 @12:03AM (#6548419) Homepage
    There is a total revolution going on in all food production worldwide through the use of a class of microogranisms known as Purple Non-Sulfur Bacterias (PNSB's). The work was pioneered by a Japanese scientist who did research for 20 years to perfect a synergistic formula of different microogranisms that work together, including the PNSB's, lactic acid bacteria, and yeasts.

    Almost all organic farms are now spraying soil with this solution. Additionally, people who raise animals are feeding it to their animals. Not just organic farmers, but even traditional mass production farms in the US because it lets them *totally eliminate anti-biotics and hormones* due the increased nutrition the microbes afford creates who consume them.

    Human beings are actually supplementing with these as well. It is very popular in Japan and South Korea, and is becoming popular in America.

    The PNSB's act as reducing agents, ie, antioxidants. So, the break things down by creating antioxidants that eliminate the material over time, as opposed to oxidizing bacteria that makes things putrify and rot. The reduction ability of the PNSB's is why the US military uses the same exact solution as the farmers and humans do, to break down toxic waste from weapons and nuclear power plants.

    Have a look at:

    http://www.rawpaleodiet.org/em/ [rawpaleodiet.org]

    http://www.antioxbew.com/ [antioxbrew.com]

    • I would label this "troll" but I don't think it's meant to be. The writer talks about a "total revolution" but if it is I suspect it is beginning with one step. Both the sites mentioned are fringe ("degreed scientist and mystic" being one author's self description) though the first one does at least admit that what is being recommended is contrary to safety and environmental legislation in many places. The first site is also full of the vague alternative approach to marketing speak, with illdefined claims a
  • Duh (Score:5, Funny)

    by fritter ( 27792 ) on Monday July 28, 2003 @12:11AM (#6548455)
    As I've learned from Saturday morning television, there has been an answer for this for years. You combine the power of the five rings to form Captain Planet, and he cleans up the nuclear waste and puts the perpetrators in jail. Sheesh, you'd think these so-called "intelligent" scientists could be bothered to turn on the TV every once in an while.
  • radioactive waste? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 28, 2003 @12:12AM (#6548461)
    Radioactivity doesn't just go away... it is not a chemical reaction, but physical instability in the nucleus of the uranium.. This may chemically break down uranium... but still. the microbes will be exposed to toxic amounts of radiation (by human standards). This is what is dangerous about uranium... where as it may be toxic as a chemical it is also radioactively toxic. the microbes might be able to break it all down into uranite. but it seems they are only dealing w/ microbes as a way to chemcially treat stable uranium...

    still doesn't solve the question of radioactive waste does it?
    • Actually this isn't so bad. There's lots of stable uranium on Earth anyway. Uranium is actually a naturally occuring element here that's surprisingly common... We've released some of it in a soluble form. The bacteria just lock it back up (like it was to begin with).
  • Done before... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Keighvin ( 166133 ) on Monday July 28, 2003 @12:13AM (#6548466)
    This was done before on a test site near the Hanford nuclear facility in Washington (state), US. Only with that, they used the population of microbes already in the area that needed methane in order to properly metabolize the contaminated elements. They pumped a continuous stream of methane into the ground to help the microbes thrive and do their job, and when finished simply turned it off and let them return to natural levels.

    A simple control mechanism such as that, especially using elements already found in nature, will be far more acceptable to the general public (fed on many a recent techno-thriller) as well as the tin-foil-beanie crowd (though just barely).
  • Hmmm... (Score:3, Funny)

    by linuxwrangler ( 582055 ) on Monday July 28, 2003 @12:20AM (#6548491)
    This story was on SF Gate 2 weeks ago and I submitted it that day. The weird thing is that my submission was and still is listed as accepted but the story was never posted. Now it finally shows up.

    Maybe the microbes had to chew through some bowel obstructions to allow the accepted stories to clear through. :)
  • We've all seen enough Godzilla, twilight zone, Marvel comics, or old school GI Joe to know what happens when you mix microbes and radioactivity bad things happen, so it might not be such a good idea.

    But there are a lot of people out there who think having radioactive symbols on their case mods is a cool idea, why not give them a reason to have that radioactive symbol: RADIOACTIVE CPUS! They fry everything, including living flesh, but they're definitely the hottest thing on the market! No cooling fan will c

  • Both on the microbes themselves (who may mutate or develop into something quite different) and the containment of the microbes themselves? What happens if they escape into an uncontrolled environment (I'm thinking on the lines of the killer bees)? The problem is alternate _safe_ sources of energy not microbes to cleanup the mess. Why not put this much effort into wind/solar technology and eliminate the need for such stuff to begin with?
  • by npendleton ( 255215 ) on Monday July 28, 2003 @01:21AM (#6548667)
    Groundwater is poluted by engine oil, petrol, and jp5 jet fuel leaking from storage tanks in all 50 states and every country on the globe.

    Hydrocarbon groundwater pollution is a much more widespread problem than soluable uranium. People with water wells 10 miles from Miami International Airport (MIA) can smell JP5 jet fuel in their well water. This is clear cut opportunity for bioremediation. People store and therefore leak hydrocarbons where they can and do use them.

    As population and water needs rise, and supply dwindles, the US Federal Government has been forced to act. In the 1990's, to reduce the hydrocarbon pollution of groundwater, the US Government forced every gas station (petrol filling station) to dig up every storage tank and the soils surrounding the tank, and leave the dirt in piles to "off gas" the hydro carbons for months. And after off gassing, station owners had to replace the tanks with less leaky modern tanks.

    Because water is essential for life, yet difficult to move economically, there will be increased border wars and politcal fights to control rivers and aquafers. We are watching a war for control of the oil rich country of Iraq. We will see similar fights and politcal disputes for control of rivers and dams on many international rivers. We will also see a marked rise in the trade of grain, one of the few water intensive commodities that can be traded economically.

    All of this spells a golden opportunity for bioremediation of hydrocarbons, to help cities, farms, and countries to improve supply of potable water.

    Mac refugee, paper MCSE, Linux wanna be
    and first person to mention knoppix on /.
  • So do we end up with a bunch or radioactive microbes then? Now you can have nuclear+bioterrorism all rolled in one easy-to-deploy package!!!
  • I agree completely with the people who are saying that there is a thriving ecosystem around the lab. I'm looking out my window right now, and I see geese, swans, ducks, a groundhog, wild turkeys, and a bunch of starlings. There are deer corpses along Bethel Valley Road (a 10 mile or so stretch from downtown Oak Ridge, if it can be described as such, through the lab campus) nearly every morning, a tribute to the growth potential of a population shielded by armed guards from predators and rednecks with rifles.

    What those who speak in praise of the city haven't mentioned is that the swan pond that I'm looking at is surrounded by a fence, that you can't fish anywhere downstream of the labs for miles and miles, and that there are still barrels of STUFF that we don't even know exist buried around the countryside. Sure, on the surface things are fine, but that's because the heavy metals have long since sunken into the earth.

    It's not like the situation hasn't gotten infinitely better since the initial mismanagement of the lab (alluded to by a previous poster and by Richard Feynmann's 'The Pleasure of Finding Things Out'). We built an onsite waste management facility [doe.gov], as part of the cleanup led by Bechtel Jacobs. It was a step in the right direction for the lab, as it allows us not only to repair damage already done, but to prevent causing further harm to the environment as research on radioactive materials continues. (side note: we prefer the term 'rare isotope'... It doesn't scare the populace). The cleanup process [bechteljacobs.com] was not painless [knoxnews.com], as this proposal by Bechtel Jacobs (the company leading the multi-billion dollar effort) and article from the Knoxville News-Sentinel indicate. We're nearly done, though. Occasionally something surprises us, but the situation's better than it was.

    So, on to the article at last... These microbes don't have a huge utility value here, but they have great potential. Chernobyl, anyone? If there's another uncontained meltdown, these little buggers can be deployed almost immediately (via aerosol spray delivered in an overfly by crop dusters) to begin to counteract the fatal seep of irradiated cadmium and contaminated nickel. It's not of use now, but it's a valuable tool to have in our box.

  • by delmoi ( 26744 ) on Monday July 28, 2003 @10:43AM (#6550677) Homepage
    Well, I think this Slashdot headline is a little misleading, it makes it sound like these microbes are somehow removing radioactive material, which is obviously impossible. You can't change one elemental isotope into another one with any chemical reaction (which means no biological reaction either)

    What they're doing is changing one molecule involving uranium (which is water soluble) into another molecule involving uranium (which isn't). Everything stays just as radioactive, but not dissolved in water.

Waste not, get your budget cut next year.

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