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By News Staff | December 10th 2007 10:57 AM | 4 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
Microbes could provide a clean, renewable energy source and use up carbon dioxide in the process, suggested Dr James Chong at a Science Media Centre press briefing today.

“Methanogens are microbes called archaea that are similar to bacteria. They are responsible for the vast majority of methane produced on earth by living things” says Dr Chong from York University. “They use carbon dioxide to make methane, the major flammable component of natural gas. So methanogens could be used to make a renewable, carbon neutral gas substitute.”



Methanogens produce about one billion tonnes of methane every year. They thrive in oxygen-free environments like the guts of cows and sheep, humans and even termites. They live in swamps, bogs and lakes. “Increased human activity causes methane emissions to rise because methanogens grow well in rice paddies, sewage processing plants and landfill sites, which are all made by humans.”

Methanogens could feed on waste from farms, food and even our homes to make biogas. This is done in Europe, but very little in the UK. The government is now looking at microbes as a source of fuel and as a way to tackle food waste in particular.

Methane is a greenhouse gas that is 23 times more effective at trapping heat than carbon dioxide. “By using methane produced by bacteria as a fuel source, we can reduce the amount released into the atmosphere and use up some carbon dioxide in the process!”

Comments

By using methane produced by bacteria as a fuel source, we can reduce the amount released into the atmosphere and use up some carbon dioxide in the process!
The burning of the methane will release the CO2 originally bound by the methane production, so unless we plan to stove away the methane somewhere without using it, no carbon dioxide will be "used up".

Hank's picture
Methane has 23X  the warming impact of CO2 so the water and CO2 released are comparatively inconsequential for global warming purposes.

Methane being more potent greenhouse gas than CO2 still doesn't make the statement in the article about "using up CO2" correct.

rholley's picture
CO2 (photosynthesis) => plant (ingestion) => animal (digestion and elimination) => manure (decomposition) => CH4 (burning) => CO2.

By making sure that all the methane gets burned, this process should reduce the greenhouse factor.




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