Microbes Can Clean Up
Toxic Waste Dumps, Scientist Says
September 08, 2006 — By Reuters
CANBERRA — Microbes with a taste for
toxic waste may hold the solution to cleaning up contaminated industrial
sites and poisoned waterways across the globe, saving billions of dollars
in cleanup bills, an Australian scientist said.
Microbes found in old waste sites in Australia not only tolerate lethal
soil and water cocktails created by waste petroleum and chlorine, but can
break them down so they no longer threaten humans, the scientist said on
Friday.
"We have isolated bacteria which can live on those waste compounds," Megha
Mallavarapu, from a government-backed environmental research centre based
in South Australia state, told Reuters.
"We are enhancing the microbes present," Mallavarapu said, adding the
altered bacteria were able to break down toxins faster.
Industrial contamination, he said, was one of the greatest threats facing
societies world-wide, with Australia alone facing a A$5 billion ($3.8
billion) cleanup bill.
"Anywhere there has been a fuel dump, a munitions store, an old chemical
factory or heavy manufacturing plant, there is potential for toxic
substances to leak into groundwater underneath," said Mallavarapu.
The researchers said there were millions of toxic dumps scattered through
Asia, with waste from the region's mega cities often pouring untreated
into waterways meant to be lifelines for nearby communities.
The centre, set up to develop and export new ways to repair ravaged
environments, said it was training researchers in Bangladesh, India, China
and South Korea to deal with the problem.
But Mallavarapu said there was no single super-bug or solution, especially
in heavily contaminated sites. He said scientists first had to look for
new types of bacteria and enhance them, or provide oxygen or food to lift
their numbers.
"It depends on the nature of the contaminant at each particular site," he
said. "Sometimes we have to help nature." ($1 = A$1.31)
Source: Reuters