Forscher haben eine bisher unbekannte Mikrobe identifiziert, die die Umwandlung von Lebensmittelabfällen in erneuerbares Methan für die Produktion sauberer Energie erheblich verbessert

    https://apsc.ubc.ca/news/2025/ubc-researchers-discover-microbes-turning-food-waste-energy

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    1. >When 115,000 tonnes of food waste hit Surrey’s processing facility each year, an invisible army goes to work—billions of microbes convert everything from banana peels to leftover pizza into renewable natural gas (RNG). Now, UBC researchers have identified a previously unknown bacterium in the Natronincolaceae family that plays a crucial role in this process.
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      >RNG is produced when organic waste from landfills, farms and wastewater plants breaks down. The resulting gas is captured, cleaned and upgraded into usable energy.
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      >Here’s how it works. Inside an anaerobic digester, bacteria first break food scraps into simple compounds like fatty acids, amino acids, and sugars. Other microbes turn these into organic acids, such as acetic acid—essentially vinegar. Methane-producing organisms then feed on the acetic acid to make methane, which is refined into RNG. The newly discovered microbe is one of these critical methane producers

      [Activity-targeted metaproteomics uncovers rare syntrophic bacteria central to anaerobic community metabolism | Nature Microbiology](https://www.nature.com/articles/s41564-025-02146-w)

    2. Not sure improving the rate of conversion of solid carbon into gaseous form is the smartest move, especially into [methane](https://pre-sustainability.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Table_1_corrected.jpg).
      The climate balance needs to be mathed out, including non zero leakage along the entire chain.

      There’s a „The day the Earth stood still“ climate bio disaster version scenario material right there, with an engineered microbe running amock turning all carbon into CH4.

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