4.7 Article

Bioaugmentation as a green technology for hydrocarbon pollution remediation. Problems and prospects

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 304, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.114313

Keywords

Environmental pollution; Bioremediation; Bioaugmentation; Hydrocarbon; Microorganism

Funding

  1. China Postdoctoral Fellow-ship, Southwest University, Chongqing, China [289550]
  2. Ontario-China Research and Innovation Funding project Innova-tive monitoring and prediction of non-point source pollution and water quality in the Three Gorges Reservoir catchment [2013DFG92520]

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Bioremediation technology is a sustainable intervention for environmental pollution mitigation, showing eco-friendly and cost-effective characteristics in addressing pollutants induced by anthropogenic stressors. While traditional remediation methods face limitations, bioaugmentation offers promising prospects for remediation of contaminated sites, providing a more sustainable environmental security solution.
Environmental pollution mitigation measure involving bioremediation technology is a sustainable intervention for a greener ecosystem biorecovery, especially the obnoxious hydrocarbons, xenobiotics, and other environmental pollutants induced by anthropogenic stressors. Several successful case studies have provided evidence to this paradigm including the putative adoption that the technology is eco-friendly, cost-effective, and shows a high tendency for total contaminants mineralization into innocuous bye-products. The present review reports advances in bioremediation, types, and strategies conventionally adopted in contaminant clean-up. It identified that natural attenuation and biostimulation are faced with notable limitations including the poor remedial outcome under the natural attenuation system and the residual contamination occasion following a biostimulation operation. It remarks that the use of genetically engineered microorganisms shows a potentially promising insight as a prudent remedial approach but is currently challenged by few ethical restrictions and the rural unavailability of the technology. It underscores that bioaugmentation, particularly the use of high cell density assemblages referred to as microbial consortia possess promising remedial prospects thus offers a more sustainable environmental security. The authors, therefore, recommend bioaugmentation for large scale contaminated sites in regions where environmental degradation is commonplace.

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