Journal
MICROBIAL BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages 240-246Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1751-7915.13993
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Our current era is marked by awareness of climate change, environmental deterioration, global pandemics, and inequalities between developed and underdeveloped countries, with a recognition of the crucial role of microorganisms in the functioning of the biosphere. To address these challenges, it is important to engage in multi-faceted discussions involving politics, technology, and science, utilizing advanced microbial biotechnology tools.
Our epoch is largely characterized by the growing realization and concern about the reality of climate change and environmental deterioration, the surge of global pandemics, the unacceptable inequalities between developed and underdeveloped countries and their unavoidable translation into messy immigration, overpopulation and food crises. While all of these issues have a fundamentally political core, they are not altogether removed from the fact that Earth is primarily a microbial planet and microorganisms are the key agents that make the biosphere (including ourselves) function as it does. It thus makes sense that we bring the microbial world-that is the environmental microbiome-to the necessary multi-tiered conversation (hopefully followed by action) on how to avoid future threats and how to make our globe a habitable common house. Beyond discussion on governance, such a dialogue has technical and scientific aspects that only frontline microbial biotechnology can help to tackle. Fortunately, the field has witnessed the onset of new conceptual and material tools that were missing when the journal started.
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