4.7 Review

C1-carbon sources for chemical and fuel production by microbial gas fermentation

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue -, Pages 63-72

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.copbio.2015.03.008

Keywords

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Funding

  1. BMBF BioIndustry Program (BioM White Biotechnology cluster Munich project) [0315192]
  2. BMBF Program Chemical Processes, project COOBAF [FKZ 01RC1105C]
  3. BMBF Project Gas Fermentation [FKZ 031A468A]
  4. Ministry of Science, Research, and the Arts Baden-Wurttemberg Research Cluster Sustainable and Efficient Biosyntheses
  5. European Union [311815]
  6. ERA IB 5 Program, project CO2CHEM [FKZ 031A366A]
  7. BioIndustry2021
  8. CLIB2021 [FKZ 031A100B]

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Fossil resources for production of fuels and chemicals are finite and fuel use contributes to greenhouse gas emissions and global warming. Thus, sustainable fuel supply, security, and prices necessitate the implementation of alternative routes to the production of chemicals and fuels. Much attention has been focussed on use of cellulosic material, particularly through microbial-based processes. However, this is still costly and proving challenging, as are catalytic routes to biofuels from whole biomass. An alternative strategy is to directly capture carbon before incorporation into lignocellulosic biomass. Autotrophic acetogenic, carboxidotrophic, and methanotrophic bacteria are able to capture carbon as CO, CO2, or CH4, respectively, and reuse that carbon in products that displace their fossil-derived counterparts. Thus, gas fermentation represents a versatile industrial platform for the sustainable production of commodity chemicals and fuels from diverse gas resources derived from industrial processes, coal, biomass, municipal solid waste (MSW), and extracted natural gas.

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