The Asian Age

E. Coli bacteria to create fossil fuel alternativ­e?

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British and Finnish scientists have found a way of generating renewable propane using a bacterium widely found in human intestine and say the finding is a step to commercial production of a fuel that could one day be an alternativ­e to fossil fuel reserves.

“Although we have only produced tiny amounts so far, the fuel we have produced is ready to be used in an engine straight away,” said Patrik Jones of the department of life sciences at Imperial College, London, who worked on the research. He said possibly five to 10 years from the point where commercial production would be possible, with his team’s findings, there will be a way to produce renewable fuel that is now only accessible from fossil reserves.

Propane is an inherently clean burning fuel due to its lower carbon content. Its developmen­t would also be convenient because it has an existing global market. In its current form it forms the bulk of liquid petroleum gas ( LPG), which is used to fuel everything from cars to central heating systems and camping stoves. It is already produced as a by- product during natural gas processing and petrol refining, but both of these are fossil fuels that will one day run out.

“Fossil fuels are a finite resource and we are going to have to come up with new ways to meet increasing energy demands,” Jones said in a statement about the research. He said a major challenge for scientists is to develop a renewable process that is low- cost and economical­ly sustainabl­e. At the moment algae can be used to make biodiesel, he said, but that process is not commercial­ly viable because the harvesting and processing requires significan­t energy and money. “We chose propane because it can be separated from the natural process with minimal energy and it will be compatible with the existing infrastruc­ture for easy use,” he said. In a study published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions on Tuesday, Jones’ team — from Imperial College London and Finland’s University of Turku — used Escherichi­a coli, or E. Coli, to interrupt a biological process that turns fatty acids into cell membranes.

The researcher­s used enzymes to channel the fatty acids along a different biological pathway, so that the bacteria made engine-ready renewable propane instead of cell membranes.

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