Atmospheric Methane Research problem statements are shared to build community and knowledge around key challenges to accelerate progress.
Submit a problem statementView all problem statementsSukhwan Yoon (Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
This problem statement was submitted to the first round of the Exploratory Grants for Atmospheric Methane Research funding opportunity, and isn't endorsed, edited, or corrected by Spark.
CH4, even at the meager atmospheric concentration of 1.9 ppmv, is responsible for ~20% of the total radiative forcing in a 100-year scale, and due to its short lifespan, active removal of the atmospheric CH4 would have an immediacy benefit.1,2 However, the low concentration has proven to be a major impediment in development of viable atmospheric CH4 removal technologies capable of attaining defacto CO2-eq removal.
The best approach to this endeavor has always been suggested as employing the extraordinary capability of microorganisms to scavenge energy and carbon from even such sparse sources. Atmospheric CH4 oxidizers have been scientifically pursued for decades, initially inspired by observations of negative CH4 fluxes from various soil environments.3,4 Involvements of USCa and USCg clusters and the Methylocystis-specific particulate methane monooxygenase with higher affinity had been hypothesized.5,6 Recently, growth on <2 ppmv CH4 was confirmed in several Methylocapsa isolates; however, their low CH4 oxidation rates and extremely slow growths still leave unanswered questions as to their ecological significance or applicability as biocatalysts.
The problem to be addressed is how to elicit and sustain microbial atmospheric CH4 oxidation activity of complex microbial consortia with occasional spiking with <100 ppmv CH4. We will seek a mechanistic explanation for the observed atmospheric CH4 consumption following excitation and means to extend the period to enable a net CH4 removal.
The key goals include 1) confirmation an optimization of the observed atmospheric CH4 oxidation following <100 ppmv spiking, 2) investigation of the ecophysiological mechanism underpinning the observed atmospheric CH4 oxidation, 3) search of amendments to elongate and accelerate the periods of atmospheric CH4 oxidation, and 3) design and feasibility test of a bioreactor where CH4 generated from organic wastes fuels atmospheric CH4 oxidation. Evaluation of success can be based on the establishment of an artificial microbiome (and eventually a miniature version of the proposed reactor) where net negative CH4 flux can be achieved over a prolonged period (>2 months) and a well-explained-and-supported theoretical rationale for the microbiome behavior with regard to atmospheric CH4 uptake.
If successful, this proposed study would make following contributions to the much-needed efforts to mitigate atmospheric CH4.
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