Overview
Environmental biotechnology focuses on the technologies and tools to enable deployment of bioengineered systems in the land, air, water, and human landscapes for purposes related to remediation, natural resource management, environmental monitoring, and species management. In contrast to other sectors – including industry and agriculture – this technology is deployed in the environment in a process design that is inherently poorly controlled. Technical and societal challenges therefore reflect its broad and uncontrolled nature. The Challenges, Aims, and Objectives in this sector are highly parallel to those that also appear in Energy, Food & Agriculture, and Health & Medicine.
Societal Challenges & Science/Engineering Aims
Address and mitigate climate change.
These Science and Engineering Aims are designed to help overcome the identified Societal Challenge:Expand tool sets for bioremediation and resource recycling.
These Science and Engineering Aims are designed to help overcome the identified Societal Challenge:Controlled deployment of engineered organisms to improve ecosystem biodiversity, robustness, and the well-being of inhabitants.
These Science and Engineering Aims are designed to help overcome the identified Societal Challenge:Enable sustainable, more environmentally-friendly materials and infrastructure development.
These Science and Engineering Aims are designed to help overcome the identified Societal Challenge: