Press release
Corporate Press
April 11, 2008

Bacteria Open up New Possibilities for Climate Control and Synthesis

With the support of Evonik Industries, Freiburg University discovers new metabolic pathway to bind the greenhouse gas CO2

Not only plants can absorb the greenhouse gas CO2 from the atmosphere and bind it via their metabolism, some bacteria are also capable of this. The working group headed by Prof. Dr. Georg Fuchs at the elite University of Freiburg has now discovered a new metabolic pathway in bacteria in which this so-called biological CO2 fixation is especially active and which may be useful in the area of climate control. The research work was supported by the state of North Rhine Westphalia, the European Union, and Evonik Industries AG as the industry partner.

The results have, in the meantime, been published in the reputed scientific journal Science and have also drawn attention from outside scientific circles. The work carried out by the Freiburg team could contribute towards reducing the greenhouse gas CO2 in the atmosphere. "Besides technologies aimed at reducing CO2 emissions, biological fixation of CO2 is one of the most promising areas of research," said Dr. Harald Schmidt, head of the research unit Creavis Technologies & Innovation at Evonik. With biological fixation, not only can the greenhouse gas be removed from the atmosphere, CO2 emissions from industrial processes can also be reduced.

From a chemist's aspect, the results from Freiburg offer a second approach. These metabolic pathways open up new possibilities in the field of synthesis—either to substitute chemical production processes with more environmentally friendly biotechnological processes or to develop new products using completely new methods. The Biotechnology Science-to-Business-Center of Evonik in Marl, Germany, which is managed by Creavis, is pursuing this goal. For the last two years, the company has been working on the innovative biotechnological production of advanced materials. "We are increasingly using the metabolic pathways of bacteria and fungus as a sort of factory in the cell," explains Schmidt. "While looking for new metabolic pathways, we struck gold in the working group headed by Professor Fuchs."

"Initially, our basic research into exotic bacteria was significant only for biology," says Fuchs, "It was only when we began working together with Evonik that we realized how the metabolic pathways could be used for environmentally friendly biological synthesis of chemical building blocks." Prof. Dr. Bernhard Arnolds from the Technology Transfer Office at Freiburg University established contact to the chemical industry.

Among researchers it has long been known that certain bacteria can bind CO2. Scientists have so far identified five different metabolic pathways in bacteria and plants. In plants, a key enzyme is responsible for the biological CO2 fixation—ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. However, in the metabolism this enzyme is involved in other conversion processes, which reduces the efficiency of the CO2 fixation. The new metabolic pathway that the Freiburg scientists have discovered is more efficient.

1I. A. Berg, D. Kockelkorn, W. Buckel, G. Fuchs 2007. Science 318: 1782-1786

About Evonik

Evonik Industries is the creative industrial group from Germany which operates in three business areas: Chemicals, Energy and Real Estate. Evonik is a global leader in specialty chemicals, an expert in power generation from hard coal and renewable energies, and one of the largest private residential real estate companies in Germany. Our strengths are creativity, specialization, continuous self-renewal, and reliability. Evonik is active in over 100 countries around the world. In its fiscal year 2007 about 43,000 employees generated sales of about €14.4 billion and an operating profit (EBIT) of more than €1.3 billion (preliminary figures).

Disclaimer

In so far as forecasts or expectations are expressed in this press release or where our statements concern the future, these forecasts, expectations or statements may involve known or unknown risks and uncertainties. Actual results or developments may vary, depending on changes in the operating environment. Neither Evonik Industries AG nor its group companies assume an obligation to update the forecasts, expectations or statements contained in this release.