X

Environmental Biotechnology - Theory and Application - G. M. Evans & J. C. Furlong

Engineering Library

 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Saadedin
    Thread Author
    Administrator
    • Sep 2018 
    • 35991 
    • 18,818 
    • 2,851 

    Environmental Biotechnology - Theory and Application - G. M. Evans & J. C. Furlong









    Preface

    This work inevitably sprang out of our environmental biotechnology modules at

    the University of Durham, but it is not intended to be just another ‘book of the

    course’. Though it is clearly rooted in these origins, it reflects our wider, and

    rather varied, experiences of the field. In many respects, we have been fortunate;

    teaching has undoubtedly drawn on the ‘theory’, while our own consultancy has

    tended to focus us on the ‘application’. Indeed, our own particular backgrounds

    mean that our partnership is based in both the academic and the practical. Like

    many before us, we came to the subject largely by accident and via other original

    disciplines, in the days before educational institutions offered anything other

    than traditional programmes of study and, please remember, this was not so

    long ago. The rise of environmental studies, which must surely be amongst

    the most inherently applicable of applied sciences, and the growing importance

    of biotechnology usage in this respect, remain two of the most encouraging

    developments for the future of our planet.



    developments for the future of our planet.

    Within a very short time, biotechnology has come to play an increasingly

    important role in many aspects of everyday life. The upsurge of the ‘polluter

    pays’ principle, increasing pressure to revitalise the likes of former industrial

    sites and recent developments within the waste industry itself have combined to

    alter the viability of environmental biotechnology radically in the last five years.

    Once an expensive and largely unfamiliar option, it has now become a realistic

    alternative to many established approaches for manufacturing, land remediation,

    pollution control and waste management. Against a background of burgeoning

    disposal costs and ever more stringent legislation and liabilities, the application

    of biologically engineered solutions seems certain to continue its growth.



    The purpose of this book is a straightforward one: to present a fair reflection of

    the practical biological approaches currently employed to address environmental

    problems, and to provide the reader with a working knowledge of the science

    that underpins them. In this respect, it differs very little from the ethos of our

    course at Durham and we are grateful to each successive wave of students for

    constantly reminding us of the importance of these two goals. In other ways, this

    work represents a major departure. Freed from the constraints of time and the

    inevitable demands of exams, we have been afforded the luxury in this book of

    being able to include far more in each section than could reasonably be covered

    in a traditional series of lectures on the topic. In some places, this has allowed



    us to delve in deeper detail, while in others it has permitted some of the lesser

    well-known aspects of this fascinating discipline to be aired anew.

    We have adopted what we feel is a logical structure, addressing technologies in

    as cohesive a manner as possible, given the intrinsic interrelatedness of so much

    of our subject matter. While the fundamental structure is, of course, intended

    to unify the whole work, we have tried to make each chapter as much of a

    ‘standalone’ as possible, in an attempt to make this a book which also encourages

    ‘dipping in’. Ultimately, of course, the reader will decide how successful we

    have been.



    The text falls into three main parts. The early chapters examine issues of the

    role and market for biotechnology in an environmental context, the essential biochemistry

    and microbiology which enables them to be met, and the fundamental

    themes of biological intervention. The technologies and applications themselves

    make up the central core of the book, both literally and figuratively and, fittingly,

    this is the largest part. Finally, aspects of integration and the future development

    of environmental biotechnology are addressed.



    This subject is inherently context-dependent – a point which recurs throughout

    the discussion – and local modalities can conspire to shape individual best

    practice in a way unknown in other branches of biotechnology. What works in

    one country may not in another, not because the technology is flawed, but often

    simply because economic, legislative or societal barriers so dictate. The environmental

    biotechnologist must sometimes perform the mental equivalent of a

    circus act in balancing these many and different considerations. It is only to be

    expected, then, that the choices we have made as to what to include, and the relative

    importance afforded them, reflect these experiences. It is equally inevitable

    that some readers will take issue with these decisions, but that has always been

    the lot of writers. As an editor of our acquaintance once confided, the most powerful

    drive known to our species is not for survival, nor to procreate, but to alter

    someone else’s copy.



    It has been said that the greatest thing that anyone can achieve is to make a

    difference. We hope that, in writing this book, we will, in some small way, do

    just that.





    Download

    *














Working...
X