Bioremediation

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INTRODUCTION

Petroleum hydrocarbons from oil spills threaten marine life worldwide. Animals become coated in the oil and ingest the contaminants while trying to clean themselves. The toxic effects of petroleum often result in death for much of the surrounding life. Bioremediation offers an efficient solution for cleaning up oil spills. The pollutants are biologically degraded by complete mineralization of the organic contaminants, turning the toxic waste into harmless products such as carbon dioxide, water, inorganic compounds, and cell protein (Das & Chandran, 2010). Although contaminants could be removed by physical means, this does not dispose of the dangerous petroleum hydrocarbons. Bioremediation can clean up our oceans without producing harmful byproducts in a relatively inexpensive way using minimal technology.

HISTORY OF OIL SPILLS

Although bioremediation can be used for many sources of contamination such as pesticides, gas sites, landfills and more, oil spills are a large source of pollution for our oceans. The environment is constantly being polluted by petroleum hydrocarbons due to tanker accidents, offshore drilling, pipeline leaks, and from cars whose oil gets washed down ocean drains when it rains (Margesin et al., 2007). In 1979 there was an offshore drilling spill in the Mexican coast releasing 400 thousand tons of oil. In 1989, the Exxon Valdez oil spill leaked over 14 thousand tons of oil into Alaskan waters (Swannell et al., 1996). In 1991, Iraq intentionally “spilled” over 14 million tons of crude oil into the Persian Gulf. In 2000, there was an oil spill from pipelines in Guanabara Bay releasing more than one thousand tons of oil. In November 2002, the Prestige sank to the bottom of the ocean after bre...

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