Get the latest tech news

The Feds Are Trying to Get Plants to Mine Metal Through Their Roots


Some species can absorb extreme amounts of nickel from soils. Such “phytomining” could help provide batteries essential for the renewable revolution.

Grow a bunch of the European plant Alyssum bertolonii or the tropical Phyllanthus rufuschaneyi and burn the biomass, and you end up with ash that’s loaded with nickel. ARPA-E is eying a specific kind of dirt to try these plants in, known as ultramafic soil, which is high in iron, cobalt, chromium, and nickel. At the moment, ARPA-E is just focusing on phytomining nickel, but says that it could in theory also explore ways for plants to extract cobalt, copper, or lithium.

Get the Android app

Or read this on Wired

Read more on:

Photo of Feds

Feds

Photo of roots

roots

Photo of metal

metal

Related news:

News photo

Intel Gets $20 Billion in US Grants, Loans for Chip Plants

News photo

The Feds Are Coming for “Extremist” Gamers

News photo

BlackCat ransomware shuts down in exit scam, blames the "feds"