Uranium is a heavy metal used in nuclear power and weapons. But mining it leaves behind waste that can pollute water and soil for thousands of years.
When uranium gets into groundwater, it can spread far and stay there. Drinking it—even in small amounts—can harm kidneys and raise cancer risk.
Right now, cleaning it up is expensive and harsh. Workers use strong acids or chemicals that can damage the environment.
We need safer, cheaper ways to remove uranium—especially in poor or remote areas.
The Surprising Shift
For years, scientists focused on using chemicals to dissolve and collect uranium from rocks.
But nature may already have a cleaner solution.
Some bacteria, when grown in the lab, can “eat” or interact with minerals in ways that free uranium from rock.
But here’s the twist: instead of letting it float away, these bacteria also trap the uranium—or turn it into a solid form that won’t spread.
Think of bacteria like tiny cleanup crews with built-in tools.
Some release natural acids—like citric acid, the same kind in lemons. These acids act like keys, unlocking uranium from rocks by breaking chemical bonds.
Once freed, the uranium (called uranyl ions) could float away. But the bacteria don’t let that happen.
They use sticky outer coatings—like slime (called EPS)—or special molecules (like siderophores) to grab and hold the uranium.
It’s like a traffic jam: the acid opens the gate, but the bacteria block the exit.
Some bacteria even change uranium’s form. They turn it from a soluble, dangerous state (U-VI) into an insoluble, solid form (U-IV).
That’s like turning liquid ink into a solid crayon—much harder to spill.
What Scientists Didn’t Expect
Not all bacteria do this naturally. But researchers have found several types that can—especially from the Bacillus, Pseudomonas, and actinomycetes families.
These microbes grow on simple food—like sugar—and don’t need extreme conditions.
That makes them easier to study and possibly use later.
This isn’t one new experiment. It’s a review of many past studies on how bacteria interact with uranium.
Researchers looked at lab tests where bacteria were grown near uranium-rich rocks or waste.
They measured how much uranium was pulled out, trapped, or changed.
Some bacteria removed up to half the uranium from crushed ore in days—using only their natural waste products.
Others didn’t remove it but changed it into a solid form stuck in the soil, stopping it from spreading in water.
One study showed that bacterial slime alone could trap a large share of uranium—without the cells even being alive.
This doesn’t mean this treatment is available yet.
But there’s a catch.
Most of these tests happened in small glass jars in labs.
The bacteria worked well in controlled settings. But real-world sites are messy.
Water flows fast. Other minerals get in the way. And some conditions kill the bacteria.
Also, pulling uranium out isn’t the same as cleaning it up. You still have to collect and store it safely.
Scientists say this research isn’t about replacing mines. It’s about cleaning up after them.
The real promise may be in remediation—using bacteria to lock uranium in place underground.
For example, engineers could build a “living filter” underground—a wall of bacteria that stops uranium from spreading in water.
This is already being tested in lab models called permeable reactive barriers.
If you live near a mining site or worry about water safety, this research offers hope—but not immediate help.
You can’t use bacteria from a petri dish in your backyard.
And no doctor can prescribe this. It’s not a medicine.
But it could one day protect your water supply—without digging or toxic chemicals.
For now, it’s still in the lab.
No large-scale tests have been done.
Most studies used crushed rock, not real soil or flowing water.
And while some bacteria work well in the lab, they may not survive in nature.
Also, no company is selling this yet. It’s not a product.
Scientists need to test these bacteria in real environments—like polluted ponds or old mines. The next step is small field trials, but it could take years before this becomes a real cleanup tool.