“The earth is bountiful, and where her bounty fails, nitrogen drawn from the air will refertilize her womb.”*…

As the Iran War continues to unfold, there is understandably a great deal of concern about energy prices (and the prices of things that depend on energy). We might forget that the Middle East is also crucial to the world’s fertilizer supply– though not for long, as farmers (along with everyone else in the food chain, all the way down to all of us eaters) are beginning to feel the pain.

But, as Diana Kruzman reports, even as fertilizer trade concerns are growing, a revolutionary sourcing alternative has emerged– one that could make a huge positive difference if it proves out at scale…

The world has an almost insatiable demand for nitrogen. Crops need it to grow, but although it makes up 78 percent of our atmosphere, plants can’t just pull it in from the air the way they do with oxygen. Instead, they rely on bacteria in the soil to convert it into nitrate, a form they can use; in the case of agriculture, think of fertilizer spread by humans. Leaving aside organic options like cow manure, most farmers use ammonia produced mainly from natural gas using a technique called the Haber-Bosch process, which was invented in 1909. [See also here.]

Haber-Bosch is expensive and energy-intensive, responsible for up to two percent of the world’s annual greenhouse gas emissions. It’s also spurred a global nitrogen pollution crisis; as much as two-thirds of nitrogen fertilizer applied to crops is never used, and the excess escapes into the soil, air, and water, raising the cancer risk in nearby communities and contributing to climate change.

Researchers have been trying to find an alternative way to get nitrogen to plants for decades — turning to everything from microbes to human urine. But so far, these scientific advancements haven’t translated into much practical change for farmers, who for the most part still rely on ammonia (which, granted, is getting greener, but is increasingly vulnerable to global price shocks).

That could soon change with the growth in popularity of a new technology known as plasma activated water, or PAW. Around the U.S., scientists and startups are experimenting with this high-tech solution, which uses electricity to pull nitrogen from the air, mix it with water, and create fertilizer straight on the farm. The concept, on the surface, seems suspiciously rosy — on-demand nitrogen, in a form plants can use, at just the cost of electricity (and the initial price of the machine used to make it). But early adopters have told Offrange that it genuinely works…

… PAW uses electricity to transform air into plasma — the fourth state of matter (besides gases, solids, and liquids), which typically forms at high temperatures. When the plasma comes into contact with water, it encourages chemical reactions that form nitrates — the type of nitrogen that plants need. Though this process was actually invented in 1903, even before Haber-Bosch, it required so much energy that it never achieved widespread use.

But in recent years, those energy needs have gone down thanks to the development of “cold plasma” technology, which operates at less than 60 degrees Fahrenheit. It’s also used for medical sterilization and food safety, and over the last decade researchers have worked to develop new ways to apply it for agricultural production…

More at: “Pulling Nitrogen From the Air” from @dkruzman.bsky.social.

* Nikola Tesla (who, around 1900, imagined and experimented with something like the Birkeland–Eyde-based plasma process described above)

###

As we count on creativity, we might send healthy birthday greetings to a man who explained one of the central ways in which we depend on the food that we eat, William Cumming Rose; he was born on this date in 1887. A biochemist, he researched amino acids, discovered threonine, and established the importance of the nine essential amino acids in human nutrition (that’s to say, the amino acids that our bodies cannot synthesize and that we must consume in our food). He received the National Medal of Science in 1966.

source

#agriculture #aminoAcid #aminoAcids #biochemistry #culture #farming #fertilizer #history #MiddleEast #NikolaTesla #nitrogen #nutrition #Science #Technology #war #WilliamCummingRose #WilliamRose
#Machinelearning streamlines the complexities of making better #proteins
#AI framework predicts how proteins will function with several interacting mutations
#MULTIevolve predicts how proteins will behave when several of their #aminoacids are swapped for others. MULTIevolve blends lab experiments with machine learning to find upgraded proteins
Specially-crafted proteins play a role in everyday products like medicines, biofuels and laundry detergent
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/machine-learning-better-proteins
https://archive.ph/DZdYg
Machine learning streamlines the complexities of making better proteins

The framework predicts how proteins will function with several interacting mutations and finds combinations that work well together.

Science News
#NASA Finds Building Blocks Of Life On Frozen Asteroid
Scientists have found evidence that #aminoacids, the chemical building blocks of life (specifically proteins), formed on the asteroid #Bennu when it was so far from the Sun as to be frozen. This directly contradicts previous belief that amino acids required liquid #water to form, through a process called Strecker synthesis. The scientists studied samples from Bennu retrieved by NASA's #OSIRISREx, published last week.
https://www.jalopnik.com/2103193/nasa-finds-building-blocks-life-froze-asteroid/
NASA Finds Building Blocks Of Life On Frozen Asteroid

The universe might have far more amino acids lying around than we realized, which gives life itself far more chances to begin.

Jalopnik
Researchers from ETH Zurich have succeeded in introducing large quantities of unnatural #AminoAcids into #Bacteria, enabling the creation of innovative and highly efficient designer proteins. These can be used as more efficient catalysts or more effective #Drugs.

A Trojan horse for artificial ...
A Trojan horse for artificial amino acids

Researchers from ETH Zurich have succeeded in introducing large quantities of unnatural amino acids into bacteria, enabling the creation of innovative and highly efficient designer proteins. These can be used as more efficient catalysts or more effective drugs. 

ETH Zurich

🪤 Cutting key amino acids from mouse diets triggers weight loss through heat burning

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-11-key-amino-acids-mouse-diets.html

#diet #weightloss #thermogenesis #biology #mice #aminoacids #bat #brownfat

Cutting key amino acids from mouse diets triggers weight loss through heat burning

It's not pleasant to shiver from the cold, but for some, it has the appeal of making the body burn more energy as heat than when staying in a warmer environment. According to several studies, exposure to cold is a reliable way to boost energy expenditure in mice and humans. This process of burning energy through heat loss is called thermogenesis.

Medical Xpress

Fast vs. Slow Digesting Protein 🍗🥩

Understanding the difference between fast-digesting and slow-digesting proteins matters because it helps you use protein strategically, not just randomly hit a daily number.

🩸Digestion Speed Affects How Quickly Amino Acids Enter the Bloodstream

💨 Fast-Digesting Proteins Are Ideal for Post-Workout Recovery

🐢 Slow-Digesting Proteins Help Maintain Elevated MPS for Longer Periods

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➡️ Post Workout Recovery: Glycogen + Protein Rebuild 💪

When you combine protein and carbohydrates after a workout, you’re giving your body the two essential resources it needs to repair, rebuild, and return stronger.

#postworkout #protein #carbs #energy #glycogen #workout #exercise #cortisol #aminoacids #muscleproteinsynthesis #musclegain #musclegrowth #onlinecoach #personaltrainer

✨🧬 How many essential amino acids are there? #protein #aminoacids #biochemistry #nutritionfacts ... Continue to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dvx4bm0tI3I
Muscle repair depends on essential amino acids, not extreme protein intake.
Your body breaks protein into amino acids and uses those to rebuild muscle and support cardiovascular function. A varied, plant-forward diet provides all essential aminos while supporting long-term heart health. 🌿💪❤️
Balance > overload.
Full article below 👇
🔗https://onfitnessmag.com/more/quality-protein-heart-health-amino-acids
#Fitness #Nutrition #HeartHealth #AminoAcids #PlantProtein #HealthScience
Best Protein for Heart Health: Amino Acids & Recovery Guide — OnFitness Magazine | Your Ultimate Guide to Fitness, Health and Wellness

Learn why amino acids—not excess protein—support heart health, muscle repair, and recovery. Discover top plant-based protein sources and daily needs.

OnFitness Magazine | Your Ultimate Guide to Fitness, Health and Wellness