Journal article

Low-carbon cows: From microbial metabolism to the symbiotic planet


Authors listFolkers, Andreas; Opitz, Sven

Publication year2022

Pages330-352

JournalSocial Studies of Science

Volume number52

Issue number3

ISSN0306-3127

eISSN1460-3659

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1177/03063127221077987

PublisherSAGE Publications


Abstract
This article focuses on two projects - one at a large chemical company and the other at a small start-up - to intervene in the relations between cows and ruminal microbes to reduce bovine methane emissions. It describes these interventions as 'symbiotic engineering': a biopolitical technique targeting holobionts and becoming effective by working on interlaced sets of living things. Based on the analysis of these cases, the article elucidates a planetary symbiopolitics (Helmreich) that connects 'molecular biopolitics' (Rose) and 'microbiopolitics' (Paxson) to 'bovine biopolitics' (Lorimer, Driessen) and the politics of climate change. We critically investigate the spatial imaginaries of symbiotic engineering practices that single out the microbial realm as an Archimedean point to address planetary problems. This technoscientific vision resonates with the notion of the 'symbiotic planet' advanced by Lynn Margulis that depicts the Earth System, or Gaia, as a vast set of relations among living things down to the tiniest microbes. Margulis' concept, as well as the 'symbiotic view of life' (Gilbert, Scott, Sapp) has been embraced in recent debates in STS as a way to think of multispecies worldings. The article contributes critically to these debates by showing what happens when the topology of the symbiotic Earth becomes the operating space for symbiotic engineering practices.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleFolkers, A. and Opitz, S. (2022) Low-carbon cows: From microbial metabolism to the symbiotic planet, Social Studies of Science, 52(3), Article 03063127221077987. pp. 330-352. https://doi.org/10.1177/03063127221077987

APA Citation styleFolkers, A., & Opitz, S. (2022). Low-carbon cows: From microbial metabolism to the symbiotic planet. Social Studies of Science. 52(3), Article 03063127221077987, 330-352. https://doi.org/10.1177/03063127221077987



Keywords


BIOPOLITICSENTERIC METHANE EMISSIONGAIALynn MargulisPROMISES


SDG Areas


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:36