Industrial biotech applications have led to cleaner processes that produce less waste and use less energy and water in such industrial sectors as chemicals, pulp and paper, textiles, food, energy, and metals and minerals. For example, most laundry detergents produced in the United States contain biotechnology-based enzymes.
Biotechnology and AIDS
Monday, May 1, 2000
Vol. 9
No. 2
Interest Area(s):
Health and Medical Biotechnology
Follow the trail of scientific discovery from identifying a deadly new disease, like AIDS, to treating and trying to prevent it. Articles include: "Discovering the Cause of AIDS," "The Combination Drug Cocktail," "New Approaches to Drugs," and "Vaccines."
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