“…In addition to building a symbiosis with ANME to enable methane consumption, sulfate‐reducing bacteria can remediate heavy metals (García, Moreno, Ballester, Blázquez, & González, ; Joo, Choi, Kim, Kim, & Oh, ) and produce plastic precursor storage molecules (Hai, Lange, Rabus, & Steinbüchel, ; Wang, Yin, & Chen, ). Sulfide generated through this process can be used as feedstock for genetically tractable chemoautotrophs (Kernan, West, & Banta, ; Nybo, Khan, Woolston, & Curtis, ), which can make high‐value chemical products (Kernan et al, ). Finding a conductive physical scaffold to enable industrially‐relevant reactions within the context of an ecophysiologicaly sustainable system—whereby microbial communities can take advantage of natural electrical and chemical gradients (e.g., Pfeffer et al, )—would decrease transport and scale‐up costs while building a robust, customizable system.…”