“…However, such strategies are not adequately considered in potential mitigating policies.Problem We are faced by an unprecedented number of humanitarian crises such as extreme weather events caused by global warming, the Covid pandemic, growing resistance of microbial pathogens to antibiotics (AMR), starvation and lack of clean water in parts of the world, an obesity epidemic, increasing mental health problems, pervasive persistent pollutants and endocrine disrupting chemicals and so forth. Again: microbes play key roles in all of these crises, either as causes or potential solutions (Timmis et al, 2022). And again: we are failing to fully exploit the potential of microbes to contribute to solutions, such as accelerating replacement of polluting agrochemicals with non‐polluting agrobiologics, which directly relates to SDGs 6, 12 and 14—protection of waters from pollution, and SDG 15—‘halt biodiversity loss’. Problem Problem 4, which is the key overarching problem, is the combination of idecisioning by policy makers, policy conflicts, and insufficient knowledge of causes of and potential solutions to crises .…”