The Scotsman

Tapping into a dram good solution

◆ Ilona Amos reports on an Edinburgh-based biotech start-up that is successful­ly turning whisky industry waste into valuable omega-3 fats

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More than 400 million litres of whisky are crafted in Scotland each year and drunk across the globe. The bottles, laid end to end, could circle the earth more than 11 times over.

That’s a lot of our national spirit.

But it also leaves behind a large bulk of spent ingredient­s which are used to make the tipple but don’t end up in the glass, often going to waste. This amounts to around three billion tonnes – made up largely of cereals – annually.

Now, though, a pioneering Scottish biotech firm is taking these byproducts and transformi­ng them into something new – and valuable – a sustainabl­e source of health-boosting omega-3.

It is also solving a waste disposal problem, tying into Scotland’s aims to achieve a circular economy, while also helping tackle climate change.

Omega-3 fats are beneficial for human health, and eating them can help to prevent heart attacks and strokes.

The compounds are also important for cats and dogs, helping keep bones and joints, and immune systems healthy.

People are advised to eat oily fish, such as salmon and sardines, as a way of absorbing the fatty acids.

But fish don’t actually make the oil themselves, rather they accumulate it through their diet – generally from eating algae.

Currently, much of the world supply of omega-3 is produced by extracting the oil from wild-caught fish, putting pressure on stocks.

But Edinburgh-based startup Mialgae is making a supplement that can be used as a complete foodstuff for farmed fish or added to pet food, reducing reliance on the oceans and helping meet a shortfall in demand for the nutrients.

Scottish farmed salmon is the UK’S top food export, worth £581 million per annum to the economy.

So where does the whisky come in?

Mialgae takes the plantbased leftovers from distilleri­es and uses it – deploying “revolution­ary biology” – to grow microalgae which is rich in omega-3.

The algae – strictly speaking neither a plant nor an animal, but part of a group called protists – is then made into a special powder that can be fed straight to fish or used to fortify animal meals.

The company, headquarte­red at Currie on the outskirts of Edinburgh, has been able to scale up operations thanks to government funding, through Zero Waste Scotland, and private sector backing.

Mialgae’s demonstrat­or site at Balfron, near Stirling, now has eight 30,000-litre tanks for growing the organisms, and the firm’s bosses have big plans for expansion to areas where whisky is distilled locally – and further beyond.

Julian Pietrzyk, head of technical transfer at Mialgae, led the developmen­t and planning of the commercial demonstrat­or site, which included design and procuremen­t of the equipment and infrastruc­ture.

Julian believes there are lots of ways businesses can bring in a circular economy structure to their processes.

“Opportunit­ies are all around us,” he says. “So many industries have surplus co-products that they are having to pay to get rid of, spray on land, and ultimately impact the environmen­t around us.

“You don’t have to look too far to find them, spot the openings and collaborat­e with like-minded businesses to tackle the environmen­tal issues we’re all facing.

“We’re utilising co-products from different industries and implementi­ng innovative biotechnol­ogy processes to create value products that

protect the environmen­t, and also create a vibrant circular economy that suppliers can benefit from.”

The ecological benefits have been sizeable, according to the company, which estimates that 18,000 tonnes of climate-warming carbon dioxide is kept out of the atmosphere each year through their current activities.

This could grow to 100,000 tonnes per site annually if expanded to cover the country’s proud network of whisky distilleri­es.

Julian adds: “We’re trying to expand and develop more sites, working closely with whisky distilleri­es to amplify our reach across Scotland. In the next six to 12 months, we plan to progress two commercial sites – live and producing.

“Technology licensing in the UK and further afield is next on our horizon, and we’re proactivel­y looking for opportunit­ies oversees.”

We’re working closely with distilleri­es to amplify our reach across Scotland

 ?? ?? A Mialgae operative working the magic that uses plantbased leftovers to grow microalgae rich in omega-3
A Mialgae operative working the magic that uses plantbased leftovers to grow microalgae rich in omega-3
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