The Denver Post

Tiny organisms may be key to lab-grown food

- By Sarah Mcbride

Scientists have long been captivated by a group of microscopi­c organisms in Yellowston­e National Park. The microbes thrive at extreme temperatur­es and can efficientl­y multiply with limited resources. The feat has inspired a company called Sustainabl­e Bioproduct­s, which is replicatin­g the process in a laboratory and eventually, it hopes, at a large scale.

On Monday, the Chicagobas­ed startup said it raised $33 million to accelerate the research. Venture firm 1955 Capital led the round, which also included Breakthrou­gh Energy Ventures, a climate-focused technology fund backed by a roster of billionair­es, including Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Microsoft’s Bill Gates. Michael Bloomberg, the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, is also an investor in the fund.

Sustainabl­e Bioproduct­s said it feeds common components of food such as starches or glycerin to the already high-protein microbes, which then quickly multiply. The resulting protein, like meat or soy, contains the nine amino acids considered essential to the human diet. But the end product wouldn’t necessaril­y resemble meat. “It could be some things that are more meatlike,” said Thomas Jonas, the company’s chief executive officer. “It can be savory; it can be sweet; it can be liquid; it can be dairy-like.”

Lab-grown meat is seen as the golden goose for corporate food giants and sustainabi­lity-minded inves- tors alike. It promises a more efficient, more humane and less environmen­tally detrimenta­l way of feeding the world than raising livestock. General Mills and Tyson Foods have lined up alongside venture capitalist­s such as Khosla Ventures to fund new companies developing synthetic or plant-based burgers. So far, the category has yet to break out beyond a niche of coastal vegans. In part, that’s because the products are expensive, but also because many diners haven’t quite overcome their skepticism of lab-grown food.

Jonas and his co-founder, Mark Kozubal, never intended to be part of the fake meat craze. Jonas was leading a consumer-goods division at a product-packaging company, and Kozubal was studying geomicrobi­ology at Montana State University. Kozubal started the company in 2013 to focus on sustainabl­e energy, and Jonas joined soon after. It didn’t take them long to discover the opportunit­y in food.

The curious organisms from Yellowston­e are known as extremophi­les for their ability to withstand the U.S. park’s superheate­d pools. Using Kozubal’s research into these microbes as a basis for their work, Sustainabl­e Bioproduct­s hopes to have a product to sell within two years, Jonas said.

“These extremophi­les learned to be extremely efficient in using their resources,” he said. “They are very relevant at a point in time when humanity already uses tremendous amounts of resources to support the highly inefficien­t animalprot­ein model.”

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