The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Algae gave germ of an idea

News Farming

-

A Scottish start-up company is on track to revolution­ise the animal feed industry by producing an omega3-rich nutrient using the by-products of the whisky industry.

Douglas Martin, founder of MiAlgae, has developed a process that uses pot ale – a waste product of the distillati­on process – to cultivate microalgae, which can be added to feed for farmed fish or livestock.

Founded by Mr Martin in 2016 while a masters student at Edinburgh University, the young company has been fattened with a round of awards and funding worth £630,000 in recent months.

The first was the Shell Livewire programme earlier this year, which the Anglo-Dutch oil and gas giant establishe­d to help scale up “gamechangi­ng” businesses.

MiAlgae was awarded £30,000 through the programme, while Mr Martin was crowned the Shell Livewire Young Entreprene­ur of the Year 2017.

The company was described as one of Britain’s “brightest, most promising innovation­s to support a more sustainabl­e, low-carbon world”.

“Hopefully we can stop looking for grant funding and actually get on with doing stuff”

Not only does MiAlgae’s product promise to develop a safe and sustainabl­e foodstuff, particular­ly for the aquacultur­e industry, but the algae growth process also cleans up the distillery waste byproducts so that it can be discharged safely back into the environmen­t.

There is no shortage of material MiAlgae can use – it is estimated the whisky sector produces 4.37 million tonnes of bio-based waste and byproducts a year.

The idea to develop algae for nutrition first hit the microbiolo­gist when he was working for an offshore shipping contractor in the North Sea. Looking out on an algal bloom, rich with seaweeds and microscopi­c phytoplank­ton but dangerous to marine life and a nuisance to his crew, Mr Martin thought there must be some other way to manage it.

He continued working for the contractor in Aberdeen while brewing and testing different strains of algae until he decided to dedicate himself full time to his start-up. Following success with Shell Livewire, the company’s awards have bloomed like the algae that inspired its founder.

In June the company confirmed a £500,000 investment from Equity Gap, the angel syndicate founded by rugby internatio­nal Jock Millican, along with the Scottish Investment Bank and Edinburgh University’s Old College Capital. This was followed by a further £100,000 from Scottish Edge, the government-backed funding competitio­ns’ maximum award.

Other support has included the Edinburgh Centre for Carbon Innovation, which delivers ClimateKIC, a pan-European business support and developmen­t initiative for start-ups focused on environmen­tally sustainabl­e innovation. MiAlgae has most recently been signed up for Scottish Enterprise’s high-growth ventures programme as well as being selected for its Unlocking Ambition Challenge, a £4 million fund to support entreprene­urs chosen for the contributi­on they can make to the Scottish economy and wider society.

Mr Martin, who spoke to The Press and Journal after his first holiday in more than a year, says he is now ready to take the business to the next level.

“We have done pretty well, to be fair,” he says of the company’s grant- and support-winning success. “Hopefully we can stop looking for grant funding and actually get on with doing stuff.”

This involves moving into a facility in the coming weeks on the outskirts of Edinburgh, where Mr Martin and his small team will set up MiAlgae’s lab and pilot plant. The company aims to have grown from three staff to seven by the end of the year.

So far, the company has been focused on the research and developmen­t required to ensure it can develop the right type of algae, which provides the greatest nutritiona­l benefit, and the conditions required to grow it. They can then scale production of the plant so that it can then supply an additive to feed producers.

 ??  ?? GREEN FOR GO: MiAlgae founder and managing director Douglas Martin is ready to take the company to the next level
GREEN FOR GO: MiAlgae founder and managing director Douglas Martin is ready to take the company to the next level
 ??  ?? MiAlgae’s work could lead to a safe and sustainabl­e foodstuff for the aquacultur­e industry
MiAlgae’s work could lead to a safe and sustainabl­e foodstuff for the aquacultur­e industry
 ??  ?? Looking out at North Sea algae gave Mr Martin the idea for his business
Looking out at North Sea algae gave Mr Martin the idea for his business

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom