Bezos Centre for Sustainable Protein launches at Imperial with $30m
funding
Imperial’s Bezos Centre for Sustainable Protein, launched today,
will develop innovative and evidence-based solutions through the
design, delivery, and commercialisation of alternative food
products that are economically and environmentally friendly,
nutritious, affordable, and tasty.
The Centre, spanning across seven Imperial academic departments,
will advance research into precision fermentation, cultivated meat,
bioprocessing and automation, nutrition, and AI and machine
learning.
The Bezos Earth Fund is providing the funding as part of a $100
million commitment to developing sustainable protein alternatives
and expanding consumer choice and an overall $1 billion commitment
to food transformation. It’s one of multiple Earth Fund Centres
working with other institutions and industry partners to develop
and commercialise new alternative protein products to give
consumers more choice for meat and dairy products.
Professor Hugh Brady, President of Imperial College London,
said: “Food security is one of the biggest challenges facing
humanity. For a sustainable future, we need to ensure that people
across the world can be fed adequately and nutritiously with
minimal impact on biodiversity, climate and our wider natural
environment.
“Imperial has the leading-edge research, innovation,
partnerships and convening power to advance global food systems and
we are very excited by the potential of our new Bezos Centre for
Sustainable Protein.”
Dr Andrew Steer, President and CEO of the Earth Fund said: “The
Bezos Earth Fund is proud to support Imperial as the home of our
second sustainable protein centre. By 2050 the world population
will be over 10 billion, so now is the time to rethink the way we
produce and consume food. This work will help ensure that our
future includes more protein options – and that they taste great,
are nutritious and come at low cost.”
Transforming our food system
Protein is essential to human health; without it our cells,
tissues, and organs can’t function. Protein is gained through what
we eat, including both animal and plant sources, such as meat,
eggs, fish, nuts, and legumes like beans.
However, animal-based protein production requires extensive land
use and generates significant greenhouse gas emissions. As the
global population expands, the health of both humans and the planet
will increasingly depend on widespread availability of proteins
that taste good and are produced in ways that reduce emissions and
protect nature.
Plant-based proteins are already gaining momentum as meat
alternatives, such as in pea-protein-based burgers. In addition,
new technologies are making new kinds of protein that also have the
potential to fit this bill, including through microbial
fermentation, which can produce proteins and nutrients that can be
used in food formulations, and cultivated meat grown from animal
cells.
Widespread acceptance and uptake of these alternative proteins
relies on improvements in their quality and price, as well as
reductions in cost and energy use. To transform these proteins into
healthy and tasty food, other components also need to be produced
more sustainably and efficiently, such as healthy fats and
carbohydrates and aspects like flavour, aroma, colourants, and
vitamins. This is where engineering biology comes in.
Engineering biology applies engineering concepts to design,
build and manufacture cells and products. The Centre will use a
combination of rational and computational-guided engineering
strategies with automation at biofoundries – where cells are turned
into mini-factories producing useful products – to accelerate the
development and scaling up of new bio-based processes.
It will also encompass institutes and facilities that will help
translate discoveries into real-world applications, educate the
next generation of bioengineers, and support commercialisation.
These include the Centre for Synthetic Biology, established in 2009
as the first of its kind in Europe, SynbiCITE, the UK’s industrial
translation centre for synthetic biology, and the Centre for
Translational Nutrition & Food Research, which has partnerships
with Quorn, Nestle, Unilever, and Waitrose, among others.
Director of the new Centre, Dr Rodrigo Ledesma-Amaro, from the
Department of Bioengineering at Imperial, said: “The Centre’s ethos
is that bio-engineered solutions can – and should – be both planet
and people-positive. Imperial is uniquely positioned to harness the
potential of engineering biology to accelerate the alt-protein
revolution and transform global food systems.”
Dr Andy Jarvis, the Earth Fund’s Director of Future of Food,
said: “Later is dangerously too late if we're to think about
growing our world's protein sources. Imperial College London has
led pioneering efforts in the field of Engineering Biology,
perfectly positioning the university to advance sustainable protein
options that will satisfy the growing global masses.”
Notes to editors
1. Partners
The Centre’s hub will be based at Imperial, with three spokes in
the UK and three abroad, with more than 65 international partners
spanning cutting-edge research and innovation to commercialisation
of new products.
The UK spokes are grouped under members of the Cellular
Agriculture Manufacturing Hub at UCL and Aberystwyth University,
the Food Centre at Reading University, and the Growing Kent &
Medway consortium involving the National Institute of Agricultural
Botany and the Universities of Kent and Greenwich.
International spokes are hosted by the Technical University of
Denmark (Biosustain), Tufts University (Centre for Cellular
Agriculture), and the National University of Singapore.
The launch of the Bezos Centre for Sustainable Protein at
Imperial follows the announcement of a sister centre last month at
North Carolina State University, as part of the Bezos Earth Fund’s
commitment to help transform food and agricultural systems, which
also includes efforts to reduce livestock emissions.
2. About Imperial College London
We are Imperial – a world-leading university for science,
technology, engineering, medicine and business (STEMB), where
scientific imagination leads to world-changing impact.
As a global top ten university in London, we use science to try
to understand more of the universe and improve the lives of more
people in it. Across our nine campuses and throughout our Imperial
Global network, our 22,000 students, 8,000 staff, and partners work
together on scientific discovery, innovation and entrepreneurship.
Their work navigates some of the world’s toughest challenges in
global health, climate change, AI, business leadership and
more.
Founded in 1907, Imperial’s future builds on a distinguished
past, having pioneered penicillin, holography and fibre optics.
Today, Imperial combines exceptional teaching, world-class
facilities and a habit of interdisciplinary practice to unlock
scientific imagination.
About The Bezos Earth FundThe Bezos Earth Fund is helping
transform the fight against climate change with the largest ever
philanthropic commitment to climate and nature protection. Jeff
Bezos has committed $10 billion in this decisive decade to protect
nature and address climate change. By providing funding and
expertise, we partner with organizations to accelerate innovation,
break down barriers to success and create a more equitable and
sustainable world. Join us in our mission to create a world where
people prosper in harmony with nature.
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