FrieslandCampina Ingredients expands beyond traditional dairy with microbial fermentation collaboration
10 Jan 2023 --- FrieslandCampina Ingredients is harnessing Triplebar Bio’s specialized biotechnology capabilities to develop and scale up the production of cell-based proteins via precision fermentation. The alliance aims to develop innovative alternative protein solutions that improve human health, target infant nutrition and reduce reliance on traditional protein sources.
“The potential of precision fermentation is huge,” Anne Peter Lindeboom, managing director innovation at FrieslandCampina, tells FoodIngredientsFirst. “We need more sources of high-quality proteins to meet the needs of a growing and aging population.”
“By offering a full range of dairy and alternative proteins side by side, we aim to give our customers access to the nutritional solutions they need for their consumers so that everyone can get the most out of life, always.”
Complementing traditional dairy
Peter Lindeboom explains that dairy ingredients will continue to play a “vital role” in the future of nutrition as a source of high-quality proteins and prebiotics.
“These remain our core offering,” he underscores.
“We anticipate that this solution [precision fermentation] will complement a balanced diet incorporating other protein sources – like more traditional dairy ingredients and plant-based proteins. People are increasingly adding more alternative proteins to their diets and this solution is a part of that complete protein picture,” he explains.
At the same time, Peter Lindeboom notes that FrieslandCampina is continuously exploring new ways to harness technology and nature to support consumers with special dietary needs, and address problems such as formula shortages.
“Together, I’m certain that FrieslandCampina Ingredients and Triplebar will accelerate the use of precision fermentation as a nutritious and sustainable source of protein. By offering a full range of dairy and alternative proteins side by side, we aim to give people access to the nutritional solutions they need now and for generations to come.”
Microbial cells production
The two companies will produce microbial cells through precision fermentation. The microbial cells can support human health and nutrition in early life and adulthood.
“Triplebar’s hyper-throughput screening platform allows us to generate variation and test the entire solution design space created by biology in a day to find improvements in organisms and molecules. We then generate additional variation in the winning populations, effectively accelerating the natural selection process of evolution to days rather than millions of years,” Mario Cho, CEO of Triplebar Bio, tells FoodIngredientsFirst.
“We need to leverage science and technology to make high-quality food affordably and sustainably,” she underscores.
According to the company, food security is getting worse, with baby formula shortages, tightening supply chains, drought and global instability that will only intensify the growing nutritional scarcity.
“Biotechnology can reduce pressure on traditional food production systems while making the food system more robust and boosting nutrition for everyone, from babies to adults,” she notes.
Triplebar will bring to the table its integrated approach, which uses hardware, software, biology and biochemistry to develop new products and biological production systems that can replicate and accelerate evolution found in nature.
Cutting emissions
Peter Lindeboom explains that FrieslandCampina aims to produce completely climate-neutral dairy by 2050. They will target that goal while keeping traditional dairy at the center of their offering.
“The biggest contribution to our company’s climate goals will come from farm-level reductions,” he highlights.
At the same time, the company “will strive for sustainable production and the lowest possible emissions for the alternative, non-dairy ingredients in our portfolio,” according to Peter Lindeboom.
“Proteins from precision fermentation will make up a portion of our non-dairy protein portfolio. Our goal is for these proteins to use less land and water and generate fewer emissions compared to some animal-derived proteins for the same value of protein,” he underscores.
Precision fermentation boom
FrieslandCampina started using precision fermentation in 2016 to produce human milk oligosaccharides. Since then, the food industry’s use of technology has flourished.
2022 saw conventional dairy players, such as Bel Group, expanding beyond traditional cheese offerings and investing in scaling precision fermentation technologies – harnessing microbes’ power to produce whey and casein. The same process has been used to develop authentic dairy-based ice cream and milk chocolate without the cow.
More on precision fermentation
Last week, Danisharoma company EvodiaBio secured US$6.4 million in a capital raise as part of its strategy to become a key global industry player in sustainable aroma production for the food and beverage industry.
The company recently introduced a technology platform that uses precision fermentation to produce sustainable aromas.
Meanwhile, seeking the potential to boost sustainability, start-ups are turning to precision fermentation to create an alternative to unsustainable palm oil.
By Marc Cervera
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