Ingenza awarded government funding to develop novel carbon capture technology
Ingenza, a biotechnology company based at Roslin Innovation Centre, is delighted to announce that its recent partnership with Johnson Matthey has been selected to receive vital funding of £441,632.88 from the Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy.
This award is part of the £1 billion fund from the Net Zero Innovation Portfolio, which aims to slash emissions and energy costs.This project aims to develop a novel CO2 conversion technology, which will capture industrial CO2 emissions and convert them into formate, a versatile chemical that can be used across various industries, including pharmaceuticals and agriculture.
This venture will build on the success of the existing partnership between Ingenza and Johnson Matthey, bringing together the unique expertise of each team to make carbon capture technology a feasible and appealing solution for industry.
As a world leader in industrial biotechnology, Ingenza will develop a bespoke engineered biocatalyst that will allow efficient hydrogenation of industrial CO2 emissions into formate. Johnson Matthey will then develop these biocatalysts into a cost competitive and scalable format for industry.
This solution aims to encourage the adoption of carbon capture technologies by converting industrially emitted CO2 into a valuable and versatile commodity chemical that can be sold on for a profit, while simultaneously reducing the emissions that leak into the atmosphere.
Ingenza is an engineering biology company based at Roslin Innovation Centre, in Midlothian Science Zone, with an extensive and unique range of proprietary enabling technologies in microbial strain and mammalian cell-line engineering, protein production, fermentation and bioprocess development.