Turning Greenhouse Gas into Biodegradable Foodware

Published: Nov. 9, 2020, 9:21 p.m.

If you could capture greenhouse gases like CO2 or methane and turn them into usable products, what would you make? 

There are a few challenges here. Which gas would you choose? What source would you use? And what market would you serve?

This episode answers all of those questions.

I interviewed Mark Herrema, CEO of Newlight Technologies about AirCarbon, a material also known as PHB (Polyhydroxybutyrate).

You probably know that cows produce methane (by burping, it turns out - not the way you thought.) And methane is a more potent greenhouse gas than CO2. While it comes from cows, there are easier ways to collect it, like digesters. 

Certain bacteria can use it to produce PHB, a compound found in many environments that can be melted and shaped into products like foodware (disposable utensils) or a leather replacement for the fashion industry. Other bacteria can produce it with CO2 as a starting point.

Wherever it comes from, if it ends up in the ocean (don't throw your waste in there) it degrades quickly because the environment already "understands it".

I found this interview fascinating from both a science and a startup perspective. Definitely give this one a listen.

Newlight Technologies

Mark Herrema

Produced by Comprendia LLC and Life Science Marketing Radio